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Gen Z, Millennials Love Subscriptions. Baby Boomers Are Dubious.

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From discounted Subway sandwiches to expedited delivery of Sephora beauty products, more and more industries are experimenting with offering customer perks via monthly subscriptions, a practice once reserved primarily for the likes of traditional media companies and gyms. 

While some opine about the onset of subscription fatigue as a result of this trend, a new Morning Consult survey shows that this is not necessarily the case for certain segments of consumers — namely younger customers and men. 

In the survey, respondents were asked to indicate their interest in paying for subscriptions in nine different product or service categories. Gen Z adults and millennials expressed the highest levels of enthusiasm among all demographic groups across nearly every tested option, and men were frequently just behind. Nearly half of Gen Zers (46%) and millennials (49%), for instance, were interested in subscriptions on average, compared with about a third (34%) of the general public. Baby boomers and women, meanwhile, reported the lowest levels of interest — often significantly less than that of the public. 

Larger portions of baby boomers (48%) and women (42%) also said they felt “overwhelmed” by the amount of subscriptions currently available than did Gen Z adults (33%), millennials (37%) and men (39%). 

Younger consumers are more satisfied with the state of the subscription economy  

  • More than half of Gen Z adults (57%), millennials (53%), and Gen Xers (53%) said they are content with the amount of subscription offerings currently available. Significantly fewer baby boomers (42%) shared this view. 
  • Men (51%) were more likely than women (47%) to be satisfied with current subscription options. 
  • Approximately 1 in 10 respondents from each demographic group said they feel underwhelmed by today’s subscription market. 

Subscription-palooza

There is consensus around one part of the subscription ecosystem: additional features or rewards to reward consumer loyalty. Significant majorities of all  adults, generations (excluding baby boomers) and genders said they expect sweetened perks after participating in a particular subscription offering for a year or more. 

Many companies are following this insight to remain competitive in the increasingly crowded space. Others, like Twitter Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc., are charting an opposite course — putting previously free features like account verification and security behind a monthly paywall

Twitter's Blue offering has reportedly netted $11 million in revenue from 385,000 global subscribers (or less than half of 1% of the platform’s monthly user base) in the three months since its launch. No data is yet available for Meta's Verified program, which rolled out earlier this month. 

The March 23-26, 2023, survey was conducted among a representative sample of 2,201 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

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Martina Birk

Update: 2024-08-13