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Why Small and Emerging Brands Must Rethink Omnichannel Through a Generational lens
Unprecedented generational shifts – seven cohorts influencing demand at once – are rewriting the rules of retail. This creates complexity that only focused, insight-led brands can turn into growth, by understanding and respecting consumers’ diverse life stages and defining moments.

Omnichannel is no longer a scale advantage – it’s an expectation. 84% of U.S. consumers are omnichannel shoppers, a striking statistic that is easily misread because omnichannel is no longer only a question of presence. The real CPG challenge is integration: creating connected experiences across a complex path to purchase amplified by an unprecedented multi-generational consumer landscape shaping demand simultaneously. Each cohort brings distinct expectations, motivations and decision triggers.
This shift is reshaping demand. Generational patterns still matter, but age alone is not a blunt predictor of behavior. Life stage, context and values are often more useful. Circana research suggests Gen Z tends to buy into identity, Millennials into lifestyle, Gen X into functionality, and Boomers into comfort. Thus, the commercial question becomes where and how those preferences translate into sales.
For small and emerging brands, this creates both opportunity and pressure. Unlike large enterprises that manage complexity through scale, smaller brands need sharper choices. With fewer resources and less room for error, growth depends on clear priorities and a strong understanding of which shoppers matter most.

SMB Growth is Driven by Targeting the Right Shoppers, Not Just Reach.
Omnichannel is still too often treated as a distribution exercise: more touchpoints, broader availability, greater visibility. For smaller brands, this can be an expensive mistake. Presence does not automatically create relevance, and reach does not necessarily translate into momentum. The more useful question is: Which shoppers are we trying to win, and where will that translate into commercial advantage?
Generational understanding helps answer that question. It is useful not only for broadening targeting, but for refining it by helping brands choose which audiences to prioritize and which moments are most likely to convert. Because every investment must prove return, broad channel expansion is risky. While large brands can afford to test and scale across multiple channels, smaller brands cannot. They grow by identifying high-value shoppers and investing where they can have the strongest commercial impact.

The Balance of Spending Power is Shifting, Making Targeting Critical.
Generational influence is not moving in a single direction. Current data shows the new power spenders are Baby Boomers and Gen X who dominate retail shopping with a combined 65% share, while Millennials are poised to become the wealthiest generation as a massive transfer of wealth reshapes the economic landscape. By 2030, Gen Z and Millennials are projected to drive 60% of retail sales growth, as Boomers will remain a significant force. Meanwhile, Gen Alpha – the oldest just 16 this year – is already influencing household decisions, with an estimated global economic impact of $1 trillion. All of these dynamics mean that brands cannot afford to treat demand as coming from one age group alone.
This creates complexity because several generations are shaping the market at once, each with distinct habits, triggers and expectations. Large brands often address this through scale and segmentation. Smaller brands are more likely to grow by prioritizing the segments where demand is most actionable and where their proposition resonates most strongly. In practice, that means:
designing experiences that pick up where the last interaction left off
ensuring messaging, pricing, and availability are aligned
using data to recognize and respond to behaviour across touchpoints
reducing friction between discovery, validation, and purchase.

Shoppers Move Seamlessly. Growing Brands Must Connect the Journey.
Omnichannel is shopper-led. But shoppers don’t think in channels, they move fluidly across them. Discovery might start on social, shift to mobile browsing, move to desktop comparison, and end in-store or via an app. To shoppers, it’s one continuous journey and they expect it to feel that way. That is why channel decisions must begin with shopper behavior instead of organizational structure.
There is also more overlap between generations than many brands assume. New technology and e-commerce are not the exclusive domain of digital natives, which is why generational insight should guide decisions rather than become a rigid label. Circana’s data reveals 46% of Millennials are comfortable using new tech tools, compared with 42% of Gen Zers, while Boomers own more smart TVs and other technology than younger generations.
Generational thinking works best as a lens, not a label. The goal is to understand the broader forces shaping demand, then validate those insights against real shopper behaviour so investment stays focused where it can drive measurable return.
For smaller and growing brands, personalization matters only when it reflects genuine consumer understanding. The brands that win align around the shopper journey delivering consistent and connected experiences, and make each touchpoint reinforce the same story while reducing friction along the path to purchase.

Focus is the Strategic Advantage for Small and Emerging brands.
In a multi-generational, omnichannel landscape, complexity is unlikely to diminish. The differentiation lies in how brands respond to it. To compete in a truly omnichannel environment, small and emerging brands should focus on a few critical shifts:
Prioritise connection over coverage – expand only where you can maintain a consistent, high-quality experience.
Design for movement, not channels – map how your customers navigate the journey and optimize those paths.
Use data to reduce friction – even simple signals can help create more relevant, connected experiences.
Stay consistent across touchpoints – your brand, messaging, and value proposition should feel unified wherever customers encounter you.
The bottom line is that omnichannel now goes beyond presence to designing experiences around how different generations discover, move, and decide. High-growth brands have an advantage here – their agility allows them to build customer-first journeys without legacy complexity. Applying the generational lens can help them link the right experiences across priority moments and make deliberate choices about where to play and how to win.
If you’re a small or emerging brand wanting to optimise omnichannel with generational understanding of shopper behaviors and motivation, Circana Liquid Data Go® helps identify high-potential stores and banners and growth-driving demographics and households – so you can prioritize distribution and focus your expansion efforts.
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