The following is a guest piece written by Evan Horowitz, co-founder and CEO at Movers+Shakers. Opinion’s are the creator’s own.
As Gen Alpha develops a stronger consumer presence online, their unique — and frankly bizarre — type of humor is emerging as an efficient option to engage with them. Born right into a digital world, this generation is drawn to absurd and often unpredictable content, making them an enchanting yet difficult audience for marketers.
Some firms are nailing this by tapping into the chaotic, meme-driven humor that Gen Alpha loves. Let’s take a take a look at three brands that get it right — Sour Patch Kids, Nutter Butter, and Crocs — and what your brand can learn from their success.
Sour Patch Kids
Sour Patch Kids has all the time had mischievous and playful marketing, however the brand has now translated its rebellious humor into socially-native content. Its TikTok presence leans into Gen Alpha’s humor with content that purposefully is mindless, like “sourp” and chaotic slideshows of memes.
What they’re doing right
- Playful rise up: Gen Alpha loves humor with a slight edge, and Sour Patch Kids taps into this with a way of playful rise up that appeals to kids and tweens.
- Interactive content: Sour Patch Kids’ marketing often inspires audience participation by encouraging users to tag people within the comments or share their posts.
- Lesson for other brands: Balancing humor with brand identity is crucial. Sour Patch Kids blends the product’s core identity with the form of humor its audience loves. Other brands can learn from this by ensuring that their humor reflects their personality.
Nutter Butter
Nutter Butter has made waves on social media with its inexplicably bizarre content, leaning heavily into absurdist humor that keeps Gen Alpha laughing.
Whether it’s showing a Nutter Butter cookie on fire at a playground or horror-fueled visuals that seem like against the law scene, Nutter Butter embraces the nonsensical in a way that speaks on to Gen Alpha’s unhinged humor (and perhaps even scares other generations).
What they’re doing right
- Embracing randomness: Gen Alpha’s humor thrives on randomness and unpredictability, and Nutter Butter’s posts feel spontaneous and out of left field. The brand craft content that mirrors the strange and abstract humor present in web memes.
- Keeping it visual and short: This generation doesn’t have the patience for long-form content. Nutter Butter’s short, punchy posts get to the purpose, often delivering the humor in only just a few seconds.
- Lesson for other brands: Humor doesn’t all the time must make sense; sometimes it could actually simply be entertaining. By leaning into chaotic and unhinged humor, brands can break through the noise and stand out. Don’t be afraid to experiment with the weird, because it resonates deeply with Gen Alpha.
Crocs
Crocs is a brand that has fully embraced its “weird” status over time and turned it right into a badge of honor. On social media, Crocs has managed to remain top-of-mind by leaning into trends and memes that are popular with Gen Zalpha, a hybrid of Gen Z and Gen Alpha, and recently even tagged Nutter Butter in a video inspired by their type of content.
What they’re doing right
- Self-aware humor: Crocs is not attempting to be something it’s not. Instead, it has embraced the very fact that their product is quirky, using that self-awareness to push the boundaries of what’s expected from a brand.
- Riding relevant trends: The brand doesn’t just tap into any trend, but it surely rigorously select ones that make sense for them. For example, “crafting and yapping” and “(*3*).”
- Lesson for other brands: Authenticity is every little thing with Gen Alpha, and being in on the joke is crucial. Brands that try too hard to appear “cool” may miss the mark, but those that embrace their true identity — and find humor in it — will connect in a more meaningful way.
What brands can learn
The success of Sour Patch Kids, Nutter Butter and Crocs reveals just a few key lessons that any brand can adopt when attempting to connect with Gen Alpha through humor:
- Absurdity works: Don’t be afraid to get weird. This generation loves the strange, the surreal and the unexpected, so brands should be at liberty to lean into the bizarre.
- Keep it short and visual: With an attention span that thrives on quick consumption, punchy, visual content reigns supreme.
- Stay true to your brand’s identity: Authenticity is crucial. Gen Alpha can see through forced humor, so be certain that your brand’s humor is aligned with its core personality.
- Incorporate playful rise up: This generation loves a little bit of edge, but it surely should all the time be fun and lighthearted, never mean-spirited or offensive.
As Gen Alpha continues to grow, brands that embrace their unique sense of humor — crammed with absurdity and authenticity — might be those to win their loyalty. By taking a cue from these standout examples, brands have the chance to entertain and engage with the following big consumer generation in fresh and exciting ways.
Read the total article here