28 people from China's '70's generation on 7 topics:
工作 (Work), 消费 (Consume), 联络 (Connect), 爱 (Love), 玩 (Play), 探索 (Explore), 梦想 (Dream)

"Our generation lived in the changes of society."
"We are open, but we are still influenced by tradition."
"We are like two different kinds of people."
"We are the main actors in society."
"We are stronger and stronger."
"People my age, there are so many of us."
"We are the generation that’s reliable."
"We are the workforce, or the creators."


Over the course of four weeks, we were invited into the homes and offices of 28 people from the '70's generation in China. We spent hours with them. We listened to their words. We met their families, friends and neighbors.

Our participants have all lived through a radical transformation of Chinese society. They grew up on the perimeter of China's past and live at the forefront of its future. Their life and perspective sits somewhere in the space between.

Words of a Generation is a collection of their personal stories and perspectives. It's not a study. It's by no means comprehensive. Words, instead, is a start. It focuses on seven core topics: work, consume, love, connect, play, explore and dream.

We hoped to give you a small window into their world.

We wanted to help you understand their lives beyond China's headlines, beyond its data.

We wanted you to spend a few minutes getting lost in their words.

-Amanda Mooney, Edelman Shanghai

Watch: Words of a Generation

Meet: The Participants


Read: A Word on Words from David Brain, Edelman APAC President & CEO

With special thanks to David Brain, Rui Xu, Rebecca Xia, Vicki Qi, Bianca Xu, Jason Born, Lisa Levandowski, Natalie Xu, Preston Zhu, Long Xi, Tony Tao, Cecily Wang, Sherry Li, Paul Flynn, Helen Yue, Jill Lu, Christina Smedley, Connor Lesniak,our participants who so generously shared their personal stories, and our oh-so-talented filmmaker and friend, Jayga Rayn, without whom Words wouldn't have been possible.


For more information, contact: amanda.mooney(at)edelman.com

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A Word on Words:
 from David Brain, President and CEO, Edelman Asia Pacific
This series contains seven short films we have made about the generation born in the 1970’s in China. They are, in effect, the generation whose work and efforts transformed China it into the second largest and consistently one of the fastest growing economies in the world.  In the space of one generation, over 300 million people have gone from near poverty to some form of ‘middle class’ prosperity.  Millions more have moved from the countryside to the cities.  The world has never before seen a transformation of this scale.  It’s not likely to again. 
Lots has been written on the economics, the industrialization, the urbanization and the environmental impacts of this transformation.  The world and marketers have also been fascinated with China’s newly prosperous young, the millions born into this new middle class China with disposable income, cars, careers and the ‘normal’ concerns of their peers the world over.  Let’s face it, their spending power could soon be the most important single economic force in the world.
But what is less talked about is that 70’s generation; their parents and uncles and aunties who built the modern China that they have inherited.  The generation with one foot in the village and one in the high rise apartment.  Right now, these are the ones with the money too.
But for marketers they are incredibly difficult to understand.  The parents of the 70s generation suffered the cultural revolution and indeed many of them will remember that tumult in Chinese history themselves; their grandparents could have been on the Long March and many of the 70’s generation were born when Chairman Mao was still alive. That China they were born into was closed, communist and traditional.
The China they inhabit and largely built could not be more different.  So how does this affect their attitudes to love, work, ‘consumption’ and technology and what do they dream and aspire to? The 28 people we interviewed in their homes in four Chinese cities are unbelievably candid about these subjects.  We decided to commit this to video because we believe the substance of what they say is best seen and heard rather than produced in just another research report of quotes and stats that no one really takes the time to read; and even if they did, those stats and charts fail to communicate the character or the emotion we think these films do.
And we very much wanted to get those qualities over, because for many clients (and indeed colleagues) from the US and Europe, making the leap to understanding the scale of difference we are dealing with with the Chinese consumer generally and with this generation in particular, is hard.  This generation is different, not like the same generation in, say, Sweden is different from their peers in France or the UK or the US.  All of those 70s generations were born into democratic, ‘western’ and prosperous environments where being middle class was normal. Their cultures and language may differ but their economic and peaceful political circumstances were broadly similar.  Their experience is entirely different to Chinese of the same age.  And so….if you want to market successfully, you have to take that into account.
We are now publishing these films because as we have shown them to clients and colleagues in China (and indeed in other places like Vietnam and Indonesia) they have sparked comments and reminiscences about childhoods and growing up that have deepened our appreciation of what this generation has been through.  We hope that in their publication they continue to do that.
In true Oscars style I would like to thank:
Amanda Mooney: our strategic planner in Shanghai and the heart and brains of the operation who has devoted weekends and much love to the project.
Jayga Rayn: our filmmaker.
Rui Xu: our researcher.
Christina Smedley: co-conspirator.
Rebecca Xia: for inspiring our focus on the 70s generation. 
Zoom Info

A Word on Words:

from David Brain, President and CEO, Edelman Asia Pacific

This series contains seven short films we have made about the generation born in the 1970’s in China. They are, in effect, the generation whose work and efforts transformed China it into the second largest and consistently one of the fastest growing economies in the world.  In the space of one generation, over 300 million people have gone from near poverty to some form of ‘middle class’ prosperity.  Millions more have moved from the countryside to the cities.  The world has never before seen a transformation of this scale.  It’s not likely to again. 

Lots has been written on the economics, the industrialization, the urbanization and the environmental impacts of this transformation.  The world and marketers have also been fascinated with China’s newly prosperous young, the millions born into this new middle class China with disposable income, cars, careers and the ‘normal’ concerns of their peers the world over.  Let’s face it, their spending power could soon be the most important single economic force in the world.

But what is less talked about is that 70’s generation; their parents and uncles and aunties who built the modern China that they have inherited.  The generation with one foot in the village and one in the high rise apartment.  Right now, these are the ones with the money too.

But for marketers they are incredibly difficult to understand.  The parents of the 70s generation suffered the cultural revolution and indeed many of them will remember that tumult in Chinese history themselves; their grandparents could have been on the Long March and many of the 70’s generation were born when Chairman Mao was still alive. That China they were born into was closed, communist and traditional.

The China they inhabit and largely built could not be more different.  So how does this affect their attitudes to love, work, ‘consumption’ and technology and what do they dream and aspire to? The 28 people we interviewed in their homes in four Chinese cities are unbelievably candid about these subjects.  We decided to commit this to video because we believe the substance of what they say is best seen and heard rather than produced in just another research report of quotes and stats that no one really takes the time to read; and even if they did, those stats and charts fail to communicate the character or the emotion we think these films do.

And we very much wanted to get those qualities over, because for many clients (and indeed colleagues) from the US and Europe, making the leap to understanding the scale of difference we are dealing with with the Chinese consumer generally and with this generation in particular, is hard.  This generation is different, not like the same generation in, say, Sweden is different from their peers in France or the UK or the US.  All of those 70s generations were born into democratic, ‘western’ and prosperous environments where being middle class was normal. Their cultures and language may differ but their economic and peaceful political circumstances were broadly similar.  Their experience is entirely different to Chinese of the same age.  And so….if you want to market successfully, you have to take that into account.

We are now publishing these films because as we have shown them to clients and colleagues in China (and indeed in other places like Vietnam and Indonesia) they have sparked comments and reminiscences about childhoods and growing up that have deepened our appreciation of what this generation has been through.  We hope that in their publication they continue to do that.

In true Oscars style I would like to thank:

  • Amanda Mooney: our strategic planner in Shanghai and the heart and brains of the operation who has devoted weekends and much love to the project.
  • Jayga Rayn: our filmmaker.
  • Rui Xu: our researcher.
  • Christina Smedley: co-conspirator.
  • Rebecca Xia: for inspiring our focus on the 70s generation. 

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