Gen Z Social Media: What Do Brands Get Wrong?

Discover how Gen Z uses social media and what brands must do to earn loyalty. Learn social trends, platform preferences, and influencer insights.
Gen Z influencer holding smartphone with social app overlays, showcasing social media trends and brand engagement preferences Gen Z influencer holding smartphone with social app overlays, showcasing social media trends and brand engagement preferences
Gen Z influencer holding smartphone with social app overlays, showcasing social media trends and brand engagement preferences

⬇️ Prefer to listen instead? ⬇️


  • For Gen Z, Instagram is their most used social platform, followed by YouTube and TikTok.
  • 48% of Gen Z plan to increase social commerce purchases on TikTok Shop, Instagram Shops, or Facebook Shops in 2025.
  • A growing number of Gen Z trust influencers, especially niche creators over celebrities.
  • Only 25% of consumers say cause marketing stands out, with Gen Z preferring social issues be addressed by influencers.

For decades, marketers have chased the secret to getting emerging generations interested, but with Gen Z, more is at stake and the rules are changing fast. As the first group to grow up with digital tech, Gen Z is changing what being influential means, how trust is earned, and the role of social media in their lives and spending. However, too many brands still use old methods, pushing away instead of attracting this smart, values-focused generation. To do well in Gen Z marketing, brands must go past trends and make sure honesty is part of everything they do.

Advertisement

teenager using phone on bed

Gen Z = Social Media Natives

Unlike older generations who got used to the internet, Gen Z has always lived with it. Born between the mid-1990s and early 2010s, this group grew up with smartphones, fast internet, and constant connection. Their social media habits are not just how they talk to each other—they are key to how they find, judge, and buy products.

Gen Z is now the generation most likely to use social media for:

  • Product discovery
  • Real-time news and updates
  • Direct support from brands

Regular websites and even search engines are becoming less important. Young people trust TikTok search for reviews and how-tos more than Google. Instagram is their digital mood board and store all in one.

Gen Z doesn’t separate social media from other things—it is central to every step of buying. For brands, that means your social presence is not just about getting people interested—it’s your digital main store.

young people scrolling social media

What Platforms Does Gen Z Actually Use?

To understand how Gen Z uses social media, you need to know that not all platforms are the same. Their choices change based on mood, what they want to do, and the kind of content they are looking for.

Each platform has a different cultural purpose:

Instagram: The Aesthetic Heart

Instagram is still the top choice as a visual diary. It has carefully chosen content along with real Stories and Reels. It’s where trends start, die out, and come back again daily. Still photos, nice-looking sets of images, short-term Stories, and fun Reels all exist in Instagram’s world.

→ Brands must speak this mixed-media language if they want to stay relevant.

TikTok: The Culture Stream

TikTok is where culture happens right now. Trends. Sounds. Micro-memes. Viral arguments. Brands that get TikTok’s subtle rhythms—quick edits, natural language, and storytelling styles—can use cultural trends in a real way.

→ TikTok isn’t for old stuff. It needs content made just for it.

YouTube: The Trust Platform

Yes, Gen Z still watches longer videos. YouTube is still a place to go for in-depth looks, behind-the-scenes info, tutorials, and working with influencers. It’s used less for memes and more for learning and ideas.

→ Trust grows slowly on YouTube—especially with helpful, human-focused stories.

What Content Gen Z Cares About (And Why Format Matters)

Gen Z doesn’t just watch content—they break it down. They understand company speak, content plans, and even how editing works. They know when something is low effort.

So what works well?

Instagram

  • Best formats: Reels, sets of images, Stories, nice-looking grids
  • Themes that work: Fun, behind-the-scenes, cause-based messages if they are honest
  • Tone: Friendly, a bit cheeky, nicely messy

TikTok

  • Best formats: Short, story videos, native sounds, formats that ask people to join in
  • Themes that work: Humor, honesty, how-to tips, working with creators
  • Tone: Bold, real, quick

YouTube

  • Best formats: Vlogs, tutorials, creator documentaries, team-ups
  • Themes that work: Health, career, beauty, mental well-being, “a day in the life”
  • Tone: Like talking to someone, immersive, branded in a subtle way

Pro tip: Make content just for each platform. Change it, don’t just reuse it. The same message should feel very different depending on where it is shown.

teen with skeptical expression

Gen Z Wants Brands to Be Real, Not Trendy

Following trends is a warning sign for this group. Gen Z can tell when a brand is trying too hard to be “part of the conversation.” And for them, joining in late is not just bad—it breaks trust.

Instead, Gen Z wants:

  • A clear brand voice
  • Consistent messages over time
  • Belief in being different, even if it means not following the crowd

Brands that do well with Gen Z often don’t chase trends and make their own cultural way. They are not cool because they copy. They’re cool because they lead—or even ignore what’s cool.

influencer recording casual video

Influencers Matter—But Only When It’s Real

Using influencers in marketing is not just effective on Gen Z—it’s key. But the rules have changed. Celebrity endorsements and basic ads don’t work anymore.

The 2024 Influencer Marketing Report found:

  • 40% of Gen Z trust influencers more now than they did last year
  • But they want honesty and alignment with their interests

So, what are they looking for?

  • Micro-influencers they can relate to
  • Creators whose lifestyles match their values
  • Content that feels like it came from fans, not a brand deal

The new rule: Work together, don’t order around. Let creators talk naturally. Allow them to make series or formats that fit the cultural rules of their groups.

Good influencer work can be the reason for success or failure.

young people at grassroots event

The Shift in Brand-Led Activism

Not long ago, brands were praised for speaking out about social issues. Now, Gen Z has higher expectations: speak only if you mean it—and prove it with real action.

What does do well?

  • Action, not just words
  • Openness, not perfection
  • Letting influencers, not brands, lead messages about issues

Gen Z expects influencers—not companies—to be the trusted voices on social causes.

Avoid:

  • Vague statements (“We believe in equality.”)
  • Pretending to care about trends (rainbow logos only in June)
  • Working with creators who are not consistent

Do:

  • Support long-term causes that fit your brand beliefs
  • Use budgets to pay for community work—not just ads to raise awareness
  • Be ready to stand by your values—even when it’s not popular

person shopping on phone at home

Social Commerce Isn’t Coming—It’s Here

For Gen Z, social media is a store. Not just in words—a real place to shop where finding things and buying them happens fast.

But—Gen Z hates being sold to directly.

They don’t like:

  • Ads that look like memes
  • Influencer scripts that are not real
  • Basic “Buy now!” spam

They like:

  • Fun content where the product is used naturally
  • Real reviews that don’t seem sponsored
  • Product advice from creators they trust

To win with Gen Z social commerce, put your offer inside a story, fun, or helpful content.

teen relaxing in nature

The “Touch Grass” Movement: Balance and Burnout

While Gen Z grew up with digital tech, they are more and more aware of the emotional and mental cost of always being online. This generation is most likely to burn out—and most open about mental health.

That’s the most of any age group. A quiet pushback, “touch grass” culture encourages going offline, nature, and shows a new liking for complete brand experiences—including offline ones.

Practical ideas for brands:

  • Set up in-person meetups, retreats, or local events hosted by creators
  • Make content about balance, well-being, and mental breaks
  • Have interactive stops at big events

Taking breaks is part of being involved for Gen Z—and brands must learn how to be present in a good way across that whole range.

teen looking at ai art on tablet

Gen Z and AI-Generated Content: Curious But Cautious

AI that makes content has grown fast in all marketing areas. But Gen Z is not just accepting it without question. They’re interested—but unsure.

It’s a mixed feeling.

So how should brands deal with this?

Use AI behind the scenes:

  • To make post timing better, study social listening, or improve personalization
  • To fill in formatting—but not creative style or voice
  • To help—not replace—creator work

As always, honesty wins. AI is not bad itself—but if it breaks trust, it hurts you.

creative office with genz style

Case Studies: Brands Doing It Right

Real examples show that honesty, knowing your audience, and content based on trust are most important.

Marc Jacobs

This high-end fashion brand uses weird, fun, and nicely strange Gen Z styles on TikTok. Their influencer partners sound like the brand but add their own unique twist to stories.

→ Tip: Be open to being different. Let your community help decide what “on-brand” even means.

Topicals

A skincare brand that understands. Topicals mixes content from fans, influencer trips, and real-time creator feedback into campaigns that feel personal. And yes—they pay their creators fairly and talk openly about it.

→ Tip: Fan content works best when it’s earned. Grow it, pay for it, work together.

Puresport

Wellness brand Puresport gets into Gen Z through YouTube stories, working with endurance athletes, and public Strava clubs anyone can join.

→ Tip: Make “slow” stories. When Gen Z feels part of the story, they stay interested.

ServiceNow

Office software doesn’t sound like Gen Z—but ServiceNow’s aware TikTok presence does. Their take on company talk, made real (“let’s get our ducks in a row”), shows humor and industry connection.

→ Tip: Even B2B can be fun. Don’t talk down to people, just connect.

teen ignoring sponsored post

What Brands Should Stop Doing Now

If you’re doing any of the following, it’s time to change your content:

  • Posting the same old video to five platforms
  • Joining in on viral trends—after they are over
  • Making basic “woke” posts with no real meaning or action
  • Treating influencers as just ad spaces

Gen Z won’t punish mistakes. They will punish dishonesty.

What Smart Content Automation Looks Like for Gen Z

Using computers to help can make your plan better if it’s used to help—not replace—human voice.

Here’s how to use automation well:

  • Change formatting automatically for each platform
  • Make content series that people come back to each week
  • Use social listening to see small trend changes early
  • Change content into as many formats as possible—“anchor and splinter” plans
  • Use automation to make time for more creativity, not less

Done well, automation lets your team focus on creative risks and closer connection with Gen Z users.

Make Gen Z Your Brand’s Future, Not an Afterthought

Gen Z is more than just your next group to sell to—they are changing how branding even works. They work on trust, openness, and community. And they expect the brands they support to put money into real relationships—not just paid reach.

Social media isn’t just one way to do things. It’s the place where things happen. And Gen Z is making the rules.

The future is for the brands that listen, learn, and lead with honesty.


⬇️ Want More Content? ⬇️

Add a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join The Rocket Agent?

Advertisement