Weekly Data

WHAT THE DATA SAY: 1 in 4 asked about politics on 1st date

By: Ray Day

CONTACT:

Ray Day
ray.day@stagwellglobal.com 

We wanted to share our latest consumer and business insights, based on research from Stagwell. Among the highlights of our weekly consumer sentiment tracking:

POLITICS AND ROMANCE

It seems politics no longer is a taboo subject when starting to date, our Harris Poll survey finds.

  • 24% of Gen Z say they have been asked about political beliefs on a first date.
  • 16% admit to lying about their beliefs.
  • 28% of Gen Z have broken up with someone over political beliefs.
  • 48% of Millennials and 49% of Gen X have been in a serious relationship with someone who has different political beliefs.
  • 56% of Republicans say they would date a Democrat.
  • 43% of Democrats say they would date a Republican.
FASHION FRIENDS IMPORTANT TO YOUNG SHOPPERS

Gen Z relies more heavily on others’ opinions when fashion shopping than any other generation, according to Harris Poll’s “Apparel & Fashion Industry Snapshot.”

  • 34% of Gen Z say they always or often seek out another person’s opinion about an item – higher than 29% for Millennials, 15% for Gen X and 11% for Boomers.
  • 48% of Gen Z say that they feel more confident purchasing items when they shop with someone they know than when shopping alone (compared with Millennials at 32%, Gen X at 29% and Boomers at 25%).
  • Gen Z is more likely to purchase a fashion item if a family member (57%), significant other (57%), friend (56%), another shopper (41%) or a store associate (35%) recommends it.
  • 23% of Gen Z say they are even more likely to purchase a fashion item if an AI tool recommends it.
  • Overall, 69% of U.S. adults say that they are more likely to purchase a fashion item if it is less expensive than they anticipated.
  • 24% say that they rarely purchase fashion items at full price.
SLEEPLESS IN SUPPLY CHAINS

Supply chain issues were supposed to be fixed after COVID. Yet our Harris Poll survey with Prologis finds that 66% of executives today lose sleep over them.

  • 86% of executives say, “rising economic and geo-political pressures are driving decisions on where to manufacture and store goods.”
  • 87% say natural disasters, regulatory shifts and unexpected political events are consuming their time.
  • Less than half of all executives feel adequately prepared for challenges like cybersecurity attacks (42%), technological disruptions (41%), regulatory changes (40%), labor market fluctuations (39%), trade wars (36%) or another global pandemic (34%).
ICYMI:

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