Nielsen found that Gen Xers use social media 40 minutes more
each week than millennials.
Not exact matches
Research from The Boston Consulting Group found that the guys are not alone in how they spend on takeout:
Millennials (ages 16 to 34) eat out 3.4 times per
week and are more likely
than other groups to get food to go and eat with friends.
Actually,
millennial Christians are more likely
than any age group — notably, those generations of Christians that invested a ton of hope in the political process — to share their faith in public (43 percent say they talk to others about their faith at least once a
week).
More
than 60 percent of
Millennials have a juice away from home at least once a month — two in five at least once a
week [3].
A secondary book that provides information on how to spend a
week in each of the 20 destinations listed in the first book while spending less
than fifty dollars a day would be of great interest to a budget conscious
millennial.
Last
week I ran a post about the median stock trading at an all - time high valuation that included this chart from «
Millennial Investor» Patrick O'Shaughnessy showing historical EBITDA yields for all stocks in the universe greater
than $ 200 million market capitalization from the period 1971 to date:
Some of the key findings of The Millennialization of the Pet Industry — Retail's Opportunity to Reach the Pet - Obsessed Report include: Lots of Love • Most
Millennial pet owners (65 percent) say it would be more stressful to be separated from their pet for a
week than their cell phone.
In this
week's Weekend Reads: why it's more expensive
than it looks to be poor, how Brexit is helping some young Brits find love, and why everything you've been told about
Millennials is a lie (they don't actually like needing to have a second job in the gig economy!).