Because of this, millennials see custom as a need and a given at any price point, not a luxury or premium upgrade. While your service offerings may say that all packages are customizable, the word packages itself sends up an unconscious red flag to millennial consumers. They equate the word packages with cookie cutter, and using it in your sales materials tells them that you are not able or willing to accommodate their uniqueness.
Even if your behind-the-scenes system is not entirely custom, the process of working with you needs to FEEL custom. The best place to start with that is to change the language you use in presenting what you have to offer to potential clients.
How to Get Millennials on Board With Your Ideas
Generation Y and Food [infographic]
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For millennials, the generation that accounts for more than 83% of today's weddings and the first to grow up with the Internet, technology has done more than give unprecedented access to information; it has physically changed their brains on a microcellular level. What worked in bridal marketing just ten years ago is no longer effective because the way today's engaged couples think is actually different than couples of generations past. In 




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