Click here to subscribe to our daily newsletter – the Ypulse Daily Update.


Privacy: Your email is private. Ypulse won't share it. Period.

Ypulse RSS Feed

Have Ypulse delivered directly to your favorite news feed reader.


Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe with Bloglines

http://www.wikio.com
TOPICS:


Totally Wired

Ypulse

Daily news & commentary about Generation Y for media and marketing professionals

« Ypulse Interview: Antti Öhrling, Co-Founder, Blyk | Main | Ypulse Essentials: Soulja Boy Ruins Hip Hop, 'Sexting,' Life Is Awkward »

May 13, 2008

For Young Women, Ambition Gets In The Way Of Life

Dove Fresh TakesDove recently interviewed 500 women in their 20s and discovered that no matter how much they accomplish, millennial females rarely feel satisfied. On the one hand, consistently working towards that next level of success leads to persistence and ambition, which is great. On the other hand, a void of fulfillment brings along an enormous sense of inadequacy, which leads to lifelong dissatisfaction.

According to a report in The Arizona Republic:

Twenty-something women are more accomplished than ever before. More are climbing the corporate ladders and earning multiple graduate degrees, and this generation of women has opportunities that their mothers and grandmothers only dreamed about.

But a new study by Dove and Columbia University also say these young women are so engrossed in having it all by the time they are 30, they are not fully enjoying what they achieve. These women are being pressured by their inner voice to keep pushing for the next goal. Nothing is ever good enough and accomplishments go unrewarded and unappreciated.

This perfection complex causes girls to "collect" experiences to bulk up their six-page resumes instead of simply experiencing life. As a college student, I witness this on a daily basis. Girls go from class, to work, to the library where they study until the early morning hours. Everyone is in a competition to get the highest grades, make the most money, and tout the busiest schedule. Leisure time is almost looked down upon, in a "Don't you have anything productive to do?" kind of way.

Dove hopes to change the definition of "success" by ultimately convincing young women to enjoy the present moment instead of constantly focusing on next week, next month, and next year. We've seen Dove's Fresh Takes series, and though the purpose is admirable, I'm hoping they have other tactics up their sleeves to reach out to teens. To get their message across, they need to infiltrate young girls' lives in a way that 2-minute commercials shown during "The Hills" can't.

Posted by casey


Advertising | Education

Comments

Interesting post.

The end was particularly interesting. It seems whenever a company steps up - like Dove - with "a purpose that is admirable," we talk about how they can do better, be better, bigger, more meaningful.

This is exactly what young women are experiencing as well. The moment we step, it's not good enough. It's internal pressure, yes, but also pressure from others that says, "You're in this now. Keep going. Is that all you've got? Step it up again."

The responsibility of change is great and if we want companies or young women to create meaningful change we need to celebrate small successes - and large culture shifts - more often.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)