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Army recruitment campaign targets 'snowflake' millennials and selfie addicts

<em>The Army is calling out to binge gamers, class clowns, phone zombies, snow flakes and selfie addicts in its new recruitment drive (PA)</em>
The Army is calling out to binge gamers, class clowns, phone zombies, snow flakes and selfie addicts in its new recruitment drive (PA)

Millennials obsessed with their smartphones, games consoles are being targeted by the British Army in its latest recruitment drive.

Binge gamers, class clowns, phone zombies, snow flakes and selfie addicts are all highlighted in the Army’s attempt at wooing Generation Z youngsters.

The Your Army Needs You campaign suggests the potentially overlooked raw skills of people like gamers and daydreamers could be seen as a strength by the Army.

The campaign has been designed to show the Army looks beyond young stereotypes and ‘sees people differently’ and recognises their ‘need for a bigger sense of purpose’, according to British Army Major General Paul Nanson.

Marketing is pitched towards the Gen Z or Generation Z youngsters, the nickname of the generation who were born approximately between 1995 and 2015, as 16 to 25-year-olds are a key recruitment range.

<em>Marketing is pitched towards the Gen Z or Generation Z youngsters (PA)</em>
Marketing is pitched towards the Gen Z or Generation Z youngsters (PA)

The recent First World War centenary may have raised awareness of the famous Lord Kitchener-style recruitment posters of that time which have been updated.

Based on the historic Your Country Needs You First World War poster featuring the stern-eyed British field marshal, the new billboards call out to ‘Me Me Me Millennials’, ‘Class Clowns’, ‘Binge Gamers’, ‘Phone Zombies’, ‘Snow Flakes’, ‘Selfie Addicts’ and say the Army needs their potential and assets.

These are named as their self-belief, spirit, drive, focus, compassion and confidence.

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TV adverts build on the idea that young ambitious people may feel undervalued and want a job with purpose.

Would-be recruits are shown at home or work, with others calling out their stereotypes, before the scene changes to show them in the Army roles including as soldiers assisting on humanitarian missions in war-torn villages and supporting on a hurricane relief effort.

The adverts are the latest part of a recruitment campaign which has previously drawn criticism suggesting it makes the Army appear ‘soft’. Topics included the emotional benefit of the strong bonds of being in the Army and inclusivity.

<em>The campaign has been designed to show the Army looks beyond young stereotypes (PA)</em>
The campaign has been designed to show the Army looks beyond young stereotypes (PA)

What may be seen as weaknesses may be seen as strengths by the Army, according to Maj Gen Nanson.

He said: ‘The Army sees people differently and we are proud to look beyond the stereotypes and spot the potential in young people, from compassion to self-belief.’

Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson described the campaign as ‘a powerful call to action that appeals to those seeking to make a difference as part of an innovative and inclusive team’.

He said: ‘Now all jobs in the Army are open to men and women. The best just got better.’

It comes as the British Army failed to meet recruitment targets as it ‘under-estimated the complexity of what it was trying to achieve’ when it embarked on a project with outsourcing giant Capita, according to a National Audit Office (NAO) report in December.

<em>The campaign comes as the British Army failed to meet recruitment targets (PA)</em>
The campaign comes as the British Army failed to meet recruitment targets (PA)

Capita was controversially awarded the £495 million contract for Army recruitment in 2012, but the Army has not recruited the number of soldiers it requires in any year since the contract began.

The Commons Defence Committee was told in October that the Army currently has 77,000 fully trained troops compared with a target of 82,500.

Figures relate to half of regular soldier applicants in the first six months of 2018-19.

A total of 47% of applicants dropped out of the process voluntarily in 2017-18, and both the Army and Capita believe the length of the process is a significant factor in this, the report said.

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