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Media must catch up to Gen Z’s video playbook
New DCN research explores the short-form video habits of younger audiences to reveal critical insights and an actionable strategic approach
May 22, 2025 | By Jason Kint, CEO – DCN@jason_kint
At some point in 2020, accelerated by the pandemic and the kids using endless hours of TikTok scrolling as a coping mechanism, short-form video surged into a major part of modern media consumption. Even for those of us who grew up on cable TV and later binged on Netflix, Gen Z is reshaping how we discover, consume, and engage with video content. Younger audiences have turned scrollable, snackable video into something so much more satisfying than a Quibi; it’s now a cultural mainstay.
That’s the wake-up call from our latest DCN research, Decoding Video Content Engagement: Gen Z & Gen Y in Focus, a two-part study conducted with Magid. We launched the project last year with in-depth, hour-long qualitative interviews to get a baseline on the latest language and media mindset of younger audiences. We then took a quantitative dive into what we now see as a landmark report for DCN and its member companies. To be clear: the numbers don’t just hint at a subtle shift. They chart a generational rewrite of what video means and what audiences expect it to do.
The headline? They don’t watch. They participate.
Simply put, video is no longer a passive experience characterized by a surge of short-form experiences on social platforms. Our research shows that 92% of Gen Z interacts with video on social platforms at least once a week – liking, commenting, remixing and sharing. But even more striking, nearly two-thirds (64%) of teens aged 13–17 create and post original video content weekly. Notably, this statistic drops materially to 40% for ages 18-22 (the back half of Gen Z). That’s a clarion call for those seeking to understand the expectations of the next wave of digital natives and why we labeled them “The Creator Generation” in this report.
For the youngest Gen Z users, “watching” isn’t a lean back experience. It’s a ticket to creative expression. Video isn’t something they just watch. It’s something they do. This dynamic is upending the traditional hierarchies of content and control. The line between viewer and creator is fading and with it, many of the historic relationships between storytelling, advertising, and brands.
Creators are the new gatekeepers
In the past, a media brand’s value lived in logo recognition and distribution demand. Today, particularly with the youngest audiences, it’s more likely to live in the hands of creators with cultural credibility and fluency. These individual creators are now the benchmark: remarkably they beat out all other creator types in being perceived as more creative, entertaining, interesting, and informative.
These creators are not the typical influencers posting their user-generated content to make a paycheck. They are micro media empires of all backgrounds. And they’re setting the tone for what today’s audience deems engaging, real, and worth watching. All of this accumulates in more trust.
And that trust gap is telling. While 88% of younger audiences trust friends, family, and creators, traditional brands fall significantly behind even though they’re visible. Yes, 93% of Gen Z still says they often see brand content. But awareness isn’t the same as engagement. And in a world where users can scroll past your video in a second (with a paltry three seconds being the magical sweet spot for nearly half of the young users in the research), that difference can be everything.
Authenticity isn’t a bonus – it’s the baseline
If you’re still investing in glossy, highly produced videos that feel like they came from a corporate studio instead of an actual human being – stop. The bar has moved. Individual creators are not major media brands. Think about it: People are flawed. In a world where the individual creator is more trusted, entertaining and engaging, a perfectly pressed and buttoned up production will not resonate like a rumpled shirt and bit of bedhead.
Authenticity is the baseline. When asked what they value most in video content, Gen Z chose originality, honesty, and authenticity far ahead of production value or polish. This generation can smell marketing a mile away and they’ll scroll right past it – teaching the algorithm you aren’t worth their precious time.
Instead, they want content that reflects them: unfiltered, participatory, and emotionally resonant. Think behind-the-scenes looks, first-person storytelling, raw filming, and creator collaborations that feel like a natural fit rather than transactional development deal.
So, what should media companies do?
We know the stakes are high. Premium publishers – many of whom DCN proudly represents – are once again navigating a digital ecosystem shaped by generational shifts, platform upheaval, and algorithmic opacity described to our researchers innocently as “TikTok magic.” However, this moment is also an opportunity.
Here’s how media brands can strategically respond:
1. Design for engagement, not impressions
Simply showing up isn’t enough anymore. Content needs to invite participation. Whether it’s Q&As, remixable challenges, or comment-driven formats, the most successful brands treat viewers like collaborators, not consumers.
2. Co-create with cultural insiders
Want to build trust and relevance? Partner with the creators your audience already respects. Not as brand spokespeople, but as co-storytellers. This isn’t about inserting your brand into youth culture. It’s about amplifying voices that already move your audience.
3. Reimagine platform strategy
TikTok is not YouTube. Instagram is certainly not Facebook (even if it’s the same parent company). And your content shouldn’t be a one-size-fits-all proposition. Create native video strategies that reflect the tone, pacing, and expectations of each platform. If you can’t do it everywhere at once in ways that resonate on each platform then pick your platform(s) of choice based on your content, audience and opportunity.
4. Lead with values – and humanity
Gen Z and Gen Y want entertainment. But they also care about who is behind the content. Our research confirms that younger users reward brands that are transparent, socially aware, and human. If your brand voice on social sounds like it was built by a committee, it’s time to revisit the script.
5. Build with the “SHARES” formula
If you want engagement, your video content should tap at least one of the six drivers identified by our DCN research team. Our SHARES formula – which includes Storytelling, Humor, Authenticity, Raw, Engagement, and Surprise – isn’t merely a checklist. It’s a roadmap for emotional connection and engagement.
The future Is participatory
The question isn’t whether Gen Z and Gen Y will continue to redefine video. They already have. The question is whether the larger media industry will listen.
At DCN, we believe that high-quality, trusted content is more important than ever to the future. But trust now resides in how and where you show up, not just what you say. If media brands want to stay relevant, we must not only reflect the values of these generations. We must also create space for them to shape the stories themselves.
Premium media brands like our DCN members have a powerful edge: credibility, creativity, and a direct relationship with their audiences. But competing in this new era of short-form video requires humility, agility, and a willingness to let go of legacy thinking.
This isn’t a pivot to video. It’s a reinvention.