Beyond the Golden Arches: How Two McDonald’s Marketers Win Gen Z

MASTERS IN MARKETING

No fluff, only first-hand expert advice and curated marketing trends from across the web.

90% of the U.S. population has eaten at a McDonald’s over the past year.

Whether a Big Mac is your drunk go-to, or you like to bribe your kids with Happy Meals on long car rides, the point holds: McDonald‘s is one of the most popular and long-lasting brands we’ve got.

We all take it for granted. Except maybe we shouldn’t.

There‘s a reason McDonald’s ranks australia telegram data among the top 10 most magnetic brands for Gen Z — surpassing Sephora, NFL, and Starbucks.

And it’s not the nostalgia factor… At least, not entirely.

To get to the bottom of this, I sat down with two experts — Anna Engel, Director of brand, content, and culture at McDonald‘s, and Nathaniel Gaynor, Brand marketing manager at McDonald’s — whose full-time job is to make McDonald’s cool to Gen Zers.

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Lesson 1: Marketing should be symbiotic.

Engel thinks of campaign elements — whether it’s a new food item, a digital campaign element, or a social media post — as “ingredients.”

Of course she does.

And what she loves about Gen Z is how they‘ve created a symbiotic relationship with McDonald’s campaign “ingredients”. Engel‘s team doesn’t just create content for Gen Z. Gen Z creates content for them, too.

As Engel told me, Gen Zers often take brand 7 e-commerce tools for your online business (2025) ingredients and “create something new with them — that’s what excites us and motivates us,” she says. “For instance, they might create a narrative or an anime poster for a campaign… Things like that.”

Let’s also address the elephant in the room — why have they created an entirely separate Gen Z marketing team?

Because “Gen Z is driving culture,“ Engel explained to me. ”And our ambition is to continue to be a cultural icon.”

Lesson 2: Connect with your customers in the wild.

Every year, one of McDonald’s text services agencies takes a road trip. (Wholesome, I know.)

“The Fan Truth Road Trip helps us understand who our fans are and why they connect with our brand,” Gaynor says. “We see our fans pulling our brand into many different parts of culture — whether that’s anime, fashion, art, or gaming.”

Engel and Gaynor’s team then takes these learnings to create authentic experiences for their Gen Z fans.

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