Friday, April 10, 2026

 


Is Your Generational Influence Showing in Your Writing?

By Heather Weidner

Recently, I’ve taken several management classes for work about communication and coaching different generations in the workforce, and some of the discussions of each cohort’s preferences and experiences made me think about my writing.

The generations and their birth years have been defined as: 

The Generation

Birth Years

Description

Greatest Generation

1901-1927

Resilient, came of age and fought/supported WWII

Silent Generation

1928-1945

Influenced by the effects of the Great Depression and WWII

Baby Boomers

 

 

Generation Jones

1946-1964

 

 

1956-1965

Post-war expansion and social change

 

Came of age during the Vietnam War and the civil unrest

Generation X

1965-1980

Latch-key kids, self-sufficient

Millennials or Generation Y

1981-1996

First generation Internet and known for work-life balance

Generation Z

1997-2010

Digital natives or iPad kids

Generation Alpha

2010-2024

21st Century kids

Generation Beta or Sigma Generation

2025-2039

AI and Automation generation

As I age and some of my newer series’ sleuths get younger, I found that there are some key things to be aware of to ensure that my writing is accurate.

Do I have the slang right? Are the expressions from the correct time period? We often do a lot of factchecking of things in our research, but dialogue is often overlooked. Here are some examples from each group. Sometimes the terms overlap generations, and other times, you need a dictionary, encyclopedia, a search engine, or an AI chat to translate. 

The Generation

Slang for Fabulous

Slang for Awful

Greatest Generation

Swell, grand, top-notch, first rate

Lousy, rotten, no good, the pits

Silent Generation

Neat, keen, peachy, dandy

Crummy, bum deal,

for the birds

Baby Boomers

Far out, groovy, cool, right on

Bummer, drag, bogus, bad trip

Generation X

Awesome, sweet, cool beans, rad

Lame, weak, harsh

Millennials or Generation Y

Awesome, epic, legit, amazing

Trash, cringe, fail, the worst

Generation Z

Slay, fire slaps, lit, hits different

Cheugy, sus

Generation Alpha

Slay, bussin’, fire, GOAT, cooked

Mid (mediocre), trash, NPC behavior (Non-player character in a video game)

Generation Beta

It’s Too Early to Tell

It’s Too Early to Tell

Your language choice is influenced by your experiences and those around you. I’m GenX, and I grew up with Baby Boomer teachers and co-workers. I tend to use slang from both of those groups. Now that I have more Gen Zs in the workforce, I’m adapting to a whole new set of words. (Some days, it’s like learning a foreign language.)

Do my allusions fit the age or experience of my character? When I first started working, the Silent Generation or the Boomers would always talk about where they were when certain historic events happened. (My generation was not born when Kennedy was shot, we were toddlers when Apollo 11 landed on the moon, and we were in elementary school when Nixon resigned.) I have a Boomer on my team who often doesn’t get why some of his teammates don’t get his jokes and cultural references. (“Seinfeld,” and “Cheers” are available in reruns or on streaming, but Gen Y and Gen Alpha didn’t watch “Must See TV.” They are used to on-demand not cable or network television.)

Do my historical and cultural references match the age group? As authors, we check our facts to ensure authenticity, but sometimes we make mistakes when we reference things that happened before a certain group was born or when they had to be in bed before “Late Night TV.” (I didn’t get to see “Saturday Night Live” live until the eighties because of a nine o’clock bedtime.)

Does my technology reference the correct age group? Just ask someone younger than you what the little icon next to “Save” is in most computer applications. They all know the button is  for saving, but those who didn’t use floppy disks have no idea what the picture is. (My Gen Z niece calls record albums “big CDs.”) I discovered when I did a ride along with my local police department that some of my law enforcement references were dated. (Most use digital fingerprinting now.) If you write police procedurals, make sure you keep up with the new technology.

There is so much research out there now about the different generations, their experiences, and their preferences, and if you want an immersive lesson in jargon, spend an hour or two watching TikTok.

For additional information on the generations, check out:

A Year-by-Year Guide to the Different Generations

The Changing Generational Values – Imagine | Johns Hopkins University

Age Range by Generation | Beresford Research


Through the years, Heather Weidner has been a cop’s kid, technical writer, editor, college professor, software tester, and IT manager. She writes the Pearly Girls Mysteries, the Delanie Fitzgerald Mysteries, The Jules Keene Glamping Mysteries, and The Mermaid Bay Christmas Shoppe Mysteries. 

Her short stories appear in a variety of anthologies, and she has non-fiction pieces in Promophobia and The Secret Ingredient: A Mystery Writers’ Cookbook.

Originally from Virginia Beach, Heather has been a mystery fan since Scooby-Doo and Nancy Drew. She lives in Central Virginia with her husband and a crazy Mini Aussie Shepherd.