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Insights & Publications
Original research and market analysis from the RB Consulting team — focused on Indonesian consumers, emerging segments, and the trends shaping business decisions.
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Your Parents Are Not Who You Think They Are
The typical picture of an ageing Indonesian? Inactive. No spending power. Just sitting at home, watching TV. Waiting. This picture is wrong. I have been studying this segment for several years. Two studies — a larger one in 2023 (200 seniors aged 55–75) and a more recent one in 2026 (44 seniors aged 60+ and 45 adult children) — point in the same direction. The senior market in urban Indonesia is more active, more motivated, and more misunderstood than most people assum
Iwan Murty
Jun 133 min read


Personal Care Is the Real Aspiration Category For Indonesia's Youngest Gen Z
When we asked 5,027 SMK students what they would upgrade first if their income doubled, food came last. Gadgets came fourth. Clothing came second. Personal care came third — ahead of gadgets and food, behind only saving and clothing. For a category often treated as low-priority in youth marketing, that ranking deserves attention. Among female students, it ranks second. Above clothing. Above gadgets. Above everything except saving. Among males, it barely registers. The Numbers
RB Consulting
Jun 133 min read


The F&B ParadoxWhy Indonesia's Youngest Consumers Prioritise Food — But Won't Pay More for It
Ask an SMK student in Indonesia what they would spend on if money were only enough for one thing. More than half give the same answer: food and drinks. Now ask what they would upgrade first if their income doubled. Only 2 in 100 say F&B. That is the F&B paradox. The category is essential — not aspirational. Those two things are not the same, and brands that treat them as the same are building the wrong strategy. What the Data Shows The IYG Study 2026 surveyed 5,027 SMK studen
Iwan Murty
Jun 133 min read


6 in 10 Young Indonesians Would Save First. So Why Does Only 1 in 8 Have a Savings Account?
Ask any SMK student in Indonesia what they would do if their income suddenly increased, and six out of ten will give you the same answer: save or invest more. That is not a guess. It is what 3,087 out of 5,027 students told us — unprompted, as their single top priority — in the Indonesia's Youngest Generation (IYG) Study 2026, a quantitative survey conducted across 20 provinces in May 2026. The finding is striking. But the more interesting question is the one right next to it
RB Consulting
May 294 min read


Redefining Success: Young Indonesians' Shift Toward Meaningful Careers
Marketing Research Study by RB Consulting about Young Indonesians apsiration about work and career
Iwan Murty
May 13, 20242 min read
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