There is a behavior sweeping boardrooms and research labs that most executives have not named yet. Millions of people, especially those under 30 are talking to their AI tools the way they talk to their closest friends. They apologize when they close an app. They thank chatbots for good answers. They feel genuinely hurt when a virtual assistant misunderstands them. This is not a glitch in human behavior. It is anthropomorphism. And it is one of the most commercially powerful forces in technology today.
Anthropomorphism is simply the tendency to project human traits onto non-human things. It is why children name their stuffed animals and why sailors once saw faces in storm clouds. But in the age of large language models and emotionally designed chatbots the scale of this tendency has exploded in ways researchers are only beginning to understand.
Why Gen Z Is the Epicenter
No generation is more primed for anthropomorphism than Gen Z. They are the first cohort to grow up with voice assistants as household fixtures and AI companions as app-store staples. A 2025 study in the International Journal on Advanced Science, Engineering and Information Technology confirmed that Gen Z users demonstrate significantly stronger emotional attachment to AI tools than older cohorts and are more likely to assign human qualities such as warmth and intent to their interactions. The study found that emotional attachment directly predicts continued use and deeper integration into daily life.
A parallel 2025 research paper on technological anthropomorphism and Generation Z found that Gen Z participants in its sample were more emotionally engaged with AI systems such as ChatGPT and Alexa than with comparable peer interactions in experimental settings.
The Business Engine Behind the Trend
Companies are not passive observers here. They are active architects. Giving AI tools a name and a voice and a personality is a deliberate design strategy. Research published in Frontiers in Computer Science in 2025 found that anthropomorphic design in chatbot avatars – soft expressions, friendly gestures and empathetic responses – significantly increased perceived empathy and trust. Trust in turn was the single strongest predictor of user satisfaction and long-term engagement.
A 2025 review by Emerald Publishing in Young Consumers journal studying 282 Gen Z visitors interacting with a service robot found that social capability and warmth both anthropomorphic qualities that drove both trust and consumer wellbeing simultaneously. The implications for product teams are enormous: humanizing your AI does not just feel better for users. It grows loyalty and revenue.
What This Means Right Now
Anthropomorphism is not something we can design away. It is simply how humans make sense of the world. Gen Z has taught us that the question is not whether people will form emotional connections with AI, but whether those connections will be built on clarity or illusion. The companies that lead tomorrow will be the ones that choose clarity. They will design relationships at scale that are warm, useful, honest and never pretending to be more than they are. For executives still focused on efficiency alone, the message is this: your customers already feel something about your AI. The question is whether you’ll help them feel something true.


