A group G is said to be 3/2-generated if every nontrivial element belongs to a generating pair. It is easy to see that if G has this property, then every proper quotient of G is cyclic. In this paper we prove that the converse is true for finite groups, which settles a conjecture of Breuer, Guralnick and Kantor from 2008. In fact, we prove a much stronger result, which solves a problem posed by Brenner and Wiegold in 1975. Namely, if G is a finite group and every proper quotient of G is cyclic, then for any pair of nontrivial elements x1,x2∈G, there exists y∈G such that G=⟨x1,y⟩=⟨x2,y⟩. In other words, s(G)⩾2, where s(G) is the spread of G. Moreover, if u(G) denotes the more restrictive uniform spread of G, then we can completely characteri...