
Posted Monday, 1 March at 2:47 pm in People

Dear Aunty,
PLEASE HELP!
I’m fed up with these twentysomethings with their tweets and their texts and their three-second attention spans, rocking up late to work every day oblivious to the needs of anyone but themselves. Apparently I’m meant to call these flickr-and-you’ll-miss-it types ‘colleagues’ and interact with them on a professional level. God only knows how. I mean, I turn up to work every day on time and apply myself with the same passion as I did in my first heady days of employment 18 years ago (and for the record, there was a recession on then too). I get paid a decent wage and I go home satisfied (mostly) with a good day’s toil behind me. I am pleased (even lucky) to be employed and I strive in every way possible to make my job a success – for my employer and myself. So the question I have is: ‘Why is all of that not enough for these so-called millennial babes? What more do they want? What right do they have to complain so much, expect so much, demand so much? And where, oh where, is their loyalty?’
These are just some of the sentiments held by Gen X and baby boomers alike about their fellow cohort, Generation Y (otherwise known as millennials, generation next or the net generation). Indeed, Gen Y is entering the workforce with an entirely different – some might say alien – set of values, attitudes and expectations. As Graham Brown recently wrote for online blog yourLifeWorks, Gen Y ‘are tech-savvy, travel-mad, self-absorbed, peer-pressured, celebrity-obsessed, Facebook-compulsive, iPod-wearing, brand-conscious 20-somethings who live with their parents and show no loyalty to their employer (and that’s the good stuff).’ So how are we expected to work with them? Manage them? Lead them? And when we’ve got over our annoyance and realise that we need them in order to sustain the workforce, how do we attract them? Engage them? Keep them?
An international survey by global workforce solutions leader Kelly Services (the Kelly Global Workforce Index) recently found that communication styles and attitudes toward rewards are key generational differences that affect workplace productivity. Forty per cent of Australian respondents believe that these differences make the workplace more productive; 23 per cent believe they interfere with productivity; and 24 per cent believe they make no difference.
Kelly Services Managing Director, James Bowmer, said that generational differences can sometimes cause friction between employees but, when properly managed, can also be a source of growth. ‘When the differences between the age groups are harnessed effectively, they can provide a powerful stimulus to creativity and productivity. Rather than trying to smother this diversity, good employers are utilising it to generate fresh ideas and new ways of doing business.’
Among the survey’s key findings were:
It has long been acknowledged that age-related differences do have an impact on the way people go about their work. Indeed, this survey showed that Gen Y and Gen X employees are more likely than baby boomers to adapt their communication style when dealing with colleagues from a different generation.
Mr Bowmer said it is important that employers recognise the key differences between the generations and manage them effectively in order to achieve a harmonious balance and a productive work environment. ‘Juggling these pressures is challenging but by addressing issues such as compensation and internal communications amongst others, it is possible to reap the benefit from a diverse group of people, and generate conditions that can help organisations to flourish.’
So how do we go about managing Gen Y in the workplace? The following tips come courtesy of a number of HR consultants and commentators on the web:
So is it a case of managing the unmanageables? Or just a case of changing our expectations?
The Kelly Global Workforce Index is a survey revealing opinions about work and the workplace from a generational viewpoint. Survey results and comments appear courtesy of Kelly Services.
Candice O’Sullivan is Head of Strategy at WellmarkPerspexa, a marketing communications agency proud to have all generations on its books.
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I believe strongly that the generational boundaries applied to the work force confine our thinking into stereotypical categories. Much of this stems from the need to control or ‘make sense of’ the complexities of human nature. When anyone enters a new work environment they can pose a challenge to the groups within the organisation they join irrespective of their generational age. The risk is seeing all people we come into contact with as fitting one set of values or characteristic traits over another. Surely, for the benefits of work place culture, progress and productivity we need to engage with the people we work with and recognise the importance of getting to know the individual and how they can contribute to the wider organisational context. Only then can a work environment be built on mutual trust and respect and real understanding be achieved.
I find it interesting to replace ‘Gen Y’ with ‘people’ in the list above. I don’t think anything on this list could be considered Gen Y specific. For instance: People like to have challenging work that matters. People like to have their good work acknowledged. And, for any age group delaying feedback tends to diminish its relevance.
Substitute as you see fit above and see what you think.
I remain wholly unconvinced (by yet another article about Gen Y) that Gen Y is so completely different.
Final and unrelated point – Am I right in assuming this survey is Australian based? I don;t think these generalisations would hold true in say, SE Asian nations where attitudes (across all generations) to work are extremely different.
Melanie Wilkinson
26 Feb 2010 at 1:26 pm
Definitely a case of changing our expectations, great article Candice