Generations At Work
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Transcript of Generations At Work
Presented by Crystal Olig & Dave Baldwin for MT Business Technologies June 4, 2012
HELLO THERE!
Crystal Olig Account Services Manager, Oxiem Interactive Blogger, Digital Marketer, Dog Lover, Husker Fan, Wife & Mom-to-Be
[email protected] @whYgenY on Twitter
whYgenY.wordpress.com
More: Professional digital marketing resume and portfolio: http://visualcv.com/crystalolig
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/crystalaolig Brazen Careerist: http://www.brazencareerist.com/profile/crystal-olig
Find this presentation online at: slideshare.net/crystalaolig
BACKGROUND Past Speaking Engagements: • Panelist, Phoenix Public Relations Society of America, Seminar on “What’s Next for 2009” (January 2009) • Selected as featured blog author, Brazen Careerist Blog, Multiple topics & posts (2009/2010)
• Speaker, Denison University, Presentation on “Gen Y-ers Who Get It” (April 2010) • Speaker & Panelist, Columbus Young Professionals Conference, “Personal Branding for Gen-Y” (April 2010)
• Speaker, 28th Annual Entrepreneurship Education FORUM with Rick Coplin, “Teaching Entrepreneurship to a Digital Generation” (November 2010)
• Panelist, Ohio Growth Summit, “Understanding the Natives, Looking at the Web from a Gen Y Lens” (June 2011)
Other appearances on the topic of changing technology and marketing:
• Education Marketing Online: Social Media, Search Marketing & Websites • Online Education and Marketing in Schools
• Does Your Website Stink? • Search Engine Marketing Workshop: The Basics of SEO & SEM
• Basics of Web Marketing for Small & Local Businesses – Reynoldsburg Chamber
Agenda • Who are the Millenials? • Gen Y Facts & Figures • Organizational Change is
in the Water • Office of the Future • Human Resources • Managerial Skills
Breakouts: • Virtual panel • Quiz & Assessments • Discussion • Mind Map
HELLO THERE!
“Gotta keep learning. Gotta keep moving. All the stuff you’ve forgotten, I’ll never have to know. Half the stuff you remember, I’ll never have to know. That just means I’m way past halfway to catching up to you. It’s the obsolescence cure getting steeper and steeper. It makes it a whole lot easier for a guy my age to catch up to the more experienced people.” Not Everyone Gets a Trophy: How to Manage Gen Y by Bruce Tulgan
Q. How Millenial Are You?
Take the quiz.
HOW MILLENNIAL ARE YOU?
Credit: Pew Research Center, 2010
HOW MILLENNIAL ARE YOU?
Credit: Pew Research Center, 2010
GEN Y PERSPECTIVES
I am…
• connected professionally to more than 500 people on Linked In
• more likely to have your e-mail than your phone number
• friends with more than 900 people on Facebook
• a second language-speaker
• a college graduate
• six jobs into my career
• a laid-off worker
• a digital native
• a DIYer
GEN Y PERSPECTIVES
• 38% have tattoos
• 75% have a social profile
• 50% favor gay marriage
• 64% believe in God
• 37% are unemployed or out of the labor force
• 41% have a full time job
• 1/3 are receiving finanical assistance from their families
• 13% of 22- to 29-year-olds have moved in with their parents after living on their own
Study of the 50 million Millenials 18 or older by the Pew Research Center, 2010
WORD DEFINITION !!!!! @ *action*
#fail Aight b4 brb BTW LOL LMAO TTYL
DEFINITION EXAMPLE USAGE
GEN Y TRANSLATOR
WORD DEFINITION !!!!! So amazing! Wow @ At
*action* Right now I’m doing this
#fail That did not go well. Aight Alight
b4 Before brb Be Right Back
BTW By The Way LOL Laugh Out Lout
LMAO Laughing My @$$ off TTYL Talk to You Later
OMG Oh My Gosh/God!
GEN Y TRANSLATOR EXAMPLE USAGE Puppies!!! I’m @ the pool. *hug* Fell down stairs. #fail “Do you want to go?”/ “Aight” Call you b4 I leave Got a call. BRB. BTW, she was late today. He did what?! LOL! I can’t believe he said that. LMAO. Gotta go, TTYL. OMG, what happened?
ZOMG, WOOT, ROTFLCOPTER, TOMOZ, REDONKULOUS
GENERATIONS TODAY
• Greatest Generation pre-1928 • Silent Generation children of the Depression
• Baby Boomers the hippie kids
• Gen X the latchkey kids
• Gen Y or Millenials the trophy kids: 60 – 70
• Gen Z or Tweens the alpha kids
GENERATIONS TODAY
Credit: Iconoculture, Generations At Work, Robinson & Elfering
Millenials are the most socially and diversely tolerant generation ever, the most educated and technologically savvy generation ever, and also the most sheltered & structured generation in our country’s history. Managing the Millenials
NEGATIVE PERCEPTIONS
Millenials…
• are entitled
• are needy
• are disrespectful
• are unmotivated
• are disloyal
• have short attention spans
• have helicopter parents
• want a trophy just for showing up
1 in 3 is not Causasian. 1 in 4 comes from a single-parent home. 3 in 4 have working mothers; and in two parent homes, children get more time with their parents than they did 25 years ago. Managing the Millenials
GEN Y PERSPECTIVES
Credit: Pew Research Center, 2010
GEN Y EXPECTATIONS
Credit: “Chasing the American Dream: Recent College Graduates and the Great Recession,” Heldrich Center for Workforce Development. via NYTimes.com, Economix blog
RECESSION IMPACT
The next pay gap? Generation, not gender.
• 40% of Millenials have been at their jobs less than 12 months
• Pay increases dropped from 3.5% in 2009 to 1/9% in 2010
• 20% of Millenials have seen at least one pay cut since 2008.
• 14% suffered a layoff (compared to 8% of Boomers)
Credit: Forbes, January 5, 2011
Millenials move in. Gen Xers move up. Boomers move beyond (a little later than planned) The collision of generations creates tension, and opportunity… and everyone has to adjust
REVERSE AGEISM What is it? Ageism, or age discrimination is stereotyping and discriminating against individuals or groups because of their age. It is a set of beliefs, attitudes, norms, and values used to justify age based prejudice, discrimination, and subordination.
What to avoid: • Asking someone his or her age • Questions like, “Do you even know what a fax machine is?”
• How long have you been doing this? I need to talk to someone experienced. • “You probably don’t remember this but…” • Outdated cultural references. i.e. Laugh-in = Saturday Night Live, American
Bandstand = American Idol, The Johnny Carson Show = Jay, Letterman or Conan
GENERATIONS AT WORK
Key Points of Tension:
• Technology
• Communication
• Definitions of success
• Space and (my) place
“When managers properly identify the points of tension, disconnects can be reframes as opportunities to connect and build trust.” Managing the Millenials, Espinoza et al
GENERATIONS AT WORK
Gen Y Gen X Boomers
TECHNOLOGY BY GENERATION
• GEN Y: Technology is everything
• GEN X: Technology keeps work & personal separate
• BOOMERS: Technology is work
TECHNOLOGY BY GENERATION
TECHNOLOGY BY GENERATION
BOOMERS
GEN X
GEN Y
Two-thirds of all Boomers agree that PDA and mobile phones contribute to the decline of proper workplace etiquette. Less than half of Gen Y workers agree. Only 17% of Boomers believe using laptops or PDAs during in-person meetings is “efficient” while more than one-third of Gen Y do. Only 28% of Boomers think blogging about work-related issues is acceptable, while 40% of Millenial workers do. LexisNexis survey, ReadWriteWeb, April 24, 2009
TECHNOLOGY POINTERS
• Recognize and encourage experimenting with new tools when the situation allows
• Locking down social media rarely succeeds and can backfire – using it well at a corporate level is more effective
• Don’t deflate by complimenting technology instead of the person
• Utilize modern technology like smart phones, tablet computers, useful systems
• Check out: • Google products – chat, drive, Google + • Yammer – internal network • Skype
TECHNOLOGY EXPECTATIONS
A recent Accenture survey indicates that Millennials: • Increasingly choose their employer based on access to leading technology.
• Prefer to choose the computer, mobile device and applications they use at work.
• Express disappointment with the quality of employer-provided emerging technologies.
• Favor text messaging or instant messaging over e-mail.
• Routinely bypass corporate approval procedures when using devices and applications.
• Regularly download nonstandard technologies not available at work.
• Exhibit different notions of online privacy than older workers.
Global Research on Millennials’ Use of Technology, Accenture, Link
TECHNOLOGY EXPECTATIONS
• Company cell phone
• “I can get to everything I need online” – cloud computing, virtual networks
• Laptop or up-to-date computer (within 5 years)
• Ability to install & try programs
• Instant tools like IM, chat
• Latest programs to accomplish the job
• Up-to-date versions of Microsoft products
• Open & flexible work/project spaces
TECHNOLOGY OPPORTUNITIES
• How to organize and manage information, including: • Email • Files • Data
• Supplements to the on-paper world: • Cloud drives • Virtual networks • Print-to-file • Virtual signatures • Document collaboration
“At least 50% of executives in the U.S. will be eligible to retire in the next 5 years. You might think, ‘Well, that’s ok, we’ll just let the people in the next positions take their place.’ The problem is that the people in the 2nd, 3rd and 4th positions are also Baby Boomers, and they are going to be retiring too,” Managing the Millenials
GETTING GEN Y THROUGH THE DOOR
Hiring & Recruiting
• Share the “soft” stuff – tell future employees what the real day-to-day is life
• Remember, you are being interviewed too
• Bring some salesmanship to the table – why do you love to work here?
• Allow for trial periods or testing during hiring process
• But, never ever B.S. Gen Y sees straight through it.
• Don’t overpromise.
• Create a few key Gen Y friendly talking points: • Flex time • Cool office space • Freedom to pursue personal projects • Ability to volunteer on company time – CSR is important
KEEPING GEN Y
Training & Retaining
• Building a Millenial-friendly culture • Identify your all-star managers and give them a platform • Involve your managers in the conversation • Ask the Millenials
• Create a mentorship program • Actively participate in career-growth planning • Commit to regular and fair performance assesments • Create a full circle of feedback • Make sure your website and other elements of online presence are up-to-date and
reflective of corporate mission & culture
WHAT MILLENIALS WANT AT WORK
• Flexibility: Schedule, process, expectations
• Freedom: To negotiate job description, management’s recognition that they have a life outside of work
• Incenting: Create incentives 20somethings value, clearly and thoroughly state desired outcomes and expectations and provide timely and fair assessment of their performance
• Rewards: Incremental & long-term
• Relationships: Be empathetic, get closer in proximity, be curious about each other, grow them
Nearly three-quarters (72%) of hiring managers said managing mutigenerational work teams poses a challenge. But more than one-third of workers polled felt having a group of employees at different experience levels increases productivity. Robert Half study, July 14, 2010
GENERATIONS AT WORK: MOTIVATION
Incenting that Millenials Like:
• Performance-based compensation
• Praise– personal, written, electronic, public
• Support & involvement
• Autonomy & authority
• Flexible working hours
• Learning & development opportunities
• Manager availability & time
Credit: The Management Bible, Bob Nelson & Peter Economy
GENERATIONS AT WORK: MOTIVATION
Non-Monetary Considerations
• Performance-based compensation
• Flexible schedules, location
• Marketable skills – both formal and information training
• Access to decisions makers
• Personal credit for results achieved
• Clear area of responsibility
• Chance for creative expression
ON COMPANY LOYALTY: “In this way, you are searching for a company that deserves your loyalty. It’s brand will be in line with the image you have of yourself.”
GENERATIONS AT WORK: FEEDBACK Dealing with Gen Y’s Preoccupation with Feedback: • Clearly state the process for decision making • Ask them what they expect to receive for participating • Communicate what you expect from them • Use “what if” scenarios • What if I don’t take your advice • What if I make a decision you don’t like?
• When you are close to a decision, increase communication • Always have a debriefing meeting to discuss the decision that was made • Identify the contribution of each team member • Ask them what they learned from the process • Tell them what you learned from the process • Explain how you came to a final decision
Credit: Managing the Millenials
“Suspend the bias of your own experience” Managing the Millenials
MANAGERIAL ADAPTATION & GROWTH
Perspective The Effective Managers The Challenged Managers
Adaptability Talked about their own need to manage in today’s world
Others need to change to make it in the real world
Self-Efficacy Believed they could do something
Believed there was nothing to do about it
Confidence Allowed subordinates to challenge
Sanctioned or punished challengers
Power Used the power of relationship
Only power felt was positional authority
Energy Working with 20somethings made to feel younger
Working with 20somethings made to feel older
Success Saw themselves as key to 20somethings success
Saw the 20somethings as an impediment to own success
“Quite frankly, there is an unrealized expectation that experience and position should count for something in the eyes of their subordinates,” Managing the Millenials
MANAGERIAL ADAPTATION & GROWTH
Perceived Orientation Millenial Intrinsic Value Required Managerial Competency
Autonomous Work-life balance Flexing
Entitled Reward Incenting
Imaginative Self-expression Cultivating
Self-absorbed Attention Engaging
Defensive Achievement Disarming
Abrasive Informality Self-differentiating
Myopic Simplicity Broadening
Unfocused Multitasking Directing
Indifferent Meaning Motivating
DISCUSSION
§ What facts of information surprised you the most or contradicted your current thinking?
§ Do you think MT as an organization is attractive to young people as a potential employer?
§ Do you see any connection between this information and MT's productivity, employee relations, and performance assessments?
§ Do you see any connection between this information and MT's opportunity to attract new younger customers?
§ What information do you still need to guide changes at MT (re: staff and customers) re: Millenials?
FILL YOUR MIND
• Not Everyone Gets a Trophy by Bruce Tulgan
• The Trophy Kids Grow Up by Ron Alsop
• Managing the Millennials: Discover the Core Competencies for Managing Today's Workforce
• Brazen Careerist.com
• GenNext Free Study (registration required)
• http://www.redtreeleadership.com/millennials/FreeGRI.php
• http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/series/the-millennial-generation/