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Generation X

Are Gen Y really that different from Gen X?

by Sally Bibb on April 12, 2008

This is a question that we get asked time and time again. Our Gen Y research tells us that there are some clear and distinguishing characteristics which are mainly to do with the fact that Gen Y are much more driven by self development and growth eg opportunities to be mentored, doing work that plays to their strengths. Whereas Gen X were/are much more concerned with security-based motivators ie secure job, salary, status, career ladder.

However it is also true that Gen Y is demanding from work things that Gen X would have quite liked too but we were not bold enough to demand.

I like this blog post from Ryan Healy. He is talking about the USA but what he says is applicable elsewhere. He says that Gen Y have the opportunity to make the workplace better for all of us for these three reasons:

Y Has Better Demographics

Generation X was simply too small to force any kind of change. There are about 50 million Gen Xers in the United States compared to nearly 76 million baby boomers and 77 million Millennials. When Gen Xers graduated college, the jobs were not there. With only 50 million people to fill the positions, and plenty of boomers around to fill the middle management jobs, companies had their pick of candidates. Employers took advantage by hiring only the top candidates and paying them as little as possible.

Generation Y is 50% bigger than Generation X, and with Xers dropping out of the workforce to take care of their children, employees, not management, have the power and even a recession won’t slow down the job market. Generation Y has the same confidence, the same ambition and the same savviness as Generation X had in their twenties, but the demographics are in Gen Y’s favor. Y can ask for change and actually get it.

Y Has Better Technology

Generation X came of age when the internet was just coming into common, public use. There were great new technologies and plenty of opportunities to strike it rich in Silicon Valley, much like there are today. But the 90s were still a time of traditional media and marketing to the masses. So if you wanted to make your voice heard, you had to pay thousands for a TV commercial or somehow become a celebrity. Today, anyone with a bad job can start a blog and tell the world why work should be better. Plus, where there was no easy way to create a collective Gen X voice, the Web is now all about community. And Generation Y embraces the idea of community like no other generation.

Y Has Better Teamwork

Generation Y is the ultimate “team” generation. Despite what the media says, it’s not about us versus the rest of you. It’s about how can we all work together? How can we all be happy?

We’re not competing now and we never were competing with the Baby Boomers. We’re the entry level grunts and they’re the big shots in the corner office. We don’t threaten their jobs and they don’t make us work long hours because we don’t report to them. But Gen X hated, and still hates, the Boomers. It makes sense. The baby boomers were directly managing the Gen Xers, and because of the demographics I pointed out above, the Gen Xers had to work the long hours or risk being fired and (easily) replaced.

Ryan is right. Unfortunately, some employers are still thinking of Gen Y as a problem/risk/challenge. Wrong. Gen Y presents a fantastic opportunity for positive change in the workplace: they are great collaborators, they are prepared to challenge the status quo, they have passion and they won’t put up with some of the nonsense that people like me (I confess I did!) did when I started out.

Sally

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Brazen careerists

by Sally Bibb on February 5, 2008

Penelope Trunk has written an ‘alternative’ career guide to help Gen Ys and Gen Xers steer their way through the career maze.

In this excerpt from an interview she gives her views on what to do if you work for a terrible boss and other interesting questions.

Question: How much money does it take to be happy?

Answer: It takes about $40,000. It does not matter how many kids you have or what city you live in—that’s splitting hairs because peoples’ happiness levels are largely based on their level of optimism and the quality of their relationships. So as long as you have enough money for food and shelter, your optimism level kicks in to dictate how happy you are.

Question: Is it more important to be competent or likable?

Answer: People would actually rather work with someone who is incompetent and likeable than competent and unlikable. [click to continue…]

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Spoken like a true Gen Xer

by Sally Bibb on February 1, 2008

I know I am supposed to be more understanding than most on the subject of generations and the differences between us. But last night I struggled to keep my Gen X work values to myself.

I was speaking to a 17 year old about his problems with college. He is doing a 2 year course that will allow him to do work that he is passionate about. But he hates the course, isn’t keeping up with it, doesn’t like the way the tutors are teaching and has, so far, handed all his assignments in late. It indeed sounded like the teaching methods are very old fashioned and uninspiring to Gen Y.

But the young man in question told me he messes around in class, can’t motivate himself to do his work on time and is thinking of dropping out of the course, even though he really wants the qualification. I felt like saying a number of things including: “you have to work hard for what you want”, “struggle through now and the reward will come later”, ”just stop messing around and apply yourself”, “the teachers are unlikely to change their teaching methods for you, get over it”, and all sorts of variations.

The killer was when he huffed and said “they just don’t realise we are a different generation” – the subtext being that the older generation should make allowances and change their ways. It’s unlikely to happen I reckon. It is more a case of each generation needing to understand the other and meet half way. Maybe I will email the college and offer them some help…..

Sally Bibb

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