Inspired at Work - Generation Y: Trailblazers or Slackers? - Spring 08 PDF Print E-mail
Written by Christine Hart   

A younger generation, viewed as slackers by Baby Boomers, enters the workforce and changes the way the business world runs.


Change takes generations to show up in the mended and re-woven fabric of society. In the case of the workplace, change is happening faster and more often, most noticeably as the latest wave of workers - Generation Y - enters the labour force.

They're also known as Millennials; Canada's up-and-coming professionals who are bringing new outlooks, skills, strengths, and challenges to their employers.

"A variety of pivotal societal factors have shaped how younger workers approach employment. The dual trends of corporate downsizing and job outsourcing have collectively created a 'free agent' mentality; today's younger workers are highly mobile and not loyal to employers in the same way as past generations," says David Morrison, President of Twentysomething Inc., a Philadelphia-based global consulting firm dedicated to Generation Y.

What effect do these new attitudes have in the workplace? If you haven't been following North American business news, the key issue many Baby Boomer professionals have with Gen-Y is that while poised to retire, Boomers are concerned that their successors do not possess the work ethic, social skills, and dedication their jobs require. For Boomers still looking at managing Millennials for years to come, they resent the suggestion that they need to begin 'being nice' or 'hand-holding' and coaching rather than commanding.

"Gen Y was raised during a time where everyone got a prize for participation. Individual accomplishments were subordinated to the common good," says Morrison. He adds, "So, while Gen Y members are excellent team players, they can quickly become lost when assigned individual duties. In addition, they may become uncomfortable with the glare that individual accountability creates," says Morrison.

Jade Zawarski, owner of Jadefish Fashion in Victoria, BC, is a 25-year-old entrepreneur with an iron work ethic and practical business goals.

"I am a very strong, focused designer. I find that I put my business before everything else. Sometimes that means Jadefish is a lot more taken care of than Jade, but my work ethic is forceful, speedy, and right to the point," says Zawarski.

"When I am working for someone else I expect that they are passionate about what they do. I need to learn from my job, feel like I am making a difference for someone, even if it's just for a moment. When I'm my own boss and have an employee, I would expect them to look up to me for answers. I want to be a good boss, so that's what I hope for when I'm working for someone else."

After two years of fashion design training, Zawarski graduated at the top of her class with award-winning designs. An entry-level position in urban Victoria fashion prepared her for running her own business.

"I knew then that I wanted to start up my own little business. I spent six or seven months on new prints, screen building, setting up accounts for wholesale. Then Jadefish was born," says Zawarski.

So far, she has established a vendor booth at a local street market, working every Sunday from April to October. For the moment, Zawarski also works in the restaurant industry while making as much time as she can to do what she loves most.

"I am planning to continue on with the Victoria markets, as well as continue to add more wholesale accounts... eventually start my own store... have my clothing in stores around BC. These are my dreams. How do I expect to achieve them? One day at a time, a lot of hard work, and ambition," says Zawarski.

So is Generation Y really just a hoard of slackers that will revolutionize the workplace for the worse by sheer force of numbers? Are they unreliable and disloyal?

As a group, our newest workers openly question the way traditional business practices affect their careers, their lives, and their overall well-being. What may be perceived as a lack of professionalism could simply be Millennials reshaping the workforce in their own image.

"Having historically empowered young adults at the bottom of the corporate ladder is going to inevitably lead to workplace disruption as well as conflict," says Morrison.

"Within the work force, Boomers often make the natural mistake of drawing on their personal experiences with members of Generation Y - their own children - when interfacing with Gen Y professionals in the workplace."

Morrison also points out that Gen Y is not as uniformly tech savvy as assumed and is much more diverse than many Boomers realize.

"Another widespread misconception that many Boomers have about Gen Y workers is that this cohort is less motivated than previous generations. While Gen Y may require a different set of management tools and incenti[ve] strategies, this audience is just as eager to cultivate meaningful, challenging careers that they can take pride in. The trick is in identifying the right 'hot buttons'," says Morrison.

Young workers experience no reservations about moving home after completing post-secondary school. They also expect more in return from their employers than a paycheck. According to Morrison, they're looking for relationships. With the stability of living at home, Millennials are more likely to quit a job that doesn't meet their needs.

"Gen Y workers are seeking better mentorship at their jobs. Rather than programs that simply provide lip service, they yearn for senior executives to take an active role in their professional development and to simultaneously function as career coaches. After all, who doesn't secretly dream of being hand-picked to become a protÇgÇ?" says Morrison.

He also points out that instability in the world around them has further enhanced Millennials' need for relationship-building. Factors like the war on terrorism, environmental crises, and economic uncertainty have created a climate of pessimism and fear.

"Gen Y quietly yearns for employers that they can develop lasting relationships with. Some envy past generations that were 'lifers' at a single company for their entire professional careers. Gen Y faces what we call 'job insecurity' in that they are the first to feel the brunt of a poor economy and among the last to feel the positive effects of a healthy one. Steps that an organization can take to help its entry-level workers feel both valued and secure in their positions will yield priceless dividends," says Morrison.

Critics call Generation Y softies, but I see a generation of youth raised by Boomer parents who lived through the peak of 20th century equal rights action and growth. We're looking at a generation encouraged to stand up for themselves and value their worth.

"When I was 12 years old my dad passed away; my mom packed us up and moved us to Vernon. After being a stay-at-home-mom for so many years, she enrolled herself in hair school and started a small salon. She's well established now. So in a way I am learning everything I know from her and everything I go through, I know she went through. So my experiences and her experiences are one in the same," says Zawarski.

I'll be interested to see how the workplace changes in the long-term, particularly since I myself flip back and forth between Generation X and Y depending on which source you examine. In typical Millennial style, I choose to refer to Wikipedia, which defines Generation Y broadly:

"The term Generation Y first appeared in an August 1993 magazine AD Age editorial to describe those children born between 1981 - 1995. The scope of the term has changed greatly since then, to include, in many cases, anyone born as early as 1976 and late as 2000."

Wikipedia also suggests that a distinct shift in workplace demographics will take hold around 2011 when the oldest Boomers reach legal retirement age. While older cousins and siblings within Generation X will hold positions in middle and upper management, "the large membership of Generation Y should take up positions in the lower half of the workforce, a process which may have possibly begun, since some definitions have members of Gen Y in their late 20s."

On behalf of Generation Y, I think it's safe to declare - we're not children anymore, we're not all hungry for corporate life and we know the importance of what we have to offer.
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy

Christine Hart
About the author:
Based in Victoria, BC, Christine Hart currently works as freelance writer and communications specialist. In addition to her background as a writer, Christine brings employment counseling experience to her column at Cahoots. She shares her Esquimalt home with two cats, three computers, and her partner of eight years. Trained as a journalist at the University of Victoria, Christine has covered social services, career planning, and youth issues in past articles. She also specializes in web design, desktop publishing, creative non-fiction, and children's literature. In her spare time she enjoys consuming alternative media, painting, photography, blogging and cross-country skiing.

Visit her website at www.christine-hart.com.

Check out the Cahoots Store to purchase some of Christine's work.

Click here to get your copy of Christine's book Watching July from McNally Robinson now!
Read More >>
 
< Prev   Next >

Sponsors

Advertisement

Featured Artist

Life Outside The Box

Editor Notes

Editor's Note


  • As the old wisdom states: in order to understand the future, you need to understand the past. How true is that? The past entices learning, reminds us of what to do and what not to do, teaches us valuable lessons, and shows us from where we have come and how far. Women suffragists have blazed trails for our future, herbal women have taught us how to heal and nurture ourselves, our travels have taught us to value what we have or to reach for a better future, and our innermost desires poke to the surface reminding us to act, that there is more we want to do. Of course, we need to look toward the future, but the wisdom of the past must always be our companion.

    Comments (0)Add Comment

    Write comment

    busy

    Read more...

Podcasts and Video


  • poems from spoken word poet, lisa b's, new CD resonant frequencies

    Honest, raw, and powerful.

    Comments (0)Add Comment

    Write comment

    busy

News From Others

mod_dbrss2 AJAX RSS Reader poweredbysimplepie

Newsflash


Fittingly for our Passion themed issue, we welcome our newest Cahoots Community member, Saskatoon's Positive Passions, which has come on board to sponsor Sarah Stefanson's column, Sense and Sensuality. Through their retail location, home presentations, resource centre, and website, Positive Passions provides an open, welcoming, and healthy place to obtain information, resources, and products in regards to sex, sexuality, and sexual dysfunctions.

If your business or organization is interested in sponsoring one of our regular columns (we have seven other columns in need of sponsorship), please contact us at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it for more information.

 

Cahoots is happy to announce that our 2nd Annual In Cahoots Fiction Contest Winner is In Season by Carol McAdoo Rehme! Carol will receive our fabulous prize package featuring a variety of excellent products from Cahoots Community members including Anne Camozzi, Christine Hart, Sheree Bradford-Lea, Trea Schuster, Jacqueline Faye Miller, Marianne Paul, Lesley Crewe, Lorri Neilsen Glenn, Coteau Books, Kim Goldberg, Sarah Stefanson, Suzanne Paschall, Jump Me Martha, Wildcrafters Herbs & Everlastings, LunaPads, Janice Art Jewelry, and Page Lambert. Check out the Fiction section to read Carol's piece as well as our three great runners-up.

 

If you haven't already noticed, we've now installed a feature that allows you, our readers, to comment on every article you read on our site! Just scroll down to the end of the article, and click on "comment!" We'd love to hear what you have to say about the articles you read here.  We're on our way to creating what we've been striving for since day one: a true exchange of ideas. All we need is you and what you have to say. Be honest and brave, agree or vehemently oppose - shake it up and speak up!

 

Yes, Cahoots Magazine now has a Facebook group, and we'd love you all to become members. We will be posting special features on the group, as well as hosting exclusive "Over Coffee" questions on the Discussion Board.

Click this link to visit the group and click on Join Group to become a member: If you are not already a member of Facebook, visit this link to join the millions of people who are already interacting!