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We are almost at the point where will have four distinct generations in the workforce at one time.
Jason is an entry level manager/leader and he was interviewing several candidates for front line position in the bank. As he reviewed the next e-application, Jason was shocked at what he saw. This applicant had attached a letter of recommendation. Normally this would not necessarily seem rare or unusual but in this case it was. You see the letter of recommendation was from the applicants parents. That’s right, the parents.
RELATED: The Aging Population and Its Effect On Small Business
For those known as Generation X this is going to drive you crazy – and it is happening more than you might think. Carol recently had to discipline an employee for poor performance. She did everything by the book, in a private and in a neutral location. The employee seemed to take it in stride. The next morning Carol received a call from the employee’s father requesting a conference. What is happening? Have we raised a generation of cry babies? Maybe!
The tough part is that this is just the beginning. We are almost at the point where will have four distinct generations in the workforce at one time:
- Baby Boomers Born between 1946-1963
- Generation X Born between 1964-1980
- Generation Y Born between 1980-1990
- Generation M Born between 1991 to present
Generation Y is the first generation to have grown up with computers throughout all of their school life. Many do not even have land line phones – they only have a cell phone. They prefer to communicate electronically, either email or text messaging.
RELATED: Generation Y: How They Think and Act at Work
Generation M (Millennium or mobile) is the first generation to have everything in their life basically mobile. This generation prefers to communicate via text messages. I asked a 14 year old young girl one day about how much she emails and her response was, “Emailing is so 20th century”.
Think back to your childhood. At the age of 13 how far did you ride your bike from home? Most baby boomers came home from school and took off on their bike and came home for dinner. In between they could have been 3-5 miles from home and no one worried about them. Today parents will not allow their children off the street until they hit 13. Are they overprotective? In many cases the answer is no – it is just a part of society today. Yet it brings up what those late Generation Y employees and the new Generation M employees think.
Generation X was considered the first latch key generation. They came home from school and did homework, even completed chores and maybe even started dinner. They truly were self sufficient. This makes it difficult for them to understand the behavior of the new generation. This generation has expectations different from any generation in the past. They expect to be shown how to do everything where Generation X just figured it out. Do you see the challenge here?
RELATED: Benefits of Baby Boomers as Mentors
What makes this even more bizarre is that the Baby Boomers will sometimes side with and want to help the young ones out. Why? Simple, they see their children here. This makes for a tight squeeze on Generation X.
What can we all do? It all comes back down to the leader setting expectations or setting the ground rules for the team right up front. Employees of all ages typically want to do a good job and will usually play by the rules as long as they know them. Unfortunately many organizations fail to set ground rules.
What is the difference between ground rules and regular rules? Ground rules can be different for each and every team where regular rules are the rules set by the organization.
Ground rules need to be congruent with regular rules yet can differ from team to team within an organization. Ground rules are your expectations of the employees as it relates to every aspect of his/her job.
The times they are a-changing, and we can either change with them or get left behind. If you are a Baby Boomer let me ask you – other than to your kids, how many text messages did you send last month? Now ask someone in Generation Y how many he/she sent. Are you ready?
Recommended Books on the Leadership Challenge of Four Generations in the Workplace:
- Generations at Work: Managing the Clash of Boomers, Gen Xers, and Gen Yers in the Workplace
- 10 Answer Keys, Communicating with the 5 Generations in the Workplace
- Generations, Inc.: From Boomers to Linksters–Managing the Friction Between Generations at Work
- Get Your Shift Together, The Secret to Working With Multiple Generations in the Workplace
- When Generations Collide: Who They Are. Why They Clash. How to Solve the Generational Puzzle at Work
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