Thursday, November 21, 2019

Move over Millennials Heres how Gen Z is going to do your job

Move over Millennials Heres how richtung Z is going to do your jobMove over Millennials Heres how Gen Z is going to do your jobA few weeks ago, The New York Times pronounced the end of the Millennial Era. It would seem, like the many fleeting digital trends theyve championed, Millennials have finally been displaced.The generation thats made a collective career out of brazen entrepreneurialism and brattiness (Theyre brash, theyre narcissistic, theyre entitled, says the Times, Or so the clich goes) has new competition in the workplace Generation Z.A note on the new kidsTo give you some context on Generation Z these kids are, literally, kids. The oldest just finished high school, but many are still toddlers. Gen Z wont be running Fortune 500s in the next three months, but theyre the next world order. In the coming decade, theyll dictate how we advertise, how we evolve the workforce and society, how we progress.And heres the thing they stand in complete opposition to the Millennial min dset.These are the kids who grew up post-911 in the height of a recession. They view their careers and hard-earned money through a lens of anxiety. Gen Z witnessed parents out of work, tight Christmases, the emergence of terrorism as a dinner table topic- all with a heightened sense of imperfection, inevitability, and tragedy.In the Times article, Lucie Greene, a director of the Innovation Group at J. Walter Thompson, calls them Millennials on steroidsIf Hannah Horvath from Girls is the typical Millennial - self-involved, dependent, flailing financially in the real world as her expectations of a dream job and life collide with reality - then alexanderplatz Dunphy from Modern Family represents the Gen Z antidote. Alex is a true Gen Z conscientious, hard-working, somewhat anxious and mindful of the future.How Generation Z does businessSo what exactly does this mean for the workforce? A lot- although its anyones guess exactly how it will turn out.For employers, its probably going to be a great thing. Where Millennials were raised in a period of relative peace and affluence, the products of 1990s stability (think Cher in Clueless, meandering through malls, buying shoes to make herself feel better, negotiating her way to better grades through hard sells, not hard work), Gen Z comes from a more unstable background. They have good reason to fear the bottom falling out, meaning theyll work that much harder to secure their stability.Where weve grown accustomed to Millennial logic (I dont like my boss. Ill just start my own company or I may be 18, but Im too talented to work entry-level), well now find dogged dedication. These are kids who study web development in school and grew up making Vine videos, who in short, live in a digital reality- but pair this with the very real fear of going broke. To put it simply theyre innovative, but most of all, theyre pragmatic.What this means for the MillennialsMembers of Generation Z still take their cues from their Millennial fo rerunners- they join the workforce fully-equipped with an entrepreneurial mindset. But theyve also witnessed their predecessors mistakes. You wont catch these kids posting any questionable photos on social media that might cost them a job, but you wont find them working at Dairy Queen either.Says 15-year-old Andrew Schoonover, Kids are witnessing start-up companies make it big instantly via social media. We do not want to work at a local fast-food joint for a summer job. We want to make our own business because we see the lucky few who make it big.Theres still a permeating sense of entitlement, but you dont stop working until you get to where you deserve to be. There are no shortcuts, which means the cheats and lifehacks of Millennials may not hold up well against the hard work of younger employees. Despite the fact that Americans already work longer hours than they should, we all might need to work a lot harder to compete. So look out, Lena Dunham, the next round of girlbosses migh t give you a run for your (possibly unfairly earned) money.This article first appeared on Career Contessa.

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