1
A Generational Battle Ahead
That which seems the height of absurdity in one generation often becomes the height of wisdom in another.
-Adlai Stevenson
Thereâs a generational tidal wave coming thatâs threatening to shake up workplaces throughout the world. A new group is leaving college and joining the workforce in growing numbers. Sometimes referred to as âGeneration Y,â Millennials are the children of the vast âBaby Boomer generation.â Born between 1980 and 1999, the âMillennial generationâ is nearly as large a cohort as the Boomers. And as they take their places in the cubicles next door to their predecessors, a pronounced culture clash is inevitable!
When a harried office manager recently announced to his team that an evening of overtime was going to be required in order to finish an important project, he expected to hear a general round of grumbling. But he was shocked when a new member of the team, a 22-year-old recent college graduate, told him he couldnât stay because he had concert tickets that evening.
One companyâs human-resources recruiter was a little surprised at the middle-aged man that showed up in front of her booth at the job fair, considering that the fair was targeted to recent college grads. But his purpose became clear a minute later when he introduced the young woman next to him as his daughter, a recent graduate who was considering her career options. The father spent the next 20 minutes asking questions on his daughterâs behalf while she listened silently.
One of the directors of a midsize electronics company felt disheartened as one of the organizationâs most promising young fast-track employees left his office. The young woman had just turned in her resignation after little more than a year with the company. The director had listened to her carefully before laying out a case for why she should reconsider and stay with his firm. He discussed career advancement and exciting new projects. He even hinted that a salary increase might be arranged. But at the end of the interview, he simply couldnât counter her deepest desire, which was to become an entrepreneur and start her own company at the tender age of 27.
The hiring manager at a large retail chain was fuming when a coworker stepped into her office. She had just finished interviewing a young man for a new sales associate position at the store. The interview went well, but she was quite annoyed to receive a thank-you text-messaged from the candidateâs cell phone to her cell phone not more than 30 minutes later. âI canât believe he had the nerve to send me a text message rather than a proper thank-you letter,â she complained. Her coworker replied, âBut he observed the courtesy of thanking you, and he probably figured it was both faster and more economical.â
A retirement party for a department supervisor at one company was barely getting under way when one of the younger employees stepped up to the division manager and asked to be considered as the replacement for the departing supervisor. The manager was flabbergasted at the youthâs nerve and self-confidence. After listening to a litany of reasons why the 25-year-old would make a good replacement for the department supervisor, the division manager became irritated. He asked, âDonât you think youâre just a little young for that job?â The employee asked back, âWhat does age have to do with it?â
Thereâs an invasion quietly taking place in organizations around the world. Itâs a revolution with the potential to forever change the way most workplaces function. It also brings with it prospects for new conflicts, as the members of one generation begin to work alongside the members of three older generations.
The Millennials are coming. Theyâre well educated, skilled in technology, and very self-confident. They bring with them to the workplace high accomplishments and even higher expectations.
As the Millennials join the workforce, organizations are finding that their existing employees and managers are often befuddled and confused in trying to understand how the younger generation thinks and acts. Their behavior, their clothes, and their attitudes are becoming subject to scrutiny as they clash with existing corporate cultures.
Millennials will bring a new style and a new perspective to the workforce, but unless organizations are willing to adapt, they risk losing billions of dollars to unwanted turnover and lost productivity.
Smart gamblers play the odds and donât leave money on the table. Corporations would do well to take a lesson from them, because right now, the odds are stacked against most organizations. Too many of them are parting with money they canât afford to waste by ignoring some of the most promising employees ever to show up for interviewsâMillennials.
Also known as âEcho Boomers,â âNexters,â and âGen Ys,â most companies are playing a losing hand when it comes to employing these young people. And unless something radically changes, companies will continue to lose billions of dollars because they lack a process to attract, hire, and retain this dynamic new generation.
The Coming Tidal Wave
Millennials are moving into the workforce in big numbers, and the need to keep them there is even greater. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts a slowdown in the pace of labor-force growth and productivity in 2016, as some of the 70 million-plus Baby Boomers retire.1
And the escalating departure of Baby Boomers from the workforce represents only one facet of the problem. Currently, in the United States alone, about 40 million Millennials make a living in corporations. By 2014, their numbers will climb to about 58 million. 2 Not only are they a growing force in the workplace to be reckoned with, but reducing their turnover is also sure to become a major focus in the years ahead.
In addition, the Boomers are leaving a workplace that has been designed around them, which is now at odds with the work expectations of the Millennials who will replace them. The clash of workplace cultures is creating puzzlement, consternation, and havoc at companies that now find themselves faced with the need to adapt their cultures to the work styles of Millennials.
The other problem companies face is that Millennials are difficult to attract and once hired, donât stay around long. For many, their per-job tenure maxes out at two to five years. And some may not work for corporations at all, but will go into business for themselves instead. According to the OPEN Ages survey from American Express, Millennials are almost twice as likely as Baby Boomer small-business owners (59 percent versus 33 percent) to be or plan to be âserial entrepreneurs,â owning or planning to own more than one business.3
All of this does not bode well for corporations. Unless companies find ways to attract Millennials more effectivelyâand to resolve their short job tenureâthe turnover problem will continue to cost companies dearly. Turnover costs can easily range from 50 to 150 percent of an employeeâs salary.
But all is not lost. Cutting employee turnover can reduce these costs substantially. Letâs assume that the average salary in a company is $50,000 per year, with a cost of turnover at 50 percent of salary. Therefore, the average cost of turnover is $25,000 per year per employee who leaves the company.
If a company employs 20,000 and experiences an annual turnover of 10 percent, the annual cost of turnover is $50 million. By reducing turnover by just 3 percent, the company can save $15 million annually.
Boomers versus Millennials
Millennial turnover is high for a number of reasons. Millennials move fast and want to be challenged. If they become bored in a job that fails to demand their best for long periods of time, theyâre gone. Whatâs more, theyâre not loyal to their employers, as their Baby Boomer parents were. Millennials are loyal to people, however, so manager and peer relationships are important.
And the prospect of switching jobs isnât at all daunting to Millennials. Most of them expect to have an easy time finding employment. According to one Australian study, 52.3 percent of Millennials stated that it was currently âeasyâ or âvery easyâ to get a new job, compared to 43 percent of the Baby Boomers surveyed.4
Another challenge for companies employing Millennials is addressing the need for work-life balance. Baby Boomers have historically been willing to work 50, 60, or 70 hours a week to get the job done, often to the dismay and displeasure of their family and friends. Over time, as job security dwindled and the apparent rewards of workaholism faded, Boomers began to question that sense of unbridled dedication. In a 2006 KEYGroup survey that included 1,727 responses from multiple generations, one in every five indicated that they were planning to leave their jobs due to work-life imbalance.
Work-life balance means just as much, if not more, to the Millennial generation than it did to their predecessors. To some Millennials, it may even mean more than salary.
Author Morris Massey once said, âWhat you are is where you were when.â His popular video series portrayed the differences between generations by focusing on the significant emotional events that influenced different generations during their âcoming of age years.â5
The Boomers grew up in an era of social revolution and widespread turmoil. The Cold War, civil rights, the peace movement, Vietnam, womenâs liberation, and similar events defined that generation. They entered the workforce in massive numbers and felt propelled to establish their careers. Like the generation before them, they played by the rules (for the most part)âmarrying, starting families, and working their way up the social ladder. They entered the workforce secure in the belief that they could expect to enjoy a long, prosperous career and a happy, generous retirement.
In contrast, the Boomersâ children grew up in a different revolution. The early 1980s saw an explosion of technology that transformed the fabric of our global society. Computers went from being a rarity in the office to being ubiquitous both at home and at work. Voice mail and cell phones permanently altered communication patterns, and video games changed the landscape of childhood. Even that mainstay of the Boomerâs childhoodsâtelevisionâmorphed into a cable-driven, 500-channel juggernaut that consumed ever more hours of childhood leisure time.
Given the differences between growing up in the 1950s and growing up in the 1980s, itâs inevitable that the two generations approach work and life in very different ways. It is those contrasts that foreshadow conflict in the workplace in coming years. But some of the conflict can also be found in the overlap between the shared experiences of Millennials and Boomers.
Boomer Dedication and Millennial Angst
Looking closely at the Millennial generation, one can detect an underlying current of sadness about their childhoods. Some Millennials seem to possess a sense of regret over the absence of their Boomer parents from the life events that mattered most to them growing up.
Under the demands of work and looming deadlines, a great many Boomers were compelled to miss soccer matches, football games, family dinners, musical recitals, and even graduation ceremonies. Millennials have transposed this mourning into a passionate embrace of work-life balance. Their lifestyle plan includes none of the heavy devotion to work that their Boomer parents have lived by. Millennials seek a multidimensional life by satisfying themselves through their work and personal lives. Theyâre responsible and dedicated, but they expect flexible work schedules that will enable them to lead fulfilling lives. They truly work to live rather than live to work.
âMy parents did what was necessary for the times,â claims one Millennial, âbut I donât plan on sacrificing my personal life to the extent that they did for their jobs.â
Millennials not only want greater work-life balance, but they also expect to proceed along their career paths more rapidly than their parents.They witnessed their mothers and fathers waiting for years on end to get the promotions they deserved. Millennials want promotions, too, but they want them now; not 5, 10, or 20 years from now.
But Boomer parents havenât been totally absent from the lives of their kids. Quite the opposite, theyâve made their parental presence felt through massive levels of nurturing, pampering, mentoring, and coaching, all to make their children the best in whatever they choose to do. Millennials bought into this gospel of being the best, but theyâve also grown up relying heavily on their parents for guidance and help in reaching decisions.
One Boomer (unmarried with no children) was appalled to hear that a colleagueâs wife, after spending days moving her child into college, stayed in a hotel room close to campus for a week after school started to make sure her daughter was okay.
A Millennial freshman had this to share:
I met Sarah at spring orientation and decided that we would be perfect roommates. We had a lot in common immediately. Over the summer, I flew to Virginia to stay with her for a week and to prepare for moving day. We moved to North Carolina for school and were both excited. However, I was shocked when Sarahâs mother drove several hours from Virginia to North Carolina each week to take Sarah shopping and to do her laundry and cleaning. And if this type of hovering wasnât bad enough, I soon noticed that Sarahâs mother was cleaning my side of the room, too! She made our beds and organized desk drawers! When I confronted Sarah about this, she quietly apologized and moved to a new dorm the next day.
Reflecting on this heavy reliance on parents, Professor Richard Mullendore of the University of Georgia has referred to the ever-present cell phones as âthe worldâs longest umbilical cord.â6
One study shows that about one in every four Millennials consults his or her parents first when making employment decisions.7 No wonder many Millennials reach the workplace expecting their bosses to anticipate their needs, just as their parents have done.
Even though they have had highly structured lives and accept the need for some structure in the workplace, their desire for freedom is more than Baby Boomers ever experienced at work. The classic nine-to-five work shift is viewed as a guiding framework for them, not as a schedule to be slavishly followed. They tend to blur the lines between work and play. For example, if a Millennial completes a project by late afternoon and nothing else is due, he or she will likely consider the rest of the afternoon as time to take care of personal concerns. This perspective on work time partly stems from a desire to improve on existing ways of doing things. They have no trouble trying to work in ways that are faster, better, and easier. And if that means freeing up their time for other things, so be it.
High Tech . . . High Touch
In his 1982 best seller, MegaTrends, author John Naisbitt wrote, âWhenever new technology is introduced into society, there must be a counterbalancing human responseâthat is, high touchâor the technology is rejected.â8 In many ways, Millennials are the living embodiment of that observation.
Their high comfort...