Title: The Millennial generation as employees
1The Millennial generation as employees
- Dr. Pete Markiewicz
- Indiespace.com Lifecourse AssociatesArt
Institute of California, Los Angeles
2Topics
- Millennials in your workplace
- Courtship/Hiring
- Day 1, 2, 3
- Management Part 1
- Management Part 2
- Retention
3The Employee Challenge
- Your company will need to hire Millennials for
their first or second jobs during the next decade - You will need to adjust your strategy for
- Hiring
- Day 1,2,3
- Management/Mentoring
- Retention
- Companies that effectively recruit and retain
Millennials will have a competitive advantage
4Millennials Bad press
- Naïve
- Mommy/Daddy will fix it
- Arrogance
- No respect for experience
- Belief in personal superiority
- Lack basic communication skills
- Need constant stroking
- Over-complaining
- Over-sharing
- Cant read a book
- Take any comments as criticism
- Reveal company secrets on blog
- Generation Debt
- Disloyal
- Cheaters
- Paying dues occupy space
- Uninterested in adapting
- Lack creativity
- Passive
- Assume automatic promotion
- Others responsible for my mistakes
- We all deserve promotions
- I get Facebook or I walk
5Millennials the truth
- No generation is bad
- Bad features of one generation may be the
good features of the next - You cant change them
- You can exploit their strengths and adjust for
their weaknesses - Youre going to have to hire them!
6Millennials are different
- SPECIAL given a sense of destiny
- SHELTERED close to parents, naïve
- CONFIDENT the last winner
- CONVENTIONAL support social norms
- TEAM-PLAYER rely on social networks
- PRESSURED great expectations
- ACHIEVING hard workers
7Bringing Millennials into your workplace
- Courtship and Hiring getting real and on time
- Day 1, 2, 3 help them hit the ground running
- Management what you need to teach
- Management what you need to learn
- Retention getting that elusive loyalty
8Millennial psychological reality
- Millennials heroes who will save the world
- Huge pressure to become said heroes
- Their opinions were equally valuable as their
parents and other authority figures - No losers/failures here just the last winner
- They expect timetables, schedules, planners
describing how to save the world - They can always fall back on Mom and Dad
- I am extraordinary!
9Millennial transactional reality
- Helicopter parents made life a series of constant
(re)negotiations - Always-on, bursty media (cellphones, Internet)
break reality into lots of little, discrete
transactions - Constant communication facilitated by technology
(social networks, cellphones) - Expect small, immediate rewards (gold stars),
rather than a chance at the long-term jackpot - Expect progressive rewards (like levels in a
game) - Uncertain future (political, technology) implies
to them that long-term planning is absurd - I am loyal to the transaction, not the institution
10Homo mobilis
- Millennials adapt to information overload
packet-switching - communicating in frequent,
short bursts - Constant communication increases re-negotiation,
reduces advance planning, reading - Need frequent contact (pinging), for
consensus-building with their friends - Definition of friend loosened to someone you
can communicate with - Looser definition of public versus private
information (a public web page seems private to
them).
11Everything is negotiable
Older people use their mobile phones to
"micro-co-ordinate" with partners during the day
in order to run their errands more efficiently
and younger people, who have never known paper
diaries or an unconnected world,
micro-co-ordinate in order to avoid committing
themselves to any fixed meeting time, location or
person at all. After all, a better opportunity
might yet present itself-The Economist, Homo
Mobilis, April 10, 2008
12Millennial customer-centric reality
- Marketing to Millennials reinforced the idea that
they were special - Retail pitches to Millennials implied that they
were a must have customer that would always get
premium service - Millennials join a company as a customer,
expecting great service from said company - Work for company series of transactions (like a
sale) with reciprocal benefit - Poor customer service reason to leave
13Courtship hiring the practice
- Employers compete for best talent with aggressive
hiring practices (reinforcing specialness) - Potential employees are wined and dined
(reinforcing their special customer status) - The company value proposition for employees is
poorly defined, especially in the short term - Months pass before the hire/first day of work,
often with minimal contact - New employee reports, bursting with excitement
- Gone in 60 seconds
14Courtship reasons
- Employers make hiring into a sales pitch
- Reinforces employee as customer conceit
- Employer discusses vague, long-term potential
- Millennials want to know about tomorrow, next
week, next month - Value proposition not broken down to a series of
progressive transactions - Employer takes too long
- Long gaps between hire and Day 1
- The constant, transactional communication
expected by Millennials is missing
15Courtship - solutions
- Dont treat potential employees as customers
- Tell the truth (realistic job previews, e.g.
shadowing) - Show the good, then try to scare them away
- Explain short-term as well as long-term
opportunities - Use trusted sources to find hires
- Employees with children
- Friend networks of existing employees
- Keep in touch
- Send sample work, background material
- Have key people enter their business network
before Day 1 - Create your employee brand
- Value proposition for employees
- Short-term, as well as long-term benefits
16Day 1,2,3 the practice
- Employee comes in bursting with ideas
- Are you ready to give me a good job experience?
- Why am I not by the window?
- Why are people ignoring my great idea?
- Why cant I talk to the people who count
anymore? - Why wont anyone tell me what to do?
- Why cant we re-negotiate our meeting time?
- Why cant I use Facebook at work?
- Employee not listened to
- Told to move arms and legs
- Told to wait until they learn the ropes
- Youre too enthusiastic
- Ignored when they present ideas
- Gone in a weekand Mom shows up in supervisors
office!
17Day 1,2,3 - reasons
- Millennials are used to being heard
- Told they were especially clever, creative
- Had their ideas listened to as equals by
authority - Unaware that experience often trumps insanely
great ideas - Assume bursty on-demand learning (fast Internet
lookup) is better than slow accumulation of
experience - Expect to immediately enter transaction-based
reality - I consume your rules, goals and receive benefit
- Looking for the specifics needed to complete a
transaction not the overlying wisdom of the
approach - Rules, deadlines are observed but in an async,
packet-switched fashion
18Day 1,2,3 - solutions
- Make sure they hit the ground running
- Meaningful work on day 1
- Work must have a defined success marker
- Let them customize their office space, computer
to improve workflow - React to insanely great ideas
- Ask for more justification
- Have them do the downside analysis
- Put an advisor in the loop
- Break their work into tiny, progressive steps
- Unbundle complex corporate roles (Tulgans best
point) - Reassemble into small, progressive, tasks
- Let them use/exploit their technology edge
- Dont deny their networks
- Allow asychronous execution of job tasks, if
deadlines are met
19Management 1 the practice
- Millennial new hire expects helicopter
management similar to helicopter parenting - Manager/Mentor doesnt want a new family member
- Acts like a philosopher
- No boundaries set
- No negotiations
- Expects them to figure it out on their own
- Demands obedience without rationale
- No praise/rewards
- Gone in a two weeksor Mom shows up in managers
office again
20Management 1 - reasons
- Manager unwilling to engage in a paternal, yet
professional relationship - Millennials lack an inner compass
- Millennials used to micro-management of their
lives - Hands-off management
- Manager feels that getting specific is
unnecessary if big ideas are understood - Manager doesnt provide enough praise/rewards
(even symbolic ones) - Negotiation interpreted as insubordination
- Manager doesnt assign responsibility for
- Adjustment/optimization of work environment
- Important projects (may not be possible)
21Management 1 - solutions
- Parental management style
- Advise rather than mentor (no cosmic discussions
with employee - Set ground rules (repeatedly)
- Constant pinging of employee to ascertain their
status - One boss, not many
- Paternal, yet professional
- Know their names, ideas, goals
- Give them creative responsibility (e.g. keeping
track of their own performance, first
impression research) - Focused management
- Specific assignments with structure
- Explain decisions
- Lend your power as needed, with evaluation
- Create structure
- Timelines, timetables, deadlines
- Metric for success (score-keeping)
- Reward strategy (gold stars)
22Management 2 the practice
- New hire advertised as awesome
- New hire irritates managers, older employees
- New hire expects responsibility beyond their
years - Management tries to fix the employee
- Employee responds poorly to help
- Confrontation
- Employee does something brazen (e.g. looking for
work on company time) - Employee is fired
- Dad tries to sue the company
23Management 2 - reasons
- They cant figure it out alone (like you did?)
- Theyre employees, not customers
- Other people know more than they do
- Things take time in the real world
- The new generation will always
- Want a family, not an army of one
- Expect authority to provide guidance
- Expect authority to keep score
- Need help digesting criticism
- Expect praise for performance
- Treat work as a transaction, not a higher calling
24Management 2 - solutions
- Hold your nose and praise them
- Accept that they arent interested in big ideas
- Respect their ideas
- Institute a point reward system, or even literal
gold stars - Make it a transaction
- Buy their work via small rewards (Tulgan)
- Replace traditional compensation model with
short-term payouts (Internet, game, rock star
model) - Encourage respect
- Demonstrate (dont just tell them) that older and
wiser is just that - Match their respect (no racists, sexist, any-ist
things) - Encourage self-criticism (have them make a list)
25Retention the challenge
- New hire asks questions about the long-term
repeatedly during courtship - Upon starting work, new hire is only interested
in the here and now - Little or no loyalty to company, brand
- Employee questions value of company work
- New hire abruptly leaves without warning during
first 6 months - Extra cost for hiring someone new
26Retention the reasons
- Millennials lack loyalty except to a good
transaction - Millennials are very loyal to social/political
causes - During the hire process, Millennials dont bring
up the short term for fear of missing the job - Millennials assume they can negotiate to
configure their ideal job - Millennials are certain there must be greener
pastures for someone as special as myself - If not, Mom has the bedroom ready
27Retention - solutions
- Lead them to the long-term
- Provide numerous, progressive, short-term goals
- Teach them to think strategically
- Study of company history
- Study of past employee experiences
- Define your company as a cause
- Create an employee brand
- Provide value statements
- Define the good citizen in the company
- Make the company a cause rather than a business
28Summary
- Hiring
- Be honest about the job
- Listen to ideas
- Break work into small, discrete steps
- Management
- Paternal, yet professional
- Focused, detail-oriented mentoring
- Praise them, and give out gold stars
- Make work a transaction
- Retention
- Lead them to the long-term
- Make your employee brand a worthy cause
29Recommended Reading
Millennial Makeover MySpace, YouTube The
Future of American Politics by Morley Winograd,
(2008, Rutgers) ISBN 0-8135-4301-0
Not Everyone Geta A Trophy How to Manage
Generation Yby Bruce Tulgan (2009, Wiley)ISBN
978-0-470-25626-8
Millennials IncorporatedThe Big Business of
Recruiting, Managing and Retaining the the
Worlds New Generation of Young Professionalsby
Lisa Orrell (2008, Wyatt-MacKenzie) ISBN
978-1-932279-82-5
Millennials and the Pop Culture by Pete
Markiewicz, (2005, Lifecourse) http//lifecouAlso
see this locations for additional book by
Strauss Howe/Lifecourse http//lifecourse.com/s
tore/books.html