Gen Y, This Is The Boss, Do You Read Me?
Transcription
Gen Y, This Is The Boss, Do You Read Me?
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2006 MANAGING FOR SUCCESS ‘Gen Y, This Is The Boss, Do You Read Me?’ Twenty-something employees are top performers, but careful managing is needed to bring out their best BY GARY M. STERN FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY Call it chutzpah. Pure impudence. On her first day on the job at a big food packaging company, the intern told her boss that she had developed a new cereal. She wanted to know when she could show it to the product development director, related Bruce Tulgan, author of “Managing Generation Y” and president of Rainmaker Thinking, a consulting firm in New Haven, Conn. Brash, confident and inquisitive, generation Y members, born between 1978 and 1989, believe they can take over the world. They don’t believe in paying dues. Get experience first? Fuggedaboutit! Why is gen Y fixated on moving up fast? “We’ve been told to be a step ahead of our parents. In order to accomplish that in an everchanging economy, it has to be done quickly. Slow progress isn’t progress,” said Michael Schulte, a 26-year-old sales manager at Circuit CityCC in Westbury, N.Y. He added: “Nobody knows what tomorrow will bring. My father’s generation held jobs for 20 years, but that’s not our reality. We don’t have pensions like their generation.” Since gen Y now numbers 22% of U.S. workers and is multiplying, learning how Global law firm Greenberg Traurig challenges gen Y attorneys by having them work on major cases from the time they’re hired. Young lawyers in firm’s New York office from left: Monty Steckler, 27; Adam Rosen, 27; Samuel Cahn, 28; Gaston Kroub, 29; Astrid Schmidt, 29; and Elisabeth Bernard, 29. AP to manage that group is critical to any company’s success. To get the most out of gen Y, managers “need to be savvy, capable and engaged enough to customize their style one person at a time. Generation Y can be high maintenance. It also can be your highest performing work force. “They’ve already checked out your company and checked out the industry,” Tulgan said. Managers who can harness young people’s energy and knowledge can turn them into peak performers. Managers who are defensive, reluctant to change the status quo and don’t want to answer their questions will likely lose them, faster than a free agent switches teams in baseball, Tulgan says. Gen Y workers bring high expectations into the workplace. “They arrive on day one, think they could do whatever they want, expect to identify and solve problems no one else has solved, and expect the boss to know who they are and help them succeed,” Tulgan said. “They are the true children of the information revolution,” he added. Reared on Google and Yahoo, gen Y has unearthed answers to questions on nearly every subject and Investor’s Business Daily www.investors.com @ Copyright 2006 brings that know-how into the work place. Gen Y “doesn’t respond to command and control authority,” noted Trudy Sopp, who co-wrote “Managing Generation Y” for the May 2006 HR magazine and is co-executive director of The Centre for Organization Effectiveness, a San Diego-based consulting firm. “They don’t respond well to authority. It has to do with how they were raised. There weren’t many authority figures around since both parents were working. They’ve learned to do things on their own,” Sopp said. (Continued) Despite the many strengths that young people bring to a company, they have their limits and can clash with baby boomer managers. “The hardest thing for baby boomers to accept from the Y group is Y’s don’t want to engage in organizational politics,” Sopp said. Y’s “miss the nuances that you need to engage in to develop relationships.” Focused on instant success, the Y generation doesn’t engage in “quid pro quos,” but wants to be entrepreneurial and make things happen as quickly as possible. The companies that do best in retaining those from gen Y are the ones that are flexible, respond to their questions and reach common solutions. Sopp consulted for the nonprofit Centre City Development Corp. in San Diego. Several of its 20-something staff members confronted its president, Nancy Graham, requesting flexible work hours and casual attire. Rather than resisting them, Graham compromised by relaxing the dress code and introducing limited telecommuting into the workweek. “As long as they feel like man- agement listens, they’re happy,” Sopp noted. At Greenberg Traurig, a full-service global law firm with 1,500 attorneys and 29 offices, luring gen Y attorneys has been critical to the firm’s growth. The firm had only 300 lawyers in 1997, says Carol Allen, its chief recruitment officer, who is based in New York. “They want lots of action, speak their minds, operate collaboratively, like change and act creatively,” she said. Many Y’s start full-time jobs having already had and are savvy abdemanding internshipsout workplace protocol. Already they have been “stretched beyond their years,” Allen said. Greenberg Traurig challenges them, even if they’re recent hires. “Their expectations are they want to control their destiny, don’t want to do tedious work and want to use their talents,” Allen said. Associates are empowered to write briefs and work on major cases from the time they are hired at the firm, says Allen. “There are no prerequisites to having brilliant ideas, our CEO Cesar Alvarez likes to say,” Allen said. “If they have a great idea, we encourage them to let our CEO know about it.” Allen says that if managers empower gen Y employees, they respond and contribute. What the young people hate is getting involved in excessive red tape and participating in groups that are only window dressing and exert no influence. Certain managerial styles won’t work with gen Y. “They don’t want to be micro-managed,” Allen noted. “They don’t care about seniority,” Sopp said, suggesting they don’t want to go through the lengthy process of paying their dues and starting as a glorified copy clerk. “They want to be given opportunities to shape their career in their own direction,” Allen said. Given their tendencies and sense of self-entitlement, what are the best ways to manage them? Experts offer some suggestions: 00 Spell out expectations every step of the way, Tulgan says. If the manager wants them to succeed, making expectations explicit will help them achieve success. 00 Don’t leave them alone, Investor’s Business Daily www.investors.com @ Copyright 2006 Tulgan says. That won’t work. They want feedback and guidance, not laissez faire. 00 Customize your management style to each gen Y worker to reap maximum performance. “One size fits all” doesn’t work effectively with this generation, Tulgan said. 00 Stress collaboration. Gen Y likes working in teams and learning from each other. 00 Be flexible. If a gen Y must have a day to telecommute, give it to him as long as the work is produced on time. 00 Set high expectations, and the odds are strong that a gen Y will reach them. 00 Address problems. If something goes awry in a gen Y’s performance, bring it out into the open. Don’t let it fester, Tulgan recommends. Despite their enthusiasm, one irony looms with gen Y’s. They don’t necessarily want their boss’ job, Sopp says. “They watched their parents burn out from working long hours. They don’t want to call home at 6 p.m. and say they’ll miss dinner,” she said. A balance between work and life is a top priority. Managers that understand those values will get the most out of their rapidly increasing gen Y staff, Sopp says.