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The 37-Year-Olds Are Afraid of the 23-Year-Olds Who Work for Them (nytimes.com) 498

Twenty-somethings rolling their eyes at the habits of their elders is a longstanding trend, but many employers said there's a new boldness in the way Gen Z dictates taste. From a report: At a retail business based in New York, managers were distressed to encounter young employees who wanted paid time off when coping with anxiety or period cramps. At a supplement company, a Gen Z worker questioned why she would be expected to clock in for a standard eight-hour day when she might get through her to-do list by the afternoon. At a biotech venture, entry-level staff members delegated tasks to the founder. And spanning sectors and start-ups, the youngest members of the work force have demanded what they see as a long overdue shift away from corporate neutrality toward a more open expression of values, whether through executives displaying their pronouns on Slack or putting out statements in support of the protests for Black Lives Matter. "These younger generations are cracking the code and they're like, 'Hey guys turns out we don't have to do it like these old people tell us we have to do it,'" said Colin Guinn, 41, co-founder of the robotics company Hangar Technology. "'We can actually do whatever we want and be just as successful.' And us old people are like, 'What is going on?'"

Twenty-somethings rolling their eyes at the habits of their elders is a trend as old as Xerox, Kodak and classic rock, but many employers said there's a new boldness in the way Gen Z dictates taste. And some members of Gen Z, defined as the 72 million people born between 1997 and 2012, or simply as anyone too young to remember Sept. 11, are quick to affirm this characterization. Ziad Ahmed, 22, founder and chief executive of the Gen Z marketing company JUV Consulting, which has lent its expertise to brands like JanSport, recalled speaking at a conference where a Gen Z woman, an entry-level employee, told him she didn't feel that her employer's marketing fully reflected her progressive values. "What is your advice for our company?" the young woman asked. "Make you a vice president," Mr. Ahmed told her. "Rather than an intern." Starting in the mid-aughts, the movement of millennials from college into the workplace prompted a flurry of advice columns about hiring members of the headstrong generation. "These young people tell you what time their yoga class is," warned a "60 Minutes" segment in 2007 called "The 'Millennials' Are Coming." Over time, those millennials became managers, and workplaces were reshaped in their image. There were #ThankGodIt'sMonday signs affixed to WeWork walls. There was the once-heralded rise of the SheEO.

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The 37-Year-Olds Are Afraid of the 23-Year-Olds Who Work for Them

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  • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @10:47AM (#61947293) Homepage Journal

    I can understand why gen Z is not willing to accept things the previous generations tell them. They have seen how that ends up - climate change, financial disasters, unaffordable housing, and an exploitative employer-employee relationship.

    Maybe they don't have all the answers, but right now there are plenty of jobs and this is a chance to change things for the better. Good luck to them and I'll help where I can.

    • by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @10:51AM (#61947311)
      Yes - it's a sign of success for the older generation that they have raised the new generation with better expectations. That being said, if they are delegating all the work to others then they are simply not getting stuff done and it will hurt them in the long run.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:01AM (#61947363) Homepage Journal

        Millennials are the first generation to do worse than their parents since WW2. Gen Z are even more screwed.

        • Millennials are the first generation to do worse than their parents since WW2. Gen Z are even more screwed.

          This is the interesting contradiction here. If Millenials and now Z are so disenfranchised, how is it they seem to have so much leverage in dictating terms? Companies are clearly terrified to tell them to just turn in their badge and take a hike.

        • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:36AM (#61947513) Homepage Journal

          Millennials are the first generation to do worse than their parents since WW2. Gen Z are even more screwed.

          Well, with attitudes and work ethics being expressed like this article has described, what else do they expect?

          That job is not there to stroke their egos, nor bend to their virtues...it's a fucking job.

          If you choose to trade your labor for wages, then that's what you do. You don't own the place, therefor you get to make no calls on direction, etc.

          If you don't like it....leave.

          Bottom line, a job is there to earn money, nothing more.

          And the world is not here to cater to your needs, wishes or to protect you from triggers.

          If the US keeps caving to this bullshit, we will fall soon and we have nothing to blame but ourselves and how we spoiled and mis-raised our latest generations.

          You can rest assured that the rest of the world isn't concerned with someones fucking feelings over pronouns, or diversity quotas in business or military.

          And they will overtake and overrun us in the long run if we don't get back to understanding priorities in the same manner that brought us to the lead over the past couple hundred years.

          • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:56PM (#61947941) Journal

            Bottom line, a job is there to earn money, nothing more.

            Nope. That's never been true. Your job is a part of your identity. When you meet someone new, what's the first question asked? "What do you do for a living?"

            There is a massive societal shift going on. After decades of pretending work is just a means to earn money, we are realizing work is much more than that. People have a fundamental desire to take pride in their work. It's why people are leaving their menial jobs in droves, and SpaceX is overwhelmed with job applications.

            Work is about more than money.

            • by JudgeFurious ( 455868 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @01:21PM (#61948075)

              All true no doubt but everyone can't work at SpaceX. It's just not possible. Everyone does need to have an income however. Work is a means to earn money. That's not all it is but it's a big part of the equation.

            • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @02:27PM (#61948429) Homepage Journal

              Nope. That's never been true. Your job is a part of your identity.

              That's a fucked up way of thinking then.

              The ONLY reason I work, is to fund the lifestyle and things I like to do in life.

              If I won the lottery tomorrow, I'd leave skid marks out the door.

              My job is enjoyable enough, all of them have been, but I'd not cast a shadow on ANY of them with my presence if I had the means to live my life without working.

              I have plenty of hobbies and interests in this world I'd rather be doing and I only work to fund those.

              A job is not you. It is merely a means to an end.

          • by dasunt ( 249686 )

            If you choose to trade your labor for wages, then that's what you do. You don't own the place, therefor you get to make no calls on direction, etc.

            If you are trading your labor for wages, that's a negotiation. Sometimes negotiations break down and the relationship ends (someone quits or gets fired).

            It's a job, not a feudal system. An employee should be free to tell their employer what they expect in exchange for their labor. The employer can either agree, negotiation, or deny those expectations. Th

        • by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:48AM (#61947569) Homepage Journal

          And there is little appetite for going back and doing it like the post-WW2 generation did it. Which, sadly is now not practical at all:

          - The US is no longer the singular, preeminent industrial power on earth, We're perhaps not even competitive, though that will take time to reveal.

          - We've rebuilt our WW2 adversaries, and indeed built up even our self-proclaimed post-WW2 enemies. Somehow it's not yet obvious that enriching your enemies has negative impacts on you...

          - We've also strayed from a society that encouraged personal responsibility, and in so many ways. As an extreme example, if you choose the most useful cause, you can burn, loot, and murder, and be let go. Not even charged. That has predictable consequences.

          But Gen Z doesn't want to burn, loot, or murder. They just want. And expect. Some do not quite accept that effort or even delayed gratification is the path to all they desire, and of course not. They were taught differently.

          I'm obviously a full-fledged Boomer. I hope not to outlive my great blessings, but I may yet live to see all taken away, But one great ray of hope, I see at my work that the Gen Z interns and newly hired are energetic, capable, and eager to do better. Maybe we're lucky in hiring, but there are many great people out there in every generation. We need to encourage them to lead.

          • by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@[ ]ata.net.eg ['ted' in gap]> on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:23PM (#61947745) Journal

            But Gen Z doesn't want to burn, loot, or murder. They just want. And expect. Some do not quite accept that effort or even delayed gratification is the path to all they desire.

            My grandparents worked on a farm to literally put food on the table. My parents worked to earn a salary, then bought their food from a local grocery store. My child can make a few taps on his phone and have food delivered right to the door.

            Our children are growing up in a world where, when they want, they order, and someone delivers. Literally, and usually within two days. Of course there is no delayed gratification.

            But what will inevitably be our downfall is when my child, or my child's children, no longer know how to create and maintain the infrastructure that makes this lifestyle sustainable.

      • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:10PM (#61947649) Homepage Journal

        I try to be careful about all these memes about what people in "generations" are like. There are 72 million millennials, for example, and the media writes about them like they all hatched out of the same cloning pod.

        Here's the thing -- every last damn generation is dominated by mediocrity, because is defined by what is *about average*. The world has always got by on most people being more or less mediocre, and depended upon a small number of people in each generation outperforming that baseline. What would the world be like if every last person was like the *average* person *you* went to school with?

        Now a societies do evolve and change, and the media explains those changes as the novel characteristics of a personified "generation" because personification is the lazy thinker's preferred explanation for everything. Sure you can find anecdotes of nightmare workers who insist that their work take back seat to their yoga classes, and no doubt that does happen if you are talking about a large enough sample of people. But it's about as sensible to think that people do that because of when they were born as to believe the Chinese zodiac year stuff printed on restaurant menus.

        If someone doesn't want to work when yoga class is on, that's not because that person is the apotheosis of a generation, it's because they think their economic value to the boss is high enough that the boss has to put up with their bullshit. And if they don't get fired, they're *right*. That's the big, society wide change: putting up with bullshit is now a two-way street. Less BS is tolerated from the boss, more from the subordinate.

        • Here's the thing -- every last damn generation is dominated by mediocrity, because is defined by what is *about average*. The world has always got by on most people being more or less mediocre, and depended upon a small number of people in each generation outperforming that baseline. What would the world be like if every last person was like the *average* person *you* went to school with?

          New York City has decided to attempt to find out. They're eliminating their gifted program [seattletimes.com]. Now all students will enjoy equally pathetically bad teaching. Mediocrity will rule. Exceptional people will be left with their potential undeveloped, stunting generations of American innovation, growth, and the prosperity it might have brought. Unless they're rich enough to go to private school, of course.

          All because some kinds of kids don't test well and come from a culture which explicitly does not want them

      • Even more bluntly: This isn't new.

        Every generation thinks they will simply supplant the generation that came before. The truth of the matter is that by the time these people end up in any real position of power, they will be part of the machine they sought to change when they were new. They will then have a vested interest in the machine not changing, so they can hold onto their own power.

        Welcome to the unending cycle. Very few disruptors change very much at all.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The problem is the “fixes” gen z suggests have been tried before and they led to mass murder, starvation and genocide.
      • by DuroSoft ( 1009945 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:32PM (#61947811) Homepage
        There are two axes, not one. There is the Egalitarianism Fascism axe, and there is the Leftism Conservativism axe. the two are completely unrelated in practice -- you can have, as you are vaguely referring to, a fascist communist dictatorship, just as easily as you can have a fascist conservative dictatorship. Likewise, you can have a society that is extremely egalitarian and leftist, and you can in theory have an extremely egalitarian conservative society. If you're going to claim that all implementations of communism/socialism/leftist are necessarily fascist (which would be absurd), then you also have to reconcile the preponderance of conservativism among fascist dictators, and the existence of largely egalitarian yet largely socialist places like Norway, Finland, Denmark, etc.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It is unfortunate that nobody has told these children what the results were the last every time anyone tried their preferred solutions: starvation, concentration camps, mass censorship, ubiquitous surveillance societies, and empire.

    • The problem is they don't have any answers. New generations complaining about the status quo is as old as time, so that's nothing new. The problem I see is they just want "somebody" to do "something" and to hell with the consequences.
      • by torkus ( 1133985 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @01:04PM (#61947979)

        There's lots of "someone do something" from both old guard and new guard.

        They're generally the loudest bunch by far too...and equally the least effective.

        But there's the equal problem of people feel the need to do/change/fix something (anything) to justify their existence. Politicians passing ridiculous, reactive, and largely misguided laws are a good example.

        P.s. younger generations have LOTS of answers. We all did when we were young - then we grew up and realized some of them were really, really dumb. The others, assuming we grew our careers too, are stuff we should be implementing. Just like younger generations need a filter of experience, older generations need a seed of new ideas. They aren't mutually exclusive.

    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:43AM (#61947555)

      Those Stodgy Boomers, use to be Hippies who did not to trust anyone over 30 years old. When they got into their 30's they became ultra conservative yuppies.
      Those Gen Xers who are the backbone of the Economy, use to be the Lazy Slacker Generation who never did any work. Until they needed to get work done. ...
      It is like kids and young adults try to play by their own rules, only to have real life get in the way and make them play by the established rules.

      This isn't to say that they are just going threw a phase and will get over it, the older generations should listen and learn from the younger ones too. As often our established methods and habits, make actually be out of date and counter productive.

      The coding I did 20 years ago, assumed that the CPU was the speed bottleneck, So we often precalculated lookup tables and had the results available storage which was faster to read from storage than to do the calculations. Today with muli-core CPU's and GPU's Ill just have the computer do the real time calculation, as it is faster for the computer to do the math, than it takes for the Bus IO to find and send back the response. I had changed my tactics over time, because while I was a kid, I was challenging all the old timers who were thinking of storage in terms of Tape and magnetic media, and were making slow programs, because the CPU was jammed doing all the same calculations over and over again, where the Bus speed of Cached Hard Drives, and RAM Bus was often faster to look it up and calculate. Now today, the new kids will challenge me on why I am doing it that way, as the computer already has many idle cores, which you can take advantage of, and not slow down the Bus with calculations that take the same amount of time or less.

      The younger generation needs to know why we do things the way we do, because often experience has overwritten our high minded ideas. But also we should listen the the younger generation as they have an outsider view of the problem and can propose a solution that is more in tune with the modern conditions.

    • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:08PM (#61947641)

      I can understand why gen Z is not willing to accept things the previous generations tell them. They have seen how that ends up - climate change, financial disasters, unaffordable housing, and an exploitative employer-employee relationship.

      I read the article a few days ago and working regular hours and being available to others in the office doesn't really factor into all that...

      Mr. Kennedy interviewed a Gen Z candidate for a full-time position who asked if she could stop working for the day once she’d accomplished the tasks she’d set out to do. He responded that her role was expected to be a nine-to-five.

      Ali Kriegsman, 30, co-founder of the retail technology business Bulletin, wasn’t sure, in the past, how to respond when her Gen Z employees insisted on taking days off for menstrual cramps or mental health: “Hey I woke up and I’m not in a good place mentally,” went the typical text message. “I’m not going to come in today.” Instinctively Ms. Kriegsman wanted to applaud their efforts to prioritize well being — but she also knew their paid time off could undercut business.

      I can sympathize with that last bit but work is a job, not a frelling hobby. I'm sure we've all gone into work on days when we didn't want to or feel like it or stayed longer then we needed to, but we did because others were relying on us to be there or be available.

  • by Midnight_Falcon ( 2432802 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @10:57AM (#61947331)
    There's been a slow process since WWII for each generation to have it successively easier, and feel privileged to easily be able to make money. This was made possible by the American Century of hegemony, which is now clearly on its decline. Graduate college, get a cushy white collar job, buy a house and live the American Dream.

    With America's strength waning (and efforts to increase its strength only hurting us, e.g. the China "Trade War") and China and Russia's gaining influence, that dream began vanishing for many millenials. The "middle-classification" of America, which happened to combat communism, ebbed back in the direction of the Gilded Age -- where wealth even more disproprotionately concentrated at the very top.

    Today a 35-year-old millenial couple with both partners working makes the same as a single-man earner in the 1970s when adjusted for inflation.

    So, Millenials took to propaganda to get everyone to "hustle hard" and work even harder, as workers got squeezed.

    Now Gen Z is seeing through that, at the same time they've been raised in a culture of several generations of privilege without WWI/WWII-era grandparents to tell them about how hard things could be. They don't want to be the next generation to get squeezed, which looks like 24/7 "availability" connected to phones getting pinged at all hours under the guise of "flexible work arrangements."

    • 2019: Millennials are a bunch of whiney twats who have an insane sense of entitlement and self importance. They don't know real work like the boomers did. Oh their music sucks too.
      2021: Millennials are a bunch of hardarses squeezing every last drop of work out of all employees. Gen Z is seeing through that and all Millenial privileges.

      Interesting. Gen Z looks like the first generation to get a free pass from being called whiney slackers and we're supposed to support them. As a matter of interest what do you

      • I actually blame the decline of music on the hyper-commercialization that happened under Boomer/Gen X leadership of the music industry. For a big example, Denniz Pop and Max Martin got sent artists from the USA and within minutes made catchy beats in weird Swedish-English they had the artists sing to. Those songs were then pushed on media channels, e.g. radio, so hard that most millenials can recite the backstreet boys or britney spears from memory, regardless if they ever liked those acts.

        Once Gen X r

    • by jeti ( 105266 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:37AM (#61947519)
      This has little to do with China or Russia. Productivity has steadily increased over many decades. However, the compensation of employees has stagnated for the last forty years. All the additional wealth has been siphoned off by a small upper class.

      Source [epi.org]
    • Today a 35-year-old millenial couple with both partners working makes the same as a single-man earner in the 1970s when adjusted for inflation.

      That's not even close to true. Purchasing power is basically flat on an individual basis, and multi-income households have substantially increased purchasing power. Kids don't really realize how much more frugal people in the past were.

      https://www.pewresearch.org/fa... [pewresearch.org]

  • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @10:57AM (#61947335) Journal

    No experience, just demands. The companies that entrust management to the Gen Z's who want to run things but haven't proven themselves or contributed as much as others; those companies will be 'agile': fail fast, fail often.

  • by Sprotch ( 832431 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @10:58AM (#61947337)
    That sort of story was all the rage back in 1999, when startups were founded on similar statements, and then again 10 years ago when it was all about millennialsâ¦
  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:00AM (#61947351)

    Automate automate automate. Some humans operate as robots. I mean, bureaucrats, they are assigned a task and do it according to the rules. If your job does not entail acting like a human being, then of course a robot can replace it. With UBI, you may get the robotâ(TM)s paycheck or part of the r fruits of its labor but if you are doing something redundant and following a fixed set of instructions or rules .. then wtf are you but a robot? I am talking at places like the DMV or other agencies, banks, especially you can see that. If you merely follow a set of rules, then what is the point of being human? Be careful not to twist what I say, I am not saying we do not need rules, of course we need them. I am saying if YOU follow instructions and rules blindly, then the human element is missing from what you do. That makes you stealing the job of robot, and of course robots bring the most economic value at least in the short term.

  • Won't last (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Morpeth ( 577066 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:00AM (#61947353)

    It's all fine and good to push you personal agenda -- BUT if it affects the bottom line or put the company at a competitive disadvantage or out of business, then you might find yourself out of a job with less power & options than you think you have.

    I don't think any business should feel compelled to make any political statements (unless it's part of their core business), as you can easily alienate a large customer base if you don't stay neutral. Of course they should and are required to support all laws regarding equal opportunity, labor laws, etc., but they don't have say they are pro-X or anti-Y.

    And here's the thing a lot of 20 somethings don't get, lots of countries and foreign businesses don't give a rat's ass about this stuff -- they are out to compete in a global marketplace. I'm concerned that the US is going to hamstring itself globally with some of the shifts. To be clear, I do support fair pay, good work/llife balance and such -- but... people need to remember businesses, small or large, need revenue if you want a steady paycheck.

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      It's all fine and good to push you personal agenda -- BUT if it affects the bottom line or put the company at a competitive disadvantage or out of business, then you might find yourself out of a job with less power & options than you think you have.

      Whether or not it lasts will mostly have to do with whether or not companies can ignore these requests without it affecting their bottom line. Companies aren't accommodating these employees because of the one or two vocal trouble makers, it is because they need to find new hires and new customers within this new generation. I assume this current labor shortage is giving workers a bit more power temporarily, but some change happens as any generation enters the workforce.

      It will all come down to how important

      • The gun lobby isn't powerful because a majority of people agree with them, it's because a vocal minority actually votes primarily on that issue.

        Well, there's a couple other items you might have missed.

        First, there is a constitutional entry right up top for gun rights.

        There are a LOT of gun owners in the US, and after the past 2 years...there are even MORE of them, and those folks aren't going to want to give that up or have it taken away from them any time soon.

        The 2A folks have to be vocal, in order to

    • Re:Won't last (Score:5, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:33AM (#61947499)

      then you might find yourself out of a job with less power & options than you think you have.

      Who is out of options? The Gen Z'er who's just sick of the shit, or the employers who can't find any employees because an entire generation is sick of their shit?

      Reality is: You're a business decision. Companies weigh up the value you provide vs the cost incurred by employing you. But that business decision is predicated on the larger market too.
      When a person is a self-entitled twat who thinks the world revolves around them, it's not going to go well for that person.
      When a generation is full of self-entitled twats who think the world revolves around them, it's not going to go well for the company looking for employees.

    • And here's the thing a lot of 20 somethings don't get, lots of countries and foreign businesses don't give a rat's ass about this stuff -- they are out to compete in a global marketplace. I'm concerned that the US is going to hamstring itself globally with some of the shifts. To be clear, I do support fair pay, good work/llife balance and such -- but... people need to remember businesses, small or large, need revenue if you want a steady paycheck.

      True dat. One can have all the research in the world showing the importance of rain forests / equality / whatever. It's hard to care about all that when your country's economy is underdeveloped and has problems supporting the people it already has.

    • Re:Won't last (Score:4, Interesting)

      by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @01:10PM (#61948019) Journal
      There's two sides to this coin. Having a workplace where the young'uns are not afraid to voice their opinions, and the older generations already got somewhat used to younger folk no longer quietly toeing the line, can actually make for a healthy breading ground for new ideas. IF the company is able to properly give each idea the weight it deserves (for examples on what happens if you generate ideas but fail to properly filter them, see pretty much any typical corporate brainstorming session). It's good to listen to the younger employees instead of dismissing their ideas because they don't have seniority or experience. It's also a great opportunity for newcomers to learn from the experienced staff. That goes for ideas on the work itself as well as ideas on how to do that work. This could well be what can keep us ahead of Asian companies.

      The other side of the coin is the effect of this on work ethics. Yes, it's great that you get a lot of say in how we do things, and you don't have to be here 9-5 just for a shitty paycheck for doing a lousy job, and that the work itself is what motivates you to stay. But the reality is that sometimes work is just going to plain suck, and decisions will be made that you do not agree with. And sometimes, your ideas are going to suck too. At some point you will have to accept that you're not god's given gift to the company and that you're wrong. And that ultimately the company exists to make money, even if it's not at any cost.

      Conviction and confidence are traits found in young people of any generation, but Gen Z it seems to be particularly incapable of accepting a disagreeabe situation, whether they actually have a point or not. That might be because they have been listened to too much, without telling them when they are wrong. The bottom line (in my somewhat limited experience in working with Gen Z) is: if you can put your own ego aside and keep an open mind, they are brilliant to work with, as long as they are intrinsically motivated. But when they are not, they are terrible.
  • I don't see much fear in these examples. I see respect for these employees as people. These are extreme examples, but sure I would assume the workplace is going to continue to change as new generations start entering the workplace. Has that ever not been the case? Greater levels of communication over social media has probably led to each generation starting at the millennials to have a more defined identity (at a younger age) than previous generations. This may make things more noticeable but I don't think

  • I did the same (Score:2, Insightful)

    by pele ( 151312 )

    I was helping my boss when I was 19, and was making my bosses serious money at 20. I was even asked how to go about doing things properly when I was 23 and was enlightening CEO at 24. Bought a bmw for my 25th with cash.
    So I salute all those visionaries before me who understood and appreciated new generations and the new perspective they bring to the table.
    But the majority of the Z people are just rude because they've had the modern "nothing off limits" upbringing. Someone needs to put a stop to that too.
    So

  • Business exist to exploit workers and workers exist to exploit their employers. Attrition on any side does not matter as workers can find other employment and failed businesses are instantly replaced by competitors.

    The market is a perfect ruthless judge. I see no problem here. Oldsters can adapt and elevate problems about their liability/decisionmaking level. They don't have to like it. We're paid to work because work sucks.

  • Zero-sum game (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fleeped ( 1945926 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:09AM (#61947397)
    Every minute spent in integrating and dealing with pronouns and any other counter-productive elements (from the point of view of a company who should not give a damn about genders) is a worthless minute, akin to busywork requested by a useless manager. Energy and work effort are finite, they should be spent wisely. The only advantage about bothering with such things is that the company would *appear* cool to prospective employees, increasing the chances that they're going to get somebody worthwhile. Good on them though for not drinking companies' kool aid though.
  • by doubledown00 ( 2767069 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:13AM (#61947407)

    Youth is impatient as we all were at that age. These folks talk a big game and have all the answers when they aren't the ones in charge. But heavy is the burden of leadership. They'll understand that soon enough.

    One thing though that no one is teaching these kids is "no one cares." Like literally, no one cares. Yoga. Your dog. Your life. The nonsense that happened over the weekend. It's all personal trajedies and no one cares.

    In the meantime get to work. Do your job. Learn your craft. If you're not willing to do that, then quit. Or in the alternative I'll fire your ass and pay more to a Gen Xer who will. It's all good, no on is indispensable and you won't be missed. I'm far enough in my career that I don't have to give a shit what a 23 year old fresh out of their mother's vag thinks or values. I'm retired and on my boat in under 10 years.

    The world continues to spin and the sun will rise from it's customary eastern location tomorrow.

    • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

      "Youth is impatient as we all were at that age"

      Impatient but also thinks it has discovered solutions that the oldies haven't**. Invariably we all find out as we age that the "solutions" we came up with had already been discussed and thrown out for being unworkable long before we joined the company.

      ** Ok, there are obviously cases where this is true or no progress would ever be made but in general its not.

    • by Morpeth ( 577066 )

      "'no one cares.' Like literally, no one cares.... In the meantime get to work. Do your job. Learn your craft."

      Would mod you up if I could.

      Might be too easy to blame social media, but many peoples' obsession with likes/followers/etc seems to have gotten confused with the importance of actually DOING or PRODUCING something of actual value. There's a level of narcissism in the US these days that terrify me -- that one's opinions/values/rights are SO much better/more importance/etc than everyone else's. That's

  • by bettersheep ( 6768408 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:13AM (#61947409)

    A crying - a possibly existential - shame that the divisive woke warriors are pulling the world apart just when it needs us to pull together.

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:18AM (#61947425) Journal
    a Gen Z worker questioned why she would be expected to clock in for a standard eight-hour day when she might get through her to-do list by the afternoon.

    No problem. You complete your work by the afternoon you can clock out. You won't get paid for any of your remaining time, but you can clock out.

    Oh, that's not what you meant? You wanted to get paid for a full shift but only work part of that shift? That's not how it works.

    Apparently the idea more work might come in throughout the day never entered their mind.
    • by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:29AM (#61947477)
      Depends if it is wages or salary. If you're doing the latter and hitting your goals on time then why would it matter if you ducked early one day any more than when you stayed late another?
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        Depends if it is wages or salary. If you're doing the latter and hitting your goals on time then why would it matter if you ducked early one day any more than when you stayed late another?

        Neither are acceptable. You come in at your start time, you leave at your leave time. That is what you agreed to in exchange for your salary. You don't get to pick and choose.

        This is what I told my millenail underling about leaving early (we're in IT). Imagine leaving five minutes early one day, and right afte
      • by Jhon ( 241832 )

        If you consistently finish early, the way this is handled is as follows:

        o Lower your salary to match hours worked
        o Increase workload (with maybe a bump in salary). Note if work/per hour/per FTE can be outclassed by a single employee then this can reflects bad on management, as they'll need to better gage what an employee is expected to do over time.
        o slow your pace so you dont get laid off and your work is split and given to two others who were retained.

        I've seen all of these attempted at all levels. Plus

    • by Tempest_2084 ( 605915 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:35AM (#61947507)
      Where I work (IT for a large car company), if you get through your 'to do list' then you start looking for other things that need to be done. There's always something that can be worked on, improved, or checked in on. If you can't find anything there then you ask your co-workers if there's anything they need help on. I always try to have a big project on the back burner that I can put some hours into when there's nothing else going on. My company is paying me to work, and there's always work to be done. If you're sitting around because you can't find anything to work on then maybe you're not really needed.
    • Perhaps. It depends on how her to-do list is created. If she was hired to a full time position and there's simply not enough work to fill one, then find her more work or let her not waste her time. If she is setting her own daily goals and is finishing by noon, then of course she needs to provide her time.

    • Apparently the idea more work might come in throughout the day never entered their mind.

      Or you could be proactive and find more work to do...

  • I feel very sure that I’m uncool

    I do not know where these people work, but sounds like they are all working as marketers. /. readers, at least in the past, never cared about "being cool". So just another fluff article.

  • So Wait (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EllisDees ( 268037 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:24AM (#61947447)

    So the younger generation thinks that they have all the answers and know better than the older generation? Stop the presses! This is the first time in history this has ever happened. Surely they are correct this time and won't fall into the same trap that their grandparents did.

  • This is spot on! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Fons_de_spons ( 1311177 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:24AM (#61947455)
    Yep, had a fierce discussion with one of the new guys recently. I am 39, more than a decade experience in electronics, spent a few years in a lab. He had to do electronics measurements using a function generator. Afer a few hours, he storms in at my office starts ranting that the equipment is rubbish. (Keysight function generators, roughly 10k a piece). "I set the voltage to 10V and it does not output 10V the voltage changes rapidly, is not stable. I think it is broken." I reply that it is probably functioning well. He interrupts me: "Then we need to buy better equipment, I cannot do my job with this rubbish, what kind of company is this anyway." (It is a company with a damn good reputation and very experienced people) So if you are not into function generators, this is the first lesson you learn when using such a machine. The output assumes a nice stable resistive load of 50 ohms. If not, the voltage can be anything especially if your load is dynamic. It is shocking at first. I had the same experience when I was using that device the first time. The big difference here, was that he declared me to be an idiot. "I can easily design a better function generator", he said and this went on and on. I jokingly said he should contact the manufacturer right away, and tell them what to do. He actually considered it. It was a rough ride from there on, marked with him knowing better all the time. Well, he could be one of the weird guys you occasionally meet, well we engineers can be stubborn. The other guy that started with him? Not as bad, but similar behavior. Actually ranting against the CTO in a full meeting. To be complete, the third guy is nice, easy going, knows when to discuss and when to just do things, ... Jeeez. Yes, I am getting afraid of the other two. It is always something, they just cannot do the job. In the end I have to hold their hand. It IS faster to do it yourself than to discuss everything to the rock bottom. Too bad engineers are scarce here. One of the old guys suggested locking them up in the cupboard from time to time. What does work in my experience, is giving them responsibility ASAP. It can go two ways. They freak out and leave with doors slamming, or they come to their senses. One of the older guys that often went head to head with me actually dropped by to apologize, after his first small project. Kids these days...
  • Until these 23yo junior employees start becoming 30-something managers. All of sudden their "I can do whatever I want" attitude will disappear.

    Hell is managing other people. And the younger the people you manage are, the more hellish it is.

    I miss the days of "Just do your fucking job" as a motivational phrase.

  • "What is your advice for our company?" the young woman asked. "Make you a vice president," Mr. Ahmed told her. "Rather than an intern."

    I work on the East Coast in a major tech hub. The guy would have been laughed out of the room.

    This sort of thinking only thrives in consequence-free zones like Silicon Valley where companies like Lyft and Uber are taken seriously rather than criminally investigated as amazingly elegant ponzi schemes utilizing securities law.

    That's probably why I have never personally met a Zoomer who acts like this where I live. They'd never make it into a corporate office where the management isn't allergic to money.

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:42AM (#61947551) Journal

    I was approaching 30 in the late 90s. I had a boss who was 19. He wasn't my direct report, but he was up there and definitely a "boss". This guy earned it though--knew all our systems in and out, I think he started when he was 16 so had more experience than a lot of us, etc. Nobody should be afraid of a young person who's *capable*.

    Arbitrarily endowing just any young person with responsibility beyond their experience seems just silly though. It's ageist, and a great way to destroy morale. Have at it. Smart people will be putting their resumes out, and it's not too hard to jump these days.

  • Fire them (Score:4, Insightful)

    by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @11:50AM (#61947581)

    If your employees are a pain in your ass, fire them. It's a lesson many need to learn. I don't care what time your yoga class is, I'm paying you for you time. Don't like it here? Ok, leave.

    • by Altus ( 1034 )

      then when you have fired your employees and find you can't hire replacements, bitch to the government and insist they import more captive workers for your failing business.

  • by rbrander ( 73222 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:03PM (#61947625) Homepage

    I was pretty proud of my role in a large bureaucracy, I thought my work had direct positive impact, because part of the job was to prove it, show the improved state of infrastructure for the replacement/maintenance money spent.

    I was very taken by the book about "bullshit jobs" and how something like a third of jobs are not even needed - in the opinion of the guy doing it, because during my career, the bureaucracy I worked in also grew really fast, and it seemed like it now took multiple people to do the work expected of one, a decade earlier. (The work had certainly added a number of steps and checks.)

    More than that, the management seemed to have developed an obsession with re-organization; there was always a re-org in progress, most of them needing years of work from several dedicated workers, and endless meetings with the people being re-organized. I could never detect any improvements from these exercises.

    So the question arises: do these workers feel they can get away with any demands because they are NOT bullshit jobs, they're the ones really needed to keep the place running? Or is it because they are true bullshit jobs, needed only to make their managers look more impressive, which of course means the managers have to have somebody in the role, and their job is to appear to be necessary. Maybe they're good at THAT.

  • It's always the same (Score:4, Interesting)

    by kaatochacha ( 651922 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:12PM (#61947661)
    The cycle repeats, indefinitely.

    1) we're young, we can change the world!!!

    2) Look, we're changing the world!

    3) wait...is anything really changing?

    4) Hmm, that problem wasn't as simple as we thought...

    5)The world is what it is.

    6) Why do those silly young people think they can change the world?

  • Method Matters (Score:5, Insightful)

    by eepok ( 545733 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:12PM (#61947667) Homepage

    It's absolutely 100% good to come in and expect that your culture (or a new culture) be recognized as valid. However, we need to make sure that veterans of industry aren't just stepping out of the way because the new values are better values. There's still a lot to be said about operational experience and wisdom.

    I work at a major public university. Every single year, we get new students who have been told they need to go out there an change the world for the better. They've been told that they know better than those older than them (more so recently). And they're bringing a lot of updated and improved principles. But they're bringing zero competency on operationalizing change. Their input is shallow:

    - You should make it so...
    - Why don't you... ?
    - Why haven't you...?
    - We shouldn't have to...

    They've been taught how to create pressure from Karens and activists, but not told how to integrate into the system and make change themselves. Once they actually ask "Why?" and "How?", they find out that a LOT of the things we do are for VERY GOOD REASONS.

    - Expense
    - Privacy
    - Risk
    - Fair Wages
    - Work-Life Balance
    - Sustainability
    - Legal Requirements

    Let's just not mistake little Karens with good causes for people who have developed genuinely good ideas and competencies who just happen to be a little more abrasive than anticipated.

  • by Magnificat ( 1920274 ) on Monday November 01, 2021 @12:19PM (#61947723)
    There is a big sign on the wall at the office I work at "New employee motivation plan: work or get fired." I think that sums it up nicely, especially for more menial labor jobs that can be automated -- and will be soon, if the Gen Z crowd keeps acting like this. We need to strip away their safety net of handouts and government subsidies and then let them see how well things go. Hunger makes a great motivator.
  • by theendlessnow ( 516149 ) * on Monday November 01, 2021 @04:56PM (#61949027)
    When I was hourly, if I finished my "task list" early, my manager would create new tasks. I know sometimes that's not possible. But clocking an efficient worker out (no money) might not be the greatest answer. But if you've ever been in a union shop learning how... to... operate.... in.... extreme.... slow.... motion IMHO is dishonest as well.

    Rules may vary, but salaried workers can often be more task focused and can take off early once "everything is done". Sure, not every place will allow that, but just means people are just going to surf the Internet (or whatever) for the rest of the day.

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