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11/02/2020

What Makes Generation Z Tick?

Guest Article Provided by Sandra Harbrecht, Paul Werth Associates

 

Just when we think we have Millennials figured out, along comes Generation Z.

Four years ago, we interviewed members of Generation Z as teenagers. These are members of society born between 1995 and 2012, and they talked to us mostly about how they engaged with technology and brands.

More recently, as these young people increasingly are entering the workforce, we are seeing heartening insights into what makes members of Gen Z tick as employees.

This is a generation that grew up facing one crisis after another. They were young when the 2008-09 recession knocked their parents out of work. They came of age in an era of school shootings and other domestic terrorism — something their parents seldom experienced when they were young. They’ve only known political polarization, have watched protests spill into the streets, and have soldiered on through the current pandemic and lockdowns.

Jonah Stillman, who graduated from high school in 2017 and now works with his father David on generational issues, noted recently in a presentation to C-suite leaders that Millennials watched movies like “Harry Potter” — a chance to live in an alternate world — while Gen Z watched movies like the “Hunger Games,” set in a fight-to-the-death world that reflected the generational feeling of always being in survival mode.

Gen Z is not a “slacker” generation according to the Stillmans and others. Like all generations who are shaped by societal forces and their parents' reaction to them, members of Gen Z typically have the following traits in common:

Organizational leaders often view the young as risky hires. But where there is risk, there is also reward. While Gen Z has a different way of viewing the workplace, its members possess many of the traits that will help them thrive. They are loyal, entrepreneurial, self-starters who want to make a contribution. They will need strong mentors and role models: Who doesn’t? And, they will need to learn that collaboration is what makes any organization successful, even if they need time working on their own.

But Generation Z is no longer coming — they're here. And, our organizations will be better for them.

 

Sandra is a former presenter at OAMES Annual Meeting & Exhibition and Paul Werth Associates is an award-winning, strategic communications firm with expertise in public relations, public affairs, marketing, and crisis management; serving clients in Ohio & beyond.

Sandra Harbrecht Ratchford - President and CEO
Paul Werth Associates
614-224-8114
877-577-0017

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