Everyone likes to call them Gen Y - Why? as Y stands for nothing much - whereas GenC stands for the Community Generation. Anyway nitpicking over...
Teenagers and young adults - the so-called Generation Y - have watched with horror as their parents worked punishing hours in their scramble for money and status. Now, as this group go in search of jobs, they have different priorities. They care less about salaries, and more about flexible working, time to travel and a better work-life balance. And employers are having to meet their demands.
Is the opening para in They don't live for work ... they work to live
The previous generation saw work as a primary part of life,' said Madalyn Brooks, HR director at Procter and Gamble. 'When they left education, work was a dominant part of what they did and they were not looking for time out. Now we are seeing the growth of a different profile of candidate. They have grown up in relatively affluent families. They want to be sure that they can strike a balance between work and their personal life, and so the opportunity to take time off, to travel, to work for a company with a strong social responsibility record, these are all concerns that we increasingly hear when recruiting talent.'
A study in 2004 carried out by Common Purpose , an organisation that offers training for leaders and managers, found that those who were not getting satisfaction at work were hitting a 'quarter-life crisis'. Searching for Something concluded that employers had to accommodate young workers' wider ambitions or risk losing them by the age of 30.'We see young people that are searching for some sort of meaning in life and if you can't align their values with the organisation they might leave,' said Julia Middleton, the group's chief executive. 'I think life is cyclical - and there is a return to people searching for meaning and searching for values.'
Middleton agreed that economic prosperity had fuelled the values of Generation Y
The economic prosperity had fuelled the values of Generation Y is a key point here. A tale well told by Ronald Inglehart and Soshana Zuboff ( Why companies are from Mars and Customers are from Venus)
The values surveys of Ronald Inglehart indicate that the new postmaterialists demand true voice. Theirs is a psychological reformation that suggests some interesting parallels to the religious reformation of the sixteenth century. Today’s individual rejects organisational mediation seeking instead to have a direct impact upon matters that touch his or her life.They shun traditional organisations in favour of unmediated relationship to the things they care about. The new individuals thus demand a high quality of direct participation and influence. They have skills to lead, confer and discuss, and they are not content to be good foot soldiers.
Young adults place a premium on the efficacy of small groups of people working together to effect change in tangible ways. And they showed strong preference for leadership “that emphasises the collective participation of many individuals over the strong leadership of the few.”
This rejection of mediated influence also helps explain the growing interest in the concept of “direct democracy” as a natural evolution of representative democracy.
The new individuals seek true voice; direct participation, unmediated influence and identity based community because they are comfortable using their own experience as a basis for making judgements.
I read an interesting statistic the other day that stated over 70% of the US workforce was not happy in their current job. To drive the point home they said 20% of the work force would be labeled as in depression over work.
The most interesting term used in this survey was "CAVE Dwellers" to describe this bottom 20%. These people, the article stated, Complain About Virtually Everything, thus the CAVE Dweller name...
Posted by: Giff Gfroerer, i2SMS | May 29, 2008 at 04:09 PM
I am not surprised they are unhappy - we pay a high price for our post modern society.
Depression is something widely recognised of being a bane of complex societies, where social structures are more transient.
I am not saying you're stat is wrong but the Cave Dweller analogy skims the surface of a much deeper social issue.
Thanks for posting
Alan
Posted by: Alan Moore | May 29, 2008 at 08:28 PM
Thanks. it is your great post. I liked this article.
Posted by: karen millen dress | May 09, 2011 at 10:38 AM
"If you live to be a hundred, I want to live to be a hundred minus one day so I never have to live without you"
Posted by: karen millen uk | May 16, 2011 at 09:02 AM
The more you no darling, the promotion quickly, you relentlessly hit somebody else, somebody else will fear you. Can men and women as horse, put them ride exhausted, to throw down on, so that you can reach the highest desires.
Posted by: Karen Millen dresses outlet | May 16, 2011 at 09:07 AM
that emphasises the collective participation of many individuals over the strong leadership of the few.”
Posted by: ergo baby carrier sale | August 09, 2011 at 07:53 AM
Young adults place a premium on the efficacy of small groups of people working together to effect change in tangible ways. And they showed strong preference for leadership “that emphasises the collective participation of many individuals over the strong leadership of the few.”
Posted by: ergo baby carrier sale | August 09, 2011 at 08:10 AM
Blog Grande Je suis certifié sur votre blog Parce que j'ai cherché et visité le contenu de blog sont uniques. Si votre blog ne sont pas uniques message pour que je ne poste mon commentaire.
Posted by: Lancel | November 17, 2011 at 10:08 AM
Depression is something widely recognised of being a bane of complex societies, where social structures are more transient.
Posted by: cheap beatz by dre | November 22, 2011 at 02:11 AM
que je ne poste mon commentaire.
Posted by: cheap beatz by dre | November 22, 2011 at 02:14 AM
I am not surprised they are unhappy - we pay a high price for our post modern society.
Posted by: cheap beatz by dre | November 22, 2011 at 02:22 AM