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How to Lead Gen Y Well in the Marketplace
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| Guest post by: Tim Elmore |
Article Overview: Because our organization works with both schools and corporations, we have a vested interest in helping employers understand and lead the new generation of workers entering the marketplace. I want to see both employers and young employees win. Let me offer eight ideas you might utilize the next time you find yourself leading a young adult on the job.
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Free Download - How to Lead Gen Y Well in the Marketplace By Tim Elmore |
How to Lead Gen Y Well in the Marketplace
Brooke is 22 years
old. She got hired right out of college. She was one of the lucky ones. But
water seeks its own level and her job only lasted ten months. She is now
unemployed. She wasn’t laid off. She was let go. She wasn’t ready to make the
transition from backpack to briefcase.
Giles is 24. He
looked and waited for work seven months after his college graduation. Finally
he got hired but now questions whether he “settled” for a job that wasn’t right
for him. During college he was the picture of confidence. Today, he’s the
picture of confusion. He’s thinking about quitting.
I wish that these
two young people were anomalies. But, alas, they are not. While I continue to
teach leadership to high school and university students, and believe in their
potential, I see a pattern following their graduation. It’s like a good college
football player who never seems to be able to transition to the pros. I don’t
think the answer is to stop hiring recent graduates. We hire them each year at
Growing Leaders. I think the answer is acknowledging they’re a different breed
and must be led slightly differently as they enter the workforce if they are
going to succeed.
Because our
organization works with both schools and corporations, we have a vested
interest in helping employers understand and lead the new generation of workers
entering the marketplace. I want to see both employers and young employees win.
Let me offer eight ideas you might utilize the next time you find yourself
leading a young adult on the job.
1. Create
incentive for them. Share the
“why” behind the assignments and tasks you give them. Remember, these young
people have a strong filter inside their brains that enables them to multi-task
and take in thousands of messages every day via technology. They learn on a
“need to know” basis. Let them
know why they need to know what you are sharing with them.
2. Micro-manage
at first. They’re used to
instant and constant feedback at home and school. Most of them grew up with
praise, trophies and ribbons just for playing the game on Saturday. Don’t be
afraid to watch them and give them your appraisal. Hold them accountable. Over
communicate. Unlike Generation X who wanted to be left alone, they want to be
watched and noticed.
3. Let them
share ideas. They support what
they help create. Give them ownership by letting them talk. They learn best by
being allowed to “upload” their own thoughts, not just receive a download from
their boss on what they need to know. They are used to “posting” their thoughts
on Blogs, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. They want to “vote.” They want to
express themselves.
4. Launch a
mutual mentor initiative. Some companies call it “reverse mentoring”, but
everyone learns and shares. Why
not match your Baby Boomer employees with these new employees who’ve been on
laptops since they were four. Ask the Boomer to share their work experience.
Ask the Generation Y team member to share their expertise in technology and
social media.
5. Communicate
the importance their work.
They want to know what they do really matters. Our research shows that
Generation Y wants to work at a job that takes the environment seriously and
has adopted some cause in addition to simply attending to the bottom line. In
short, young people today want to be part of something that is very important
and almost impossible.
6. Tell them the
truth. They’ve been lied to by adults who said they can do anything they
want to do. You and I know that’s a cliché. We all must align our dreams to our
strengths. Too many look like the early performers on American Idol. They are
out of their gift area and someone needs to tell them so. Help your young
employees discover their weaknesses and strengths and then play to those
strengths.
7. Manage by
objective. Be flexible if possible; let them find creative ways to use time
and resources. They are less at home being managed by the clock than by the
project. They might do their best work at midnight from home, when they’re off
the clock. Try adapting to them, if possible, and allow them to achieve when
they are peaking each day. Measure results not just hours.
8. Mentor more
than manage. This one is all-important. Learn to be a coach. Launch
developmental relationships with them by taking them to coffee and getting
acquainted if you can. They love being “in the know” with their leaders and
will follow you loyally if you connect with them. Put on the mentor-hat and
watch what it does for their performance.
Here’s to a win /
win relationship for them and for you.
Article Tags: marketplace, next generation, young adult
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About the Author: Tim Elmore RSS for Tim's articles - Visit Tim's website Dr. Tim Elmore is the Founder and President of Growing Leaders, a non-profit organization created to develop emerging leaders. He and his team are equipping middle school, high school and college students on hundreds of campuses across the U.S. and overseas to think and act like authentic, servant leaders. His passion for student leadership development grew out of his experience working alongside and being mentored by best-selling author Dr. John C. Maxwell since 1983. Dr. Elmore has written more than 20 books, including the best-selling Habitudes®: Images that Form Leadership Habits and Attitudes, Life Giving Mentors and Nurturing the Leader Within Your Child. Click here to visit Tim's website How to Lead Gen Y Well in the Marketplace |
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