Posts Tagged ‘GenY’

  • Productivity 2.0

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    Just found this article on Zenhabits.net about the shifting paradigm and understanding of what productivity means in the workplace.  While reading the article a couple of things came to mind.  First, technology has provided us with lots of tools to make our jobs easier and more efficient.  But I’m sure most of work with more than a few laggards in this regard.  Second, I thought of Gen Y and how they live and breathe the concepts of ‘productivity 2.0.’  Its going to be important for businesses and HR departments to be aware and adapt their policies so to allow this upcoming generation to be their most productive and make the biggest impact to the business.

    Productivity 2.0: How the New Rules of Work Are Changing the Game.

    A couple things that stood out the most for me:

    • Less planning and more doing.  For most businesses the world is moving a lot faster than it used to, and too much planning just makes you slow which gives the competition a head start.  Besides, most meetings are ineffective.
    • Automate with technology.  Just this week a co-worker was busy compiling results from a paper-based survey.  She spent hours typing in all the answers into a spreadsheet.  Had this been done with one of the many online survey tools (many available for free), the results would have been instantaneously available.  Plus those hours spent typing could have been put towards another project.
    • Tag it, then search it.  Forget about being organized with folders, and sub-folders with more sub-folders.  You know you can’t find anything, and pity the person who has to figure out where things are in your folders.  Search technology for the desktop has come along way (Spotlight on Mac, Google Desktop on Mac/PC, and Windows Desktop Search 4.0 for PC) which make it feasible to just throw everything in the proverbial pile but still find what you’re looking for with ease.  I still use a few folders on my computer, but not nearly as much as I used a couple of years ago.
    • Flatten that hierarchy.  We’re all adults here, and if you’re hiring smartly everyone is capable of making decisions to positively impact the business.  Allow people to work more independently and make decisions faster.  “People with freedom are generally happier with their jobs and more passionate about the work they produce.”
  • Young workers push employers for wider Web access – BusinessWeek

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    Just browsing through the headlines on BusinessWeek and came across this article.

    Young workers push employers for wider Web access

    I’m sure the Gen Y readers will particularly enjoy the article, but I’d like Baby Boomer business owners to take a moment and read it as well.  Here is a quote that I think sums up the article’s position nicely:

    “It’s no different than spending too much time around the water cooler or making too many personal phone calls.  Do you take those away?  No,” says Gary Rudman, president of GTR Consulting, a market research firm that tracks the habits of young people.  ”The two worlds will continue to collide until there’s a mutual understanding that performance, not Internet usage, is what really matters.”

    This new generation of talent lives and breathes technology, so when they get to the office and find they can’t get to Facebook, Gmail and other popular internet sites, or if there is no Wi-Fi access for their laptop, its as if they’ve been incapacitated.  Hindered from working in the manner they are accustom.

    Certainly for some companies in highly regulated industries, some safeguards will need to be in place.  The article mentions a company allows employees to access any site but prevents file uploads for data security reasons.

    In general, I think its better to assume your employees are all adults and can handle the internet appropriately.  How are you handling the changing role of the internet in the office?

  • Hiring the Net Generation

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    I read an interesting article on BusinessWeek this morning; a couple of lines stuck out to me in particular.

    Once the recession is over, the smart companies that have hired top young talent will be in a prime position to survive the next war: the war for talent. As one of my clients said to me, “A recession is a terrible thing to waste.”

    Its an add-on notion that businesses that cut back during a recession limit their abilities to grow when its over.  However, for many the Net Generation as this article calls them (otherwise known as Gen Y or Millenials) stand as a bit of a mystery or yet another problem to overcome.

    Regardless how you feel about them, they are changing the rules of engagement.  Running an ad in your local newspaper isn’t going to find top talent among this group.  So where are you going to find them?  How are employers going to attract the Net Generation?

    • Informative web sites
    • blogs and podcasts
    • Multimedia on YouTube and Facebook
    • Hiring FAQ page in the form of a wiki
    The author also suggests wisely that companies and interviewers need to start looking at interviews as two-way dialogue.  Employers are being evaluated just as mach as the candidate, and this extends into the 90-day probationary period.
    Supervision may be on the way out, too. Brad Anderson , chief executive of Best Buy (BBY), puts it this way: “The Net Geners we hire have enormous knowledge, unprecedented information, and facility with tools that in some areas is superior to their seniors.” So the job of management is more to create the context whereby they can be successful, rather than to supervise them. 
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