Managing Millennials
July 14, 2010 • By Bob Pike CSP, CPAE
Some managers might think that with the economy the way
it is, it's not as critical to figure out how to manage the Millennials. After
all, aren't they just lucky to have jobs? And the answer to that question would
be "no." If the job isn't all they wanted, they'll simply quit - and if they
need to, move back home - and that's not such a bad deal.
Beyond that, the Millennials are here to stay - and the
boomer generation is not. More and more of them are retiring, and someone is
going to have to take up the slack. And those someones are the Millennials.
Managers who learn to understand this generation and how to work with them are
going to be extremely valuable over the next 20 years. Will you be one of them?
In Managing the
Millennials, Mick Ukleja, Chip Espinoza, and Craig
Rusch blend research
and best practices to provide us with the knowledge, skills, and strategies
needed to not simply survive working with Millennials, but to thrive as
managers when they are part of your team.
It begins by understanding that there is no right or
wrong - especially in the minds of Millennials - just different. Boomers may
think there is a best or right way to do something; Millennials will question
whether it really is better and whether some other way might work just as well.
Chapter by chapter the authors unpack the nine areas that
are likely to cause tension between managers (especially Boomer managers) and
the Millennials. Don't worry, all of these aren't issues for every millennial,
but knowing what the pinch points are for a particular Millennial you'd like to
work with more effectively will be invaluable.
To that end, the authors have given their readers access
to a special offer with immediate benefit to readers: the authors' Generational
Rapport Inventory (GRI), a tool that measures a manager's competencies and
identifies strengths and weaknesses in dealing with Millennials.
You also get access to a companion
website that offers fresh information weekly about generational
differences in the work place.