Catching Zs with Gen Z – why a multigenerational team is the dream workforce

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As more of Generation Z (Gen Z) moves into the workplace, there has started to become apparent a discrepancy between such a diverse range in ages all working together. With up to five generations all in the same work space, each with very different life experiences, especially regarding technology, the challenge now is how to make such multigenerational diversity work for you and your business.

Mind the (age) gap

Generation Z refers to anyone born between 1997 and 2012. Very much born into the ‘digital age’, Gen Z’s will soon represent nearly 30% of the workforce by 2025. Rather than seeing the differences between Gen Z and the rest of the more established workforce, businesses should see this as a new opportunity to pass on key knowledge and best practices, especially as older team members retire. This is particularly true in skilled trade workforces, such as construction, which is struggling to address the ever-growing skills gap.

Thinking outside the box

This issue just highlights how we shouldn’t put people into boxes. The type of employee is largely defined by their personality – you don’t have to be in a certain age bracket to have a certain type of personality. Especially in the job market, success largely comes down to personality, resourcefulness and risk taking, and these three elements don’t have anything to do with age.

A risk taker could be someone in their 50’s who wants to set up their own business, despite having a mortgage, three children and no back up finance to support them, and still be ready and eager to do it. Conversely, a 22-year-old ‘Gen Z’ living at home could be very fearful of setting something up on their own, even with financial support from their parents, and be terrified of failure.

A balancing act for a multigenerational workforce

Each generation will have different aims for themselves and their careers, and that’s true at any life stage. We are all influenced by the changing marketplace, together with our own needs and personalities.

I found that world events, such as the financial crisis of 2008, helped a lot of very senior clients in their 40s and 50s to take a good long look at their career and made decisions around what they enjoyed doing, rather than worrying about status, and the same was true following the Covid epidemic, with many of my clients looking for a change to reflect our new ways of working.

When the shared aim is to help a business succeed and do well, then the drive of the individual working with the team should be the emphasis, not the age.

I sometimes think older generations are fearful of Gen Z – they are hungry to do well, achieve and progress, but still want a good work/life balance, meaning a healthier and happier workforce, something we can all learn from!

It’s also not just about comparing Gen Z to the rest of the workforce, each generation has more in common than we may first realise. The lines are blurring as everyone tries to keep up to date with the latest changes in technology and ways of working.

Employers should therefore not limit their workforce by age, for fear of losing out on this growing and talented pool. They are the future of your business after all. So, beware of comments of ‘the youth of today’, an age-old phrase that we’ve all been subjected to ourselves by our previous generation. Time will pass and before you know it, people who never knew a world without AI will be the topic of Gen Z recruiters, telling them what the world was like when they were young!