Generational Diversity in the Workplace

 
Generational Mixes in the
Workplace
Presentation
 
Outline
“Collaboration is the new Competition”
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Multiple 
Generations
Silent Generation / Traditionalists
1965 - 1980
Ages 67 - 75
Baby Boomers
1946 - 1964
Ages 48 - 66
Multiple 
Generations
Generation X
1937 - 1945
Ages 36 - 47
Generation Y - Millenials
1981 - 2008
Ages 19 - 35
Silent Generation: 
Traditionalists
Includes everyone born before
1945 (67 – 75 years)
Less than 1% workforce today
Respect authority and expect
respect for a job well done.
They are hard workers and stick
to instructions given.
Most have stayed with one
company most of their career.
Baby 
Boomers
Born between 1946 & 1964 (48
– 66 years)
Make up approximately 30 -
35% of today’s workforce.
Respect authority and often hold
higher management positions.
They offer more ideas than
Traditionalists and expect to
lead, not follow.
E.g. Bill Clinton, George Bush
Gen 
Xers
Born between 1965 & 1982 (36 – 47
years)
Make up about 35 - 40% workforce
They know and understand
technology and want to use it.
May have lots of career interests and
paths.
They demand individuality and like
multi-tasking.
E.g. Jennifer Lopez, Victoria
Beckham
Millenials / 
Generation Y
Born between 1983 and 2000 (19 – 35
years)
35% of the current workforce but rising
rapidly
Not only expect technology in every
form, but demand it - would be lost
without the Internet or gadgets.
Dress code not especially important
Seek out jobs where their 
creativity
 is
most important and rewarded.
E.g. 
Justin Bieber, Rihanna
 
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Millenials 
in 
Local Government
SmartGovCommunity 
 
“millenials are a force of change in
Government in 3 ways:
1.
Millenials as Citizens 
 trips to city hall decrease and
demand for online will increase (digital government), instant
services
2.
Millenials as Leaders 
 coming into their own power in
their 30’s, organisational culture change, flexible work
arrangements enabled by mobile technology
3.
Millenials as Civic Employees 
 make local government
compelling and enticing career path
Generations & 
Technology
Millenials & 
Technology
 
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Innovation Leadership: 
2 Components
1. 
An innovative approach to leadership
Bring new thinking & different actions 
- Innovative thinking is a
crucial addition to traditional business thinking. It allows you to
bring new ideas and energy to your role as leader and to solve
your challenges
How to think differently about roles & organizational challenges
How to break open entrenched, intractable problems?
How to be agile and quick in the absence of information or
predictability?
Innovation Leadership: 
2 Components
2. 
Leadership for innovation
Create organizational climate - innovative thinking
Growing a culture of innovation, not just hiring a few
creative outliers
Helping others to think differently & work in new ways to
face challenges?
Innovation when all resources are stressed and constrained?
Staying alive and stay ahead of the competition?
Business
 
Thinking
 
Versus
 
Innovative Thinking
2 Sides of  
the Same Coin
 
“COMPANIES CAN NO LONGER EXPECT THEIR
EMPLOYEES TO BE LOYAL ENOUGH TO STAY FOR
10 OR 20 YEARS, AND MAYBE THAT’S A GOOD
THING.”
Harvard Journal
Har
 
Thank            You
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Explore the dynamics of generational mixes in the workplace, from the Silent Generation to Millennials. Learn about their characteristics and how to navigate collaboration effectively in a multi-generational environment.

  • Generational Diversity
  • Workplace Dynamics
  • Collaboration
  • Millennials
  • Silent Generation

Uploaded on Mar 08, 2024 | 4 Views


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Presentation Transcript


  1. Generational Mixes in the Workplace

  2. Presentation Outline Workplace Mix Millenials in Local Government Innovative Leaders & Organisations Collaboration is the new Competition

  3. Workplace Mix

  4. Multiple Generations Silent Generation / Traditionalists 1965 - 1980 Baby Boomers 1946 - 1964 Ages 67 - 75 Ages 48 - 66

  5. Multiple Generations Generation X 1937 - 1945 Generation Y - Millenials 1981 - 2008 Ages 36 - 47 Ages 19 - 35

  6. Silent Generation: Traditionalists Includes everyone born before 1945 (67 75 years) Less than 1% workforce today Respect authority and expect respect for a job well done. They are hard workers and stick to instructions given. Most have stayed with one company most of their career.

  7. Baby Boomers Born between 1946 & 1964 (48 66 years) Make up approximately 30 - 35% of today s workforce. Respect authority and often hold higher management positions. They offer more ideas than Traditionalists and expect to lead, not follow. E.g. Bill Clinton, George Bush

  8. Gen Xers Born between 1965 & 1982 (36 47 years) Make up about 35 - 40% workforce They know technology and want to use it. May have lots of career interests and paths. They demand individuality and like multi-tasking. E.g. Jennifer Beckham and understand Lopez, Victoria

  9. Millenials / Generation Y Born between 1983 and 2000 (19 35 years) 35% of the current workforce but rising rapidly Not only expect technology in every form, but demand it - would be lost without the Internet or gadgets. Dress code not especially important Seek out jobs where their creativity is most important and rewarded. E.g. Justin Bieber, Rihanna

  10. Millenials in Local Government

  11. Millenials in Local Government SmartGovCommunity millenials are a force of change in Government in 3 ways: Millenials as Citizens trips to city hall decrease and demand for online will increase (digital government), instant services Millenials as Leaders coming into their own power in their 30 s, organisational culture change, flexible work arrangements enabled by mobile technology Millenials as Civic Employees make local government compelling and enticing career path 1. 2. 3.

  12. Generations & Technology

  13. Millenials & Technology

  14. Innovative Leaders & Organizations

  15. Innovation Leadership: 2 Components 1. An innovative approach to leadership Bring new thinking & different actions - Innovative thinking is a crucial addition to traditional business thinking. It allows you to bring new ideas and energy to your role as leader and to solve your challenges How to think differently about roles & organizational challenges How to break open entrenched, intractable problems? How to be agile and quick in the absence of information or predictability?

  16. Innovation Leadership: 2 Components 2. Leadership for innovation Create organizational climate - innovative thinking Growing a culture of innovation, not just hiring a few creative outliers Helping others to think differently & work in new ways to face challenges? Innovation when all resources are stressed and constrained? Staying alive and stay ahead of the competition?

  17. Business Thinking Versus Innovative Thinking Innovative thinking Traditional business thinking Logical Deductive / inductive thinking Requires proof to proceed Looks for precedence Quick to decide There is right or wrong Uncomfortable with ambiguity Wants results Intuitive Abductive reasoning Asks what if? Unconstrained by the past Holds multiple possibilities There is always a better way Relishes ambiguity Wants meaning

  18. 2 Sides of the Same Coin Innovation Leadership Design Innovative Thinking Skill Perceive more deeply, beyond first impressions Interpretive: Look for different perspectives Paying Attention Tap into personal experiences to gain fresh perspectives Personal: consider the customers point of view Personalizing Bring information to life through use of metaphors Abductive: redefine the problem, as what if Imaging Experimental: rapid prototyping, make solutions feel real Generate insights through exploration & experimentation Serious Play Foster productive dialogue by embracing diverse viewpoints Collaborative: share insights and ideas Collaborative Inquiry Integrative: consider the whole Synthesis, rather than analysis Crafting

  19. COMPANIES CAN NO LONGER EXPECT THEIR EMPLOYEES TO BE LOYAL ENOUGH TO STAY FOR 10 OR 20 YEARS, AND MAYBE THAT S A GOOD THING. Harvard Journal Har

  20. Thank You

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