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Lets Talk About the Family ..

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Title: Lets Talk About the Family ..


1
Lets Talk About the Family ..
Person County Schools
  • Generations in the Workplace
  • Person County Schools
  • Summer Leadership Conference
  • July 2008

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Great Truth
Person County Schools
  • WERE NOT GETTING ANY YOUNGER!
  • General population and work force are aging.

4
Is Eminem a candy or a rapper?
Person County Schools
  • Is smashing pumpkins an act of vandalism or a
    band?
  • Is your version of technology a cordless phone
    or a phone that doubles as a camera?
  • Whats your idea of Hollywood? Rat pack or brat
    pack?

5
So how do we look in PCS?
  • Well .
  • What percentage of our workforce has more than 20
    years experience?
  • What percentage of our workforce has less than 10
    years experience?

6
70 of our staff has less than 10 years experience
7
Lets walk through our schools .
Person County Schools
8
Range of Birth Years 1942 -1985 Range of
Service 0 - 35 Average Length of Service
12.1 years
9
Range of Birth Years 1946 -1985 Range of
Service 0 - 34 Average Length of Service 12.9
years
10
Person County Schools
Range of Birth Years 1946 -1981 Range of
Service 2 - 37 Average Length of Service
12.6 years
11
Person County Schools
Range of Birth Years 1947 -1984 Range of
Service 0 - 35 Average Length of Service
11.8 years
12
Range of Birth Years 1952 -1983 Range of
Service 0 - 32 Average Length of Service
14.7 years
Person County Schools
13
Range of Birth Years 1949 -1984 Range of
Service 0 - 37 Average Length of Service 14
years
Person County Schools
Range of Birth Years 1949 -1984 Range of
Service 0 - 37 Average Length of Service 14
years
14
Range of Birth Years 1944 -1985 Range of
Service 0 - 28 Average Length of Service 7.8
years
15
Range of Birth Years 1947 -1985 Range of
Service 0 - 32 Average Length of Service
10.6 years
16
Range of Birth Years 1940 -1985 Range of
Service 0 - 38 Average Length of Service
13.2 years
17
Range of Birth Years 1951 -1983 Range of
Service 0 - 31 Average Length of Service 14.1
years
Person County Schools
18
So ..How do I know (affirm) what my staff needs?
  • Three variables determine level of need
  • Teacher age
  • Years of experience
  • Readiness level

19
Needs determined by experience
  • Five Stages of Development
  • (Based on research with secondary teachers)
  • Survival Discovery (1 - 3 years)
  • Stabilization (2 - 4 years)
  • Experimentation Activism (7-18 years)
  • Serenity/Relational Distance Conservatism
    (19-30 years)
  • Disengagement (31-40 years)

20
Four stages of teacher maturity
  • Provisional
  • Developmental
  • Transitional
  • Decelerating

21
Person County Schools
  • For the first time in history, four generations
    are sitting side by side in the workplace.

22
  • Striking a balance with all generations can be
    difficult.
  • Younger generations are geared to working in a
    fast-paced environment and getting information on
    a whim.
  • Short, abrupt communication may occur and leave
    out important details that others may need to
    know in order to provide adequate responses.
  • Older generations may over-inform, causing
    confusion or extra work in sifting out pertinent
    information.

Person County Schools
23
The closer you are to the beginning or end dates
of these generational groupings, the more likely
you are to possess traits or approaches to work
that bridge two distinct generations. With
their varying approaches to work and leadership
styles, multiple generations will need to accept
that working together effectively may require
compromise.
Person County Schools
24
The Silent Generation
  • Born 1927 1945.
  • Grew up during World War II. 25 of work
    population.
  • Started working when managers did the thinking,
    employees did the work, and organizations were
    very hierarchical.
  • Employers expected absolute loyalty, and rewards
    went to team players, not mavericks.
  • Familiar with the top-down style of management
    that disseminates information on a need-to-know
    basis, and they get satisfaction from knowing a
    job is well done.
  • Gray Generation is near or beyond retirement.
  • Loyal and hardworking, are excellent mentors to
    younger generations.

25
The Silent Generation
Person County Schools
  • Distinguished by their skill in building
    consensus among coworkers. They are good helpers,
    good facilitators and good listeners.
  • Familiar with hardship, value consistency,
    disciplined and respectful of the law.
  • Known for staying with one company for their
    entire career. Love to work or need to work.
  • Concerns Young leaders and being placed in a
    followers role.

26
The Baby Boomers
  • 76 million Boomers, born between 1946-1964 grew
    up in relative prosperity and safety.
  • Represent 55 of workforce.
  • Have always competed fiercely for jobs
    promotions.
  • Competitive assertive but put a premium on
    ethics values.
  • Developed opinions during the 60s 70s,
    believing in growth, changes, and expansion.
  • Tend to be workaholics define themselves
    through work. Seek promotion by working long
    hours and demonstrating loyalty.
  • Personal relationships with coworkers are
    important. Good team builders.

27
The Baby Boomers
  • Boomers were beat up by downsizings and
    rightsizings and may have had several employers
    or types of jobs. Bring many varied experiences
    to the workplace.
  • First Half of Boomers aka Yuppies Idealistic,
    ambitious, economic achievers.
  • Second Half Boomers Less materialistic, family
    oriented, more cynical about work.
  • They believe anything is possible and therefore
    strive for the corner office, top title, and
    highest salary.
  • When this group reaches age 40, a new midlife
    is defined, shaping the economy of the nation.
  • Facing retirement.
  • Issue Security. Where do I stand in the scheme
    of things?

28
Generation X
  • 47 million strong, Born between 1965 and 1981
  • Experienced some of the most difficult formative
    years of any generation.
  • Came of age when governmental and corporate
    leaders were lying and cheating and failing.
    Thus, Xers are skeptical, self-focused and
    self-protective at work.
  • Self-led, want to make a contribution, want job
    satisfaction and are tech savvy.
  • Witnessed the layoffs of the '70s, '80s and
    '90s, they distrust big institutions and "assume
    that every job is temporary, every job is a
    stepping-stone.
  • First Half of Gen Xers entered workforce during
    corporate downsizing and are the workers that no
    one wanted
  • Second Half of Gen Xers are Gold Collar workers
    who took advantage of the tech boom.

29
Generation X
  • Saw workaholic parents suffer fatigue, illness
    and divorce (40 percent of Xers have divorced or
    single parents) Xers are trying hard to strike a
    better balance in their lives.
  • Professions requiring overtime or varied shifts
    don't match up well with Xers' desire to work
    steady shifts, avoid long hours and keep their
    work and personal lives separate.
  • Nontraditional orientation about time and space
    want flexible work hours, seek independence.
  • Want fun, humor, and casual dress at work.
  • The days of a job for life became history with
    Generation X.

Person County Schools
30
Millennials
Person County Schools
  • First generation to grow up surrounded by digital
    media.
  • Babies on Board of the Reagan years, Have You
    Hugged Your Child Today Sixth graders of the
    early Clinton years, The teens of Columbine.

31
Millennials
  • More than 70 million strong also known as
    echo-boomers, boomer babies, Gen Y, entitlement
    generation, digital generation, Yes generation
  • 21 of overall workforce and fastest growing
    segment of the workforce.
  • They work to provide the necessities of life.
  • Feel competent and WANT to feel responsible.

32
The Millennial Generation
  • Born after 1980
  • Most-supervised generation ever, grew up as
    overscheduled kids.
  • Grew up very protected might be soft in the
    workplace, especially in combative situations.
  • Will rival or exceed Boomers in number.
  • Watched Xers rise and fall with tech boom and
    bust of the 90s.
  • Seeking job security in fields like healthcare.

33
Millennials (are)
  • Dont know what its like to live without a
    computer.
  • Most technologically savvy generation ever.
  • Realistic According to this generation, if the
    Internet has broken cultural barriers between
    people, then this advance should extend to the
    workplace.
  • Demand diversity in their place of work. This
    generation is more team-centric at work.
  • Tend to thrive in a collaborative work
    environment.

34
The Millennial Generation
Person County Schools
  • Defining event was September 11. Strong sense of
    nation and patriotism.
  • View occupations like firefighting and nursing
    to be heroic from the visuals they saw
    surrounding 9/11.
  • Actively involved in community service want
    occupations that make a difference.
  • Millennials may be forced to compete and work
    extra hours to get ahead.

35
Technology has revolutionized the workplace.
  • Millennials thrive in a fast-paced technological
    world. They grew up with nanny cams, cell phones,
    video games, voice mail, PCs and the Internet.
  • More tech savvy than their parents.
  • Advanced motor, spatial, and strategy skills due
    to gaming technology.
  • Their brains have developed differently. Able to
    process a huge amount of information in a short
    amount of time.
  • "CNN Generation this group of workers often
    only want bits and pieces of information -- the
    parts important to them -- to accomplish their
    tasks.
  • May never have learned effective face-to-face
    interpersonal communication skills, due to the
    fact that so much of their social interaction has
    been over instant/text messaging,
  • cell phones and email.

36
Only five years ago
  • In 2003 Five exabytes of information were
    generated.
  • Less than 0.01 was printed.
  • To hold 5 exabytes, we would have to build 37
    more Libraries of Congress.

37
  • This generation is more affluent, more
    technologically savvy, better educated, and more
    ethnically diverse than any previous generation.
  • Theyre always looking to develop new skills and
    embrace a challenge.
  • They strive for success, and therefore measure
    that success in terms of what theyve learned and
    the skills theyve developed from each
    experience.
  • Millennials often take longer to find stable
    careers and settle into lifelong relationships.
  • Though Millennials often take longer to emerge
    into the professional world, they are more likely
    to obtain graduate degrees than previous
    generations because of their high regard for
    education.

Person County Schools
38
Millenials
Person County Schools
  • Known for their optimism, education,
    collaborative
  • ability, open-mindedness, and drive.
  • Have always felt sought after, needed, and
    indispensable.
  • They are arriving at the workplace with higher
    expectations than any other generation before
    them.
  • Theyre so well connected that, if an employer
    doesnt match those expectations, they can (and
    will) tell thousands of their cohorts with one
    click of the mouse.

39
The Millennial Work Ethic
  • Confident. Their parents believed in importance
    of self-esteem, they consider themselves ready to
    overcome challenges and leap tall buildings. Pay
    your dues managers and coworkers who dont think
    opinions are worth listening to unless they come
    from someone with a prerequisite number of years
    of experience find this can-do attitude
    unsettling.
  • Hopeful. Optimistic yet practical. They believe
    in the future and their role in it. They expect
    a workplace that is challenging, collaborative,
    creative, fun, and rewarding. 

40
Millennial Work Ethic
  • Goal- and achievement-oriented. A day after she
    won an Olympic gold medal, skater Sara Hughes was
    talking about her next goalscoring a perfect
    1600 on her SATs.
  • Civic-minded. They think in terms of the greater
    good have a high rate of volunteerism. They
    expect companies to contribute to their
    communitiesand to create a sustainable
    environment.
  • Inclusive. Millennials are used to being
    organized in teamsand to making certain no one
    is left behind. They expect to earn a living in a
    workplace that is fair to all, where diversity is
    the normand theyll use their collective power
    if they feel someone is treated unfairly. 

41
Eight Key Trends That Developed the Millennial
Generation
  • Parent Advocacy
  • Scheduled, structured lives
  • Compelling Messages
  • Heroism Patriotism
  • Digital Divide
  • Globalism
  • Terrorism
  • Multi-Culturalism

42
Parent Advocacy
  • Millennials were raised by active, involved
    parents who often interceded on their behalf.
  • Protective Boomer and Xer parents tried to ensure
    their children would grow up safely and be
    treated well.
  • Parents challenged poor grades, negotiated with
    the soccer coach, visited college campuses with
    their charges, and even went along to Army
    recruiting centers.
  • In exchange, Millennials actually like their
    parents. Mom and Dad were most often named when
    young people were asked whom they admired.

43
Scheduled, structured lives
  • Millennials were the busiest generation of
    children ever seen in the U.S. facing time
    pressures traditionally reserved for adults.
  • Parents and teachers micromanaged their
    schedules, leaving very little unstructured free
    time.
  • Signed up for soccer camp, karate club, and
    ballet lessonswith parents shuttling them from
    one activity to the next.
  • Some started carrying Daytimers when they were in
    elementary school. 

44
Compelling Messages
  • Be smartyou are special. Catered to since they
    were tiny. Nickelodeon, Baby Gap, and Sports
    Illustrated for Kids. 
  • Leave no one behind. Taught to be inclusive and
    tolerant. 
  • Connect 24/7. They learned to be
    interdependenton family, friends, and teachers.
    Can live without the television rather than the
    computer. Prefer chatting on line to talking on
    the phone.
  • Achieve now! Parents hired private agents to line
    up the right college others got started choosing
    the right pre-school while the child was still in
    the womb.
  • Serve your community. 50 of high school
    students reported volunteering in their
    communities. When asked for the major cause of
    problems in the U.S., they answered selfishness.

45
Terrorism
  • During their most formative years, Millennials
    witnessed
  • the Oklahoma City bombing
  • Columbine
  • school shootings become a three-year trend
  • and their catalyzing generational eventthe one
    that binds them as a generation, the terrorist
    attacks on September 11, 2001. 

46
Heroism Emerging out of those acts of violence,
Millennials watched
Person County Schools
  • Re-emergence of the American hero.
  • Policemen, firemen, and firefighters.
  • In the 10 months following 9/11, the word hero
    was heard more than it had been in the entire 10
    years before. 

47
Patriotism
  • Post-Vietnam and Watergate, patriotism was at an
    all-time low.
  • Displaying the American flag had become less and
    less common.
  • September 11 changed all that. Stores that
    carried flags sold out within 24 hours, ordered
    more and sold out again.
  • National pride had been tested, and patriotism
    was alive and well.
  • UCLA freshmen survey reported signs of renewed
    political interest.
  • Percentage of students who reported discussing
    politics represented the largest one-year
    increase since the 1992 presidential election
    year.

48
Globalism
Person County Schools
  • With pen pals in Singapore and Senegal,
    Millennials grew up seeing things as global,
    connected, and open for business 24/7.

49
The Digital Divide
  • Millennials are healthier and more economically
    secure than any earlier generation.
  • Personally conservative about issues like
    drinking and driving.
  • Reading scores have improved.
  • Rate of high school graduates who go on to
    receive a college degree is at an all-time high.
  • BUT

50
Digital divide Never has the gap between the
haves and the have-nots been so great.
  • Sixteen percent grew upor are currently growing
    upin poverty.
  • Though every generation has members who grew up
    poor, never have the differences been so
    dramatic.
  • The gap is about technology.
  • Technology is the great unifier of Millennials
    from places as diverse as Geneva, Japan, and
    Jersey. More than any other factor, it has united
    this generation, even globally. 

51
Multiculturalism
Person County Schools
  • Kids grew up in the 90s and 00s with more daily
    interaction with other ethnicities and cultures
    than ever before.
  • UCLAs Higher Education Research Institute notes
    interracial interaction among college freshmen
    has reached a record high. 

52
Issues????
  • Perceived to have a short attention span.
  • Reluctant to perform tasks that lack depth.
  • Issue As the demand for intelligent workers
    intensifies, employers need to understand what
    motivates and inspires the loyalty of these
    high-performing employees.

53
Getting Ready for the Millennials
Person County Schools
54
Growing Our Millennial Employee Base
  • Millennial workers like to have a life outside
    work.
  • The dont want to repeat the mistakes their
    parents made.
  • They dont want to work long hours at the expense
    of family, friends, and personal pursuits.
  • Whereas the boomers put a high priority on
    career, todays youngest workers are more
    interested in making their jobs accommodate their
    family and personal lives.
  • Money is important but maintaining work-life
    balance outranks money.
  • Its not the corner office or a large paycheck --
    but the opportunity to work for a company that
    fosters strong workplace relationships and
    inspires a sense of balance and/or purpose.
  • Work is only one component of a balanced life
    portfolio that includes family, friends, fitness,
    and fun.
  • Demonstrating flexibility, while focusing on
    goals and accountability, can go a long way
    toward inspiring loyalty in Millennial employees.

55
Dont
  • Expect them to pay their dues
  • Throw a wet blanket on their enthusiasm

Person County Schools
56
Do
Person County Schools
  • Encourage them
  • Mentor them
  • Learn from them

57
Where Employers Go Wrong with Millennials
Person County Schools
  • Not meeting their high expectations
  • Discounting their ideas for lack of experience
  • Allowing negativity
  • Feeling threatened by their technical knowhow

58
Millennials are only one of four workforce
generations.
Person County Schools
  • In addition, todays workforce includes
  • the Silents (pre-1946), Baby Boomers
  • (1946-1964), and Generation X (1964-1979).
  • Each group has its own distinct set of values,
  • view of authority, orientation to the world,
    loyalty, expectations of their leadership,
  • and ideal work environment.

59
What misunderstandings do older workers have
about younger workers?
  • This is the first generation that says, I dont
    want to work more hours. I want to work less
    hours and increase my efficiency and
    productivity.
  • Thats very strange to the Baby Boomers and the
    mature generation. They see that as lazy.
  • Part of the gap is that when Boomers entered the
    work force, we had no computers. Imagine doing
    all your accounting, all your budgets, by hand.
    You had to work 40 hours to survive.
  • We dont appreciate that the next generation is
    highly productive because they have new tools to
    do that.

60
Leadership The Silent GenerationAge 54 and
older
  • Tends toward command and control leadership for
    decisions through clear and simple directives.
  • Pleasant and dependable but may be overbearing
    when directing others.
  • Well-developed skills, talents, experiences.
  • Young Leaders Need To Understand their concerns
    and lead with compassion and awareness.
    Collaborate with older employees to learn new
    ideas. Keep them motivated, productive, and
    employed. Leaders must tailor their approaches to
    followers.
  • Train them in technology.
  • Use personal notes.
  • Recognize their symbolic status as senior
    employees.

61
Leadership Baby Boomers
  • Leadership style tends to be consensual not
    hierarchical
  • Their Key Approach Understand, listen,
    communicate, motivate, delegate
  • Young leaders approach Let them know their
    experience is valued and respected, give credit
    for their accomplishments, challenge them to
    excel, assure them that individual contributions
    are appreciated.

62
Leadership and Generation X
  • Must be skilled at developing and supporting a
    responsive team.
  • These workers will tend to challenge others
    thinking.
  • Information is a source of power.
  • Enjoy independent activities and virtual
    teamwork through electronic means.
  • Leaders must acknowledge that Xers have a life
    reassure them that quality of work is more
    critical than years of experience encourage
    technology and innovation with a hands-off
    management approach provide employee services
    (child care, gym memberships, etc)

63
We are dealing with four generations of
employees. How can we please them all?
Person County Schools
  • Be knowledgeable about generational diversity.
  • Embrace it as diversity, not as right or wrong.
  • Pull the next generation into decision-making
    groups about work environments, strategy,
    staffing, performance appraisals, benefits and
    rewards.
  • Understand what is important to this soon to-be
    -largest part of our employee base .

64
The Challenge for Employers
  • Millennials will most likely prove to be one of
    the greatest assets of companies today.
  • The challenge that lies ahead is to find a
    balance between a work environment that leverages
    the benefits of Millennial employees but does not
    alienate the rest of the workforce.

65
High Expectation of Employers
Person County Schools
  • Millennials want fair and direct managers who are
    highly engaged in their professional development.

66
Leadership Millennials
  • Evaluate them quickly on their performance.
  • Move quickly to the stage where they are
    self-led.
  • Spend time orienting and supervising them.
  • Mentor them and include an electronic source in
    the mentor program.

67
Need for Ongoing Learning
  • Millennials multitask and seek creative
    challenges.
  • View colleagues as vast resources from whom to
    gain knowledge.
  • Give them challenging projects to prevent
    boredom and attrition.
  • Millennials arent eager to bury themselves in a
    cubicle and take orders from others in the
    workforce.
  • They want ownership and control of their own
    fate.

68
Goal, Goals, Goals
Person County Schools
  • Millennials want small goals with tight deadlines
    so that they can build ownership of tasks.
  • They should be challenged to find technological
    solutions to everyday issues.

69
Desire for Immediate Responsibility
Person County Schools
  • They want to make an important impact immediately
    on projects they are involved with.
  • They are looking for immediate
  • gratification and an opportunity to excel.

70
Balance and Flexibility
  • Millennials are most drawn to flexibility and
    balance in their day-to-day life.
  • Employers must incorporate flexibility and
    work-life balance into their recruiting
    strategies.

71
To this goal-oriented generation of employees,
training may be the most important aspect of the
workplace.
Person County Schools
  • Even more important than bonuses and
  • stock options.
  • Provide a variety of training options online,
    on-the-job, and classroom.
  • Use the technology expertise and productivity
    potential of this generation of workers.
  • Spend money on state-of-the-art equipment and
    cutting-edge training.

72
6 Principles of Millennial Management
  • You be the leader.
  • Challenge me.
  • Let me work with friends.
  • Lets have fun.
  • Respect me.
  • Be flexible.

73
Person County Schools
Person County Schools
  • This Is OUR Family!

74
Person County Schools
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