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Managing Generation Z

How to Recruit, Onboard, Develop, and Retain the Newest Generation in the Workplace

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Expert advice on attracting, training, managing, retaining, and succeeding with America's newest generation of hard-working, tech-savvy employees.

A new generation is entering the American workforce—Gen Z, the age cohort born after 1996. Having grown up with smartphones, social media, emoji-speak, helicopter parenting, and no expectation of privacy, Gen Z has a unique culture and working style that can be baffling to their Millennial, Gen X, and Baby Boomer managers.

In Managing Generation Z, Robin Paggi, a veteran HR manager, and Kat Clowes, an educational consultant who has worked with hundreds of Gen Z'ers, join forces to give employers and managers a practical, easy-to-understand guide to the new generation defining the future of work. Based on Clowes's in-depth knowledge of Gen Z habits and Paggi's real-world experience of how generational miscommunications can cause expensive personnel problems, Managing Generation Z gives managers at all levels a plan for getting quality work from Gen Z employees while avoiding cultural clashes at the office.

Gen Z is highly educated, extraordinarily tech-savvy, eager to meet expectations, and loyal to employers, but many Gen Z workers have never been trained in the basics of professionalism, workplace communication, and the unwritten social rules older generations instinctively expect. Managing Generation Z teaches managers how to bridge the communication styles between Gen Z and older colleagues, how to train Gen Z staff to make work objectives clear, and how to evaluate and correct Gen Z employees so they will listen, accept, learn, and improve.

Like having an expert HR manager at your fingertips, Managing Generation Z is essential reading for both front-line supervisors and C-level executives who want to get the most from the newest generation in the workforce.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 22, 2021
      Paggi, an HR trainer, and Clowes, an educational consultant, deliver a comprehensive but stereotype-hobbled guide to managing the 61 million-strong age cohort born after 1996. Because of technology and lack of work experience (only 19% had jobs as teens), Gen Z has a different approach to work than their boomer or millennial bosses, the authors write, which can lead to misunderstandings. They tout the younger generation as workers who are practical and cautious after seeing their parents go through a recession, as well as tech-savvy, and the authors encourage businesses to hire Gen Z employees since they’re “not going to be able to ignore them for long.” But the authors also often employ generalizations that undermine their credibility (Gen Z “have rarely been held accountable for being on time”; they also lack email etiquette). They offer no shortage of advice on such subjects as orienting new employees (show them around, introduce them to coworkers), setting goals (make sure they’re attainable), and giving feedback (ensure it doesn’t make them feel threatened), but it lands as not specific to any age group. This one misses the mark.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2021

      Paggi and Clowes are a good combination for this practical guide to hiring, training, and managing Generation Z (i.e., people born in or after 1996). Paggi works with human resources professionals, especially in training and development, while Clowes assists Generation Z'ers in finding employment. They draw from their own experience but also from the experiences of others, as well as data from surveys. The book argues that Generation Z is more deeply involved with social media (especially via smartphones) than previous generations, which makes them think the internet holds the solution to any question. At the same time, having lived through the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the Great Recession of 2008, they are inclined to be risk averse and to seek stability. Paggi and Clowes say managers should pay deep and sustained attention to developing an appropriate office culture that can take full advantage of the strengths Generation Z brings to workplace while averting a culture clash between employees of different generations. VERDICT The book's pragmatic, realistic approach will appeal to HR professionals and general managers.--Shmuel Ben-Gad, Gelman Lib., George Washington Univ., Washington, DC

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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