Monday, April 27, 2015

Three Tips To Inspire your Millennial Workers

As a millennial myself, it’s hard to write an article telling baby boomers how we need to be treated. I mean, why take me serious? Aren’t I just asking you to cater to us so we don’t need to work and grow?

No.
The thing is, baby boomers tend to think young workers aren’t inspired. I can’t tell you enough how much we KNOW you think technology made our lives way easier and we probably wouldn’t have been able to get where we are if we had it the way the boomers did.
They also didn’t have to have over a 3.5 GPA to get anywhere in life. That is the minimal requirement for anything.

Back to my original topic, your millennial workers do want challenge. They are very creative, because creativity is highlighted everywhere they go (thanks to that crazy technology stuff), and they want to be the best.
www.Millennial2020.com


If your business isn’t changing to work with both generations, your millennial will become robots to whatever you tell them to do and your business will start to decline. As hard as it may be to accept, a millennial will NEVER think like a baby boomer. Stop trying to change and mold.

As you cater to their creativity, you still hold reign. All you need to do inspire.

Give Feedback Regularly
Honestly, so many young people have it in their heads that their boss will never see them as an equal in the company to a baby boomer. Most people who’ve been with a company over 10 years get feedback, try it for a day, shake their head and go back to thinking they know how to run the office. A millennial, when given feedback, WILL change. A simple “thank you” does the job most of the time, and your youngsters can handle constructive criticism better than anyone. Let them know you reward hard work and they will want nothing more.

Share Ideas with Them and Give them Opportunities for Idea-Implementing 
Invite the youngsters to more meetings. They probably want to sit in on the big-wigs talk, and they want to feel important. On your end, they will be most active when implementing new ideas, not to mention have ideas of their own. Ask regularly what ideas they have, and if they have a good one, allow them to work on it. Google is a great example: they allow team members to work on whatever they want on a regular basis. It allows them to feel in control while boosting innovation.
Complete win-win.


Allow work-life balance and flexibility
Some of the greatest companies of our time allow unlimited vacation time, travel time, and the opportunity to where from anywhere. This may sound ridiculous to give them so much freedom, but provided their great performance, why not work from home if possible? You can still have constant communication, and a millennial honestly couldn’t ask for a better day than sitting in sweats and making money. Vacation time can give given without being taken (millenials are in tune with school and other debts after they get a job), but freedom is the best feeling.

A millennial who feels encouraged, inspired, and free at work=a loyal and hard worker.



No comments:

Post a Comment