WHY IT'S IMPORTANT TO RIP OFF GENERATIONAL LABELS
Earlier this year, it was reported that there are now five generations in the workplace, reflecting the fact that most Australians are now working longer to achieve “a comfortable retirement”.
While it’s useful to understand the diversity of worker ages, it can be unhelpful – and even damaging – to embrace generational labels in the context of employment.
Generational labels were first used after World War I, with the concept of the ‘lost generation’. This term referred to the loss of so many young people during the war. After that, terms like Baby Boomers, Gen XYZ and Millennials were embraced largely as artificial devices to create new market segments. In truth, there’s not much science behind these labels.
A more helpful approach is to think of people in terms of their lifespan phases and their experience. For example, regardless of their year of birth, it’s normal for young people to push boundaries and champion ways of doing things better to benefit themselves, their communities and the world around them. We did it. Our parents did it. Their parents did it. It’s natural and it’s actually what we need young people to do. Similarly, it’s very common for older people to have different drivers such as shorter-term returns and legacy issues.
While it’s valid to recognise that personal drivers are likely to change over time, embracing generational stereotypes is harmful because it breeds discrimination and unconscious bias. For example, when younger people are called ‘digital natives’ and older people are called ‘digital immigrants’ it perpetuates stereotypes that are not founded in science. The research we’ve read indicates that technical ability is the same across all lifespan stages – it is not moderated by age. Understanding this, as just one example of age-related bias, will stop younger people who are not strong in technology from feeling like failures and older people with the right capability and curiosity from being excluded from workplace opportunities relating to technology.
To help promote the benefits of age-based diversity and overcome unconscious bias, there are three things organisations can do.
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How can JOST&Co help?
To help organisations rip off generational labels, address ageism and make the most of age diversity, our team can work with your leaders to help them recognise lifespan performance levers, undertake a cultural evaluation (including a diagnosis of age-related strengths and opportunities for improvement) and review learning and development frameworks, and their current state application for people in different lifespan stages.
Contact us on 1300 791 950? - we’d love to hear from you.
Training & Recruitment at DivergentOne | We Guide, Place & Train | Co-Founder DivergentOne, TechFielders | Interests: Systems Thinking, AI & Data Ethics, Writer
1 年Few good points here. Very important to bring people together on their commonality, rather than their differences. The purpose of any team is collaboration