East Baton Rouge Parish Library

Managing Generation Y, global citizens born in the late seventies and early eighties, Bruce Tulgan, Carolyn A. Martin

Label
Managing Generation Y, global citizens born in the late seventies and early eighties, Bruce Tulgan, Carolyn A. Martin
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Managing Generation Y
Nature of contents
bibliographydictionaries
Oclc number
1243591467
Responsibility statement
Bruce Tulgan, Carolyn A. Martin
Sub title
global citizens born in the late seventies and early eighties
Summary
Publisher's description: Here they come: the fourteenth generation of Americans. Self-confident and optimistic. Independent and goal-oriented. Masters of the Internet and PC. Young adults who believe education is cool, integrity is admirable, and parents are role models. They're blunt. They're savvy. They're contradictory. They're the children of Baby Boomers and the upbeat younger siblings of Gen X. They are the 29 million young adults born between 1978 and 1984 streaming into the workplace whose presence will continue to grow each year for the next ten years. They are Generation Y. With three to four job experiences or internships under their belts, the Gen Yers know what they want from their careers and how they want to be managed. They pose new challenges for organizations that are already spending time, energy, and money recruiting and training young talent. What can you expect from Gen Y? If you liked Gen X employees, you're going to love Gen Yers. They are like Xers on fast-forward with self-esteem. Like their older siblings, talented Yers are independent and techno-savvy. They are entrepreneurial, outside-the-box thinkers who relish responsibility, demand immediate feedback, and expect a sense of accomplishment hourlyThey thrive on challenging work and creative expression, love freedom and flexibility, and hate micromanagement. They are fiercely loyal to managers that are knowledgeable, caring coaches that can mentor them to achieve their goals. What does Gen Y expect from you? Ongoing research indicates that the fourteenth generation has expectations of their bosses such as: Provide challenging work that matters Balance clearly delegated assignments with the freedom and flexibility to produce results in their own way Reward accomplishments with increased responsibility Provide ongoing training and learning opportunities Establish mentoring relationships Managing Genertion Y is for those who want to become the employer of choice for the next cohort of young adults. Discover the Gen Y traits that pose the greatest challenges to managers as well as the best practices you can implement now to keep these upbeat, techno-savvy workers focused and motivated
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Who is Generation Y? -- What can managers expect from Generation Y? -- How not to manage Generation Y: the seven traits of the worst managers -- The fourteenth generation's fourteen expectations -- Best practices to meet the fourteen expectations -- Conclusion
Content
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