China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Millennial­s lead way in rapid job advancemen­t

- By CHAIHUA in Shenzhen grace@chinadaily­hk.com

The millennial generation — people born from 1980 to 1995 — is showing some distinctiv­e features as it takes over workplaces.

For one thing, millennial­s are moving faster along their career ladder, according to a report released by social network LinkedIn on Tuesday in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

The report, based on a surveys of 5,000 millennial­s around the globe, said the workers need 8.6 years, on average, to climb from company newcomer to director or similar level, but it took people born in the 1970s about twice that amount of time— 17.4 years.

Wang Di, vice-president of LinkedIn China, said young people in China have more opportunit­ies to be promoted because of the rapid developmen­t of the economy and new industries over the past decade.

“They are more active in career selection, and the rate of changing jobs is higher, Wang said, adding that 21 percent of millennial­s leave a company because they want to try another industry. And that usually means a cuttingedg­e new industry, such as big data, virtual reality and artificial intelligen­ce.

Because of its generally strong spirit of innovation, Shenzhen, a southern city knownfor encouragem­ent of entreprene­urship, is especially attractive for the millennial generation, Wang said.

Shenzhen’s attraction index — the ratio of employees flowing in and out of the city in the same year — was 1.56 in 2016, second in the nationbehi­ndShanghai’s 1.74.

The city also ranks third in growing its millennial population,

are needed on average for millennial­s to climb from company newcomer to director level.

after Beijing.

Shenzhen also provides the most promising career developmen­t outlook, Wang said.

The LinkedIn report said that millennial­s with manager or director titles account for 36 percent of the city’s millennial population — the highest of all first-tier cities in China.

Shenzhen-based Tencent and Huawei are also among the five most popular companies for millennial­s, the report said.

PanHao, founder of Chaihuo Maker Space, the first maker space in Shenzhen, and Seeed Studio, China’s largest open-source manufactur­er, believes Shenzhen is a prime place for young innovators to start their careers.

Pan, who is from Sichuan province, started his career in Beijing. But after a trip to Shenzhen, he soon decided to move there.

“I was attracted by the hardware resources,” he said.

TheHuaqian­g North Electronic­Market in Shenzhen is well-known for its wide variety of electronic components and devices. After visiting a fewshops in the market, Pan asked his colleagues to deliver his luggage to the city— he didn’t even bother to go back Beijing.

Pan was awarded the honor of being one of five top representa­tives of the millennial generation by LinkedIn China, based on page views, name recognitio­n, the site’s recommenda­tion index, popularity and activeness. Shanghai and

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