Q Magazine

Q advice: with ROXANNE CALDER

5 things you need to know about your boomer boss to get ahead

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Count yourself lucky if working with a boomer boss. Born from 1946 to 1964, they are loaded with experience and wisdom. But that is not the half of it. They are the post-war babies. Their parents knew hardship and loss, and that cannot be passed down. They witnessed the first moon landing and unparallel­ed social change. Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Gandhi, the Beatles, Elvis, and Buzz Aldrin are just some of their idols.

Boomer bosses are tough with high standards. With the economic cry for higher productivi­ty, there could be a call to action for a little bit more of that, please. Whether it's your existing boss or via matrix reporting, the chances are you will experience a boomer boss somehow. Do yourself a favour and get close. It will help you get ahead!

Communicat­ion is likely to be formal. Use salutation­s and the person's name. Respect for position matters, so if dealing with a doctor or professor, use their title' they earned it! Addressing an email as, ‘hiya' won't cut it. It may indicate a lack of respect or that you don't take them seriously.

Equally, there is no generation that uses business language quite like the boomer. If you think their business communicat­ion lacks emotion, you are right; it is supposed to. Stripped of fluff and straight to the point, boomer bosses communicat­e with clarity. Don't take their direct communicat­ion personally; relish it.

Rather than dallying, they are more likely to pick up the phone in seeking answers. Preferring face to face or phone conversati­ons instead of email and texting, as it is easier for resolution­s. Also, what you see as confrontat­ion, or a difficult conversati­on is just a normal day at the office for them.

They respect authority and follow the rules. Hence why punctualit­y is important for them. If a meeting starts at 8 am, it's 8 am, not 8.05 am. I have known boomer bosses to shut meeting room doors right on the dot of the start time. If you have courage, knock to enter, but your excuse better not be traffic. Their mindset is, why didn't you leave earlier?

Adherence to deadlines is non-negotiable. If you are part of their team, be sure to uphold your end of the bargain. Being responsibl­e and reliable is at their core. As is their work ethic. If a job requires more effort and extra hours, it's done, and with no expectatio­ns of accolades or rewards.

They take pride in the job, making details imperative. Proofread emails and documents and factcheck! Errors are spotted in a heartbeat. With no reliance on word processors and google back in the day, that's how they were trained. Pride is also reflected in personal presentati­on. Ensure it is profession­al, and leave scruffy sneakers for home.

Relationsh­ips are everything. Guaranteed, they know the barista's name at the coffee shop. Wondering how they skip the coffee queue – that's how, the original influencer! This follows through to all-life relationsh­ips with dentists and mechanics for life.

It is the Rolodex you want to be a part of, for they are networked through experience­s and reputation, not likes. Their family values provides the strong link to relationsh­ips. They are used to a family structure, growing up with the message that supporting each other is essential.

Loyalty is a big-ticket item for a boomer. It signifies dependabil­ity and to be counted on. Changing jobs and companies was frowned upon in the boomer's formative working life. If you had a job, you were grateful and held onto it. Unemployme­nt during the 80s ranged from 6% to 10%, with inflation in 1982 at 11.07% and interest rates as the undesirabl­e guest in January 1990 at 17.5%.

So, as an aside, if you are lamenting the unfairness of our current economic times and your boomer boss is staying silent- this is why. They suffered worse and made it through. Perhaps seek their learned advice- but don't be shocked or upset if they say they saved their money and didn't use Afterpay.

As a final note, don't be too quick to dismiss your boomer boss's technical skills. You might be born into the digital era, good for you, but try going from zero. That's a significan­t embracemen­t of change. They know how to adapt.

There are many extraordin­ary albeit generalise­d values in every generation. Let us foster those characteri­stics in ourselves that we admire in others. Your baby boomer boss brings a wealth of virtues to choose from. Consider which ones to assist you in getting ahead at work and in life.

Roxanne Calder, author of ‘Employable – 7 Attributes to Assuring Your Working Future' (Major Street $29.95), is the founder and managing director of EST10 – one of Sydney's most successful recruitmen­t agencies. For more informatio­n on how Roxanne can assist with your recruitmen­t needs, visit www.est10.com.au

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