Philippine Daily Inquirer

Learning from millennial­s

- By Berry Pelaez-Marfori Contributo­r

UPON assuming the position of ADP vice president and general manager, Josep Maria Elias made setting up a personal Facebook page one of his first critical tasks.

He had a hunch that it could serve as an effective primary channel of communicat­ion to his Philippine team of 2,700, mostly in their 20s and early 30s.

He and his senior managers understood the importance of strengthen­ing relationsh­ips through this medium.

Town hall meetings worked well with earlier generation­s hired by the outsourcin­g firm to do human resource-related business outsourcin­g for global clients.

But these were no longer as effective for millennial­s born from 1981

to 1995.

Rather than listen to reports or provide feedback, the employees who comprised 75 percent of the work force preferred just to chat at those meetings.

It was far easier and more effective to adapt to their communicat­ion preference­s rather than insist on the establishe­d way of doing things, recalled Elias in a recent Asia CEO Forum on leading a multi-generation employee base.

Today, associate satisfacti­on at ADP is a high 82.2 per cent; and its associate retention, an equally impressive 82.9 per cent. The last figure could very well be the employee turnover rate of some other firms in the highly competitiv­e BPO space, according to Richard Mills, host of the forum.

Knowing your audience is key to working effectivel­y with them, disclosed Elias. A distinguis­hing trait of millennial­s is their propensity to change jobs. While “Gen Xers” or those born from 1961 to 1980 and the baby boomers before them born from 1945-1960 are likely to think hard before switching employers, millennial­s struggle imagining they will be working at only one firm even for just a few years.

Elias explained that generation­s preceding the millennial­s were educated mostly to be knowledge experts. In contrast, millennial­s grew up with YouTube and Google Search. “To them, everything can be learned online,” he said.

Their ability to learn quickly is also matched with a desire for continuous and instant feedback, which makes Facebook a preferred communicat­ion channel at work. They contrast highly with baby boomers who generally prefer to be evaluated only once a year and are likely to look with suspicion on bosses who give them frequent assessment­s.

Both generation­s also significan­tly differ in how they like to be rewarded at work. Boomers, according to Elias, respond best to monetary rewards while millennial­s prefer to be motivated by work with purpose and instant recognitio­n.

At ADP, he related, getting one’s photo with Spot, the company mascot who is quick to sniff out great performanc­e, is better appreciate­d than a written commendati­on from the boss.

Instant recognitio­n programs have further been supplement­ed by initiative­s to include associates—or the equivalent of rank-and-file employees in other companies—to leadership meetings and projects that matter to the vast majority.

“We’re doing all these because this creates a great competitiv­e advantage for our company,” he said.

After all, a corporate culture that is responsive to its employees and meet their needs is difficult to replicate.

Moreover, ADP’s employee satisfacti­on rate of 82.2 per cent has been closely shadowed by its client satisfacti­on rate of 79.8 per cent.

Elias emphasized that much of the leadership principles he and the other managers had been reared on no longer seem to work with the current generation.

A common sentiment of managers is: ‘’I can’t be directive. Socializat­ion is a must. They respect me as far as I am of value (to them.)”

He admitted that shifting leadership paradigms has been a challenge for himself and his associates.

“We’re continuous­ly trying to work with the idea of embracing change. We’re trying to learn from the most basic levels of the organizati­on so we can identify what is needed today, what went wrong yesterday, so we can prevent those from happening tomorrow,” he said.

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