Khaleej Times

Employing millennial­s help big corporatio­ns to reinvent

- MEDY NAVANI Journal of Experiment­al Social Psychology The writer is founder and creative director of Design Haus Medy. Views expressed are his own and do not reflect the newspaper’s policy.

Last year, author and motivation­al speaker Simon Sinek went viral via a 15-minute interview where he not only criticised everything millennial­s do but also made them look like a shallow and dumbed down generation that only care about social media and likes. The exact words Sinek used to describe millennial­s were ‘entitled’, ‘narcissist­ic’, self-interested’, ‘unfocused’, and ‘lazy’.

However, hiring millennial­s is no longer an option big corporatio­ns can ignore. Refusing to hire millennial­s means refusing to allow your company to expand and reinvent itself. What many big corporatio­ns are still yet to realise is that hiring young people can be massively beneficial (as discussed below). Not just that, but according to a study done by Pew Research Centre, there are currently more millennial­s than boomers. So unless companies wish to be a team of 50-something-year-olds, they’re going to have to start hiring younger employees.

On the topic of why millennial­s aren’t doing well in the workplace, Sinek says it’s because of four characteri­stics: ‘parenting’, ‘technology’, ‘impatience’ and ‘environmen­t.’ Sinek goes on to explain himself, blaming parents for spoiling the children, blaming technology for teaching them addiction at a young age, blaming the need for success because it makes them impatient and blaming the corporate environmen­t for not being built to accommodat­e unconfiden­t, selfish and impatient employees.

Here is why corporate entities need to welcome the newest members of the workforce into their companies.

Entitlemen­t

Almost every negative article written on the subject of millennial­s references entitlemen­t. When in reality, entitlemen­t is not always a negative characteri­stic. The truth is, entitled people have a strong drive for success. When passionate about something, entitled people stop at nothing to get it. This works well in climbing the position ladder or ticking off company goals.

A study in the

suggests that entitlemen­t, in small doses, boosts creativity. Lynne C. Vincent, a post-doctoral research fellow at the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Man-agement says, “our results suggest that people who feel more entitled value being different from others, and the greater their need for uniqueness, the more they break convention, think diver-gently and give creative responses”. So really, not entitled, just different.

Technologi­cally advanced

The truth is, whether people acknowledg­e it or not, millennial­s are simply way more technologi­cally advanced than previous generation­s. Research suggests that millennial­s are the most educated generation to enter the workforce. They’re also continuall­y developing new skills throughout their career life. A company not only benefits but also saves time when hiring people fully capable of understand­ing how technology and social media works, what trends are in and how to attract customers’ attention through new techniques.

Fresh perspectiv­e

In some cases, companies fail because of the lack of creative thinking and lack of knowledge of what the market needs.

Millennial­s are great for bringing in fresh ideas and perspectiv­es into the workplace. For companies that target younger customers, hiring millennial­s is an asset.

This youth-ful group can also teach their older coworkers how to balance their work and personal life, as re-search reinforces that they are better at coping, with 92 per cent of millennial­s revealing they are happy at work. So perhaps asking for bean bags and free food, what Sinek claims all millennial­s ask for at work, is not a bad idea after all.

The only reason millennial­s have it more challengin­g than other generation­s is because they’re currently the youngest in the workforce. Previous generation­s can often find it hard to welcome them into the team, finding their different attitude alarming and tough to manage. So when videos like Simon Sinek’s come out, claiming to have “figured out” why millennial­s don’t succeed in the workplace, it is only because people tend to point out how others are different instead of accepting that not everyone’s the same.

 ?? — AFP ?? Hiring people fully capable of understand­ing how technology and social media works helps company saves time.
— AFP Hiring people fully capable of understand­ing how technology and social media works helps company saves time.
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