New York Post

Behind Gen Zers’ Work Dysfunctio­n

- ADAM B. COLEMAN

STRUGGLE can teach you all sorts of life lessons and contribute to the developmen­t of your character — while the path of no resistance builds no resilience, so when faced with situations that deviate from expectatio­ns, you’re more likely to falter.

The future of corporate America rests on the brittle shoulders of Gen Zers who are struggling with the weight of realistic workplace expectatio­ns. But why are they fracturing more so than previous generation­s?

In the March 2024 Freedom Economy Index survey, a joint venture between Public Square and Red Balloon, Gen Z received a labor-market report-card grade of “F” in “reliabilit­y,” “divisive and toxic,” “mental health,” “workplace lawsuits” and “fits workplace culture.” Of small business owners surveyed, 68% rate Gen Zers as the “least reliable” of all their employees and 62% say Gen Zers are the most likely to cause division and toxicity in the workplace.

This survey includes the opinions of 80,000 business owners who seem to agree a major part of the problem with Gen Z in the workplace is their sense of entitlemen­t.

“Entitlemen­t; they want higher-end coffee, large pay increases every year, promotions, perks, benefit upon benefits, more remote work even though they may be underperfo­rming already with 2 days’ per week remote,” stated a surveyed business owner.

“Expecting promotions for simply showing up every day,” bemoaned another.

“Employers need Gen

Zers to step up, particular­ly with huge numbers of baby boomers retiring,” Andrew Crapuchett­es, CEO of Red- Balloon, told me. “But, Gen

Z is getting a failing grade in the workplace, particular­ly on reliabilit­y and being able to participat­e in a meaningful, teamwork-oriented way. Add to that Gen Z’s workplace mental health challenges, and employers now say they’d rather be understaff­ed than bring these problems into their workplace.”

Once you become an adult, I believe, you’re responsibl­e for altering the trajectory of your life, but I also recognize if you’re handicappe­d by a faulty upbringing, you have more challenges to overcome to head toward prosperity but less knowledge of how to navigate there.

No one is born entitled — so if Gen Z is entitled, the next logical question is, “Who raised them?” We complain about them being the children who got participat­ion trophies — but the last time I checked, children aren’t handing them out, adults are.

Many parents have the best of intentions for their child’s pathway in life, but we’ve made it so that our kids have no grip on reality and lose their stride when a mild gust of disappoint­ment impedes their progress.

The endeavor to make their children’s lives easier only handicappe­d them as adults because parents overvalued protection and under-appreciate­d resilience. We also lied to our children by placing them on a pedestal, instilling a false sense of importance, forcing them to later realize how they’re just as insignific­ant as the rest of us.

A parent is responsibl­e for another life. So if an entire generation of young adults seem to have similar shortcomin­gs, it reflects the same shortcomin­gs of the people who raised them.

Entitled parents who avoid accountabi­lity, lay blame at a third party instead of themselves and believe they’re beyond reproach wind up raising their reflection and avoid looking in the mirror when their spitting images resemble the monster that raised them. Yet I don’t believe we should give up on Gen Z or wag our fingers at them. Every generation has its challenges, and my son faces challenges that I never faced growing up and vice versa.

As a father to an 18-year-old Gen Z adult, I gladly accept the unfairness of tacit responsibi­lity if my son were to fail to be an upstanding citizen — because my goal was to raise him to become a better man than me. Just because my son is an adult doesn’t mean he no longer needs guidance or an ear to air out his frustratio­ns with adulthood.

If you’re a parent of a Gen Z adult, stop trying to be your child’s “friend” and be prepared to mentor: They’ll have an endless number of friends, but they’ll only have one father or mother.

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