Infographic Shows What HR Pros Think of Millennials

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Volumes have been written about the difference in generational beliefs, habits and self-perception. Each generation is either admired or criticized for their actions or beliefs. We’ve heard of the “Greatest Generation,” those brave men and women from the 40’s and 50’s who fought in WWI and WWII. The “Hippie Generation,” the Peaceful protestors (“Let It Be”) of the 60’s. The latest to gather media attention, even making the front cover of Time Magazine, is the Millennials, the “Me, Me, Me Generation.”

 

While the Time article begins with the perception that narcissistic personality disorder is three times higher for those in their 20’s (Millennials) than those who are in their 60’s (baby boomers), Nexxt’s team of data analysts came up with more specific findings in their recent Infographic, “Bucking the Stereotype:  Millennials KNOW They Have What It Takes, But They Need To Prove It To The HR Pros.” It’s one thing to have a high opinion of yourself, but in the real world of work, the HR pros still need some convincing.

 

When you’re looking for a job, your perception of yourself is expressed to an employer through your resume and interview performance. Skill, knowledge, and ability to do a job aren’t tied to a generation. The ultimate seat of power is in the interviewer—the hiring manager or HR professional who holds the only card that matters. The “you’re hired” card. The data found perception disconnects that Millennials need to pay attention to.

 

Millennials measure their people savvy (65 percent) by their number of Facebook “friends,” or how many times they’re tagged or tweeted in a day. To the HR pros, the Millennials came up short with only 14 percent. How you interact with a co-worker face-to-face or a group in a team meeting is what matters in the workplace. Millennials may be able to text and tweet at the speed of light, but the HR pros perceive them sorely lacking in interpersonal people skills.

 

Another disconnect is tech savvy. Surprisingly, Millennials don’t consider themselves high on the scale (35 percent) but the HR pros see them as high on the chart (85 percent). When perception meets reality in the workplace, it can make lack of training look like poor performance, which can be unfair to the Millennials who suffer from the misconception they all grew up with a PC and iPhone in their bassinet. 

 

The biggest gap in perception is the loyalty factor. Only one percent of HR pros thought Millennials were loyal to their employer, while 85 percent of Millennials saw themselves that way. The baby boomers think in terms of years or decades of devotion to an employer. Millennials have a much shorter time span, like today or next week. Ambitious and eager to move up (like any generation) they aren’t afraid of being labeled “job-hoppers,” because, well, their peers do it all the time.

 

In the “fun-loving” category, neither generation gave the Millennials a high rating. Is work supposed to be fun? The last category, “hard-working” revealed a wide gap in perception. The baby boomers, who grew up with their depression-era parents’ work ethic see the Millennials as slackers who would rather be surfing the Web, connected to ear buds and taking time off every other week than putting in the long hours they had to endure to make it to the top. The Boomers worked hard to earn their titles and paychecks, and they see Millennials as wanting those rewards to be handed to them just because they show up for work, even if they are a little late or distracted.

 

The infographic gives tips on how Millennials can change the HR Pros’ perceptions to get jobs and keep them. By adopting some of their work styles and interpersonal techniques, Millennials can keep the best of what they have to offer and package it to impress the HR Pros.

 

Make sure to check out the full infographic here. What do you think? Let us know below!

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  • Mary Nestor-Harper
    Mary Nestor-Harper
    Thanks for all the thoughtful comments.  It's interesting to see how parenting in several cases made the difference in how the millennials regarded work.  Tough love by one parent helped a "child" grow into an adult, taking on responsibility and finally getting it.  Like all statistics, the conclusions don't apply to every millennial.  There are many hard working, responsible and dedicated workers.  These are the future managers, leaders and consultants.  I'm sure another generation feared the "hippie" generation taking over.  They ended up being today's Boomers!
  • Denise  M
    Denise  M
    I believe that this is what those doing the interviews said, but I don't believe it is  the truth about millennials. I hire ( and fire) folks of all ages. By in large, the youngest employees are energetic, eager learners, and hard workers. Sure, they're green, but so was I when I graduated from college, the difference is that I was provided a lot of training to insure that I could do my job well. Nowadays, kids are thrown to the wolves without much structure or mentoring to save non- productive dollars. The result is a confused workforce who aren't loyal because employers have done little to earn that loyalty. Communication is a two way street- my generation does not communicate in the same way as millennials, but I have learned how they do communicate and find that there is no longer gap since I've learned to adapt. Bottom line- I love the kids that work for me and see great potential in many of them!
  • kaly g
    kaly g
    I feel that there is a lot of valuable information to be gleaned from the previous postings.  Far too often people have a tendency to 'paint everyone with the same brush".  I feel if you extend respect, you receive respect in return.  Quid pro quo.  
  • Darlene D
    Darlene D
    I am in the nursing field and am disheartened to see young people going into nursing, not because it is "a calling", but because it is an easy fix-go to school for 2 years and get a decent paying job with benefits. What they forget is that they have patients and family members who put their trust in this person to safely take care of this person. I see so many(not all) young nurses who just do not have the same work ethics, professionalism and a true passion for such an important job...caring for the lives of people.
  • Carrie S.
    Carrie S.
    During my last year of college, 2009 to 2010, I went to several interviews and was almost immediately dismissed due to my age. I heard these above remarks from the HR staff as preconceived ideas about me based on "Millennials". Although I proved a stable work history prior to college and during college, I was slammed with illegal questions surrounding age and gender stereotypes- marriage plans, children in the works, clubbing, etc. After a long hard search, a small engineering original equipment manufacturing company gave me a chance in 2011. I am salaried and I work early mornings, longs nights, and weekends if necessary. I do not feel entitled to anything but respect. If I put my heart and time into my work, I expect you to value this as an employeer. Wanting respect for true effort is not unreasonable. I have already been laid-off once, taken a pay cut, and thrown into two positions I was not trained for because people (far older than me) quit abruptly. However, because I stuck with the company I also received two raises and new responsiblities which leaves other people very reliant on my performance. My behavior surprised several of the older workers, because many of the younger employees did quit in six months or less. I believe it all comes down to how the previous generation raised us. My parents expected me to do chores, help with my little brother, help on my grandparents, and help on my grandparents' farm all with a smile on my face. As a child, I was expected to accept what was given to me, and be in bed by nine o'clock at night- at least until high school. We did not have cable (still do not), had one computer everyone shared (still do), and did "quality time" things as a family on the weekends. My parents also expected me to move out after I graduated, which I did. I graduated in May; moved out completely by June with a job to pay my bills. I am married now, and I do not get along with many of my Millennial peers because of the way I was raised. I do understand, unfortunately, there are those that were not made to appreciate the small things before reaching the large things in life. However, the blame does not completely lay with Millennials; half of blame is attributed to the parents. (Proverbs 22:6)  Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it. In the end, every generation has slacker, takers, and dreamers with no plans. So, give us Millennials a fighting chance!
  • Diane L
    Diane L
    The working fast and correct mistakes later seems to be an MO of this generation.  I am surprised to see, however, that for my daughter who landed herself a highly sought out position at the St Regis, there are exceptions to these rules.  She is the typical Millennial at home, but at work, you would never know she was only 20 with a very responsible position.  I'm proud of her.  She is different from most everyone else her age.  She hates gambling, drugs, and is staying away from alcohol, this being her own idea as a reaction to the millennials around her.  I also have to question age discrimination against the older worker if this article holds true
  • Marvin B
    Marvin B
    It's amazing when you hear how wonderful they are and they laugh when one talks of the greatest generation when they have done absolutely nothing but play computer games
  • Laura S
    Laura S
    The article is somewhat true however it is missing some very important factors. The work ethic is taught in the home, if the parents did not work the children they are raising do not see the purpose. Others want better than what they had or equal to it. I am a work- a- holic and a Gen X with a sandwich issue. Millennial are my children and a Baby boomer lives with me.  We do a lot of basic items that have been missed in the hustle and bustle of daily life.  Holding people to integrity was key, I have 2 teenage daughters that are " go getters". They talk about how I went back to school and furthered my education to obtain a promotion. They see the money and what you need to do to obtain it.  The hard truthful conversations they can handle, however no one is having them.  I am an HR professional and very nervous about the next generation.
  • KC
    KC
    1 I work with people that are 5-10 years older than myself and surprisingly enough they are the ones on Facebook checking out what their 40 something year old friends are doing. 2. I am finding the loyalty card overrated, in my opinion it is unfair to keep a person employed who is not productive or contributing to the team, but is being kept around because they have been around for a longer period of time.3 I have spent the last 7 years in the same department, the first one in, the last one out trying to "be the change I want to see". I even developed a program to make the daily process at least 30% more efficient. And for what? So these people have more time to be on Facebook!
  •  Libby L
    Libby L
    So the millenials are a worthless generation? Hmmm, who raised these children? Yeah, boomers that's right, look right into the mirror. Oh wait, let me guess, it's not your fault, right? Please, give it a rest.
  • Steve O
    Steve O
    This author makes the assumption that they are misconceptions. Mostly, not so much....
  • Brian S
    Brian S
    I read this article and couldn't discern it from whether it was talking about Millennials or H1-B workers. I waded through many of the comments and they mostly seem to be in agreement. Paper tigers, empty suits, extraordinary views of self-worth, et al. But don't try to pull away the mask or you'll get your arm bitten off.  Shoddy parenting, materialistic and unrealistic views of the world have left us with a legacy that is largely shallow as a puddle of piss. Nice work guys. They whine about the world we left to them yet what about the world they create? We continue to slide further down the global economic and political scale, with only military domination as our coin of the realm. Pathetic.
  • Linda R
    Linda R
    Those of you complaining about the Millennials, are their parents!  So you are part of the problem!  Children learn what they live...if you never said no...then of course they will always expect instant gratification...because that is what they were taught by (you) their parents.
  • Charlie S
    Charlie S
    Another "story: desperately trying to be relevant or important, when it is neither other than to a tiny percentage of people. Give us something interesting/relevant to someone other than your industry please.
  • Tom L
    Tom L
    I teach college and have to deal with these folks all the time.  They are NOT tech savvy even if they can text at the speed of light.  Most of the people I see in class have no clue about the fundamentals of a computer or any of the other devices they play with on a regular basis.  I would be willing to bet that many of them couldn't even change a tire on their car.What's worse is that many of them don't even have a decent grasp of English, preferring to "OMG" and "LOL" their way through a conversation.
  •  Thomas G
    Thomas G
    I am 64 and found myself unemployed for the first time in 42 years. I returned to college to gain some new skills. I was shocked by what I saw. When asked to share a little insight about themselves by the video production instructor, many of them referred to themselves as filmmakers or cinematographers. they skipped right on past all of the lesser important jobs that a person in this field would normally hold before being considered any of the titles that they presented to the class upon introduction. Just because your phone shots video doesn't make you a film maker. I had similar experiences in other related classes. A lot of these 20 something people seemed unwilling to start at an entry level and learn from those who had worked in the film industry for many years.     
  • Bill K
    Bill K
    Unfortunately too many HR people think life ends at 49. The extreme ends of the unemployment scale are both suffering from an out of balance  hiring system. The young inexperienced candidate and the mature experienced applicant are viewed as the same....not worth hiring.I despise the notion of agism at either end of the spectrum.
  • Gary L
    Gary L
    As a school teacher I have seen the fruit of giving a child a reward just for showing up.  Students want extra rewards because they did the bare minimum.  They see their peers not meeting the minimum expectations, so feel entitled to special treatment because they tried a little harder, but barely had average performance.  It is getting worse rather than better.
  • Heidi Marie G
    Heidi Marie G
    Interesting, I thought that younger generation is given much importance for being technology savvy and having so much confidence.
  • LeeL
    LeeL
    I have three grown children in this generation and I would NOT label any of the three in the same negative light reflected in this article.  Evidently my hard work and teachings rubbed off on my offspring.
  • Bob W
    Bob W
    Having a daughter born in 1992 and knowing her friends your demographics are correct. They do think an employer is required to entertain them at work and allow for flex time in regards to their work schedule attendance. As long as they show up at some point in the day it is okay. They also want full benefits from day one and all holidays off and seniority is legal discrimination and that is not fair. So give me my time off. Between my daughters employers and myself she now gets it and her attitude has changed. Her first employer came to me about her because she was also a student there at that time and she saw the potential in her as an instructor, if she would just do the work as directed! I told the employer that's between you and her, not the three of us and to fire her if she needed to. She would remain there as a student even if she got fired. That's her problem, not yours. Eventually she got demoted to part time and she eventually ended up resigning. She has since learned and on her second job the Millennial attitude drop made her a good employee. She is on her career path now, job 3, medical and she is a great employee. Knowing how to use an iPhone and some apps is what makes these kids think they are the star performers to be hired. What I have noticed is what most of them tend to over look is the fact that almost all of the employers, still, are not of their mind set. That hurts them and they are blind to it.
  • MICHAEL C
    MICHAEL C
    How about those tattoos?Back in the day only 3 types of people had tattoos:military, jailbirds and carnival workers.How can anybody take these sleezy looking kids seriously?
  • James L
    James L
    One thing that jumped out at me was the comment about loyalty to the employer.  Loyalty is a two-way road and employers show scant loyalty to employees in the current market.  Physician, heal thyself!
  • Doreen C
    Doreen C
    I work in a salon of 15 women, of those 15 only 2 of us are over 37... The rest are 19-27. That being said there are a small handful of these women that are hard working and responsible.  The majority are not, they do what they can to cut corners, are loud, inconsiderate and do spend most of their time on their iPhones texting or surfing Instagram. We have one young woman who is 24, who runs up and down the hall at the top of her lungs yelling for no reason using profanity left and right. The other day asked a co worker to do something for her and when she was told no, proceeded to pound the coworker in the leg with her fist over and over...To me that is disrespectful and had i done that would have earned my walking papers. But this age group i hear they are young or it is their personality. To which I say is an excuse...there is not a lot of respect that I have observed in this age group and as someone above stated it is a product of their up bringing and getting a cookie for showing up. This is the result of 'no child left behind'.
  • Thaddeus W
    Thaddeus W
    As a Gen Xer, I could not argue with these perceptions.  While there are always exceptions, in general probably very true.However, I do not see it as big a liability as being honest, hard-working, reliable, and over-30....Increasingly, so many employers want young and easily-exploitable so that they can milk to the max and trust will disappear without putting-up a fuss....

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