TNNWC ENTREPRENEURIAL PUBLICATIONS

TNNWC Publications And Informational Products Division publishes The National Networker (TNNWC) Weekly Newsletter and The BLUE TUESDAY Report especially for entrepreneurs and early-stage venturers; free weekly subscriptions to these informative publications are available online to all entrepreneurial Members of TNNWC.

Membership in TNNWC is free (it's automatic for any subscriber to any TNNWC Publication) and available at our website. When you arrive there, just click on any of the JOIN US or BECOME a MEMBER buttons or links.

Showing posts with label bridging generation gap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bridging generation gap. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010

WHAT BOOMERS WANT: Bridging the Generation Gap by Optimizing the Differences, Part 2

What Boomers Want with Terri Benincasa, M.A. Ed.M.


As we help you close an ever widening gulf between your company’s Boomer Bosses and Millennial Newcomers, or equally problematic, between your young staff and your Boomer customers, last month we covered Step One: Uncovering the common ground between them. Here is a quick recap of those 5 elements, as you’ll need them for Part 2:
  1. Appreciation of a win-win outcome.

  2. Need to see the value of their contribution to the company/end result.

  3. A desire to be seen as the best at what they do.

  4. Appreciation for flexibility (how that flexibility is played out is where the conflict usually arises).

  5. Both want to know “what’s in it for me”.


This month as promised, covers Step Two:

SPECIFIC METHODS FOR APPLYING THEIR SIMILARITIES TO OPTIMIZE THEIR DIFFERENCES

  • Each One Teach One (#’s 1, 2 & 3):
    Folks are much more willing to learn something if they also get to teach – it is an explicit demonstration of their value and expertise. At every level of the organizational chart, and with any major difference, have each generation teach the other their particular skill-set/strength that is missing for the other.

    Example 1: Boomers are late onto the technology field, and Millennials consider their IT as another appendage; M’s have not learned the more traditional modes of communication such as writing in long-hand and formal etiquette that to Boomers is second nature. Each can mentor the other for great outcomes on both ends.

    Example 2: Boomers in your business know what Boomer customers want… Millennials know what their cohort responds to. And each side prides themselves on their value to the company. So let that value play a key role in improved service outcomes by designing service/sales trainings with each generation teaching the other what they’ll need to know to be successful with the opposite group, for practice, feed-back, and help with follow-up refining as needed.


  • One For You, Two For Me (#’s 1 & 5):
    This is a “built for a ‘what’s in it for me’ type” compromise technique. Each side of the generation gap gives the other one important thing the other wants, in return getting two of the things they want. As you can see, if done back and forth just once it’s now “even” – but each gets the most important things to them and everyone wins.


  • Flexing for Dollars (#4):
    This is based on the simple but well-known “exceptional leadership” practice of looking at whether goals are being met instead of how an individual staff-person goes about meeting them. If I seem to always have a messy desk (in your opinion) but I outsell everyone else in my group, then that approach is clearly not causing a problem and what works for me!

    An example of the generational differences in types of flexibility might be:

    Boomers flex their schedule as needed to get the job done but within the office hours and on-site.

    Millennials flex around in and out of office time such as telecommuting & 4 day weeks. As the song from the 70’s put it so well: “Nobody’s right if everybody’s wrong…”. It’s important to get away from whose approach is “right” and move to what works best for who to get the best outcome, period.


  • Walk a moment in my shoes (#’s3 & 5):
    Getting each generation beyond their preferred modus operandi so they can see the immense value the other brings to the company table is the key here. Here’s how to do that. Schedule a “Talkin’ about My Generation” kind of event, one that’s fun but with serious intent. Have each group make the strongest argument they can for why that “generational style” is superior…but they must do it for the other generation. Each makes a presentation, as they would to a client, on what the other’s generational style adds to the bottom-line, and why they think it’s the best approach in which specific set of circumstances. Those from that generation then must critique it from the other generation’s perspective. There’s no better way to have a full understanding the value the other brings than to argue their case. By the way, this is done in law schools across the land to give law students a full understanding of the law from all sides.

Finally, the responsibility for getting cross-generational crankiness in check lies with both groups, not one more so than the other, to the contrary of some well publicized news reports on this issue. These reports have insinuated that the greatest burden for change falls on the Boomer bosses… not so, although as leaders they must take the first steps and then model the best-practice approaches for conflict resolution.

I’ve gotten you started with this 2 part series; to do this well and ultimately most effectively, bring in a seasoned professional to work with you developing solid programs and teams around this issue. Then follow through with them.

But most assuredly, do not ignore this elephant in the room. It will take over quickly, and you will spend much more time and dollars cleaning up its mess.


For more information, please visit Terri's TNNW Bio.




COMMENT/RATE/SHARE THIS ARTICLE; CONTACT THE AUTHOR, & MORE...

The National Networker Companies™

Empowering Emerging Enterprises”

Membership in TNNWC’s Global Interactive Cooperative Business Community is free of charge and entitles you to receive both The National Networker Newsletter and The BLUE TUESDAY Report, as well as access to our unparalleled Suite of Business Services.

Join Us! Simply click on http://bit.ly/JoinTNNWC

Visit our website at http://www.TheNationalNetworker.com


Forward/Share This Article With Colleagues And Social Media:
Share/Save/Bookmark

Thursday, March 25, 2010

WHAT BOOMERS WANT: Bridging the Generation Gap by Optimizing the Differences, Part 1

What Boomers Want with Terri Benincasa, M.A. Ed.M.


You’re quickly discovering that there’s an ever widening gulf between your company’s Boomer Bosses and Millennial Newcomers, or equally problematic, between your young staff and your Boomer customers.

It’s creating increasing levels of internal discord, customer dissatisfaction (or worse, loss of some of your highest spending customers, Boomers), and lost productivity through either high staff turn-over or time taken away from growing your business to handle conflicts. You’re seeing big gaps in:
  • Communication style (high-tech vs. low-tech; formal vs. informal; individualism vs. team approach)

  • Workplace expectations (work/service ethic; dress; career demands such as flex-time)

  • Compensation/Motivation/Reward Systems expectations

The good news: you’re not alone. This “corporate generation gap” is being felt, and addressed, by the likes of Coca-Cola and Microsoft.

So, what to do about it.

This will get you started using two basic steps: the first fosters improved understanding between the disagreeing parties on which all conflict resolution is based; the second uses that higher-level awareness to take the differences from polarizing, to productivity power-houses!


FIRST STEP: UNCOVER AND THEN WORK FROM THEIR COMMON GROUND

Here’s what Boomers and Millennials have in common, often without realizing it:

  1. Appreciation of a win-win outcome:
    Both generations prefer to get their own needs met without having to sacrifice the needs of others.

  2. Need to see the value of their contribution to the company/end result:
    Both prefer to work from a vision, a sense of being valued for their knowledge or specific skill sets, and like being a part of the decision-making process regardless of level.

  3. A desire to be seen as the best at what they do:
    Don’t let the differences in the way they go about it fool you. Boomers may show this through working longer hours, whereas Millennials may pride themselves more on their creativity, but at heart, both have the same pride in their end work product.

  4. Appreciation for flexibility (how that flexibility is played out is where the conflict usually arises):
    Here again style may overshadow substance, so it is easy to miss the way each uses and values versatility.

  5. Both want to know “what’s in it for me”:
    Boomers are known as the “me” generation, Millennials the “everybody gets a trophy” group, but as you can see, each has at its base the desire to have one’s own specific needs met, so once understood, both can appreciate that in the other.

And, here’s a generational check-list to effectively begin the communication process:

FOR BOOMER LEADERS

Be very clear about the benefits of working for the company, and for you. You would want the same information if you were your staff.

What you focus on is what you get. If you focus on the negatives, you'll foster them. Focus on the positives and you'll get a whole lot more of them!

FOR MILLENNIALS


Don’t buy the myth that jumping from job to job is a good thing. It's not and will come back to haunt you.

You too must focus on the positives with your Boomer boss, not the negatives. You get what you focus on.

FOR BOTH

This is the window of time to pass on and learn from the expertise Boomers have acquired over the decades. Take advantage of it before it's gone.


For more information, please visit Terri's TNNW Bio.





COMMENT/RATE/SHARE THIS ARTICLE; CONTACT THE AUTHOR, & MORE...

The National Networker Companies





Forward/Share This Article With Colleagues And Social Media:
Share/Save/Bookmark

Blog Archive

BNI News Feed

The Emergence of The Relationship Economy

The Emergence of The Relationship Economy
The Emergence of the Relationship Economy features TNNWC Founder, Adam J. Kovitz as a contributing author and contains some of his early work on The Laws of Relationship Capital. The book is available in hardcopy and e-book formats. With a forward written by Doc Searls (of Cluetrain Manifesto fame), it is considered a "must read" for anyone responsible for the strategic direction of their business. If you would like to purchase your own copy, please click the image above.

Knowledge@Wharton













Site Credits:


Featured in Alltop
ALLTOP Business
News Wire. HOT.
Cool Javascript codes for websites
KeepandShare.com(R)  Fabulous Free Calendars

Create FREE graphics at FlamingText.com