Wooing a NextGen workforce? Millennials, Gen-Z will turn down jobs missing these 3 elements

March 12, 2019  |  Tommy Felts

Ross Quinn, Super Dispatch, NextGen workforce

Employment is always a give-and-take scenario, said Ross Quinn, but today’s complex NextGen workforce wants more than a paycheck for time spent on the clock.

Ross Quinn, Sydney Steehn, and George Khoukaz

Ross Quinn, Sydney Steehn, and George Khoukaz

Millennials and Gen-Z workers often won’t feel satisfied with a position or a potential job if they aren’t given significant freedom and trust in exchange for the skill sets and tools they bring to the table, said Quinn, business development associate at KC-based startup Super Dispatch.

“It does help having some sort of guidance or training to mesh with that,” he admitted. “We’re maybe like house cats. We’re like, ‘Pet me. Pet me. Pet me. Don’t pet me anymore!’ We’re complicated, but we can also survive on our own.”

Joining a Startland panel discussion on attracting the workforce of tomorrow, Quinn and his fellow panelists emphasized that young workers want to personally identify with an employer’s culture, mission and values.

“We’re looking for companies that do what they say they’re going to do, and really live that culture,” said Sydney Steehn, a University of Missouri-Kansas City Entrepreneurship and Innovation student.

Other core requirements: Opportunities for young workers to make a meaningful impact; company transparency; and a workplace environment that supports employees having a life outside the four walls of an office.

Keep reading below the photo and check out a full gallery from Innovation Exchange at the bottom of this story.

Innovation Exchange

William Dowdell, Hire KC, KC Social Innovation Center

William Dowdell, Hire KC, KC Social Innovation Center

Responding to Innovation Exchange panelists’ conversation about workplace deal-breakers, William Dowdell asked the audience to consider that not all employees have the luxury of turning down or quitting a job because of their satisfaction level.

If Dowdell — program director for Hire KC at KC Social Innovation Center — for example, walked away from his job, he said, he couldn’t just immediately find a new role that was comparable in pay or level of fulfillment.

And race plays a significant factor, he acknowledged.

“You are less likely to get a job as a person of color, compared to your white counterpart,” Dowdell said. “The discrepancy and disparity is huge.”

That satisfaction checklist is attainable, said George Khoukaz.

“I remember very well, on my first day at work — and even back when I first interviewed with the firm — I was told that I was encouraged to be entrepreneurial, to be creative, to try to think out of the box whenever I’m at the firm,” said Khoukaz, a corporate transactional attorney at Husch Blackwell, which sponsored the Innovation Exchange panel at nbkc bank. “In that sense, I was told, ‘You obviously have to do your job — there’s some certain minimum threshold that we need to abide by — but beyond that, whatever ideas you have in mind, we are willing to support you and we are willing to provide you the tools to put these ideas into practice.’”

“The idea behind this new perspective is that my professional career should not be limited to the amount of time I sit behind the desk cranking and billing those hours,” he continued. “But rather it’s in the service that I provide to my community; it’s in the connections I build within my community; and basically, at the end of the day, what do I contribute to the people around me beyond just regular, legal, billable work?”

Anything less can be a deal-breaker for some workers, the panelists suggested.

“The purpose of one’s career is not necessarily only limited to the amount of money you would make, or the position or the rank you make within a certain company, but rather the purpose you are getting out of this experience — whether you’re being fulfilled in what you’re doing,” said Khoukaz. “And I do agree — not necessarily only here in KC, but really anywhere — we see that younger people are much more mobile, they’re willing to move to new cities, change jobs, change careers, just in order to get to where they want to be. And I think that the employers are also having to adjust with these new demands from the employees: trying to be more flexible, stepping up to the desires of the employees.”

Neelima Parasker, SnapIT Solutions

Neelima Parasker, SnapIT Solutions

Companies hoping to woo NextGen workers — or a potential employee of any age — must identify candidates’ specific desires in order to make them feel welcome, said Neelima Parasker, president and CEO of SnapIT Solutions.

“When I hire somebody new, I make them sit down and the first question they ask is: ‘If there is no restriction of what you could do, what would dream job be?’” she said. “You would be surprised how hard some people have to think about that question. … And if their answer is beyond my organization’s current capabilities, I will start planning for it right now.”

Click here to read more about how SnapIT Solutions has approached the NextGen workforce.

Elizabeth Souder, Husch Blackwell

Elizabeth Souder, Husch Blackwell

Innovation in hiring begins with a company rethinking its process from the ground up, added Elizabeth Souder, attorney and innovation strategist at Husch Blackwell.

William Dowdell, Hire KC, KC Social Innovation Center

William Dowdell, Hire KC, KC Social Innovation Center

“You have to have a culture that is open to the possibility that maybe the way you’ve been doing things is not the right way, and that it’s not a reason to continue doing it,” she said, noting the hope that each generation learns from each other.

While a lot is riding on the NextGen workforce, William Dowdell said, employers need to recognize it’s about more of a “millennial mindset” — not just a certain age group.

“The thinking is really concentrated on the chronological sort of classification of millennials, but it’s also ushered in a new way of doing business, a new way of respecting that employee as a valuable input,” said Dowdell, program director for Hire KC at KC Social Innovation Center. “Millennials are bringing in change, but I also think that change is happening all around us.”

“It’s not just about young blood,” added Parasker. “It’s about new ways of doing things.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Kauffman Foundation selects familiar face as new CEO

    By Tommy Felts | June 9, 2015

    After a yearlong, nationwide search for a new CEO, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation wound up selecting one of its own. The Kansas City-based foundation selected Wendy Guillies as the Foundation’s new president and CEO. Guillies, who previously served as interim CEO and vice president of communications for the foundation, joined the organization in April…

    EyeVerify enters new European market with Vodafone deal

    By Tommy Felts | June 9, 2015

    Biometrics tech company EyeVerify is continuing its global expansion into Europe with a new deal. The Kansas City-based firm recently announced a licensing and marketing agreement with Turkish security tech company Olcsan CAD. The deal makes Olcsan the exclusive distributor of EyeVerify’s eye vein biometrics technology, or Eyeprint ID, throughout Turkey. “We’re pleased to partner…

    What’s in a name? MindMixer gets new moniker

    By Tommy Felts | June 8, 2015

    A year after its move to Kansas City, MindMixer is making a name change. Formerly based in Omaha, MindMixer now will go by the name of its new software product, mySidewalk, which engages communities to share ideas and stay informed of new initiatives. “Like all businesses, the more we learn about the people we serve,…

    Event-staffing tech firm Pop Bookings opens seed round at $250K

    By Tommy Felts | June 8, 2015

    Kansas City-based Pop Bookings is scoring local love from angel investors as it hopes to bolster its seed round to further develop its online event-staffing platform. A recent graduate of business accelerator SparkLabKC, Pop Bookings opened its round in April at $250,000, with lead investments from Kansas City-area angel investors. Pop Bookings CEO Erika Klotz said…