Now that five different generations are on the job simultaneously--from Traditionals to Generation Y to Millennials--it's important for companies to understand how their people can not only coexist and cooperate, but thrive together as a team.
Written by Meagan and Larry Johnson, a father-daughter team of two generational experts, Generations, Inc. offers the perspectives of people of different eras to elicit practical insights on wrestling with generational issues in the workplace.
This book provides Baby Boomers and Linksters alike with practical techniques for:
Generations, Inc. includes realistic strategies for relating to your team members’ different views of loyalty, work ethic, and the definition of a job well done--and tips to make those perspectives work together to strengthen your workforce and grow your business.
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MEAGAN JOHNSON is a generational expert and professional speaker.
LARRY JOHNSON is a corporate culture expert and professional speaker. Together, as the Johnson Training Group, their clients include American Express, Harley-Davidson, Nordstrom, Dairy Queen, and many others.
“This book...provided down-to-earth, understandable, and easily employed techniques to improve cross-generational interactions, both in business and in personal relationships.” --Mike Triantafellou, President and CEO, Handee Marts, Inc., dba 7-Eleven
You’re great at hiring talented people. Seasoned veterans and ambitious rookies alike, everyone on your team is energetic, focused, positive, and skilled. But with each generation looking at business from its own unique perspective, they won’t always see eye to eye. Professionals of different ages have different definitions of concepts like success, work ethic, priorities, and a job well done. Their points of view come from their different professional and personal experiences.
It’s almost never a clear-cut question of whose approach is right or wrong, so how do you manage the confluence of Woodstock Nation and the Facebook Generation—and everything in between?
Authors Meagan Johnson and Larry Johnson are walking examples of this challenge. A father-and-daughter consulting team whose points of view only sometimes coincide, they have developed powerful solutions to many of the seemingly intractable problems of intergenerational conflict. Generations, Inc. makes it easy for any manager, supervisor, or team leader to:
Talk openly about conflict • Create cross-generational alliances • Reconcile disparate values and idiosyncratic working styles • Run meetings and direct teams with equal (and equally valued) input from members of all generations • And much more
The book features their snappy give-and-take, point-counterpoint approach to getting to the heart of the matter, and includes a wealth of dialogue among professionals in dozens of fields and across multiple generations. What surfaces is that despite all the differences, there is much common ground to serve as a springboard to lasting cooperation.
You may find yourself managing great talent from five or more generations at once. Each is brilliant but headstrong, well intentioned but wary. But with the powerful management secrets of Generations, Inc., you’ll soon have them working together to move your organization into a future that works for everyone.
Meagan Johnson and Larry Johnson, a father–daughter team, are the Johnson Training Group, whose clients include American Express, Harley-Davidson, Nordstrom, Dairy Queen, and many others. Both authors are noted public speakers on the subjects of generations in the workplace as well as corporate culture and other management challenges.
CHAPTER 1
Signposts: Harbingers of Things to Come
‘‘Life is rather like a tin of sardines—we’re all of us
looking for the key.’’
—Alan Bennett, British author, actor, humorist, and playwright
Meagan Remembers
When I was six years old, I went to the grocery store with my
father. He bought an item priced at $1.69, but the cashier
misread it and only charged him 69 cents. (This was 1976.
Scanners had yet to be invented, and cashiers manually entered
prices.) My father alerted her to her mistake. She thanked him
and charged him the extra dollar.
I was dumbfounded! At the time, my weekly allowance was a
dollar. My father had just thrown away what it took me a week
to earn. So I said, ‘‘Dad, that was dumb. All you had to do was
keep your mouth shut and you could have saved a whole dollar.’’
‘‘Yes,’’ he replied, ‘‘but how I feel about myself is worth more
than a dollar.’’
My memory of that event has followed me all my life. It helps me
decide how to handle situations in which I must determine the
right thing to do. It taught me that there is more to life than
material gain. I’ve even used it as a standard for picking the
company I keep. Would I want a friend who would have kept the
dollar? I think not. Thanks, Dad, for the great life lesson.
Larry Responds
You’re welcome, Meagan, but gosh, I don’t even remember this
big event in your life. In retrospect, it seems I was able to convey
a simple life lesson for a pretty small price. If it had been a million
dollars at stake instead of one, I hope I would have acted as
nobly.
It does remind me that early experiences can have lasting influences
on our lives. I attended YMCA summer camp when I was
ten years old. My family didn’t have a lot of money and couldn’t
afford the tuition, but I was an enterprising sort. I secured a
position as a dishwasher that allowed me to go for free.
For some reason, an adult counselor at the camp considered
tuition workers second-class citizens. On an overnight excursion,
after a long day of hiking, this counselor told the kitchen crew to
wait until all the paid campers got their food from the chow line
before eating. I waited and waited. When I saw some of the paid
campers queuing up for seconds, I got in line. This counselor
grabbed my arm and jerked me out of line. In front of all the other
campers, he dressed me down, reminding me that I was just a
‘‘dishwasher,’’ and I had to wait for the ‘‘real’’ campers to eat.
My humiliation was unbearable. I burst into tears, threw my plate
in the counselor’s face, and ran into the woods, hoping I would
get lost and starve to death just to show them how unjustly I’d
been treated.
Luckily, a more sympathetic counselor tracked me down and
escorted me back to camp, where he gave me something to eat.
He told me not to take the counselor who had been mean to me
seriously because he had some personal problems that caused
him to act that way. In retrospect, he should not have been
allowed to work with kids, problems or not, but I did gain something
positive from the experience. In the years since, I’ve traced
any empathy I have for people less fortunate than I to that unpleasant
incident. It gave me a small taste of what it feels like to be discriminated
against. It was a painful, but beneficial, event in my life.
Personal and Group Signposts
We call these kinds of events personal signposts: experiences in our lives
that significantly contribute to who we are. They are personal because
they are unique to each individual. They are signposts because they influence
our future decisions, reactions, attitudes, and behaviors.
Other signposts have just as much impact on us, but these spring
from the experiences of the groups to which we belong and the society in
which we live. These group signposts can have a strong effect on us because
they are magnified by the power of numbers. For example, if you are a
member of a racial minority, you may or may not have endured racism
yourself. However, the fact that your friends, family, and colleagues probably
did will affect how you view the issue of discrimination. And, if you
combine this group signpost with one or more personal signposts associated
with race, the effect can be very powerful.
Larry remembers an experience he had when working for a large
organization. He and his boss, Irene, were conducting interviews to fill a
position that would report directly to Larry. It came down to two finalists:
one Larry liked, and one Irene liked. Since Irene was the boss, Larry
yielded, and they hired her choice.
It turned out to be a mistake and they eventually had to let the
woman go. In discussing it later, Irene graciously claimed responsibility
for the fiasco. She said that she had let a prejudice hidden deep within
her affect her judgment. It turns out that Larry’s preferred choice was
white, and Irene’s was black. Irene herself is also black.
Larry was surprised. Irene had never struck him as being racially motivated.
After all, she had hired him, a white guy, when there had been
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