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Published bySibyl Leonard Modified over 8 years ago
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The Factor The Factor Harness the Power of the Next Generations
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Boom…or…Bust? MethodicalLikes Structure Unrealistic DisrespectfulDisciplinedTrusts AuthorityNo Attention SpanHighly Motivated Cynical Lazy
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Are We Prepared? Stereotyping NOT keeping pace – Technology Management practices Hiring and Training NOT changing Waiting for THEM to change
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The End of the World? The Industrial Revolution The Roaring Twenties Rock n’ Roll The Mini Skirt Long-Haired Hippies Technology
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Questions to Help Us Change Who Are They? What Do They Want? How Can We Succeed?
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Who are They?
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Defining The Generations SeniorsBorn 1920 - 1942Age 65 - 87 U.S. Pop. 42 Million
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Who are Seniors? The Great Depression World War II Unprecedented Economic Prosperity Chaos of the 60s
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Defining The Generations Seniors BoomersBorn 1920 - 1942 1943 - 1963Age 65 - 87 43 - 64 U.S. Pop. 42 Million 82 Million
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Who Are Baby Boomers? Peace and prosperity Anti-establishment politics Civil Rights movement Anti-war Environmentalism Raised with television Music Is Important Rock n’ Roll Folk Hard Rock Disco
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Defining The Generations Seniors Boomers Gen XBorn 1920 - 1942 1943 - 1963 1964 - 1980Age 65 - 87 43 - 64 26 - 42 U.S. Pop. 42 Million 82 Million 68 Million
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Who Is Generation X? Latch-Key Kids Downsizing, Restructuring, Takeovers Shaped by Mass-Media, not Politics Cable, MTV, Video Games Technology
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Defining The Generations Seniors Boomers Gen X Gen YBorn 1920 - 1942 1943 - 1963 1964 - 1980 1981 - 2000Age 65 - 87 43 - 64 26 - 42 06 - 25 U.S. Pop. 42 Million 82 Million 68 Million 80 Million
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Who is Generation Y? Terrorism Booming economy then…bust The Electronic Age - Media everywhere! Cell phones Online for EVERYTHING – Education Shopping – On Demand Social Networking
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What Do They Want?
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X and Y as Consumers Skeptical/Informed Style matters Will search for value What do others say? Empowered and vocal Demand customization “Give me what I want, when I want it.” “Or Else.”
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X and Y at Work 77M Boomers replaced by 45M Xers Career Systems International
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X and Y at Work Stereotype Not Loyal Hate Structure Don’t Work HardReality Two-Way Loyalty Adept at Change
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X and Y at Work 77M Boomers replaced by 45M Xers Career Systems International Hours Worked per Week – Boomers in 1977 – 42.9 GenXers in 2002 – 45.6 American Business Coalition
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X and Y at Work Stereotype Not Loyal Hate Structure Don’t Work Hard Not MotivatedReality Two-Way Loyalty Adept at Change Focused on Results Seek Balance
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X and Y at Work 77M Boomers replaced by 45M Xers Career Systems International Hours Worked per Week – Boomers in 1977 – 42.9 GenXers in 2002 – 45.6 American Business Coalition Want jobs with more responsibility? 1992 - 68% of Men, 57% of Women 2002 – 52% of Men, 38% of Women American Business Coalition
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How Can We Succeed?
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Learn Research Quit preaching LISTEN and OBSERVE! Accept Change Collaborate Combine Strengths Overcome Weaknesses
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Change for Today’s Consumers Messaging is OUT The Customer Experience is IN Frequently Update Styles Mass Customize (but watch the Mass) Tap Into the Network Constantly Create More Value
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Collaborate at Work Mature Too Loyal Structured Effort ProcessNext Too Wary Change Results TechnologyBest Partners Evolution Innovation Success
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How Can We Succeed? Together
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Thank You!
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