Millennials and their work demands
I just want to shake these idiots (millennials). Do they understand that the typical cost of a new hire (including productivity costs, training costs, HR costs, etc.) is $10K even for a low-level position?
Further, I am not interested in someone working for me who tells me in the interview they are probably going to be gone in 1-2 years. They obviously do not understand that the very leadership roles they seek require insights into the company, its people, its competitors, its systems, and its customers - and those take years to acquire - not days.
I don't care how much you know about technology. I don't care how connected you are with your peers. I want to know what you are going to bring in the long term to my business that is going to justify me hiring you.
Further, I am not interested in someone working for me who tells me in the interview they are probably going to be gone in 1-2 years. They obviously do not understand that the very leadership roles they seek require insights into the company, its people, its competitors, its systems, and its customers - and those take years to acquire - not days.
I don't care how much you know about technology. I don't care how connected you are with your peers. I want to know what you are going to bring in the long term to my business that is going to justify me hiring you.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
Like in a line from the song Sweet Home Alabama, "Does your conscience bother you?"
Nope.
Would I tell a job interviewer that I may just do so mean a thing?
That would be stupid.
Anyhoo, my last job with yet someone else was semi-retired.
Now I'm fully retired. Hopefully, I will stay that way.
That last job and the full time I jumped ship from told me I could come back whenever I wanted to, but now I have old dino aches and pains.and I'm really tired of answering to anybody who may ring my home phone out of the blue or my cell at the last minute.
know that nobody is going to hire me for manage-
ment, and I wouldn't expect it.(But I'm not a millen-
ial). But I think maybe a company should not ex-
pect much loyalty, if it hires people from outside
for boss jobs, instead of promoting from within,
and letting people rise through the ranks.
If you are interviewing these millienials, simply ask them why they are planning to leave. Don't let it affect your decision to hire someone. You may lose on a few hire, you may also win on others when you steal away an employee that someone else sank $100k in to train. That's the calculated risks that manager have to take. It's just business. Never personal.
is it any wonder why companies are stagnating because they do not keep people even though they may pay a very good wage.
i noted that my neice now 32 i believe would get a job and 6 months later she knew all there was to know about the business so it was time to leave. she is very fortunate that her parents are well off and have a big house so she and her boy friend and their son have a place to live.
the parents in these situations have failed to educate the child to the ways of the world, our world. so it is the parents who i put some blame too. hell if the president of the usa and the congress don't take responsibility why should the population.
life the way that we were taught is that you had to earn your "perks" and that nothing was going to be handed to you. Now, with a school experiment that has been going on since 1963, we are seeing this "mistrust" that you and your Millennials are feeling. Unfortunately, you and millions of others almost the 1960's have been spoon fed the same line of malarky.
For all of the poor souls out there who have suffered this fate, I for one would consider suing the schools where I graduated (many times not really earned) for educational malpractice. Actually, we now have several generations, all raised and educated with this line of crap, that are now teaching the next generations.
This is one of the techniques used to bring this country to the sad state we are in today. Just look at the bozos in DC. For what its worth!
These are serious manifestations of a totally failed social experiment that is going to cost us our culture, our country and even perhaps our very lives.
This is what the Hegelian model has given us. We abandoned Reading Writing and Arithmetic (and yes, civics) for the brainwashing technique used by Nazis Germany and Stalinist Russia. Now we have a large segment of our population who feels "entitled" and totally tune with the propaganda!
The Millennials are just a manifestation of this totally failed, "Progressive" educational system.
There was a time in the past when many companies offered security for their employees. That is not true today. Most companies cannot afford to pay for that security.
The socialist, statist looters have destroyed the free market and along with it the middle class and jojb/retirement security.
Every vote for the GOP or the Dems is another step toward the abyss.
Lol.
Seriously, though, thank you for your insight. We're glad you escaped the asylum and are here with the rest of us in Reality ;)
I truly believed I deserved more that $35,000/year after college even though I had no real job experience. (I had worked at restaurants and retail stores in college but never like a 9-5 serious job).
I'm like an escapee from a cult. I've been de-programmed. Not everyone is so lucky.
I think you'll like this article: http://waitbutwhy.com/2013/09/why-gen...
By the way, I'm not trying to make excuses for millennials. We can't blame other people all our lives. We have to wake up and face reality. We have to make our own choice. I'm just trying to show you how we got to be the way we are.
You mention trust as if it was something you feel should be there but isn't. Any thoughts on that?
If the goal is knowledge, you can learn a lot about a process by doing two things: learning it, and asking questions about why it gets done that way. Now there are going to be times when the answer is "because we've always done it this way". That is a flag to warrant further investigation - but not an automatic sign of something in need of an "upgrade". You can get to the point (modern operating systems are the classic example) where you spend so much time in "upgrade" mode that you don't spend any time in "get things done" mode. There may be a better way of doing things, but that must be balanced against the cost of the change - and that cost includes not only hardware and software but re-training on new process: frequently the least quantifiable and most expensive part of the process.
Let me give you an example. When I was in college my career advisor told me not to take a $35,000/yr leadership development program position because I could do better. I did pass on the position (although looking back it was a very good opportunity that I probably should have taken) and actually didn't do better for about 3 years.
Add the lies colleges tell us to the lies our parents tell us (you're special, you can do anything, etc.) and you can start to see why we have some pretty bloated egos.
Load more comments...