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"They're Rude, Difficult...": Gen Z's Workplace Behaviour Sparks Debate Online

Harnidh Kaur shared that many of her peers are now reluctant to hire Gen Z employees not because they lack intelligence or skills, but because of their behaviour and social interactions at work.

A recent social media post has ignited a discussion online about Gen Z's workplace behaviour and their ability to collaborate with colleagues. Taking to X, user Harnidh Kaur shared that many of her peers are now reluctant to hire Gen Z employees not because they lack intelligence or skills, but because of their behaviour and social interactions at work. According to Ms Kaur, Gen Z employees are often rude, difficult to work with and struggle with basic workplace etiquette. "So many of my friends are now not hiring gen z NOT because they aren't smart or good at their jobs (they are) but because they're rude, difficult to work with, and don't know how to behave with other colleagues. Honestly hard to defend a lot of the stuff lol," Ms Kaur wrote.

In a follow-up post, she quoted someone attempting to bridge the generational divide, who shared a common frustration. "To quote a someone who's really put in the effort to try and bridge the gap- 'they expect everyone to make space for and care about their feelings but if you ask them to care about anyone else's, it's too much work for them and they lash out' Ouch," Ms Kaur said.

The X post has now sparked a debate online about Gen Z's workplace behaviour. In the comments action, while some users agreed with the criticism of Gen Z, others criticised the generalisation.

"Largely agree. Sense of entitlement is too much, without onus of delivering !" wrote one user. "Thats a fact,they think they own the world and are super rude," commented another. "I have faced this myself too in my own team - and when you are in HR, it is all the more challenging," expressed a third user.

However, some users strongly disagreed with the generalisation. "way to go with the generalisation! I can say the same for boomers and millenials who don't want to pay their employees fairly, have no life of their own, want everyone to slog at work, and are mostly intolerant of diversity and yes, they generalise :) The new generation wants work life balance and the old folks hate it and don't want anyone to question anything," commented one user.

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by Anonymousreply 6December 5, 2024 11:38 AM

They need to experience a brutal recession, where they can't even find a dishwashing job. And their parents issue 'tough love' and lock them out. They'll learn how to be nice real fast.

by Anonymousreply 1December 4, 2024 3:47 PM

We need another Vietnam to thin out their ranks a little.

by Anonymousreply 2December 4, 2024 4:31 PM

LoL :)

by Anonymousreply 3December 5, 2024 6:47 AM

As a Gen X, I have two sayings that have served me well in my career”

“Don’t be a hero”. I manage a new stylist at work that constantly turns the tables and makes it all about herself. She is the “hero” in every interaction, every conversation, and the low key vibe is defensive mode looking for a way to express herself. She identifies as nonbinary, but is happily involved with a man and has a daughter. When talking about a client’s hair challenges, her challenges always are greater. She immediately compares her challenges as more challenging, and shows very little interest in following anyone else’s timeline or interests. Yesterday she interjected on a fellow stylist’s conversation with a client, but could not pick up the facial and body cues that signaled her injection was not welcome or to continue. She continued anyways.

“Don’t make a meal out of it.”

This is OCD behavior I have seen in younger generations where they need to make things “right” in their view even when it complicates things overall, adds more problems to solve later from the result, or interrupts other’s work flow. Instead of working more efficiently, they are unable to decisively stop a process midstream that isn’t working well. They also fail to recognize when to leave well enough alone, and anllow others to make the mistakes they can learn from.

They make the meal anyway even if no one shows up to eat it or no one likes what they served.

by Anonymousreply 4December 5, 2024 7:50 AM

However, some users strongly disagreed with the generalisation. "way to go with the generalisation! I can say the same for boomers and millenials who don't want to pay their employees fairly, have no life of their own, want everyone to slog at work, and are mostly intolerant of diversity and yes, they generalise :)

Damn, GenX ignored yet again…

by Anonymousreply 5December 5, 2024 8:26 AM

^r5 that passive aggressive smiley face at the end of that sentence in the original article gave me hives.

by Anonymousreply 6December 5, 2024 11:38 AM
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