What Does The Millennial Generation Want To Be When It Grows Up?

Feb 11, 2014 1 Min Read
Alt

A new survey of Millennials conducted globally by Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Ltd provides some fascinating insights on what Gen-Y wants from business, Government, and the future workplace:

1. Millennials expect businesses to care

While most Millennials believe business is having a positive impact on society by generating jobs (48%) and increasing prosperity (71%), they think business can do much more to address society’s challenges in the areas of most concern: resource scarcity (68%), climate change (65%) and income equality (64%).

2. Millennials want to be innovative

Millennials want to work for organisations that support innovation.

In fact, 78% of Millennials were influenced by how innovative a company was when deciding if they wanted to work there, but most say their current employer does not do enough to encourage them to think creatively.

They believe the biggest barriers to innovation are management attitude (63%), operational structures and procedures (61%), and employee skills, attitudes, and lack of diversity (39%).

3. Millennials want to be leaders

Almost one in four Millennials are “asking for a chance” to show their leadership skills. Additionally, 75% believe their organisations could do more to develop future leaders.

4. Millennials want to make a difference

Millennials believe the success of a business should be measured in terms of more than just its financial performance, with a focus on improving society among the most important things it should seek to achieve.

Millennials are also charitable and interested to participate in “public life”: 63% of Millennials gave to charities, 43% actively volunteered or were a member of a community organisation and 52% signed petitions.

5. Millennials are ready to go their own way

Businesses that fail to address these concerns may find they will lose skilled professionals in the years ahead, as many of the most talented members of the Millennial generation decide to leave large organisations and instead work for themselves.

Roughly 70% of Millennials see themselves working independently at some point, rather than being employed within a traditional organisational structure.

Click here for more articles like this.

Share This

Functional

Alt

This article is published by the editors of Leaderonomics.com with the consent of the guest author. 

You May Also Like

employee working from home

Nurturing Human Assets in the Hybrid Era: Retaining Talent for Success

By Roxanne Calder. Explore the power of hybrid leadership, flexibility, and employee well-being as crucial factors for driving performance and maximising organisational value. Don't miss out on the insights that will revolutionise your approach to staff retention and unlock the potential of your human assets.

Jun 12, 2023 4 Min Read

gamification

Gamifying Learning and Development Programmes

Arun Nagarajah, the founder of eVULX, a digital simulation developer that focuses on creating digital games for corporate learning and development speaks about the significance and impact of gamifying the whole training experience.

May 07, 2023 21 Min Podcast

Alt

ChatGPT4 Turbo Unveiled: Sam Altman's Keynote at OpenAI DevDay | AI's Next Leap

Discover the transformative potential of these models in various applications and learn about OpenAI's ongoing partnership with Microsoft. Key Insights Summary: - Explore the new voice and vision capabilities of ChatGPT, making it a more interactive AI tool. - Learn about OpenAI's Custom Models program and the launch of the GPT Store. - Understand how GPTs are revolutionizing programming and technology interaction. - See real-world applications of GPT in education, finance, and more. - Discover OpenAI's approach to AI safety and user accessibility.

Nov 16, 2023 43 Min Video

Be a Leader's Digest Reader