By Giorgia Madonno
Marco Polo Consulting
Marco Polo Consulting
Posted September 05, 2013
Your team members in China are from Generation Y?
See what Bloomerang Business
week suggests in order to manage them effectively
Working with China's Generation Y - Bloomerang Business week
Population demographics make
it essential to understand the priorities of Chinese employees born in the
1980s: They make up about 50% of the country's current working-age population.
Although local and foreign organizations in China must learn to manage Gen Ys
effectively to remain successful, they are struggling. In a previous article, Reckoning with Chinese
Generation Y, we introduced our research showing that urban Chinese Gen Y members are
smart and well-educated. While they hold on to many traditional values, they
are beginning to challenge the preeminence of hierarchy.
In urban China, Gen Y is a
group of exceptionally talented people. No other generation in Chinese history
has received such high-quality
education for so many people. Chinese Gen Ys are single children born
under China's one-child
policy. According to studies such as those by Posten and Falbo of the
Guttmacher Institute, China's solo children perform significantly better
academically than peers with siblings. These single children have grown up in
traditional extended families (including four grandparents and two parents), under pressure since
kindergarten to pass entrance exams. This means that the child's educational performance
has been a top priority for six adults.
Chinese culture has always
emphasized academic excellence as the source of family pride and achievement.
Cross-cultural IQ studies indicate that culture impacts even IQ: Memorizing
some 2500 Chinese characters at an early age stimulates the brain and Chinese
show higher IQ scores on average. This means Gen Ys have been generously
stimulated throughout childhood and now have more advanced and complex brains
than many other people. So a large number of Chinese Gen Ys are gifted.
Gifted people are often hypersensitive. Psychologists call it over-excitability (OE).
Because of their constitution and their upbringing, many Gen Ys suffer from unhealthy
perfectionism, meaning that any work that is less-than-perfect is unacceptable
and merits criticism. This creates self-doubt, performance anxiety, and ultimately,
procrastination. Being exceptionally bright does not necessarily mean
being successful: For instance, most members of the Mensa society for people
with high IQs remain unexceptional.
Generation gap with management
In our interviews with
business leaders, they experience Gen Y members as ambitious and demanding,
hypersensitive, and almost
allergic to criticism. They are puzzled by the amount of
"emotion" Gen Y employees add to the workplace. The combination of
high intelligence and overexcitability explains many of the difficulties
managers have with their Gen Y staff.
While they take for granted
that hierarchy exists, Gen Y does
not comply with hierarchic rules as the previous generation—the generation of their managers—does. This creates friction between young staffers and supervisors.
Many multinational companies
in China have a layer of Gen X middle managers who tend to be less assertive
than their Gen Y staff. These managers may rarely voice opinions in meetings,
yet are now managing a group of young people with good English skills, full of confidence in speaking up
and interacting with foreigners. The young want to take initiative and
share ideas but lack experience. Their immediate bosses at the middle level
feel squeezed, not respected, and unable to deal with their young subordinates.
Even in the service sector,
where the middle managers are considered quite modern, friction persists
between the generations. For example, a typical 40-year-old manager lives
easily with the idea that organizations have written rules that are not always
implemented. This manager trusts his superior to treat him correctly. Gen Y is
drawing a line between personal and professional contexts and does not bear
this trust outside personal relationships. Gen Y has grown up with
grandparents, parents, and teachers all telling them what to do. "We don't want to be talked at
anymore," they say. They want to learn but they do not want to be
told what to do and how to do it. They long for good role models. When asked, Gen Ys often mention
Apple (AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs, who is cool, creative,
successful, and has a clear personal image.
For Gen Y, the good boss is like a kung-fu
master who stays in the background, teaching through small hints. The good boss
is highly available to his employee and has trust in them. He is balanced and nonemotional.
He knows how to share his skills without talking much but rather expresses
himself in the right dose, at the right time and place. It is not about
telling workers what to do but waiting for the right time to drop by their desk
and ask: "Have you asked yourself X? Perhaps you might have tried Y?"
Difficult to achieve? Yes, but it is important to show Gen Y why they should respect
their boss—and then they
will.
Gen Y listen to those they trust.
They want kindness and
sympathy at the workplace. Our research shows that they predominantly trust
their peers. So while it is necessary to build trust and loyalty, this
can be difficult for older managers. It will take time and consistent behavior
to give Gen Y a feeling of security so that they can share new ideas or
experiences without worrying about rejection.
Companies do well to share information and future strategies with Gen Ys. Brainstorming with these gifted staff members
on projects or approaches can generate ideas that managers might never have
thought of on their own. Being
involved creates a sense of pride and a feeling that they are doing something
important. The key is to give Gen Y some influence.
Most Gen Ys know they become overly enthusiastic about projects and then
get discouraged easily. They also realize that they
can be too emotional and that this ultimately affects their performance. Many
of the Gen Ys we interviewed said they want training in interpersonal skills
and communication so they can communicate emotions and talk about how to deal
with their problems more constructively.
Gen Y resists discipline more
than the previous generation, but they need to train their behavior in a
disciplined way. When Gen Ys become over-emotional, they benefit from being
reminded of the big picture. They need help learning persistence—to solve
problems step-by-step and to learn that there is always a solution. This helps
build self-confidence and a reputation for being steady and reliable.
Gen Y's reputation as highly
critical and judgmental reflects the issues surrounding interpersonal
communication. Gen Ys are
very insightful and their understanding of organizational problems is an asset
to a company, but they need to find an effective way to communicate their
thoughts. Getting feedback helps Gen Y learn how being overly critical
affects other people. Young workers should be encouraged to ask their friends
and family for feedback, too. Overall, Gen Y needs training in active
listening, which helps their performance and career.
Many supervisors of Gen Y don't understand why
management should change instead of Gen Y adapting. Given the demographics and
global economic developments, the answer seems clear. In one meeting the CEO
answered the change question simply: "Because Gen Y is the future of our
company." It is imperative for any company doing business in China and
with Chinese to understand Gen Y and to find ways of working with them
effectively so as to tap their huge potential.
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