Are millennials difficult to manage or simply less tolerant of bad managers?

I quit

I quit

Sixty-three percent of business decision makers and 68% of corporate recruiters say that it’s difficult to manage millennials while they offer different skills that are valuable to the workplace.  Bentley University Preparedness Study

As a manager of millennials, I have to say it is simply difficult to be an effective manager. Being a manager that cultivates an engaged workforce takes time and a certain skill set. Sure, millennials need a different type of managing or coaching than an older generation may be accustomed to. Let's face it, most managers don't know how to manage for engagement. If they did, we would not have a workforce where 70% report not being engaged at work. My guess is that GenX and Baby Boomers suffer in silence under poor managers where as millennials just quit. They may even post it on YouTube.

During the "Millennials in the Workplace” panel discussion at the Bloomberg Business Summit in Chicago, Shema Kabani, Founder and CEO of The Marketing Zen Group, relayed the story of her talented millennial employee who finally left her prior position after being asked to spend half a day filling out forms to get approval for buying a stapler. Having worked in government organizations where it has taken an inordinate amount of work to procure office supplies, I can relate to the ridiculousness of it. It often is symptomatic of an organizational bureaucracy. When employees of any generation are afforded coaching around using their strengths and the other elements that make up an engaged workplace, they can often tolerate the time it takes to procure a stapler. Millennials are not more difficult to manage, they are just less tolerant of disengaged at work and more vocal when they are not happy at work.

Jennifer Selke

Dr. Jennifer Selke is a UC Berkeley-trained educational psychologist, veteran program director, and workplace strengths and engagement expert. She helps the military and corporate community maximize their strengths to reach goals, regulate complex emotions, and find purpose and work that is fulfilling. Dr. Selke spent 26 years at UC Berkeley as a program director and faculty member. In 2019, she retired from UC Berkeley and moved to Atlanta, Georgia, to work for Zac Brown, the Grammy award-winning musician. At his non-profit, Camp Southern Ground, Dr. Selke is the director of the nationally acclaimed Warrior PATHH program, the nation's first-ever program designed to cultivate and facilitate Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG) in combat veterans and first responders, and enables these remarkable warriors to transform times of deep struggle into profound strength and growth.