
The Donald made a big mistake last night firing Tiffany Fallon and not Omarosa (links to video), but I don’t blame him. Everybody’s doing it.
[NOTE: I really have no idea if Tiffany Fallon, the first Celebrity Apprentice contestant to be fired (last night) by The Donald officially fits in the age category of "Millenials" or "Gen Y". According to Wikipedia, if she was born as early as 1976 and late as 2000, she is... and we'll give her the benefit of the doubt.]
What’s more interesting to me, however, is that she displayed several key attributes of Gen Y/Millenials in the workplace:
What does this all boil down to for managers not looking to make the mistake that Donald did? Well, it’s a bit humbling, but frankly, millenials are just not that into you.Whatever you’ve (the boss) got on your plate… your (corporate) goals and mission… unless you’ve taken the time to enroll your GenY/Millenial employees into your purposes, they’re just not that interested in pleasing you unless it’s clear they’ll get what they’re looking for simultaneously…. not eventually (as in paying dues, like you did).
CBS’s 60 Minutes’ story recently, The “Millennials” Are Coming highlights this as well as anybody:
Stand back all bosses! A new breed of American worker is about to attack everything you hold sacred: from giving orders, to your starched white shirt and tie. They are called, among other things, “millennials.” There are about 80 million of them, born between 1980 and 1995, and they’re rapidly taking over from the baby boomers who are now pushing 60…
“The boomers do need to hear the message, that they’re gonna have to start focusing more on coaching rather than bossing. If this generation in particular, you just tell them, ‘You got to do this. You got to do this. You got to do this.’ They truly will walk. And every major law firm, every major company knows, this is the future,” Crane explains…
“We’re not going to settle. Because we saw our parents settle,” [Jason] Dorsey says. “And we have options. That we can keep hopping jobs. No longer is it bad to have four jobs on your resume in a year. Whereas for our parents or even Gen X, that was terrible. But that’s the new reality for us. And we’re going to keep adapting and switching and trying new things until we figure out what it is.”
Make No Mistake About It
Some might see this as arrogance or that this is a generation of slackers (as if you weren’t called a slacker when “you were their age”), but make no mistake about it. It may be that they’re simply more on-purpose than you ever were at that age.
All they hear is blah, blah, blah.
Tell ‘em what’s relevant, and give them the opportunity to tell you why it matters to them. Leverage their irreverance, and their desire to mashup what is into something completely new.
And, for Fallon? In the cab on the way off the set, she said what many Millenials will say when their ego-driven bosses choose the back-stabbing self-defending Omarosa’s of the world over those with untapped potential and passion that runs deeper than just “winning this task”:
Retweet This Post“…Moving on.”
Great post! I’ll be reading more of your blog with updates like this. Great discussion.
I would have liked to have seem Donald chnge his tune and fire Omorosa, but you know it just wouldn’t be “The Apprentice” without some outside mix to stir things up like that lady can.
Great post! I missed the show, but loved the informative recap and analysis.
Interesting perspective. But I’m not sure that all managers or organizations who treat Millennials this way will think of it as a mistake to act like this. That, to me, is part of the problem itself.
@Scott @Josh Thanks for the great comments. You’re right he needs the fire and spit in there for “ratings”… I’ve never classified Donald Trump in my list of “great managers to emulate”.
@Tiffany, thanks for your comment, too. I’m checking out your blog and enjoying what you have to say there.
Unfortunately, many managers dismiss “them all” as slackers and underperformers, when what is really happening is a lack of connection on BOTH parts–the manager and the employee.
Someday, it’ll all shake out–that’s the blessing of such a vast and wide economy. Until then, there’ll be a lot of back-room grumbling… but there wouldn’t be anything to have shows like “The Office” about, if we didn’t have office politics.
Nice Post Robert! I couldn’t agree more. Great leaders listen to their team members and encourage them to help build the vision. The Omarosa’s of the world only serve to build ratings. Donald proved once again that the Apprentice is all about ratings and less about business.
[...] Deal. But, the celebrity edition of the show is just more of the same. Robert Merrill has a great post on his blog about Trump’s decision to keep Omarosa over Tiffany. I couldn’t agree more. The problem [...]
[...] you think Zuckerberg, or any other millenial, would like to go somewhere else and pay their dues just so they can learn how to be a stodgy [...]