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A detailed look at the characteristics of each generation. Posted February 22, 2016|Reviewed by Ekua Hagan. Source: Sovereign Health/Shutterstock. If you were born in the U.S. after 1946, you...
With four different generations making up today’s workforce, it can be difficult understanding what they all need and where they are best utilised. Each group brings a different dynamic to the table, but the only way to truly harness their potential is to understand their generational characteristics.
Thanks to increased life spans, at least six distinct generations live side by side in the United States today. Over time, they have earned names based on how they behave and the historical events that influenced them.
Gen Z, millennial, zillennial? Find your generation — and what it means — by year
From Baby Boomers to Gen Z, explore the complexity of America’s living and lost generations through an interactive multimedia experience.
Generation Y, or more commonly known as Millennials, follow Generation X and precede Generation Z. Millennials are the most populated generation and compose the majority of today’s workforce, (approximately 35% according to U.S (United States).
They are highly collaborative, self-reliant and pragmatic, according to new Stanford-affiliated research. Generation Z, the first generation never to know the world without the internet, value diversity and finding their own unique identities, says Stanford scholar Roberta Katz.