Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (2024)

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Hillary Hoffower

2022-05-08T12:30:00Z

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (1)

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  • Gen Z is paving the way for change in the post-pandemic workforce.
  • They prioritize a good working environment, demanding flexibility and wellbeing benefits.
  • Without it, they have no problem quitting for a job that offers what they're looking for.

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A new generation of workers is in town.

Gen Z is now the youngest of the workforce, and, as every new generation is wont to do, they're shaking things up. For them, a good working environment is what matters most — a job that is meaningful at a company that makes a difference, aligns with their social views, and offers mental health support.

They're demanding all these things in a new, bold fashion, turning flexibility and wellbeing from workplace perks to workplace norms. "The quest for a workplace that respects boundaries and needs is baked in generationally," Lauren Stiller Rikleen, president atRikleen Institute for Strategic Leadershipand author of "You Raised Us, Now Work With Us: Millennials, Career Success, and Building Strong Workplace Teams," previously told Insider. "That will not change. With each new generation, this will get stronger."

If their job doesn't fulfill those requirements, they have no qualms about quitting for a better one. It's why the generation is helping to lead the Great Resignation alongside millennials. But many are also experiencing "shift shock" after starting their new job, realizing that it wasn't what they thought it would be.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker.

The typical Gen Zer is entering the workforce on their own terms, demanding change with a new sense of boldness not seen in previous generations.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (2)

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By asserting new norms in the workplace, Gen Z is eschewing the ones implemented by millennials before them. They're demanding a better work-life-balance, and it's scaring their millennial managers, The New York Times' Emma Goldberg reported last fall.

Young 20-somethings are delegating to their boss, asking for mental health days, working less once they've accomplished their tasks for the day, and setting their own hours, Goldberg wrote. It's a sharp contrast from the overworked, structured days that work-obsessed millennials are accustomed to.

Some of it is part of a "slow-up," a purposeful shift in slowing down productivity with the aim of a better work-life balance. This could be taking unofficial breaks or responding to emails only on select weekdays.

That's because they're disillusioned with the current working environment. Some are even taking to social media to reject the notion of work.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (3)

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The pandemic has made many burned out and overworked Americans question their work lives. Gen Z, along with younger millennials, are acting as the voice of these grievances online.

On TikTok, they're calling out capitalism for the role it's taking on their mental health.

"I live in a society where my productivity matters more than my well-being, and so I'm just depressed and anxious all the time," says a user who goes by Rama in a video. "I'm smiling, but I'm deeply wounded. I work three jobs, and I still feel like I'm not doing enough."

On Reddit, they're bolstering the "antiwork" movement, which embraces a work-free lifestyle. As Insider's Juliana Kaplan reported, the movement looks tosimilar youth-led movements against work in other countries, especially China, where young people are "lying flat" by decentering a drive to constantly be more productive and competitive at work, and instead find happiness in their own lives and relaxation.

The antiworkers areopting out of working altogether. Kade, a Gen Z worker in Kansas, quit his job as a service worker after his bossposted a signtelling workers they couldn't use their phones during shifts — and, if they were caught with their phones, management could confiscate them.

"I think it felt like I could be like a bigger part of a movement," Kade told Kaplan. "I didn't want to put up with this stuff."

It's driving many to quit their jobs. But most are just finding a better one, as the typical Gen Z worker is leading the way in the unprecedented job hopping the labor market has been seeing.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (4)

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The era of remote work gave Gen Z the upper hand in amplifying demands for workplace autonomy, Rikleen said. She added that their lives were turned upside down during an impressionable time.

"They had so much taken away from them in terms of access, you can go on and on with what has been lost," she said. "That reframes your thinking ... you start to think about what's important to you and how to express [that]."

Back in October, LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky deemed the Great Resignation more of a "Great Reshuffle." Workers were quitting their jobs in favor of a better one. His team found that job transitions on LinkedIn have increased by 54% year-over-year, with Gen Z's job transitions increasing by 80%. Millennials were transitioning jobs at the second highest rate, up by 50%.

The findings echoed data released earlier in 2021. In late July,a Bankrate surveyfound that nearly twice as many Gen Z and millennial workers than boomers planned to look for a new job in the coming year. In August,a study by Personal Capital and The Harris Pollfound that two-thirds of Americans surveyed were keen to switch jobs. The majority of Gen Zers felt that way (91%), as did more than a quarter of millennials.

The trend is continuing in 2022. Sixty-five percent of the generation plans to quit their job this year, according to a recent report by talent acquisition platform Leverthat polled 1,200 full-time employed adults. That's way higher than the 40% of overall employees in the survey who plan to leave in less than a year.

One of the factors driving the quits is being forced to give up working from home. The typical Gen Zer is more inclined to quit over returning to the office full time.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (5)

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A new report from ADP Research Institute titled "People at Work 2022: A Global Workforce View," surveyed over 32,000 workers worldwide found that 71% of 18 to 24 year olds said that "if my employer insisted on me returning to my workplace full-time, I would consider looking for another job." That's a higher rate than among older workers. Overall, ADP Research Institute found 64% of the workforce said this.

"I think that for them, for this segment of workers, the change from workplace to home was probably pretty natural," Nela Richardson, the chief economist at ADP and co-author of the report, told Insider's Madison Hoff about younger workers. "It probably felt like an extension of their social lives in some sense, because they hadn't yet been cemented by the workplace. And so the challenges of going back to work are more formidable."

"These are young workers who never really got their foot in the door and honestly don't know what they are missing in terms of the workplace," Richardson added, referring to the things like building relationships with coworkers orlearning by just observing their coworkers.

As 22-year-old Erifili Gounari, founder and CEO of The Z Link, previously told Insider: "We value things like freedom and flexibility more. So, to me, not having an office and having the opportunity to let everyone work wherever they want creates a much better company culture, because everyone feels a lot more independent."

But many are experiencing "shift shock," finding themselves surprised or regretful about their new job once starting it.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (6)

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An early 2022 survey of more than 2,500 workers by The Muse found that 72% of jobseekers said they experienced shift shock after starting their new role. Kathryn Minshew, The Muse's cofounder and CEO, defined this as starting a new job only to discover, with surprise or regret, that the position or company is different from what you thought it would be.

"This is a generational shift, driven by Gen Z and millennial candidates who are more likely to believe the employer-employee relationship should be a two-way street," Minshew said. "On top of this, the pandemic has emphasized for many that 'life is short,' which means candidates are less likely to stick around in unfulfilling jobs."

It's part of a larger trend. Twenty percent of people who joined the Great Resignation regret quitting their jobs, per a new Harris Poll survey by USA Today that polled 2,000 American adults. The survey found that some of these workers were lured by the prospect of a higher salary without taking other job factors into consideration, only to find that they lost a work-life balance or that their new role was different than expected.

The typical Gen Zer cares most about the working environment. Salary takes a backseat for them.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (7)

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Gen Z cares more about work-life balance and personal well-being, according to a report by workforce communications app Firstup. It found they look for benefits such as paid time off, mental health days, or activities that create a sense of community.

They value employers who prioritize employee mental health. That's likely because the generation is more open to talking about mental health and growing increasingly depressed. Nearly half of Gen Z (46%) said in a Deloitte report that surveyed 23,000 Gen Zers and millennials that they feel stressed or anxious.

Gen Z workers also want a workplace that's meaningful, both for their career and in the impact the company makes on the world. The Lever reportalso found that 42% of Gen Zers would rather be at a company that gives them a sense of purpose than one that pays more. They're also more likely than the average American to want to work for a company that is speaking up for or addressing social justice issues.

More than half (56%) of Gen Z said they would leave their job if it interfered with their personal lives, per a Workmonitor global study by Randstad that drew from 35,000 workers. Almost half of them said they wouldn't accept a job at a company that didn't align with their views on social and environmental issues.

Because Gen Z is less motivated by financial success, many are driven by an entrepreneurial side to make a difference in the world.

Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (8)

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"I want to make a difference before I want to make money," Aryaansh Rathore, the 16-year-old founder of Bread, a Dubai start-up reimagining banking for Gen Z, told Crunchbase's Jason Williamson.

Advanced technology has helped enable Gen Z's entrepreneurial streak, which often begins in their teen years. They're posed to drive an entrepreneurship boom, Williamson wrote. A study of 1,000 Gen Zers by the Center for Generational Kinetics found that 62% of Gen Z plans to start or possibly start their own business in the future.

"Gen Z is innovative and powerful," Emma Havighorst, a 2020 graduate, previously told Insider. "The way we see the world is very different from prior generations."

For three years, Havighorst has hosted the podcast "Generation Slay," which profiles Gen Z creators and entrepreneurs like the mental-health advocateGabby Frostand the nonprofit founderZiad Ahmed. She said she thought the pandemic would produce even more innovators.

"Necessity breeds invention," she said. "We'll be trying to figure out solutions to problems that plagued past generations."

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Meet the typical Gen Z worker, who is quitting their job for a better one but probably regretting it later (2024)

FAQs

Are Gen Z more likely to quit their jobs? ›

Gen Z workers, aged between 18 and 26, make up about 35% of those wanting to quit, while millennials (aged 27 to 42) are another 31%.

Why are Gen Z quitting their jobs? ›

In addition, the Cigna 360 Global Well-Being Survey 2022, it is said that 91% of Gen Z workers feel extremely stressed in the workplace. This is a leading cause of burnout and lack of satisfaction in their jobs.

What is one thing that Gen Z really want from their workplace? ›

Co-create. More than other generations, Gen Z wants to have their voices heard. They want agency to create a future that they find meaningful. Enlist their energy and problem-solving skills.

Are Gen Z the most stressed workers? ›

New research from Mercer suggests that members of Generation Z experience the most stress at work. The study found that more than half of Generation Z staff face stress at work. For the study – titled 'Health on demand' – Mercer surveyed nearly 18,000 employees from numerous countries around the world.

Does Gen Z care about work? ›

A Gallup report termed them “Generation Disconnected,” noting that Gen Z is less likely than older generations to be actively engaged in work and more likely to suffer stress and burnout.

What is the term Gen Z quitting? ›

Quiet quitting” and “Bare Minimum Mondays” have become popular terms in recent months, but these phrases are just two of many that have emerged from a disillusioned generation entering the workforce.

What generation Z wants in a job? ›

Accountability on the environment, sustainability, and social responsibility. Gen Zers are passionate about making a difference, and want to work somewhere they feel has a broader mission and purpose that aligns with their own values. They don't want to make money just to make money—they want to make an impact.

Why is Gen Z so disconnected? ›

For one, it's said they're addicted to technology and can't handle face-to-face interactions. They also expect too much from the brands and companies they interact with. They ask for bigger pay and better perks, and they want to be rewarded quickly.

Who is the hardest working generation? ›

26% of millennials have 2 or more jobs.

Despite stereotypes endorsed by older generations, millennials are one of the hardest working generations. Over a quarter of them work 2 or more jobs.

What are the flaws of the Gen Z? ›

Another weakness of Gen Z is that they can be quite impulsive. With instant gratification being so easily accessible, this generation has difficulty waiting for anything.

Is quiet quitting a Gen Z thing? ›

Quiet quitting isn't just a Gen Z phenomenon, but they do own it. In Gallup's 2023 State of the Global Workplace, Gen Z and young Millennial engagement with work dropped four points from 2019 and 2022.

Is Gen Z hardest generation to work with? ›

Gen Z, loosely defined as those born between the mid-to-late 1990s and early 2010s, is the latest generation to enter the workforce. A survey done by Resume Builder, a resource website for job seekers, revealed that around 3 out of 4 managers find that Gen Z is the most challenging generation to work with.

What motivates Gen Z employees? ›

Gen Z is often motivated by a sense of purpose and may be drawn to jobs and companies that align with their values and beliefs. As a manager, you can help motivate your Gen Z employees by ensuring their work is meaningful and positively impacts others.

What jobs are Gen Z most interested in? ›

Driving the news: Young people today are more likely to job-hop, but they are also looking for stability by pursuing careers as CEOs, doctors and engineers, according to a new Axios/Generation Lab study. By the numbers: Gen Z-ers surveyed said their top career goals were businessperson, doctor and engineer."

Are Gen Z less likely to work? ›

Gen-Z find themselves in an inhospitable labor market, with challenges in finding employment opportunities. There are overwhelming concerns about a lack of jobs and financial security. Around 60% of 18-to 25-year-olds said they're likely to switch jobs in 2023, up from 53% last year, according to Robert Half.

How many Gen Z are jobless? ›

However, unemployment is disproportionately affecting both young and middle-aged adults — the newbies of the working world and the veterans. Fifteen percent of the respondents in this category are members of Gen Z and 15% are members of Gen X. Additionally, another 14% fall on the Gen X-baby boomer cusp, aged 55-64.

How long does the average Gen Z stay at a job? ›

However, Gen Z's average length in a job (so far) is 2 years and 3 months - only 6 months less than Millennials. Gen Z have very different attitudes than their older colleagues, including: More cautious when it comes to professional expectations, after seeing the fallout from the recession and widespread job losses.

Is Gen Z harder working than millennials? ›

Forty-nine percent of managers say it's difficult to work with Gen Z all or most of the time, according to a recent Resume Builder survey of over 1,000 managers and business leaders. Seventy-four percent even believe Gen Z is more difficult to work with than other generations, and would prefer to work with millennials.

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