It All Started with a Conversation…
A few weeks ago, during a regular mentoring session, I sat across from a young software engineer on my team. Bright, energetic, and full of potential—but clearly restless.
“I just want to understand why we’re doing what we’re doing,” he said.
“I want to feel like I’m building something that matters.”
That hit me.
Not because I didn’t have the answer.
But because I remembered my own early days—and how that question was never even asked, let alone encouraged.
Flashback: The Way We Grew Up
When I began my IT journey two decades ago, the workplace—and even the world—was different.
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Hierarchy ruled.
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You did what your boss said—no questions.
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You stayed late, stayed loyal, and stayed silent.
We were raised by strict parents, shaped by a world where discipline, obedience, and job stability were the gold standards.
Was it bad? Not at all.
It gave us resilience, structure, and grit. But it also muted our voices and made mental health feel like a weakness.
Enter Gen Z: The Bold, Digital Natives
Born between 1997 and 2012, Gen Z was raised in a completely different ecosystem:
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Information at their fingertips.
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Parents who encouraged curiosity over compliance.
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A world that changed faster than textbooks could keep up.
They bring with them new values, new tools, and new expectations.
But that doesn’t mean they’re entitled or unmanageable.
It just means they’re speaking a language we’re not fluent in—yet.
Then vs Now: A Side-by-Side Comparison
Are They Struggling—Or Are We?
Many senior managers complain:
“They don’t listen.”
“They lack patience.”
“They’re always switching jobs.”
But here’s the question we should ask instead:
Are they struggling to perform—or are we struggling to evolve?
Because Gen Z doesn’t lack potential.
They lack alignment with systems built decades before they were born.
What Gen Z Teaches Us
Once I stopped managing and started listening, I began seeing remarkable things:
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Lightning-fast adoption of AI tools.
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Honest retrospectives.
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Out-of-the-box ideas from hackathons.
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Clear boundaries for burnout prevention.
They’re not lazy. They’re intentional.
They’re not rebellious. They’re curious.
They don’t reject authority—they redefine accountability.
From Manager to Mentor: A Shift in Mindset
If you're leading a Gen Z team, here’s what works (and what doesn't):
What Works:
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Purpose-first leadership – Explain the why, not just the what.
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Open communication – Let them speak; don’t just instruct.
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Continuous feedback – Short cycles, real-time encouragement.
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Flexibility – Trust them with time and tools.
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Mental health awareness – Normalize breaks, balance, and boundaries.
What Doesn't:
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Micromanagement
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Rigid 9-to-5 rules
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“Because I said so” mindsets
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Annual-only appraisals
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Shaming emotional vulnerability
Final Takeaway: Evolve or Miss Out
We’re not here to fix Gen Z.
We’re here to understand them—and evolve with them.
Because if we stop seeing them as “difficult” and start seeing them as different, we unlock an entirely new kind of innovation, passion, and excellence.
“The future doesn’t belong to the loudest voice in the room. It belongs to the one who listens first, adapts second, and empowers third.”
And trust me, when Gen Z is empowered, they don’t just build apps—they build cultures.
Let’s Lead Better
If you're a manager, ask yourself:
“Am I leading the way I wanted to be led—or the way they need to be led?”
Because the workplace isn’t just changing.
It’s already changed.
Let’s meet it with empathy, courage, and open minds.
Share Your Thoughts
Have you experienced a generational shift in your team?
What have you learned? What surprised you?
Let’s start a conversation. Drop your thoughts in the comments.
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