Why You Should Share Your Profits with Millennials

Like two warring factions, there is a pro-millennial camp and an anti-millennial camp who rigorously debate the benefits and challenges of a growing Gen Y workforce. On the pro side, millennials are celebrated for their ideals and stubborn vision of disrupting the status quo. On the con side, they are viewed as narcissistic, lazy and entitled neophytes who almost refuse to work a meaningful 40 hours per week.

I have wrestled with these opposing perspectives in real-world applications. Many of my clients have owners that struggle with this emerging workforce as they feel “forced” to hire increasing numbers of millennials. This collision of establishment and new order mentalities leads to strife in almost everything they try to accomplish as an organization. Even office parties can become a blood-letting as opposing views on the importance of cultural sensitivity, dietary considerations and inclusionary activities battle for dominance.

Once you spend some time working in this push and pull between the old guard and new workforce, you start to see where common ground may exist.

Money.

Regardless of age or the corporate cultures you cut your teeth on, money still creates a bridge between the two sides. Despite the popular notion that millennials aren’t driven to acquire material possessions, that just isn’t the statistical truth.

According to Goldman Sachs’ survey of millennials in 2015, 30% said they have little interest in buying a home and 33% said they have no plans to buy a car. For a minute, let’s consider the counterpoint of those numbers. With the inverse nature of percentages, this survey also shows 70% of millennials want to buy a house and 66% plan to buy a car. Additionally, many millennials are carrying crippling student debt and entering an employment market that is increasingly tight as the sharing economy grows without a correlating growth in job creation. Even if millennials don’t want to focus on the accumulation of money or wealth, they are bound by the same economic realities as people twice their age. Even if money may be motivating for Generation X and seen as a necessary evil by Generation Y, they both understand it’s role.

I worked with a client who rolled out a performance plan for all employees that paid an additional 15% of their current salaries as a bonus at year end€”provided they met revenue and profit margin goals. This company is comprised almost 100% of Gen X management and 100% of Gen Y front line employees. Previously, they had not published strategic goals and had no meaningful monetary incentive for reaching specific performance levels. This straight-forward program created a 26% increase in top line revenue, and net income grew 135% in one year.

What we found was a millennial workforce that still had enough need wrapped around money that they worked hard to make this bonus. I also believe the very nature of working toward a common goal provided a sense of purpose and community. For the first time, there was some consensus between the Gen Y and Gen X populations.

Even with some massive checks being written by the owners of the company to pay those bonuses, there was little pain in signing them. The program was a massive success for them personally and professionally. After backing out the bonuses, they still had one of their highest profit margins ever.

I’m not suggesting to simply throw money at a millennial workforce and consider the problem solved. I am suggesting that a thoughtful approach to using it as starting point has merit. Here are some things to think through when considering a profit-sharing program.

Tie the Money to Performance Goals
The business should benefit from the program and the program actually gains meaning when it is tied to some achievement. It helps to create alignment and shared purpose. Without goals to reach, the bonus becomes the corporate version of a participation trophy.

Pick 3 Goals that Everyone Impacts
Don’t pick 12 metrics to hit. That’s just wasting your time. Pick 3 that really matter and that everyone in the organization can impact.

Measure and Share Constantly
Progress toward a goal or series of metrics should be measured and shared as often as possible. Remember, you are working with millennials who are used to information being available on-demand and in real time. Publish the results or progress with the highest frequency possible. Internal social media programs are great conduits for this.

Create Meaning Behind the Goals
Use the opportunity to explain why these goals are important to the employees as well as the company. Revenue improvement can mean expansion and more opportunities for the employees. Excellent profit margins represent ownership’s ability to reinvest in the business which can mean growth in a number of ways. If you spend some time explaining the what’s-in-it-for-me (WIIFM) components to the program, you can maximize the motivation.

It’s important to recognize that many of us Gen X’rs wanted the same things as these “millennials.” We wanted our work to matter, to be recognized for our achievements and have the opportunity for rapid advancement. The only difference is we folded like cheap shirts when our parent’s generation said no. I admire that Gen Y is being so hard-headed. I think many of us old curmudgeons are envious of their resolve.

Again, I don’t believe this is some magic bullet to solve all disconnects between a millennial workforce and Gen X management but it provides one bridge between the two. If you are an owner or manager currently ignoring this dynamic or believe it will go away, consider there are 50% more millennials than Gen X’rs. At some point, if it hasn’t happened already, your workforce will be more Y than X so you need to focus on how you can engage and motivate them.

Millennials aren’t bad, you’re just old

Maybe more than any other topic that keeps coming up for older founders and business owners is how to “deal” with a Millennial workforce. Here is the definition of a Millennial according to Urban Dictionary:

“Special little snowflake. Born between 1982 and 1994 this generation is something special, ’cause Mom and Dad and their 5th grade teacher Mrs. Winotsky told them so. Plus they have a whole shelf of participation trophies sitting at home so it has to be true.”

Terms like entitled, self-important, lazy and narcissistic have been used when referring to millennials. Even the preceding definition nods to the pervasive belief that Millennials are some kind of malfunctioning adult.

Participate in the bashing long enough and you start to sound a little like your mom or dad who just couldn’t fathom hip-hop music, those dirty plaid shirts (that seem to be back in style) or why everyone is fascinated with that “interweb” thing.

I barely fall outside this birth range but started my professional career early enough to have been indoctrinated into the “old” business model. In my first job, the salespeople had to print everything for our boss to read because he refused to learn how email worked and Office Managers were still referred to as “Secretaries.”

Millennials frustrate and anger people who are used to the old way of doing business. Andy White, Founder of City as a Startup, brilliantly speaks about the shift in business culture from our previous generation’s manufacturing model. This manufacturing model relied on organizational charts, finely written manuals, individual contributors and deference to corporate dogma where the new workplace replaces those with shared goals, shared accomplishments and shared experiences.

Here is a great article from Fast Company that explains what Millennials want and don’t want. It also speaks to some strategies to draw the best out of them.

Before you disregard all of this, consider a couple of things.

  • Millennials will be 75% of the workforce in the next 10 years.
  • There are far more millennials in the workforce than owners of companies.
  • Organizations need these young professionals and they better help them be successful.

Millennials represent a significant change in how businesses are managed and that scares the hell out of some people. In a true reflection of poor human behavior, this fear translates into the dismissal of Millennial’s motivations as frivolous or selfish.

Being the proverbial grumpy old man or woman starting every discussion about your young employees with “Back in my day…” has grown tiresome and is as worthless now as it was the first time you muttered it.

There is little reason to believe businesses can’t thrive by embracing this shift and engaging their employees in more meaningful ways.
If you are struggling with all of this- get over it. You need to realize you have an opportunity to hire people who will care more deeply about their work than ever before. If you can’t make that transition, maybe it’s time to stop blaming “lazy” Millennials and start considering your “lazy” leadership.

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