590 likes | 778 Views
Understanding Each Other and Working Together, Multigenerational Health Teams. Karen Dunlop RN BN LLB May 2007. The world is changing. Pluto is no longer a planet!. And so are we…. Multigenerational Workforce.
E N D
Understanding Each Other and Working Together, Multigenerational Health Teams Karen Dunlop RN BN LLB May 2007
The world is changing • Pluto is no longer a planet!
Multigenerational Workforce • Today there are at least three and sometimes four generations working together in the workplace. • Veterans, born before 1945 • Baby Boomers, born 1946-1964 • Generation X, born 1965-1980 • Millennial, born after 1980 • Boychuck Duchscher J.E., Cowin L., Multigenerational Nurses in the Workplace, JONA Vol. 34, No. 11, pp. 493-501, 2004.
The Veterans, born before 1945 • Born into conservative, overprotective, two parent, one income households; as children, were “seen and not heard”. • Rules were clear, authority clearer. • Heroes had clear unarguable and great purposes such as saving the world. • Born into the Industrial age.
Veterans’ Work Ethic • Aspired to and expected life long single employer career. • Diversity was uncommon. • Future was predictable. Roles were clear and traditional. • Fiscally prudent or frugal. • Value organizational loyalty, discipline, teamwork, pay your dues.
Veterans’ Work Ethic • Value history and experience. • Comfortable with chain of command. Believe in central command and control. • Expect professional managers in a hierarchical structure, who communicate formally and officially in a proper manner. • Want formal recognition, symbols of prestige and status.
Coaching Veterans • Acknowledge their knowledge and experience. • Use one-to-one face to face meetings; formal feedback, recognition and communication mechanisms. • Acknowledge their long service. • Teach them about evidence based practice, research, new models of care, shared leadership. • Encourage them to express views, question decisions if they see a problem.
Baby Boomers • Comprise at least 55% of the workforce. • “Me” generation. • Raised in nuclear traditional families. • Spirit of rebelliousness and idealism. • Learned to challenge authority and value those who questioned the status quo. • Equate work with self-worth, and personal fulfillment.
Baby Boomers • Strong work ethic. • Invented the word “workaholic”. • Competitive, strong willed. • Desire but did not achieve work-life balance. • Will work longer than traditional cohorts.
Baby Boomers’ Work Ethic • Want to work in organizations that are democratic, humane, caring and have a positive effect on the world. • Value a manager who knows them personally and treats them as a peer. • Expect their individual achievements and contributions to be acknowledged. • Value a strong work ethic.
Coaching Baby Boomers • Recognize their achievements with formal status symbols and titles. • Peer to peer coaching situations. • Recognize with perks. • Understand they are a stressed “Sandwich generation”. • Provide organizational supports, stress management resources and continuing education.
Generation X • Raised in dual income or single parent households of ethnically or culturally diverse parents, in an adult orientated society. • Under protected, latchkey kids. • Self-reliant, resourceful, technologically savvy. • Born in the Information Age. • Saw their workaholic parents get downsized.
Generation X • Described as alienated, skeptical, cynical, nonconformist and radically individualistic. • Grew up with Sesame Street and computers in the classroom. • Learned to be self-reliant and turned to friends to fill the gap from absent parents. • Pragmatic, outcome focused, independent. • No faith in institutions.
Generation X Work Ethic • Want to work independently on outcomes. • Want opportunities for professional growth. • Are committed to their profession, not their employer. • Value “employability”, not long term employment. • See work is a job. • Have a “free agent” mentality
Generation X Work Ethic • Focused on information rather than personal experience. Want facts over emotion. • Expect immediate feedback and success. • Less willing to make sacrifices for the greater good (not part of it). • Are not interested in process, committees that don’t accomplish anything.
Coaching Gen Xers • Give them a task and leave them alone. • Provide opportunities to grow professionally. • Provide technological resources e.g. internet • Allow them to learn by doing e.g. role playing • Listen to their input and feedback. • Deemphasize bureaucratic obstacles. • Respect their value for work life balance. • Recognize them on the basis of merit.
Millennial • The second largest demographic cohort, after their parents, the Baby Boomers. • Born into multicultural, biracial parents, many in single parent households. • Optimistic, goal orientated, educated, ambitious, confident, technologically sophisticated. • Accept that the world is a global economy. • Understand multiculturalism as a way of life.
Millennial • Respect authority, hard earned achievement, hierarchy and teams. Morally grounded. • Similar to Veterans in sociopolitical attributes and work ethic. • Share the Veterans traditional values, respect for heroes that accomplish great things e.g. 9/11 • Considered generous, sociable, practical and morally convicted.
Millenials’s Work Ethic • Expect work-life balance. • Expect mutual respect, support, commitment and trust. • Like working in teams. • Tolerant, loyal, motivated • Have career plans and paths.
Millenials’s Work Ethic • Change is inherent in their lives. • Multitask easily. • Technologically confident. • May have limited social and personal interaction skills. • May have limited clinical or practical experience. • Outspoken.
Coaching Millennial • Want information, education, communication and lots of feedback. • Want a leader who has a vision, can communicate, is honest, has integrity, can motivate others, is knowledgeable and supportive. • Want lots and lots of coaching and mentoring. • Expect structure, guidance and extensive orientation.
Coaching Millennial • They want to be involved in decision making and implementation of new practices. • They have little patience for a lack of resources, rigidity, or blind insistence on doing things “the way they have always been done”. • They want to learn from experience but not be burdened by it.
Technology has flipped traditional hierarchy of knowledge • Younger generations know more about technology.
The #1 issue in health care today: • Recruitment and retention (health human resources). • Ours is an aging workforce. • Boomers poised to retire. • We are not educating, hiring or retaining enough nurses to replace us. • 30% of new graduates leave nursing.
Why do nurses leave? • Not valued as a professional • Not respected as a person • Loss of self • Lack of recognition • Workplace stress • Lack of acceptance • Lack of opportunities in nursing/other opportunities available.
Sources of Disrespect • Other nurses • Other staff • Patients and their families • The organization
Conflict • Inevitable in human interactions…. • Unresolved conflict leads to error, staff turnover, decreased patient satisfaction.
Generational Conflict • Members of each generational cohort share common experiences that influence their attitudes and expectations toward authority, organizations, work expectations, career goals and private life. • These perspectives can create stress, misunderstanding and conflict in the workplace.
The generational divide • Disrespect Disconnect ↓ ↓ • Peer conflict Poor working relationships ↓ ↓ =Burnout + Professional attrition
“Every generation blames the one before”* • Believing one’s own perspective to be unique and universal. • Different assumptions regarding roles. • Participating vs. challenging • Pay your dues • Focus on differences not strengths. • Expecting to teach not learn. • *Mike and the Mechanics, In the Living Years.
Workplace attributes • Strong visible nurse leader. • Autonomy • Respectful work relationships • Control over work
Respect • Requires valuing and understanding of each other. • As a team, group • As an individual. • Stereotypes and generalities are used only as guideposts. • Generational • Area or place of practice e.g. ER nurses
Valuing every member of the team • Veterans • experience, knowledge, skill and judgment • Baby Boomers • clinical and organizational experience. • Gen Xers • innovative, independent, creative, new models. • Millennial • technologically sophisticated, connected, spirit of optimism.
Strategies for Leaders • Conduct a generational inventory. • Hold every employee to the same expectations, organizational policies, code of conduct. • Promote the concept of team. • Set ground rules the reinforce an expectation of respect and tolerance. • Communicate, communicate, communicate. • Be a role model.
Strategies for Leaders • Explore new ways of doing things. • New nurses are not interested in lengthy outdated policies and procedures, delayed communication, meetings. • Develop a generation-sensitive coaching and mentoring style.
Strategies for Leaders • Promote career management to manage turnover. • Create, facilitate or promote continuing education and professional growth opportunities.