Sunday, June 13, 2010

A Holistic Approach to Professional Development

The 21st Century is opening up new doors for professional development as the latest generation entering the workforce refuses to believe in the all-powerful, life giving corporation and the requirement to conform to the way things have always been to succeed. Students graduating this year are confident, aggressive, fearless, imaginative, impatient and short-sighted. That combination of traits makes for a scary cocktail for business leaders who have managed employees for decades who believe what they're told and fear stepping too far outside of what is expected.

This new generation intimidates a lot of managers. The situation requires creative answers to questions like: how do we make managers out of these employees? how do we keep them in a job long enough to benefit from their contributions? and how much is it going to cost for us to make the necessary changes?

What many employers fail to recognize is the incredible benefit that these new creative approaches will have for all employees within the organization. Here are two ways professional development will have to change and how those changes will benefit the current workforce:

1) Treating employees like human beings.
The days of developing processes and forcing employees to bend to fit the system are on the way out. Confident, creative and aggressive employees aren't intimidated by authority. They aren't afraid to ask "Why?" and wait for an answer. Businesses that try to manage that behavior out of those employees will lose the talent to more tolerant organizations. Meanwhile, tolerant organizations are going to have to come up with suitable answers.

Eventually, organizations will begin to explore the reasons most business processes don't account for the humanity of the employees they affect. Work days will become infinitely more flexible, lines between home and life will blur even further than they already have. Businesses will find themselves looking for employee training that addresses the personal, as well as professional, development of the employee. It will become infinitely more cost effective to teach employees financial sense that can be applied personally and professionally. Communication skills training will address how human beings talk to human beings, rather than focusing on the proper way for professionals to address one another.

2) Recognizing that Loyalty is a two-way street.
As the dreaded phrase "due to the economy, we're going to have to...." has been thrown around, we've all seen an unprecedented firings by companies in every single industry. The catch phrase means gloom and doom to most employees and most managers make a good show of looking upset and disappointed while they deliver the line. But the fact of the matter is, this has been a blessing to many corporations that have made massive layoffs without the negative attention they would have received ten or fifteen years ago. It's like a "get out of PR jail free" card.

Upcoming generations, however, are not afraid of being dumped. They don't believe that their current job will be their last. They are confident that they can be millionaires, idols, stars and nothing can stop them. As more and more companies jump on the dump & run bandwagon, young, energetic talent will continue to bounce from job to job until retraining costs become unbearable for companies. To combat that trend, smart businesses will begin to differentiate themselves to potential employees by stressing loyalty plans that are customizable to suit the individual.

As these changes are implemented, the workplace will become more humane. There will be many who believe that all of this is huggy-feely nonsense. To them, we say, hope you've fully funded your 401K and haven't put too much of your future in stocks. Companies who ignore the cries of the masses for a return to humanity will inevitably fall...and it's a long way down for some of those folks!

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