Getting Prepped For The Next Generation Of Employees

Getting Prepped For The Next Generation Of Employees

Getting Prepped For The Next Generation Of Employees

The Next Generation Of Employees: Some Interesting Insights 

Usually described as those born between the early 1980s and the turn of the century, Millennials now represent the single largest group in today’s workforce. Soon these digital natives will have a fresh group of young upstarts to contend with. The first of those born in 2000 and since the turn of the century will be entering the workforce over the next 24 months. As social commentators grapple with their label (Generation Z, the iGeneration, post-Millennials, and the Screeners are hot favorites), Lumesse Learning’s insights team gathered the teens taking on tomorrow’s workforce into one room and asked them how they learn.

Call them late-Millennials, iGeners, call them what you want: The insights gained by talking to this group of 15 to 16 year-olds offers up some eyebrow-raising surprises:

So what kind of tech-based learning really engages teens soon to join the workforce (and what doesn’t)?

Conducted as part of Lumesse Learning’s “Leadership, learning, and the connected generation” program, full details from the teens study are available on video. Expert interviews from the world’s leading researchers plus new infographics and research summaries have also been drawn together for the first time in the program’s comprehensive insights download.

“Learning and Development professionals are becoming acutely aware that, by 2020, nearly half of the workforce will be Millennials or post-Millennials”, explains Carole. “The insights paper and video package we’ve created for this program responds to their increased calls for simple, straightforward guidance as Learning and Development departments set about delivering learning support for the next generation of workers.”

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