Saturday, May 23, 2020

Professional and Personal Communication Across Generations - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career

Professional and Personal Communication Across Generations - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Today, I wanted to discuss how different generations communicate. The more you understand how to reach people properly, the more successful you will be with responses. Imagine yourself as the receiver before you send messages. This discussion will wrap around new and traditional methods of communication and serve as a resource for you, prior to engaging in conversation or sending a message to another person. The Facts There are 3 major age brackets: gen-y (also called millenials), gen-x the baby boomers. Gen-y members are between the ages of 15 and 27, while gen-x is between 28-42 and the baby boomers are older than 42. There are 74 million people in gen-y, 49 million in gen-x and 77 million baby boomers. 37% of US adult internet users use social networks (projected at 50% in 2011) eMarketer 70% of US teen internet users use social networks (projected at 84% in 2011) 50%+ Facebook users are not students The majority of new Facebook members are people over 35 69% of US female gen-yers use Facebook eMarketer 56% of US male gen-yers use Facebook 98% more people in gen-x visited Facebook in the past few months. MarketingCharts.com Gen-y Communication Protocol I think its obvious at this point that gen-y is the most tech savvy group that communicates through fast paced messaging, with little detail and more visuals. They express themselves in a way that commands attention and want to be judged on more than just age. Facebook: Those of us that registered before Facebook opened up to the masses are still uncomfortable with the transparency and visibility to our professional contacts or colleagues. Ive been Facebooked by 2 managers at my current company and a few at past ones. How can you not accept? Dont you feel obligated, but at the same time nervous? This social network is being used in various ways and deep inside there are a few communication devices that stand out. The first is the wall, which is a place where gen-yers post happy birthday messages, or videos/images.They may talk about what they did on a Friday or Saturday night on their wall as well. The next method of communication is private messages, which still pass through our email accounts, but they are used to keep secrecy. Aside from the many applications, the third (brand new) vehicle is Facebook Chat, which launched to the world this week. It will take between 2-4 years for it to succeed and for other instant messaging sources to lose popularity. Instant Messaging: Employers, please dont email gen-yers on our instant messaging devices, such as AIM. We use this specifically for communicating with friends and possibly people at work, depending on the company culture and the people we trust. Instant messaging works well for us because its fast paced communication and we can get our answers, ask our questions or show our personalities (emoticons) to everyone on our buddy lists. Its also great for speaking with members of the opposite sex if you arent someone who enjoys the phone. Email: Gen-yers have to use email because we need to speak with the older generations and that is their preference. Also, we receive notifications from all our social networks through email, such as LinkedIn invites, Facebook group invites and direct tweet messages. Im still a big fan of email and with the proper filters (Gmail is great), you can sort through your messages automatically and prioritize them with stars (Gmail option). Gen-y prefers and expects employers to contact them through email or phone for job offers, questions, consulting, etc. Blogging: If you are in gen-y and still dont have a blog, here is a toolkit I made a while ago for you, which I will update soon. Gen-y is fine with any generation commenting or responding to a blog post. It works well because written content forms talking points with your community and in order to get a full perspective on each post, you want people in different generations to chime in. Gen-x The Baby Boomers Strike Back They own the workplace right now, unless you are an entrepreneur. That being said, you need to be able to communicate with these groups and both of them have almost identical preferences. A lot of baby boomers dont know what blogs are, and certainly not Twitter or Kite or UStream or even Ning. Due to the incredible placement of Facebook and blogs in the media, these generations are well aware of them, but maybe not so much what they can accomplish in the corporate world. They rely on gen-y to figure it out and gen-x to manage them. Phone: If you want to have a conversation with someone in these generations, just pick up a phone and call them. A phone is perfect if the person is in another building, state or country. If you cant meet face-to-face, then setup a call, conference call (multiple people) or a live meeting using Webx or Microsoft Live Meeting software. Face time: If you want to succeed in the workplace as a gen-yer, then you better get in front of the people with the political power to make change or at least middle management. Remember what I say: if you arent visible, you dont exist. This works just as much with Google as it does in a work setting. Competitively, if others are being seen more than you, then they have a much better chance of getting promoted, even if they lack the experience or knowledge you have. Its a vicious world out there, so make sure you get mentors in the company and force yourself into situations where people can identify you as noteworthy. Email: Ive made the mistake of treating email like IM or Twitter in the workplace and Im sure you have to if youre in my generation. There is an expectation that management sets that you will send them an appropriate email fit to their preferences. If you are trying to be persuasive to get a point across, then include many details. You cant send people 2 words or a single sentence and have them take you seriously. To them, its an insult.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.