It’s a New Generation

They are young, bold, self-assured, bordering on arrogant. They are moving into your workplace in great numbers, replacing the aging 76 million baby boomers and GI Generation members that preceded them. It was just a few years ago that Generation X was turning corporate policy upside down. Quickly following in their footsteps is Generation Y, born in the 1980s—our country’s 14th generation—and children of boomers, they are poised to change the workplace in as yet incalculable ways. They, depending on immigration policy, may also be our nation’s largest generation, and certainly will be a force in shaping the future U.S ...

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