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Gen Z and  How Best to Manage ‘Generation Snowflake’

Gen Z and  How Best to Manage ‘Generation Snowflake’

A series of unconnected recent conversations with law firm leaders have impelled me to reflect further on a topic I am periodically asked about. 

Senior management in law firms often raise the issue of how best to manage Gen Z and ask:  How should we best manage our Gen Z employees?  Why do we struggle to retain them?

The issue has been raised with me by law firm leaders in multiple jurisdictions and is evidently  an international issue.  It was one of the top topics that managing partners and other senior leaders wanted me to talk about at the recent meeting of their international law firm network.  I have been asked about it in the last couple of years in jurisdictions as diverse as Greece, India, Ireland, Israel, Mexico, UK and the US.

At the highest level, law firm leaders comment on the difficulty of meeting the needs of their Gen Z junior lawyers and often report on difficulties they encounter retaining lawyers from the generation they sometimes label – derogatorily – as ‘Generation Snowflake’.

A few of the things law firm leaders tell me about the challenges associated with managing ‘Generation Snowflake’ (their language, not mine):

Some leaders add that some of their colleagues aren’t prepared to flex to the ‘demands’ posed by Gen Z.  For those colleagues it’s ‘our way or the highway’.  Those colleagues will insist, for example, on their team members being in the office, whether their team members like it or not.

There is an old apocryphal English legend, well-known to everyone British of my generation (cards on table I was born in 1967 and am a post-baby boomer, Gen X-er).

King Canute was an 11th century English king who on the popular retelling of the legend believed that his divine powers included the power to turn back the tide.  Surrounded by his courtiers he commanded the tide to retreat but ended up soaked to the skin.

Interestingly the popular version of the Canute legend is apparently the opposite of the original telling of the story.  In the original version of the legend Canute role-modelled his inability to reverse the tide in order to educate his courtiers about the limits of his regal powers.

Whatever. The story is apocryphal in both versions and either way illustrates that leaders cannot hold back irreversible tides. 

Some compelling facts that should cause the inflexible ‘older guard’ to have pause for thought and reflection:

The harsh reality is that Gen Z talent is highly portable and aware of its value. It is also easier than ever for younger lawyers to identify opportunities for lateral movement as information is more readily accessible than at any previous time in human history.

Here are my top 10 tips for how best to manage Gen Z:

Jonathan Middleburgh specialises in advising firms on people issues and is a highly experienced coach and trusted adviser to senior law firm management internationally. If you would like to discuss any of the issues raised by this article with Jonathan you can email him at [email protected]

Jonathan Middleburgh
Author

Edge Principal consults on senior human capital issues and coaches senior legal talent in both law firms and legal departments. A former practicing lawyer who is also trained as an organisational psychologist, Jonathan has a wide range of experience helping law firms and legal departments to develop their senior legal talent so as to maximise business outcomes.