Anonymous ID: ddb620 Aug. 7, 2022, 9:39 a.m. No.17143136   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6822

>>17140189

I’ve got Gen X friends, is this true

 

Michael Girdley

@girdley

Generation X is weird.

 

These 42-57 year-olds are so strange it presents golden opportunities.

 

Here are 10 mind hacks to use with Gen X:

 

Before we start, I’ll be generalizing.

 

Not every Gen X will think this way.

 

Especially those Gen Xers closer in age to either Boomers (born 1946-64) or Millennials (born 1981-96).

 

But these tricks will work with most.

 

Let’s go…

 

1: Motivate Gen X with two phrases, “Do it your way” and “Don’t sweat the rules”

 

Many Gen X grew up in divorced single-parent homes.

 

So were forced to be self-reliant and unsupervised early on.

 

They want independence to get it done their way.

 

2: Send your Gen X colleagues well-written emails.

 

Gen X grew up with email – but before SMS or apps.

 

Their teachers stressed correct writing, too.

 

Poor grammar drives Gen X nuts

 

3: Acknowledge Gen X's emails quickly.

 

They will love you.

 

Gen X wants to know who is responsible at all times.

 

They grew up when institutions weren’t to be trusted

 

4: Focus with Gen X on mission and results.

 

Not seniority, effort, or hours worked.

 

You’ll often hear Gen X say, “If someone gets the job done in half the time, that’s fine.”

 

5: Allow Gen X a balanced life.

 

Gen X grew up with workaholic Boomer parents.

 

Seeing that, Gen X thinks work is part of life but not why they live

 

6: Bond with Gen X as individuals.

 

Not as part of a tribe (Millennials) or institution (Boomers).

 

Institutions from Gov’t to marriage showed they couldn't be trusted during Gen X's youth.

 

7: Be direct with Gen X.

 

Give them data.

 

Gen X says “Tell me how it is!” and cuts out the fluff.

 

For generations like Millennials, this is hard.

 

Millennials want the “shit sandwich” for feedback.

 

8: Just acknowledge Gen X exists.

 

Gen X feels forgotten.

 

Only 20% of the population.

 

They’re also the people in your org with their heads down, getting stuff done.

 

But, take them for granted and they can bolt.

 

9: Expect Gen X to be pessimistic.

 

Boomers/Millenials grew up in ages of abundance.

 

Gen X is the first generation to NOT do as well financially as their parents or kids did.

 

10: Expect Gen X to want work-life separation.

 

Expect them to be friendly but not “friends” at work.

 

Unlike recent generations who bring their personal life to work

 

tl;dr:

 

Win by doing these things with Gen X:

 

1) Say "Do it your way"

2) Use well-written emails

3) Say "I got it!"

4) Focus on the mission w/ them

5) Allow life balance

6) Bond as people

7) Be direct

8) Acknowledge they exist

9) Expect pessimism

10) Expect work-life separation

 

Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this or feel pity for me, retweets and likes of the first post in this thread would be great

 

https://twitter.com/girdley/status/1511316479106453511?s=20&t=EMIbGxz2u9UnWoNfQKWquA