How employers can find the balance between the aspirations of the younger generation and the requirements of the company.
iStock A Chennai-based entrepreneur caused quite a furore on LinkedIn when he admitted that he ‘gladly’ broke the heart of a Gen Z job-seeker who asked for a better salary during an interview. A ...
A viral LinkedIn post sparked debate as a Chennai man claimed he "broke a Gen Z heart" by rejecting a candidate who demanded high salary. A Chennai-based professional has ignited a social media ...
A new Army National Guard recruiting campaign targets Gen Z’s disdain for the 9-to-5 grind, and their desire for flexibility ...
Gen Z is known for shaking up industries and demanding change. While the rate of EV sales has slowed year-over-year, reports ...
In a now-viral post on LinkedIn, a Chennai-based man said he was "glad" to break a Gen Z heart when he rejected their "unrealistic" salary demand. Listen to Story A Chennai-based man said he was "glad ...
A viral LinkedIn post sparked debate as a Chennai man claimed he "broke a Gen Z heart" by rejecting a candidate who demanded high salary.
Research by News Corp’s Growth Distillery with Medibank found that, of the 34 percent of Australians currently experiencing burnout, 45 percent were Gen Z and 41 percent millennials – citing a ...
"Breaking a ‘Gen Z heart’ shouldn’t be a flex. If his work was subpar, guide him rather than mock him," one user countered. Another commented, "Maybe he needed guidance instead of public ...
The post was shared on LinkedIn by Man Maran Ramalingam, a self-employed Fractional CMO, who stated that he was "glad" to have broken a "Gen Z heart." Ramalingam shared that during the interview, the ...
“Our research shows that Gen Z struggles with phone and social media addiction more than any other generation,” English said. Indeed, a 2022 Gallup poll revealed 58% of Americans believe they ...
Wales Online on MSN16 天
Gen Z's biggest travel icks revealed
The research, commissioned by global hospitality brand GENERATOR, revealed other common icks included overly dramatic airport goodbyes (19%), wearing flip-flops (17%) and rocking tourist merchandise ...