The most surprising thing about speaking with Gen Z the bulk of them did not think it was controversial or cheeky to be streaming during work time.
They were very blasé about it.
Workplace and recruitment expert, Roxanne Calder, is up in arms about young people being so comfortable streaming at work.
When asked if she thought it was acceptable workplace behaviour, she laughed and then said “no”, as if she almost couldn’t believe the question needed to be asked.
“I do not think for one second it is okay to be any at job (while) being on your phone or watching movies or listening to podcasts,” she told news.com.au.
Ms Calder said the idea that you can multi-task and still do your job is an absolute “falsehood” and not something she believes in.
“It is actually physically and mentally impossible to multitask. You can’t actually do two different tasks at the same time,” she said.
“You are distracted. How can you be 100 per cent focused?”
The Aussie boss argued that this is because Gen Zers aren’t always equipped to deal with the demands of a modern job.
“I think Gen Z have a lot to offer but we pander to them too much,” she said.
Ms Calder said “so much support” is given to Gen Z – and for the right reasons – but it can get to the point where they come into the workforce and find there are parts of the job they can’t deal with.
She noted she often hears the term “entitled” used to describe Gen Z, but she believes Boomers and Gen X also need to take some of the blame.
“My generation is responsible because we’re the ones managing them. If we’ve got entitled Gen Z, maybe we co-created it,” she said.
The boss has noticed trend of Generation Z constantly needing to be saved at work, which isn’t helping them.
“We don’t give them full responsibility, we give them part responsibility, and then we rescue them,” she said.