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Managing Generation X: How to Bring Out the Best in Young Talent

Managing Generation X: How to Bring Out the Best in Young Talent

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Baby Boomer Thinking Is Jolted
Review: As a baby boomer, I found this book exceptionally insightful and grounded in real world research. Since I manage many GenXers, every page turning example jolted my thinking. I now have a better understanding of how to attract and retain the GenX employee. Thanks, Bruce Tulgan for the wake-up call!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Embarrassed to be an Xer
Review: I am a "member" of Generation X. I was very optimistic about reading this book, but after reading the first half I am now extremely embarrassed to make that statement. What a frustrating book! I found myself rolling my eyes and groaning in disgust as I read how Generation X is picked on by the evil (and obviously clueless) Baby Boomers. A consistent underlying message in this book was "Xers will do a good job as long as we get what we want, when we want it, and how we want it, otherwise we just won't bother to make the effort because obviously we aren't appreciated. I'm sorry, Bruce, but the Xers needs for autonomy, credit for the results they produce, opportunities for creative expression, and the ability to learn and grow (to list only a few examples) is something all professionals need to flourish. I don't think it really matters what year we are born. Your constant whining that "Nobody understands us!" is insulting to Xers that are able to work and adapt within an environment that encompasses three almost four generations. If Xers are so adaptable and we are so great at solving problems on our own why the need for this book? If Xers are so creative and innovative won't we figure out a way to work within the current market and still be able to "think outside the box?" Bruce, this book is over 200 pages of you tooting your own horn and trying to convince us that you have stumbled upon a revolutionary method of management. I laughed out loud when I read your statement that "you were struck by the fact that more senior lawyers in your firm (your first job after law school and the bar exam) didn't have a clue about how to manage people your age." And you wonder where people get the idea that Generation X is arrogant. Maybe that's just what they told you.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Embarrassed to be an Xer
Review: I am a "member" of Generation X. I was very optimistic about reading this book, but after reading the first half I am now extremely embarrassed to make that statement. What a frustrating book! I found myself rolling my eyes and groaning in disgust as I read how Generation X is picked on by the evil (and obviously clueless) Baby Boomers. A consistent underlying message in this book was "Xers will do a good job as long as we get what we want, when we want it, and how we want it, otherwise we just won't bother to make the effort because obviously we aren't appreciated. I'm sorry, Bruce, but the Xers needs for autonomy, credit for the results they produce, opportunities for creative expression, and the ability to learn and grow (to list only a few examples) is something all professionals need to flourish. I don't think it really matters what year we are born. Your constant whining that "Nobody understands us!" is insulting to Xers that are able to work and adapt within an environment that encompasses three almost four generations. If Xers are so adaptable and we are so great at solving problems on our own why the need for this book? If Xers are so creative and innovative won't we figure out a way to work within the current market and still be able to "think outside the box?" Bruce, this book is over 200 pages of you tooting your own horn and trying to convince us that you have stumbled upon a revolutionary method of management. I laughed out loud when I read your statement that "you were struck by the fact that more senior lawyers in your firm (your first job after law school and the bar exam) didn't have a clue about how to manage people your age." And you wonder where people get the idea that Generation X is arrogant. Maybe that's just what they told you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dangerously Accurate
Review: I am about as much of a GenXer as can possibly be being born in 1970. For my entire life I saw a great deal of things as "off key", such as the broken homes, the druggies, and being mistreated by many of the Boomers in the workplace. This book proved to me that it was not just my little world, but an actual issue. Bruce disarms the sterotypes of GenXers extremely well. This is a must read for anyone, Xer or Boomer, to successfully manage the most driven and innovative generation in American history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dangerously Accurate
Review: I am about as much of a GenXer as can possibly be being born in 1970. For my entire life I saw a great deal of things as "off key", such as the broken homes, the druggies, and being mistreated by many of the Boomers in the workplace. This book proved to me that it was not just my little world, but an actual issue. Bruce disarms the sterotypes of GenXers extremely well. This is a must read for anyone, Xer or Boomer, to successfully manage the most driven and innovative generation in American history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On the Mark
Review: I have a habit of highlighting as I read, and this book has more yellow in it than any of my others! As an Xer (former military officer and now clergy), I saw myself on just about every page. Tulgan offers many excellent insights into the formation of our generation and how we are best approached. He also offers some truths that are true for GenX, but not necessarily unique to GenX. The first half of my book has more yellow in it than the last half, in which Tulgan begins to restate himself. Nevertheless, this book is worth the price of admission and is a must read for all managers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: On the Mark
Review: I have a habit of highlighting as I read, and this book has more yellow in it than any of my others! As an Xer (former military officer and now clergy), I saw myself on just about every page. Tulgan offers many excellent insights into the formation of our generation and how we are best approached. He also offers some truths that are true for GenX, but not necessarily unique to GenX. The first half of my book has more yellow in it than the last half, in which Tulgan begins to restate himself. Nevertheless, this book is worth the price of admission and is a must read for all managers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More relevant than it was two years ago!
Review: It takes a recruiting and retention crisis to make businesses really wake up and take notice of Tulgan's commentary on the needs and expectations of Generation X. Of course every generation wants what they want--training in marketable skills, creative challenges, growing responsibility, performance-based compensation, timely rewards, etc.--but the difference is Xers negotiate for these things at the beginning of their careers-- not waiting around to climb some corporate ladder for five years before they get them.

Xers are challenging organizations to make the radical changes they've been dragging their feet on for the past 20 years.

Tulgan makes the case that the new fast-paced, global, techno-centered economy demands workers who are flexible, techno-savy, adaptable, entrepreneurial; people who are willing to reinvent themselves daily, jump from project to project, team to team. His star Xers are just those people.

As a management trainer, I'm meeting them and their bewildered managers every day. And it's clear that the dialogue between and among the generations is one of the healthiest--and hotest--topics around. Tulgan's book provides a springboard for a coversation that can only result in positive changes for everyone. Xers are "the workforce of the future," helping to define "the workplace of the future" for all of us.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Building Block for Future Management Relationships
Review: Tulgan's book is important because of what it stands for. It's not a call to arms, but a call for workers and managers to get together to consider what has changed about today's world of work and, in particular, the motivations and behaviors of younger workers.

Most, if not all, young readers in the workforce will relate to Tulgan's message and hope that more managers take the time to listen to Tulgan's argument. Older readers will either take note and better manage their younger troops, or they will defensively reject Tulgan's work because of its implication that they are doing something wrong.

It's fun to read about individual workers' real life experiences being "managed." As one who has been on both ends of the management relationship, the book reminds me that there is not one right way; rather, I must be flexible and think of different ways to motivate and retain employees. I don't have to decrease my demands of workers. If I get it right (with Tulgan's help), I can be a more demanding manager and get more out of workers in a mutually beneficial relationship. Check out Tulgan's concept of "fast feedback" and other motivational ideas. This stuff works!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: good take on generation x
Review: While I believe Tulgan spends too much time bashing baby boomers, his assessment of how to market to generation x is quite good. When he focuses on the needs of this market segment and what it wants, there are good insights into how to manage them in the workplace.


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