Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Gen Z at Work: Its Superpower Isn’t What You Think
Gen Z at Work: Its Superpower Isn’t What You Think
Oct 27, 2025 2:13 PM

Spoiler alert: It’s not TikTok.

Read More…

My professional career was born into a world of remote work. In the summer of 2021, I kicked off my first “real” internship at a pany in Washington D.C.—and never once stepped foot in the office. There was no water cooler, office banter, or real “face time” with coworkers. In fact, my first corporate interactions, for better or worse, were all through the unforgiving, unfulfilling medium of Zoom. I’ve been blessed with perhaps munication skills and more training than many within my generation, however, and I’d like to believe that my ability to network and navigate office settings has caught up to that of the average 21-year-old pursuing a career.

Yet there are still those moments when I wonder: How much “growth” did I miss out on from that year of remote work? How many opportunities did COVID-19 rob me of? And, more broadly, how much did the pandemic further my generation’s already mixed approach to being in the workforce in the first place—a workforce we’re projected to be a third of in less than two years?

Much has been made of the problems Generation Z (born 1997–2012) is bringing into the workplace. Demanding and mitted, the narrative goes. We lack soft skills, which leads into many other negative stereotypes: emotionally unprofessional, addicted to the softest support for our own mental health, and lacking the tools necessary to handle a degree of inevitable workplace conflict. We have trouble staying at jobs, too, due to difficulties in both finding places that reflect our values and feeling valued ourselves.

So are there any positives to the post-COVID generation, the fastest-growing group in America’s workforce?

Spoiler alert: It’s not in the area you’re probably thinking of. One of the prevalent assumptions about my generation is that we’re technologically savvy in a way that older generations aren’t, particularly when es to social media. It’s true that in certain fields—social media coordination and many marketing jobs to name two—Gen Z’s relative immersion in technology may give us not only a degree of familiarity with the tools of the trade but the ability to quickly adapt to new systems as they emerge. Particularly in industries where artificial intelligence and machine learning are ing part of normal practice, this will be a positive.

There’s just one problem: a lot of industries just aren’t like that. Many industries simply don’t exist on the cutting edge of technology and won’t be using AI for years, if not decades. Far from overhauling in favor of shiny new innovations, many industries are still using old technology with no intentions of changing, and it’s here that Gen Z’s technological advantage may well end. Instagram? We can figure that out. Scanners and printers? Not so much.

Recent research indicates that Gen Z faces the same technological barriers that many other generations do. It seems counterintuitive: Shouldn’t young, technologically literate people be able to figure these things out? Well, the skills that allow my generation to reach millions on TikTok and Snapchat aren’t the same skills that prepare us for workplace functionality. Or, in one researcher’s words, “neither watching TikTok videos nor playing Minecraft fulfills the technology brief.”

That’s a massive problem, not only for Gen Zers seeking to enter the workforce but also for panies hiring them. Technological savvy isn’t the silver bullet that can make up for a lack of soft skills. This was only aggravated by a global pandemic that paradoxically forced us all online but didn’t increase our knowledge of the older tech we need to navigate the workplace. It’s not even the case that we can make up for that skills disparity with above-average motivation—research also indicates that Gen Z is at least perceived as highly unmotivated, with 27% of employers saying they’ve had to fire a Gen Z employee within the first month.

So, are there any positives to my strange, mental-health-focused generation? There’s one big one—and it’s one that really doesn’t feel like a positive: we’re aware that we have knowledge gaps. A 2021 survey noted that an overwhelming majority of Gen Z workers are seeking supervisors and managers who can provide them with advice and mentorship in the workplace. While it may seem like we’re asking for a beyond-the-paygrade task, it’s actually a positive sign in a strange sense: we’re realizing just how much we don’t know and reaching out for help in the best way we know how.

At a more philosophical level, it could be a sign that the post-COVID workforce has the right situational mindset: identify what we don’t know and learn it in the best way we can to have a less stressful work experience all around. We’ve all heard the term “impostor syndrome.” Well, given Gen Z’s general overconfidence, birthed from those limited technological skills and the perennial chase of social media clout, it’s not hard to see how it came about—but some research is indicating that it isn’t as bad among Generation Z as it was among previous generations. This is a positive trend, and if coupled with growth in actual workplace skills, it’s a sign of how America’s youngest workers may actually make it in the modern economy. If, as one small business owner argues, Gen Z’s biggest handicap is lack of experience, that’s not a world-ending problem, now is it? It’s almost like that’s been the most pressing issue with every new employee ever.

So what’s the future of Gen Z and work? It’s probably going to be a messy one, particularly in navigating interpersonal workplace dynamics and boundaries. It’s also likely to look very different from the corporate world that Gen X and even Millennials grew up in—remote work isn’t going anywhere post-pandemic. Yet the biggest positive of Gen Z in the workplace is this: with quality guidance, open lines munication, and the ability to explain why pany’s mission is worth being enthusiastic about, employers can nurture a growing and enthusiastic workforce that’s ready to take on new technological challenges, engage with issues of cultural/political significance, and leverage the power of confidence, earned or otherwise, to spread awareness of mission-driven organizations. It has nothing to do with the ability to go viral on TikTok—it has to do with harnessing the power of this strange group of underprepared, yet confident people that are passionate about creating change but have no real idea of how to do so. Many within that group are truly ready to learn the tools of success.

At least that’s a better-case scenario.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Brexit deal defeat and confidence vote: Why Christians should care
UK Prime Minister Theresa May suffered the largest defeat in modern history last night, as Parliament rejected her Brexit deal by a vote of 202-432; she now faces a confidence vote that could turn her out of office.Rev. Richard Turnbull – who is both ordained in the Church of England and the directorof the Centre for Enterprise, Markets, and Ethicsin Oxford – explains the likely es in a new essay forthe Acton Institute’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite.Christians should be concerned about...
Govt may deny homeschool families custody to teach tolerance: ECHR
The government has the right to remove children who are homeschooled from their parents’ custody if authorities believe their parents will not teach children “tolerance,” the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled last week. The Wunderlich family had claimed German authorities violated their innate human rights by denying them custody and forcibly enrolling their children in public schools to further their “social integration.” But the ECHR disagreed. Nearly three dozen police and social workers stormed the family’s home in...
What Christians should know about marginal tax rates
Note: This is the latest entry in the Acton blog series, “What Christians Should Know About Economics.” For other entries inthe series seethis post. What it means: A marginal tax rate is the amount of tax paid on an additional dollar of e. The Explanation: What is the tax rate you pay on your current e? For most Americans, the question is surprisingly difficult to answer. The reason we don’t know our tax rate is because we have a progressive...
When you mock Christianity, you’re mocking women and minorities
Last month a judicial nominee was asked during a Senate hearing if his membership in the Knights of Columbus might impede his ability to judge federal cases fairly. Senators Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Kamala Harris (D-California)both questioned Brian C. Buescher about his membership in the Catholic service organization. Hirono even asked Buescher if he would quit the group if he was confirmed “to avoid any appearance of bias.” In response to this blatant anti-Catholic bigotry, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) wrote...
The irony of Patagonia’s tax cut ‘protest’
In response to the recentRepublican-led tax reform—which reduced corporate taxes from 35% to panies have responded by handing out surprise bonuses, increased 401(k) matches, and various wage bumps. For pany like Patagonia, however, the tax cuts have been labeled “irresponsible,” a symbol of the federal government’s reckless apathy. In response, Patagonia CEO Rose Marcario recently announced that the outdoor pany will donate its $10 million tax-cut windfall to its preferred partners in battling climate change. “Instead of putting the money...
Homeschooling a parent’s choice, not the state’s
Decades ago, when I was first ordained a priest, I shared a prejudice that many people hold: I thought homeschooling families were odd. I believed schooling children at home deprived such children of opportunities to be with other children causing them to be less able municate with others, socially awkward and reclusive and narrow in their experience and understanding of the world that they would one day have to grow up in and navigate. That was until I actually met...
Toward ‘humanomics’: Deirdre McCloskey on honoring the world of human creation
In her transformative Bourgeois Era trilogy, economist Deirdre McCloskey challenged our popular theories about the causes of our newfound economic prosperity, arguing that it sprung not from new systems, tools, or materials, but rather the ideas, virtues, and rhetoric behind them. “The Great Enrichment, in short, came out of a novel, pro-bourgeois, and anti-statist rhetoric that enriched the world,” she writes. “It is, as Adam Smith said, ‘allowing every man [and woman, dear] to pursue his own interest his own...
Understanding the quantity theory of money
Note: This is post #106 in a weekly video series on basic economics. The quantity theory of money states that there is a direct relationship between the quantity of money in an economy and the level of prices of goods and services sold. According to the theory, if the amount of money in an economy doubles, price levels also double, causinginflation. The consumer, therefore, pays twice as much for the same amount of the good or service. In this video...
C.S. Lewis on how the humanitarian theory of punishment threatens liberty
Over the past decade conservatives have, once again, e champions of criminal justice reform. To some this appears to be a surprising development. Why would conservatives, the self-proclaimed champions of law and order, have concern for the treatment of criminals? On reflection, though, the interest and connection es more obvious. Conservatives are concerned with how law and order leads to human flourishing, and so are necessarily troubled by a criminal justice system that is neither just nor serves the interest...
A call for harmony — and a demand for truth
Pope Francis’ recent Christmas message, ‘Urbi et Orbi’, was a meditation on the roots of fraternity in the incarnation: What does that Child, born for us of the Virgin Mary, have to tell us? What is the universal message of Christmas? It is that God is a good Father and we are all brothers and sisters. This truth is the basis of the Christian vision of humanity. Without the fraternity that Jesus Christ has bestowed on us, our efforts for...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved