Newly minted college graduates entering the job market could be facing another hurdle besides high unemployment and a sluggish economy. [Read More]
PR Daily: Open letter to millennials—PR industry edition
PR professional wants to spend a minute talking to Millennials as prospective employees. Here’s an Open Letter. (Read More)
NY Times: Do Millennials Stand a Chance in the Real World?
For the first time in modern memory, a whole generation might not prove wealthier than the one that preceded it. (Read More)
Warning to millennials: Be careful what you wish for
But here’s the thing, millennials: Be careful what you wish for. (Read More)
Bloomberg: The Misery of Mentoring Millennials
According to Jeanne Meister, co-author of The 2020 Workplace, younger workers seem less respectful of more experienced colleagues and don’t feel compelled to follow in the same path as their superiors. (Read More)
Millennials Act Way Too Immature at the Office
According to new research from the Center for Professional Excellence at York College of Pennsylvania, young professionals right out of college are a little bit on the “I-know-what-you-are-but-what-am-I?” side. (Read More)
A bleak picture for Generation Y’s retirement
A recent report from one of Canada’s major banks paints a bleak picture for young adults saving up for retirement. (Read More)
Huff Post: Millennials Come of Age as America’s Most Stressed Generation
According to Stress in America, a study commissioned by the American Psychological Association, Millennials are the most stressed demographic. (Read More)
Wash Post: The State of the Millennial Union
We are grotesquely unemployed. We waded bravely into the workforce waving extremely expensive sheets of paper that turned out to be almost meaningless. Nearly half of college graduates are working jobs that don’t require four-year degrees. And those are the ones who are working at all! (Read More)
USA Today: Who’s feeling stressed? Young adults, survey shows
Stress levels for Americans have taken a decidedly downward turn across the U.S. – except for young adults, whose stress is higher than the national norm, says a new survey. (Read More)