Anonymous wrote:As someone who does recruiting & hiring, I don't find it surprising.
I'm Gen X. I started seeing it happen for the first time when interviewing Millennial candidates. I work for a company with 200+ employees. If I did 30 interviews in a month, maybe 1 would bring mom into the office and leave her in the lobby. I can only think of 2 instances where the candidate wanted to bring their parent into the interview or the parent wanted to come in.
However, in the last 3 years, Gen Z has gotten bad about bringing one or both parents into the interviewing & hiring mix. Not just toting them along to the interview, but also them adding them to the cc on emails or even a few candidates asking us to negotiate their salary with their parents. We've had parents call in sick for their adult kids, and not for emergency situations like where they were rushed into emergency surgery, but for simple colds/flus. Another odd thing is that these Gen Z workers want to bring their parents to work to show off their work. For example, a new hire brought her dad to work to sit in on the first big meeting and presentation she was heading.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who does recruiting & hiring, I don't find it surprising.
I'm Gen X. I started seeing it happen for the first time when interviewing Millennial candidates. I work for a company with 200+ employees. If I did 30 interviews in a month, maybe 1 would bring mom into the office and leave her in the lobby. I can only think of 2 instances where the candidate wanted to bring their parent into the interview or the parent wanted to come in.
However, in the last 3 years, Gen Z has gotten bad about bringing one or both parents into the interviewing & hiring mix. Not just toting them along to the interview, but also them adding them to the cc on emails or even a few candidates asking us to negotiate their salary with their parents. We've had parents call in sick for their adult kids, and not for emergency situations like where they were rushed into emergency surgery, but for simple colds/flus. Another odd thing is that these Gen Z workers want to bring their parents to work to show off their work. For example, a new hire brought her dad to work to sit in on the first big meeting and presentation she was heading.
You should be very very embarrassed that you don't understand connections and networking (yes, even through parents - no ESPECIALLY through parents) is how the real world works. Not taking every advantage and opportunity you have at your disposal, especially huge ones like having parents who know decision-makers, is just plain stupid.
You think George W. Bush would have gotten anywhere near as far as he did if it weren't for who his parents were? Is becoming President (regardless of what a terrible job he did) "failure to launch?"
If you're holding back on offering your connections to your kids out of some misguided attempt to make them independent, I feel very sorry for them.
Anonymous wrote:I said this in the other thread about Gen Z but: Gen Z is currently age 12 to 26. Are we sure this "statistic" is not referring to teenagers. I was accompanied by parents to "job interviews" when I was 13-16 because I couldn't legally drive and also they often needed to sign paperwork to allow e to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This does not remotely pass the sniff test. No way.
+1. There's basically zero chance this is true, but it does give people a chance to be upset about Kids Today, so they lap it up.
Different survey; similar results:
https://www.businessinsider.com/gen-z-jobseekers-unprofessional-entitled-employers-say-survey-2024-1?amp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I do not believe it will grow larger. I have never seen this and interviewed hundreds of Gen Z applicants in the past few years.
Maybe their parents gave them a ride to the interview?
There are lots of phony trend stories and that is nothing new.
Why would the parents even give them a ride to the interview. Will they also give them a ride to work? And pack their lunch?
Grow up!
Anonymous wrote:
Dear All,
I am OP. I love how virtually every response expresses complete and utter disbelief this phenomenon exists.
Google it for yourself. This phenomenon is not represented by one single person, one time. It is a trend (but do your due diligence and find out). It exists.
In any event: answer the question:
- will this increase or decrease in the future?