Training Millennials in the Workplace and Boosting Engagement
                    
                    
                        The Ins and Outs of Training Millennials 
                        Millennials make up the largest part of the workplace and they’re expected to be 75% 
                        of the workforce by 2025. Millennials are also known as Generation Y (Gen Y) and refer 
                        to anyone born between 1981 and the mid-90’s. They want meaning in their work, they are
                        incredibly tech-savvy and value inclusion in the workplace. The traditional means of
                        training and onboarding this group won’t work. It requires a different approach. Because
                        they need to feel included and that they aren’t just an employee number on a spreadsheet,
                        their personal fulfillment is important to your organization’s success. A recent study 
                        says that 50% of millennials plan on becoming entrepreneurs within a year of being hired
                        to a job. 
So how to keep this new generation of leaders engaged? Here are some tips.
                    
                    
                        Technology
                        Not surprisingly it’s all about the technology with Gen Y. They live on apps and social 
                        media so it makes sense that their preferred method of learning is digital. The other 
                        benefit of digital learning over documents or lectures is that it fosters collaboration 
                        and interaction.
                    
                    
                        Gamification
                        One step beyond using technology is using games to teach. This is growing in popularity
                        among both schools and businesses, turning boring experiences (like training) into a game 
                        complete with rewards, levels of difficulty and prizes. A 2019 report by Nielsen revealed 
                        that millennials spend six hours on average each week watching gaming video content and 2 
                        out of 3 in the US play video games monthly. Meeting them where they are means you are 
                        more likely to get better engagement and learning.
                    
                    
                        Providing Mentors
                        Millennials are very ambitious and they also want to learn new skills. This is a perfect
                        recipe for a mentor relationship. The value of one-on-one relationships and professional
                        guidance with mentors creates a connection that help with Gen Y that can be frequent job 
                        hoppers. The time investment shows them their value in the larger picture of the 
                        organization as well as giving them an excellent role model.
                    
                    
                        Microlearning
                        Microlearning is learning in small, digestible chunks. This isn’t hour or even half-hour
                        increments. We’re talking 30 seconds to a few minutes at a time. If you think about a
                        population that’s also in to social media like Twitter and Snapchat and obsessed with 
                        video games, then this makes a lot of sense. Matching your training style to the short
                        attention span of your audience is an effective way to again meet them where they are. 
                    
                    
                        Make Learning a Company Thing
                        Millennials like working with other people. So involving other departments is a good
                        way to help them feel part of the team. Let other parts of the company contribute to
                        the training program content. Make learning an ongoing part of the business plan. This
                        way you show that you care about their role in the company which is very attractive to
                        millennials. 
                    
                    
                        Teach Leadership
                        As mentioned, Gen Y is a highly ambitious and career growth focused bunch. They are 
                        intent on moving into leadership and management roles. But here’s the catch. They don’t 
                        want to be lectured. See above section on mentors. Find a way to teach leadership with
                        a guiding hand rather than a megaphone. It will be much more successful.
                    
                    
                        Since They’re Staring…Video
                        Employees are 75% more likely to watch a video than to read documents, emails or 
                        anything else in writing. And when the bulk of these are millennials, that’s an even
                        bigger population! We’ve already established traditional methods don’t work for Gen 
                        Y so a YouTube video would be the perfect training tool. Oh and microlearning remember.
                        Keep it short.
                    
                    
                        Let’s recap what we know. 
                    
                    
                        Millennials like their information in a high-tech way in small doses. They want to 
                        have the whole company involved in the process and to keep learning always. They want 
                        to have mentors who will help them become better leaders and managers. They will do 
                        best if training comes in the form of videos and games. 
                    
                    
                        None of these things are very complicated but it may mean some big shifts from what
                        you’ve always done. Workbooks to read or staff lecturing might have been the training
                        norm for many years and that may have to change. And that’s a good thing. Make the 
                        effort to engage this generation of staff because if you do you will have a tremendously
                        talented and creative pool of employees who will benefit your organization.
                    
                    
                        Sources:
                    
                    
                        https://www.talentlms.com/blog/training-millennials-best-practices/
                    
                    
                        https://www.goskills.com/Resources/Training-millennials-workplace