US Gen-Z has unbelievable job requirements: 1/6 won't work without a "Nap Room", 1/4 expect "extended work sabbaticals for personal development"

They’re Gen-ZZZ.

Nearly one in six Americans under the age of 28 won’t even consider taking a job unless there’s a designated snooze space at the office, a mind-boggling new survey found.

“It’s clear Gen-Z isn’t shy about voicing what they want from today’s workplace, and for many, it goes beyond salary and health insurance,” said Amanda Augustine, a certified professional career coach and resident expert for the resume-building website Resume.io, which polled 1,000 professionals across the country about their must-have perks while evaluating job opportunities.

For them, napping on the clock, and other demands “aren’t just nice-to-have extras; they reflect a shifting view around work-life balance and overall well-being,” Augustine added.


One in five Gen-Zers — more than any other generation — say a “fun room,” complete with games like ping pong and other recreational activities, is essential to their work environment, the startling survey results reveal.

And one in five wouldn’t even consider a position if the company’s offices are not pet-friendly, compared to 14% of millennials, aged 29 to 44; 8% of 40- to 65-year-old Gen-Xers and only 4% of Boomers, aged 61 to 79.

More Gen-Zers — 33% — expect free snacks and lunches at the workplace, more than any of their older coworkers, the poll found.

And even if an office is up to snuff, they don’t want to show up.

A whopping one in three said a four-day workweek is non-negotiable, and one in four expect “extended” sabbatical leaves “for personal development or travel.”

Younger generations are “pushing back against the old model of constant hustle and burnout” by valuing flexibility and “a more enjoyable day-to-day experience,” according to Augustine.

“Companies that dismiss these priorities as frivolous may find it increasingly difficult to attract and retain top talent from this up-and-coming generation of workers,” she warned.

 
Numbers aside I had to post because of this specific quote

“Companies that dismiss these priorities as frivolous may find it increasingly difficult to attract and retain top talent from this up-and-coming generation of workers,” she warned.
Lol, lmao even. "Top talent" is the one that needs nap rooms, "personal development days", free cookies, and dogs at work?
 
I guess the source could be a bit dubious but I think most people are probably fine with a workplace that just won't bleed into their personal life and lets them actually use all of the PTO they accrue. Though for PTO I've seen a lot of workplaces switch to unlimited PTO schemes which are a trick since it can be hard for workers to actually take long stretches of time off under those systems when they don't have a defined number of hours that they've earned and are entitled to take off.

Then again I work in a field where we actually get shit done, I have no idea what some industries actually do all day aside make shitty powerpoints at each other.
 
Last edited:
“It’s clear Gen-Z isn’t shy about voicing what they want from today’s workplace, and for many, it goes beyond salary and health insurance,” said Amanda Augustine, a certified professional career coach and resident expert for the resume-building website Resume.io, which polled 1,000 professionals across the country about their must-have perks while evaluating job opportunities.
I'm thinking this might not be a representative sample.
 
I'm thinking this might not be a representative sample.
Definitely not but there's dozens of similar examples of expectations from the US to the UK and they all pretty much say the exact same shit lol the great babying is among us (hella dank meme insert bruh).

Although like 100% of the people polled almost guaranteed don't work in said environments lul
 
When I worked at Microsoft twenty-five years ago, thought the perks and benefits were pretty amazing. People could bring pets to work. If you didn't interact with customers you could dress as you pleased. There were multiple kitchens in each building, providing free Coke, Pepsi, and Odwalla juice products. Cereal, milk and fruit were supplied regularly, donuts came once a week, and our weekly staff meeting featured a catered lunch. People worked in small offices called pods. Saw at least one pod sporting a sleeping bag. There was at least one shower in each building.

The place was open 24/7/365. Stopped by one Saturday night after picking up my kids from the SF Airport. We wanted to get free drinks and snacks. There were a lot of people there, some playing basketball, some working, some hanging out.

Microsoft didn't provide the aforementioned bennies, and more, from the goodness of their corporate heart. Some smart person realized the more things workers could get at work the longer they tended to be at work, getting more out of the workers. If some people lived in their pods, so much the better, they are present even longer. And the approach worked.

Gen Z wants the goodies without having to work for them, and employers don't always agree with that. The next time there is a recession Gen Z will drop all these childish demands and be glad as hell to just have a job.
 
Then again I work in a field where we actually get shit done, I have no idea what some industries actually do all day aside make shitty powerpoints at each other.
An autistic girl I know has a “service dog” that’s really just a Chihuahua in a satchel, it does absolutely nothing, but she sells overpriced shoes, so I guess the dog's main purpose is for small talk.
 
Numbers aside I had to post because of this specific quote


Lol, lmao even. "Top talent" is the one that needs nap rooms, "personal development days", free cookies, and dogs at work?
I would much rather have 'native' broccoli haired zoomers who want a nap room over 'jeets. Literally the article is just propaganda to shill for 'jeets because "Indians are such hard working people unlike those lazy White people!" lol, lmao with the H1B propaganda.
 
There's nothing "mind boggling" about this, you raised them through over permissive schools and helicopter parents to just do whatever they want...... to have laughably low standards and then fail to meet them, to excuse everything that goes wrong in their lives on external forces that grow ever more bizarre and niche to justify why they just can't do it, whatever "it" is. To just decide when they're going to "adult" and when they're not.


This is what you sewed, now you shall reap it.
 
I am glad they are standing up for themselves and demanding better work conditions no matter how absurd it might seem.
This article is literally H1B shilling propaganda. 'Jeet and latinx o algo hands wrote those words.

The concept of 'nap rooms' or long breaks isn't too different from work cultures seen in Southern European countries like Spain. That's just called a siesta.
 
This is what you sewed, now you shall reap it.
I think you mean
IMG_3613.webp
Not
IMG_3612.webp
 
Back