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Mobility Momentum: Optimizing the Mobile Workforce

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Bridging the Generation Gap

Talking About Your Generation

By Jamie Eckle

The greatest problem for the workforce may be the failure of different generations to talk to one another.

In an online survey by employment services provider Randstad USA, 51% of baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1964, according to this survey) and 66% of the generation that preceded the boomers reported having little to no interaction with colleagues from Generation Y (born between 1980 and 1988). No contact, no knowledge transfer. And with the baby-boom generation regarded as the storehouse of most institutional knowledge, Randstad concludes that U.S. businesses risk a shortage of skilled labor, not because of a dearth of manpower in the wake of baby boomers' retirements, but because of a limited transfer of that knowledge.

After all, as Randstad points out, members of Gen Y in the workforce currently outnumber still-working baby boomers, 79.8 million to 78.5 million. Randstad urges businesses to foster more collaboration among their workers, something that may require tearing down perceptions of basic differences among the various generations.

One perception that the survey helps modify is the long-standing one that Gen Y workers are more likely than older workers to want their workplaces to provide them with things like satisfying work and pleasant co-workers. Just a few years ago, that was decidedly true, but in this new survey, Gen Y attitudes have changed considerably (see chart). In fact, Gen Y'ers are now much less likely than their older colleagues to seek those soft benefits.

The vast majority of 310 CIOs and other senior IT executives who responded to a recent survey said they are satisfied with their compensation, with many fewer saying they are extremely satisfied or dissatisfied.

Extremely satisfied 16%

Satisfied 69%

Dissatisfied 15%

Source: 4th Annual Strategic Insights Survey of IT Leaders in the U.S., conducted for IT recruiter Harvey Nash USA by PA Consulting Group Ltd., February 2009

A desire for a fresh challenge was the No. 1 response of 310 CIOs and other senior IT leaders who in a recent poll were asked why they would change jobs. Of course, in 2009, new challenges are likely to be had without changing jobs.

What is the most important factor in making a job-change decision?

A fresh challenge 29%

Greater involvement in business strategy 21%

Expanded decision-making opportunities 19%

Better work/life balance 12%

More money 10%

Source: 4th Annual Strategic Insights Survey of IT Leaders in the U.S., conducted for IT recruiter Harvey Nash USA by PA Consulting Group Ltd., February 2009

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Poll: Data Limits

How do you currently manage and prevent users from exceeding mobile broadband data limits?

    Circle_unselected Tool that tracks usage and stops users when they reach set limits
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    Circle_unselected We view reports on data usage but have no way to enforce limits

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