SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Human Resources Issues

CIOs: Learn the wireless, workaholic ways of Gen Y

CIOs: Learn the wireless, workaholic ways of Gen Y

By:  Shane Schick  On: 07 Jan 2009 For: CIO Creator

Employees aged 18 to 29 are likely connected for most of the day to a mobile device, and putting in more office hours even once the office closes. Are CIOs prepared to support them? Fourth of a five-part series

The report also confirmed the high degree of mobility and comfort level with trying out new software among Generation Y. More than one third of those surveyed, 36 per cent, said they will be using one device for both personal and business activities over the next five years, while 62 per cent said they have downloaded applications for work-related purposes. Dellazizzo said this should help educate CIOs about the kind of users with which they’ll be dealing.

“They are highly connected and increasingly global – which means that ‘9 to 5’ is a notion of the past,” she said. “Inhibiting this generation from using their skills to their fullest capacity is reducing our productivity and enforcing a false parameter of activity that ends abruptly at the office door.”

This was backed up by research in the report around retention and hiring. While not as important to Gen Y as salaries and other benefits, 26 per cent said an “open computing environment” is either extremely or very important to them in choosing an employer.

Tomorrow: What the ideal Gen Y IT environment would look like










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1461   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

Related Content

One in five choose relaxed IT policies over money
One in five choose relaxed IT policies over moneyIn the last of our five-part series, Generation Y employees show a surprisingly strong desire for more freedom to use technology at work. What a "proactive computing" environment might look like
Why Gen Y workers bypass IT usage policies
Why Gen Y workers bypass IT usage policiesAn IT World Canada/Harris-Decima report looks at the generation gap and shows younger employees don't take the rules around office computing very seriously. Get the stats about the demographic shift
Nearly 500 laptops stolen from IRS, audit says
Nearly 500 laptops stolen from IRS, audit saysOver the past three years, 490 laptops were lost or stolen from the Internal Revenue Service, according to an audit by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration. Between Jan. 2, 2003 and June 13, 2006, a "large number" of the laptops were stolen from the vehicles and homes of IRS employees, according to the report released last month, while 111 were stolen from IRS facilities, the report said.
The intrapraneurial factor
i was speaking with professor moren levesque from the university of waterloo yesterday, who specializes in issues around entrepreneurship. she identified a trend that is beginning to affect enterprises that is related to her area of study, one which cios would be wise to consider. increasingly, attitudes among younger employees within large organizations are of an entrepreneurial nature. hav
The flip side of 'Freedom to Compute'
there has to be at least one person under the age of 25 who hates facebook. nagging thoughts such as these came to me late las
Gartner proposes CIO resolutions for 2009
the research firm published a report which suggests senior it professionals resist the natural impulses they might have during a downturn. my favourites out of the 10 proposals:stop being the exception that enforces the rules: in tense times, leading by example matters more than usual – from body language to dress code, and from vocabulary to attention-span. cios should
blog comments powered by Disqus