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Hiring Gen Z: Challenges, Opportunities & What Comes Next

Boutique Chat
Boutique Chat

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At The Boutique Hub, we’re always exploring how small business owners can grow not just in sales, but in leadership. In a recent episode of The Boutique Chat Podcast, Ashley Alderson sat down with Britni Wilkey—a regional expert in education, innovation, and AI integration—to talk about how business owners can better understand, hire, and retain Gen Z talent.

Hiring Gen Alpha: Challenges, Opportunities & What Comes Next

Gen Z Is Here—and They’re Different (Not Worse)

There’s a lot of frustration out there from business owners trying to manage a younger workforce that doesn’t always seem to fit the mold. But as Britni shared, that disconnect starts with how this generation was raised and educated. Unlike Millennials or Gen X, Gen Z grew up during a time of hyper-connectedness, emotional disruption, and a pandemic that reshaped their education and social development.

“Gen Z has lived through things we couldn’t imagine,” Britni says. “They missed formative milestones—graduations, proms, social interaction—and their mental health has taken a hit. We can’t treat them the same and expect the same results.”

The key takeaway? Different doesn’t mean worse. It means as employers and leaders, we need to rethink how we connect with and support this generation.

Rethinking How We Train and Lead

Many business owners feel like they shouldn’t have to repeat themselves, or they expect employees to “just figure it out.” But for Gen Z, learning is different. Traditional methods—like sitting through lectures or reading training manuals—don’t resonate the same way.

Britni and Ashley introduced the TTRR method used in Retail Bootcamp: Train, Test, Review, Repeat. This ongoing loop of communication, support, and positive reinforcement helps create clarity and builds trust. Gen Z thrives on hands-on, kinesthetic learning. Employers need to focus on bite-sized instructions, clarity, and frequent feedback.

“They’re used to being talked at, not talked with,” Britni notes. “So building that one-on-one connection matters. Don’t just drop into a meeting with hard feedback. Prep them. Give them a heads-up. Let them feel safe.”

Empathy Over Authority

Britni emphasized the importance of approaching Gen Z employees with grace. Whether it’s personal struggles, mental health, or social anxiety, this generation is carrying a heavier emotional load.

Ashley reminded listeners, “Your employee isn’t just a means to an end. They’re a whole person.”

Leadership today requires emotional intelligence. Creating a space of psychological safety doesn’t mean lowering standards—it means helping young employees rise to meet them with the tools and support they actually need.

Upskilling for the Future

When it comes to preparing Gen Z for the workforce, Britni believes it’s about tapping into human potential. She encourages employers to shift from frustration to curiosity: What motivates this employee? What are their strengths? How can I help them develop?

She recommends checking out the research of Dr. Jean Twenge, author of Generations, as well as the World Economic Forum’s insights on the future of work and upskilling.

“We’re not maximizing human capacity,” Britni says. “We have to think bigger—not just hiring for today, but building people who are equipped for the future.”

Celebrating Innovation

Britni recently received national recognition at the AI Summit in San Diego as a K–12 AI Innovator, showcasing how school districts in her rural region are using AI to improve education and help teachers focus more on the human side of learning. Her work is setting the stage for systemic change and preparing the next generation of leaders—many of whom will land in small businesses like yours.

What It All Comes Down To

When asked what she wants people to remember about her someday, Britni answered without hesitation: kindness, vulnerability, and a lifelong passion for learning.

“Being vulnerable is how we connect as humans,” she said. “I want to be known for making those connections and for helping people never stop learning.”


In This Episode

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