Groups seek to dissolve age
boundaries
in job market for Baby Boomers, seniors
Anywhere
from 1.3 to 2 million new jobs are predicted for 2006, and everyone, from
marketers to economists, is gearing up for a feeding frenzy similar to the
one that heralded the dot.com era.
Everyone,
that is, except the 40 million or so baby boomers
older
than 50 this year. In fact, by 2012, all 78 million boomers will have
already turned 50. But here’s the dilemma: Ageism still exists in the North
American marketplace and magically rears its ugly head around 50. Just as
the last boomers are leaving the marketplace in droves whether they want to
or not, there will be massive job openings that the younger generation will
be unable to fill.
As Wendy
Spiegel, Gen Plus™ founder, explains, “There is still such rampant
ageism
that 50 plus jobseekers are going to have to be creative, inventive, and
aggressive to keep or get their foot in the door – despite the anticipated
surge in job openings and shortfall in managers.”
Take Diane (not
her real name), for example. At 52, an experienced professional with over 20
years of diverse experience in management, strategic planning, and
communications, she suddenly found herself laid off. And she was aware it
was due to her high salary. With a background that included marketing for a
retail solutions company and a leading airline, she was confident her
experience would land her a new position quickly. After a disheartening year
of unsuccessfully looking for a new employment opportunity, she had no
choice but to start her own small business and change many of her lifestyle
arrangements. A homeowner, she rented out two rooms to help cover mortgage
payments and augment the income she earns from her business. Would Diane
take advantage of a new employment opportunity? In a heartbeat. But she,
like many of her peers, knows that unless a company is willing to invest in
an over 50 candidate, she is going to have to make her new venture work.
“How can a
talented manager find herself unemployed in the face of statistics that show
skilled people will be needed?” Diane asks. “Our society is still redefining
what constitutes a market, and who, exactly, is employable in an aging
world.”
Spiegel
comments further, “There is such confusion in how to market to 50 plus!
Marketers generally target societal segments. But the huge demographic shift
of our aging world is turning all these segments on their heads. The boomers
span an age range of almost two decades, each with very particular needs:
There are early boomers, born 1946-51; mid-boomers, born 1952-57; and late
boomers, born 1958- 1964. In other words, either they are solidly in their
40’s (pre-mid-life crisis), or currently around 50 (true mid-life crisis)
or, this year, are just turning 60 (to retire or not to retire? -- that is
the question).
“Now it
really gets confusing. There are the pre-retirees, the active retirees, the
true seniors (also called the older-old, which really ticks them off), and
all the blurred lines in between. ‘Golden-ager’ seems like a term used
centuries ago, ‘senior citizen’ has become meaningless, and even 50 plus
organizations are reshaping taglines and trying to reach out to the younger
boomers! And, not to get anyone’s knickers in a knot, who are all the folks
who are generally charged with creative design and marketing to these
boomers and beyond? The young-young, of course.”
If it’s
confusing to marketers, people who find themselves chronologically within
these pragmatic boundaries are equally frustrated. Gen Plus™ doesn’t
distinguish between the different categories of boomers. If you’re over 50,
you are a Gen Plusser. The company aims at demystifying the market in order
to address what a reinvented 50 plus really needs.
As Spiegel
notes, “Employers have to be looking beyond this year’s bottom line to five,
ten, fifteen years ahead in order to save their businesses from a potential
employment drought. They need to challenge their current employment
practices now in order to be ready for the future. There will be no youth
culture in the workplace if there are no senior mentors to show younger
workers the way, to preserve company historical knowledge, and to manage the
companies of the 21st century.”