games

banggood 18% OFF Magic Cabin Hat Country LLC HearthSong 15% Off Your First Purchase! Code: WELCOME15 Stacy Adams

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

FB, texts, BBM create generation divide - Postnoon

fb - Google News
Google News
FB, texts, BBM create generation divide - Postnoon
Apr 10th 2012, 13:54

FB_texts_BBM_create_generation_divide_postnoon_news

New Delhi: The psychological gap between the Facebook generation of young employees and their baby booming boss is widening in the age of electronics, says Australian body language guru Allan Pease, who has co-authored 15 bestsellers with wife Barbara.

"What happens is most of the Generation Y employees at workplaces are under 32. They are the techno-savvy Facebook generation who know more than their parents. Their bosses are baby boomers — 45 and above. That has created different perceptions of the world between the older generation and young workers," Pease told IANS in the capital.

The body language honcho, whose best-sellers like The Definitive Book of Body Language, Why Men Want Sex and Women Need Love and Why Men Lie and Women Cry have sold 25 million copies in 51 languages, was in the capital to address a select group on the importance of body language, lifestyle trends and his books, which are distributed in India by Manjul Publishing House.

Pease and his wife Barbara, who work out of UK and Australia, appear on the global media regularly and their work has been made into a television series.

Exploring the workplace psyche of older bosses, Pease said, "They perceive that the employee will work hard, remain loyal, tell the truth and will remain with the company till he retires."

"Generation Y thinks that is stupid stuff and wants to change job every three years."

The body language of the two generations of professionals is also a world apart, the he said.

"At the coffee shop of the hotel where I was staying (in Delhi), I saw six people on the table besides mine – four were in their 20s and two in their 40s, a man and his wife. They probably owned a company and the youngsters were employees armed with Blackberrys. The four young people were SMSing across the table to send messages to each other. The employees were not looking at each other while they were sending messages," Pease, who is in his 60s, said.

"The older couple was appalled that they were not attracting attention," the body language instructor said.

Pease said the cardinal body language rule at the work place is to "switch off the mobile phone while in a meeting or put it on the silent mode".

"But my 28-year-old son does it (messages on his mobile phone) all the time, especially when his mother is talking to him. It is typical of the generation. When they talk to the baby boomers (45 plus), they can't keep eye contact," he said.

Pease observed that the "Generation Y brains are being rewired by the electronic media".

"Most of them are most likely to get a job because they don't have a body language (and they cannot talk). Body language makes 60 per cent to 80 per cent of impact between people, but electronics is cutting the younger ones away from their immediate surroundings," Pease said.

The body language guru said "the dependence on electronic gadgets was a very alarming trend for youngsters which made meeting and recognising partners (mates) difficult and where they should stay away".

"A woman in her 50s knows who is sending signals to her around in a room, but a 25-year-old (whose uses the mobile phone and SMS for communication) is less aware of it. We have never been good at body language," he said.

Tags: , , ,

Category: India

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters recommends: Donate to Wikileaks.

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments:

Post a Comment