Theyre getting Z last laugh kinda.
Generation Zs recent foray into the corporate world has been an eye-popping escapade plagued by their annoying workplace habits and helicopter parents accompanying them on interviews.
Now, newcomers to the 9-to-5 grind are inflicting a fresh new level of hell onto the workforce with a trending act of defiance known as career catfishing.
The messy movement sees Zoomers, young adults ages 27 and under, accepting a job offer but not showing up on the first day, according to a January report via CVGenius, an online rsum building platform.
Our survey found that Gen Z workers, in particular, reported opting for creative ways to put themselves first before their jobs, explained the UK-based experts, who polled 1,000 employees across all generations.
Researchers found that a staggering 34% of 20-somethings skip Day 1 of work, sans communicating with their new employer, as a demonstration of autonomy.
After drudging through the ever-exasperating job hunting process which often includes submitting dozens of lengthy applications, suffering through endless rounds of interviews and anxiously awaiting updates from sluggish hiring managers the Zs are apparently catfishing jobs to prove that they, rather than their prospective employers, have all the power.
But the rebellious babes arent the only ones pulling fast ones on new bosses.
A surprising 24% of millennials, staffers ranging in age from 28 to 43, have taken a shine to career catfishing, too, per the findings. However, only 11% of Gen Xers, hirelings ages 44 to 59, and 7% of baby boomers, personnel over age 60, have joined in on the office treachery.
Unlike their older colleagues, Gen Zs are apparently more concerned about prioritizing their personal needs and goals than kowtowing to the demands of corporate culture.
Empowered by fads such as “quiet quitting doing the bare minimum at work to coffee badging reluctantly commuting into the office long enough to have a coffee and swipe their badges before returning home to complete the workday youngsters on the clock arent afraid to take liberties.
Even if that means being unemployed until the right job and salary comes along.
I dont care how much you make, if its less than $60,000 a year get a new job tbh #nobuy #nobuyyear #nobuy2025 #underconsumptioncore #budgeting #budgetfriendly #2024wrapped #budgetingforbeginners
Alice Raspin, a job-seeker in her 20s, recently gained TikTok acclaim after turning down a gig offering $37,500 a year, arguing that the pittance of a payment just wont cut it amid the global inflation crisis.
What bills am I paying with that? the Australian asked her over 234,000 video viewers. A full-time job for [$37,500] a year?
Youre dreaming.