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Gen Z is redefining what leadership means, and it’s time companies caught up. Born between 1997 and 2012, Gen Z entered the workplace amid the swirl of uncertainty: a global pandemic, economic instability, climate anxiety, and geopolitical conflicts. By 2035, this generation is set to make up 31% of the global workforce, per McCrindle research. They’re reshaping workplace and leadership, challenging the very foundation of how we work, lead, and grow, choosing to bypass the traditional management track in favor of roles that align with their value, well-being, and a sense of purpose.

Gen Z: A Force That is Shifting Culture

Tagged with cultural catchphrases like “Quiet Quitting,” “Bare Minimum Mondays,” and “Productivity Theatre,” this generation has been painted as disengaged and often criticized for lacking a work ethic. They have drawn a lot of attention, yet this narrative misses the nuance, the bigger picture. This is a generation that questions the traditional definitions of productivity and success. They’re discerning and they expect work to meet them at the intersection of technology, values, and well-being.

They are the first generation that grew up with the internet as a part of their daily life, and as a digital-first native generation, digital fluency is their language. From social media to virtual classrooms to AI tools, they turn to the internet for any questions. Their formative years were shaped by global crisis, inflation, climate anxiety, and geopolitical unrest. These experiences influence how they approach work, switching effortlessly between online tools and expecting workplaces to resonate with their values. They crave access over ownership, authenticity over polish, and community over competition.

Leadership isn’t the Goal: Impact is

According to the DDI’s Global Leadership Forecast 2025, Gen Z is 1.7x more likely to actively avoid management roles compared to previous generations. The traditional path to leadership is marked by long hours, hierarchical power, and burnout, which isn’t attractive to them. This retreat from leadership, known as “conscious unbossing,” is becoming a growing concern for organizations. The same study found that 80% of HR professionals lack confidence in their current leadership pipeline.

That’s not to say Gen Z lacks ambition – they’re avoiding models that feel unsustainable. Rather than measuring ambition by title, they’re drawn to roles that offer autonomy, mental well-being, meaningful impact, and flexibility. Success isn’t about climbing the ladder – it’s about finding roles that align with their values.

What Do Gen Zers Value in the Workplace?

Financial Security: While making money isn’t everything to this generation, it’s a prerequisite for everything else. Raised during economic recessions, mounting student debt, and skyrocketing housing prices, they’ve seen the dangers of precarity up close. Financial stability is foundational to how they view job satisfaction and mental well-being. They value the peace of mind that comes with a dependable paycheck and job stability. According to a Deloitte survey, Gen Zs are far less likely to report strong mental well-being or meaningful work experiences if their financial needs aren’t met. And given the rising inflation and global cost-of-living concerns, financial security is a top priority for every generation.

Meaningful Work: Roughly 89% of Gen Zs say that having a sense of purpose is key to their job satisfaction and overall well-being. But purpose doesn’t look the same for everyone – for some, it’s social impact. For others, it’s skill-building, financial independence, or the freedom to pursue passion projects on the side. The unifying factor is the desire for work that matters, to their personal journey.

Mental Health & Well-being: According to McKinsey, they report the lowest mental well-being scores of any generation, with anxiety, burnout, and existential uncertainty playing a prominent role. Here’s what’s often missed: when their mental health is in a good place, they thrive. Positive mental well-being is directly tied to how meaningful they find their work: 67% of Gen Zs who report positive mental well-being say their job enables them to make a meaningful contribution, compared to just 44% of those with poor mental health. For them, mental health is directly tied to their ability to lead, create, and stay engaged long-term.

Work-Life Balance: This generation has made work-life balance non-negotiable: nearly 40% of them cite work-life balance as a top priority when selecting a job. They don’t live to work, they work to live well. They are also more likely to research workplace rights, company culture, and flexibility policies before accepting a job offer. Only 6% of Gen Zs say reaching a senior leadership role is their primary goal, suggesting they’re more interested in the quality of their experience than titles.

Learning & Growth: Gen Z is highly proactive when it comes to learning and growth is a baseline expectation. According to another Deloitte research, 70% report developing their skills at least weekly. A third are doing it during work hours, while 67% take the initiative outside of work. When asked why they chose their current employer, learning and development opportunities were among the top reasons, following closely behind work-life balance and career progression. This generation wants dynamic learning environments – access to mentors, personalized upskilling, and the freedom to experiment.

Environmental Responsibility: Environmental consciousness is a part of their identity, and it often shapes how they consume, what they buy, who they trust, and where they work. Around 65% of Gen Zers are willing to pay more for sustainable products or services. More importantly for employers, 23% of them will research a company’s environmental policies before accepting a job offer, and 15% have changed jobs due to unsatisfactory environmental practices. A sustainability strategy isn’t just a brand booster – it’s a talent magnet.

Why Gen Z isn’t Signing Up for Leadership (Yet)

As Baby Boomers retire and Gen X moves into senior roles, Gen Z and Millennials are next in line, but many are hesitant to step forward. Not because they’re not capable, but because they don’t want to inherit leadership roles built on outdated models.

Traditional leadership models, defined by hierarchy, rigidity, and relentless performance metrics, don’t resonate with this generation. They value relational, trust-based leadership. They expect transparency and emotional intelligence from leaders, not command-and-control behavior. The idea of leadership as a power trip doesn’t resonate. Instead, they want to collaborate, build consensus, and lead with empathy.

If we don’t rethink what leadership looks like, we risk not just a gap, but a collapse, in future leadership pipelines.

Rethinking Leadership Development for Gen Z

If we want Gen Z to step into leadership roles, we need to redesign the role we’re asking them to fill. Here’s how:

Redesign Learning and Development Around Growth: Learning must be ongoing, accessible, and meaningful. High-potential employees are 3.7x more likely to leave if they don’t see opportunities to grow. They’re also 3.1x more likely to leave if the pace of growth feels too slow. Companies should invest in in-house development programs, mentorship with senior leaders, peer-learning initiatives, and offer financial support for external certifications, subscriptions, and flexible time to pursue. Most importantly, add learning into the flow of work, not after hours or off the clock.

Treat Financial Security As A Strategy: Pay signals value, respect, and trust. Rising living costs, economic volatility, and financial independence goals mean that job offers with vague perks but low pay will fall flat. Benchmark salaries against market data to address today’s cost-of-living realities. Provide healthcare benefits including dependent care, mental wellness programs, and even commuting stipends. Financial well-being has a multiplier effect, it increases job satisfaction, engagement, and mental health while reducing turnover and burnout. When employees feel financially supported, they’re far more likely to invest in the long term, emotionally and professionally.

Create a Purpose-Driven Work Culture: Don’t just talk about mission and values, operationalize them. Show employees how their daily tasks contribute to bigger goals. Let them opt into purpose-aligned projects. Recognize and reward value delivered, not hours logged. Roughly 63% of Gen Zs who are satisfied with their pay believe their job allows them to make a meaningful contribution to the world. So, give employees chances to choose projects aligned with their values. Celebrate impact metrics and recognize their contributions based on depth. Purpose becomes powerful when it’s part of the process.

Prioritize Mental Health as a Structural Priority: Well-being should be embedded in the rhythm of how the company functions. Normalize conversations around burnout and stress. Offer real-time support through wellness programs, mental health days, and access to counseling. 62% of Gen Zs satisfied with their compensation also report good mental health, and this well-being correlates strongly with motivation, retention, and trust. So, focus on building a culture where checking in is normalized and managers are trained to recognize burnout.

Take Environmental Initiatives Seriously: To Gen Z, sustainability is both ethical and existential. It shapes their buying decisions, social behavior, and career choices. Make your sustainability goals transparent, measurable, and regularly reported. Involve employees in the journey through green initiatives, innovation sprints, or community partnerships. Share progress openly and invite employees to contribute ideas. When Gen Z sees their company as a force for good, they’re more likely to stay and lead.

Offer Remote Work & Flexibility: According to a recent LinkedIn survey,  72% of Gen Zers have either left or considered leaving a job that lacked flexible policies. Deloitte’s 2024 data also found that 63% of them prefer hybrid work. Flexibility means giving people choice, when, where, and how they work best. Whether it’s hybrid schedules, asynchronous collaboration, or compressed workweeks, it tells your team: we trust you to manage your time, and we care about your life outside these walls.

The Bottom Line

Gen Z isn’t saying no to leadership. They’re saying no to burnout, bureaucracy, and outdated models that no longer serve the modern world. They want growth, impact, learning, and balance, and they’re willing to work hard for it if the structure supports their well-being and values.

If organizations want a future-ready leadership pipeline, it shouldn’t be about molding Gen Z into old frameworks. It should invite them to help shape the new ones.