Home » Boomers RetYrement » Knowledge Continuity » Currently Reading:

Resentment in the wake of Affirmative Action

November 3, 2006 Aiden Choles Boomers RetYrement, Knowledge Continuity 4 Comments

wakeThere is a unique situation in South Africa as the white Baby Boomer generation head towards retirement in the next few years.

Instead of wanting to leave a legacy behind them (which is probably the global Boomer desire), South African white Boomers just can’t wait to get the hell out of the organisations that have sidelined them over the last 15 years in the wake of Affirmative Action and Empowerment policies. This is a precarious position as businesses begin to realise that there are not enough Xers to replace them and they run the risk of losing core skills, experience and wisdom. This risk is compounded by the reluctance to engage in transferring their wisdom prior to leaving the organisation.

It was a telling moment when sitting with a client in the electricity industry yesterday who told me directly that we won’t get anything out of these guys – in terms of transferring their wisdom to younger employees – until someone from the organisation stands up and says, “Guys, we’re sorry … we’ve f&*ked this Affirmative Action thing up and messed you around”.

I wonder if the Corporate Ego will allow this to happen?

Related posts:

  1. Affirmitive Action is Dead in South Africa – or is it? Sipho Ngcobo wrote an interesting article on Money Web this...
  2. Can I Clean Your Clock? Why China must wake up to clean power Thomas Friedman is one of my favourite authors. He has...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Currently there are "4 comments" on this Article:

  1. Deon Botha says:

    This sentiment just scratches the surface of the Boomers that are heading out. I’ve also noticed it in the Boomers and I don’t think they are going to get their appology.

  2. Some sweeping statements and suggestions in your post. Can one conversation be enough evidence to suggest some of what you are?

  3. Aiden Choles says:

    Good question. There have been numerous conversations I’ve been involved in, but this one is just the one I’ve articulated. Perhaps other readers might be able to clarify?

  4. Dragon says:

    It’s a bit ironic that affirmative action and empowerment would ge rid of people, don’t you think? Actually the thing I wondered about when I first read your note was where these boomers are going. That is they may not be going home to sit in a rocking chair to watch the trees grow — they may be doing another job, altogether.

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe

Category Drop-Down

Posts about Future Trends

You’re going to have to change your management style

March 17, 2010 Barrie Bramley

You’re going to have to change your management style

I spend a large part of my year in conversation with managers working hard to try and understand today’s younger workforce. The pain they’re feeling is palpable. The evidence of change is overwhelming. Making the necessary changes, at times, seems impossible. The hope is that the challenges are being interrogated and slowly but surely acted [...]

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

March 15, 2010 Graeme Codrington

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

Everyone agrees that something must be done about executive pay. One of the major contentious issues emerging out of the financial crisis is the way that senior executives and manager, especially in the financial industries, are remunerated. These days, executive pay often seems to be unrelated to the company’s performance, and in many [...]

The future of money

March 12, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

The future of money

For years banks and credit card companies have held a strangle hold over the movement of money and charged exorbitant rates for doing so. Now this is changing and fast.
Michale Ivey the founder of Twitpay has devised a system, using code that PayPal made available to him, that allows people to make payments [...]

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

March 5, 2010 Barrie Bramley

Twitter 10 Billion – quality not quantity

In the last few hours the 10 billionth tweet was tweeted on Twitter. As one would imagine there was all kinds of hype and excitement, as Tweeps with the necesary skills attempted to predict the time it would happen, and I imagine even be ‘the one’?
My last tweet was 9999989724. Wild. Will be at 10 [...]

Recent Comments

  • Graeme Codrington: Here's another example - a company that developed software t...
  • Graeme Codrington: I agree with you on this point, Barrie. BUT... I just had a...
  • Graeme Codrington: I really wish I could use the main section of this blog site...
  • Mike Saunders: "CEO salaries should be capped at 20 times that of the lowes...
  • Jakes: Funny here in South Africa we can only use paypal to buy, no...

Archives

Tweet Blender

barriebramley: Light-Emitting Wallpaper to Curb Carbon Emissions in U.K. Homes - http://ow.ly/R9eZ
53 minutes ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @WarOfWisdoms: Indian Companies: Doing Well Because They Do Good - http://bit.ly/bpzusc (via @HarvardBiz)
2 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @WarOfWisdoms: Have you ever wondered how generational theorists establish parameter dates? - http://bit.ly/ckz1tI
2 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @WarOfWisdoms: Will the next generation live to be 1000 years old? - http://ow.ly/15kNq
2 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @SloanBecky: Cheat Sheet to Help You Conquer Social Media - http://ow.ly/1i9HN - Thanks @kbauco!
2 hours ago
barriebramley: My first ChatRoulette (http://ow.ly/1qsHrr) experience last night. Mixed emotions. Speechless, intruiged, WTF, rejected. Won't be my last?
3 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @mannatechreview: Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep moving.
9 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: Examples of Tremendous Business Leadership http://ow.ly/1ngfH
9 hours ago