Why Firing Gen Z Is a ‘Huge Mistake,’ According to Business Expert

While Gen Z might have a stigma against them in the workplace and employers are already firing them in droves, business experts are warning companies not to let go of their younger employees just yet.

A new report from Intelligent.com revealed one in six businesses were hesitant to hire recent college graduates over concerns about their preparedness for work, communication skills and professionalism.

Perhaps more shockingly, six in 10 employers had already fired the college graduates they hired in 2024.

Gen Z’s wobbly existence in the hiring world aside, business experts say firing them would be a “huge mistake.”

Since Gen Zers now outnumber Baby Boomers in the workplace and are expected to comprise 30 percent of U.S. workers by 2030, employers will need to adapt to them, not the other way around, according to Joy Taylor, the managing director at consulting firm alliant. Taylor said, “…this is a huge mistake…mastering intergenerational workflows will be crucial to tackling the most anticipated business challenges in 2025, from succession planning to culture realignment.”

“Whether employers like it or not, this generation is bringing a Blue Ocean lens to modern work culture, and it’s doing companies a huge disservice to run away from this rather than embrace and adapt,” Taylor told Newsweek.

While the legacy leaders in the workplace are reaching the end of their careers, Gen Z has been known for turning corporate norms on their heads.

By resisting this workforce change, too many Gen X or Baby Boomer leaders are failing to set their organizations up for long-term success and resiliency, as well as missing out on the opportunity to harness this new generation’s potential,” Taylor said.
By resisting this workforce change, too many Gen X or Baby Boomer leaders are failing to set their organizations up for long-term success and resiliency, as well as missing out on the opportunity to harness this new generation’s potential,” Taylor said.
“It’s going to take someone who is experienced at transformational change to get people back into a return-to-work mode for organizations that require it.”

Gen Z has some gifts established employers can learn from like their digital literacy, entrepreneurial spirit and willingness to speak up.

“Learning to appreciate the unique gifts and talents of all generations is what will make the single greatest outcomes,” Taylor said. “Businesses that are capable of harnessing those great talents will ultimately be the winners.”

Since entering the workforce at around the same time as the pandemic, Gen Z has quickly gained a reputation for being lazy and uncooperative, but that stigma might be a self-fulfilling prophecy.

“Any time we get data calling out Gen Z in particular, it feels like it’s taken as more of a justification for how ‘the younger generation doesn’t want to work’ instead of triggering questions of what exactly is at the root of the issues with employees in this age group,” Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek.

“We know Gen Z workers in general have a different perspective on life and often view their personal activities and goals above those of their employers. While this certainly isn’t a bad thing, if it bleeds too much into your workspace, it can dramatically affect performance and lead to those employees being shown the door.”

In the Intelligent survey, 75 percent of companies reported that some or all of their recent college graduate hires were unsatisfactory.

Still, leading your young employees to the door too soon could become a fatal flaw for your organization.

“Employers are firing Gen Z workers because they’re not used to a workforce that isn’t willing to tolerate outdated practices, toxic work cultures, or subpar pay,” HR consultant Bryan Driscoll told Newsweek. “Gen Z isn’t afraid to demand respect, fair treatment, and work-life balance, and that makes some employers uncomfortable. Instead of adapting, they’re reacting, and poorly.”

Driscoll said firing workers because they’re vocal about what doesn’t work at their companies would be “shortsighted,” and instead, companies should lean into their “fresh and needed perspectives.”

“They’ve grown up with access to information and are far more aware of their rights and the world around them than previous generations,” Driscoll said. “Dismissing their needs instead of evolving to meet them isn’t just a mistake. It’s a step backward for any company trying to stay competitive.”

Because Gen Z is set to become the future leaders, firing them is not the answer. It could even set them up as competition, Driscoll said.

“My advice to employers: stop viewing Gen Z as a threat and start seeing them as an opportunity to innovate your workplace,” he said.

Michael Ryan, a finance expert and the founder of michaelryanmoney.com, called the decision to fire Gen Z-ers a “critical strategic error.”

“The perceived challenges with Gen Z workers, such as communication style differences or misaligned expectations, are not generational flaws,” Ryan told Newsweek. “But rather symptoms of a larger failure in talent management and organizational adaptability. Forward-thinking companies need to view these as opportunities for organizational evolution, rather than grounds for termination.”

The tech fluency Gen Z brings alongside their adaptability from entering the workforce during the pandemic can be strengths, Ryan added.

To cultivate them, Ryan said companies should invest in their onboarding and mentorship programs and tailor them to Gen Z’s perspective and skills.

“Leverage Gen Z’s digital status to drive innovation from the bottom up. Implement reverse mentoring programs and create cross-generational teams to foster knowledge transfer and spark creative problem-solving,” Ryan said.

“The companies that will thrive in the coming decades are those that recognize Gen Z not as a liability. The question isn’t whether you can afford to retain Gen Z talent. It’s whether you can afford not to.”

Joy Taylor isn’t just a consultant; she’s a force of nature in the world of business transformation. With over twenty-five years of cross-functional experience, Joy applied her expertise in program transformations, project leadership, strategy and execution, team facilitation, change management, communication, and Lean Sigma to everything from startups to multibillion-dollar enterprises. Her impressive track record speaks volumes, but her accolades and career milestones set her apart as a critical advisor for CEOs.

Chris Stephenson

alliantDigital Managing Director: Intelligent Automation and Al

Chris Stephenson is the Managing Director of Intelligent Automation, Al & Digital Services at alliantDigital. Chris has a 25 year history in tech consulting and developing emerging technology solutions for nearly every sector. As a leader in the Al space, Chris has already delivered on multiple internal and client-facing Al products.

History of Proven Success

A serial entrepreneur, Chris founded a successful management consulting practice that was later acquired by Grant Thornton. As the Managing Principal of Product Automation at Grant Thornton, Chris helped develop over 200 internal and client-facing automation products and was recognized for his ability to lead integrations, acquisitions, and technological implementations.

Chris has directed major transformation projects for:

Sondra Leibner

alliantConsulting Managing Director: Transformational Leader and Strategic Visionary

Sondra is an executive level consultant who doesn’t just support leaders but revolutionizes their strategy development, leadership alignment, change management, culture design, and talent development. When you meet Sondra, you will feel the depth of her experience and her understanding that your challenges, culture and circumstances are unique. She will bring flexible, creative and pragmatic approaches to create truly customized and workable solutions. Sondra’s ability to communicate complex messages in simple and memorable ways enhances her ability to achieve unprecedented levels of engagement and adoption. When you begin working together you will be excited about your next meeting.

History of Proven Success

Sondra offers comprehensive services to help business leaders maximize stakeholder value and drive organizational success. She works with teams to craft visions, align leadership, manage changes, and build effective cultures that foster growth and innovation. By focusing on key areas such as communication, collaboration, clarity, and accountability, Sondra helps organizations improve profitability, increase engagement, and realize long-term value.

Leadership Alignment

Leadership teams that are aligned are able to drive business success more effectively. Communication, collaboration, clarity and accountability are the foundations for successful leadership teams. Sondra works to align teams behind your desired destination with the objective of increased engagement, buy in, visible support and clarity of goals to drive success and value realization.

Change Management

It is possible to engage large groups of people and motivate them to do things differently and decrease disruption when thoughtful change management practices are deployed. Change Management requires clarity of purpose, leadership alignment, sponsor leadership, engagement, simple and targeted messaging, crisis and risk management and many others. Sondra will work to develop and execute a scalable approach to manage the people side of change through assessing impacts, readiness and educational needs of stakeholders.

Culture Design

The success or failure of an organization is driven by leadership and culture. Actively taking steps toward building your culture means focusing on the alignment of your leadership, values and behaviors. Sondra will assess current state behaviors, beliefs, norms and structures of your organization to identify similarities and differences inherent in the culture and subcultures and together we will create a roadmap to increase engagement to realize the intended culture.

Talent Development

Customized talent strategies that resonate with your vision, values, and culture are Sondra’s forte, empowering your team to excel and drive the company’s strategic objectives.

Sondra has directed major transformation projects for:

Joy Taylor

alliantConsulting Managing Director:
A Visionary Leader and Proven Change Management Expert

Joy Taylor isn’t just a consultant; she’s a force of nature in the world of business transformation. With over twenty-five years of cross-functional experience, Joy applied her expertise in program transformations, project leadership, strategy and execution, team facilitation, change management, communication, and Lean Sigma to everything from startups to multibillion-dollar enterprises. Her impressive track record speaks volumes, but her accolades and career milestones set her apart as a critical advisor for CEOs.

Award-Winning Leadership and Proven Success

As National Managing Principal at Grant Thornton, Joy demonstrated her unparalleled ability to steer complex, global programs and initiatives. Her tenure as CEO of a $60 million business underscores her credibility and reliability as a peer for other CEOs seeking strategic guidance and impactful change management.

Joy’s career is also studded with achievements including:

Brava! Award,

EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women Class of 2013 member, and a

2022 Life Sciences Voice Top Industry Leader Award.

Award-Winning Leadership and Proven Success

Joy's career is studded with achievements including a Brava! Award, EY Entrepreneurial Winning Women Class of 2013 member, and a 2022 Life Sciences Voice Top Industry Leader Award. As National Managing Principal at Grant Thornton, she demonstrated her unparalleled ability to steer complex, global programs and initiatives. Her tenure as CEO of a $60 million business underscores her credibility and reliability as a peer for other CEOs seeking strategic guidance and impactful change management.

Master of Complex Transformations

Joy's unique talent lies in her ability to manage intricate, large-scale programs that span continents and cultures. She has a proven ability to manage complex, global programs and initiatives, drive process and productivity improvement efforts and lead change in a fast-paced environment.

A Visionary with Tactical Precision

Joy is not just a big thinker; she's a visionary who can translate high-level strategies into actionable goals that people are eager to achieve. Her ability to collaborate with leaders to shape vision and strategy is matched by her meticulous attention to the necessary steps and tactics required to bring those visions to life. She aligns people, process and technology to deliver results that are truly exceptional.

Joy has directed major transformation projects for: