Photo: Alfa27/Adobe Stock
A large swath of Gen Z and millennial workers in the U.S. say they're not satisfied at their current jobs, according to a study by ELVTR.
The demographics spend tens of thousands on education, fire off countless applications and accept the first offer that lands in their inbox, the data showed, with quitting feeling like a backward step after a few years on the job.
"Gen Zers want meaningful, flexible, and creatively fulfilling work," said Avery Morgan, CHRO at student platform EduBirdie.
"Call it youthful idealism or self-confidence that they'll find their passion—either way, it signals that retention strategies need to go beyond traditional incentives like promotions and bonuses," he added. "Managers and HR leaders should rethink how roles are structured. Can we build creative outlets into traditional positions? Can we offer rotational projects, internal side hustles or creative labs that let young employees explore their interests without leaving the company?"
Key takeaways:
- Thirty-three percent of Gen Z and 37% of Millennials say they're not satisfied with their current job. Education and fitness show the highest dissatisfaction, while technology and healthcare lead in employee satisfaction — signaling where talent feels valued and where burnout dominates.
- Flexibility beats pay as the top driver of job satisfaction. 58% say flexibility is the most important factor in workplace happiness, ahead of salary (48%) and a supportive team (47%).
- Confidence separates career climbers from career stallers. 37% of satisfied employees apply for roles they're underqualified for — nearly double the 19% of dissatisfied employees.
- Millennials are deep in a mid-career identity crisis. More than half (55%) feel unsettled or still figuring out their careers.
- Twenty-five percent of Millennials are actively planning a career pivot, and 59% admit they've hoped for an external excuse — like a layoff — to finally leave a job they feel stuck in.
- Dream careers expose generational differences in purpose. Millennials lean toward tangible impact: 11% dream of helping professions, and 7% dream of working with animals — a distinctly Millennial aspiration. Gen Z, by contrast, favors creative and flexible careers, prioritizing self-expression over hands-on service.
(Photo: Alfa27/Adobe Stock)
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