For almost a year, I sat in every focus group discussion, interview, and analysis session, listening firsthand to how each generation defines or has redefined work — and why Gen Z is now demanding quality life, not just quality job.
Across Philippine boardrooms, human resource channels, and leadership meetings, one question keeps resurfacing: What does Gen Z really want?
Some call them fragile. Others claim they’re entitled. Still others see them as “quiet quitters” who don’t want to work the way older generations did.
But findings from Acumen’s Project Alphabet interviews tell a deeper, broader story.
Gen Z is not running away from the system — they are interrogating it, challenging it, and reshaping it with demands rooted in wellness, authenticity, and activism.
And when you step back and look at the bigger arc of Philippine generational behavior, their actions don’t look rebellious. Rather, they are inevitable.
Work, as a cultural institution, has evolved dramatically across four generations:
This progression is not random. It reflects how socioeconomic conditions, workplace realities, and cultural pressures shaped each cohort. Understanding this context allows us to finally see Gen Z clearly — not as a “problem to fix” but as the generation insisting that the old system finally be fixed.
Boomers: The Era of Security and Sacrifice
For Boomers, work was synonymous with survival — a necessity to anchor a family, build a future, and secure stability in a recuperating economy.
One interviewee summed it up simply: “Boomers… would really tend to find stable work.”
Loyalty was a virtue. Sacrifice was expected. Pension schemes and long-term employment were the markers of success. Many Boomers defined their lives by the companies they stayed in for decades.
“I only know about our company because it’s my first and hopefully my last employer. Dito na ako magre-retire,” one respondent said proudly.
To Boomers, having work was the dream.
Gen X: The Rise of Competence and Professional Identity
Gen X inherited the Boomers’ hunger for stability but added their own twist: pride in mastery. For them, work wasn’t just a job — it was a craft.
“I take it seriously,” one Gen Xer shared. “This is what I do, and this is what defines me.”
Described by peers as “driven… adaptable… resourceful,” Gen X framed their identity around being technically excellent and professionally reliable. They respected hierarchy but valued fairness. They pursued titles, expertise, and the privilege of being trusted to perform.
To Gen X, having quality work was the goal.
Millennials: Boundary Builders and Balance Seekers
Then came the generation raised on overwork, globalization, and burnout: Millennials.
They were the first to actively challenge the idea that life must revolve around work.
One interviewee reflected: “Over the years… aabot ka talaga sa point ng life mo na, okay work, pero I have life outside work.”
Millennials mainstreamed the language of “boundaries,” “self-advocacy,” and “work-life balance.” They began negotiating compensation more boldly and rejecting the “martyrdom” culture of their elders.
And yes, they were the first to be labeled “entitled,” especially for demanding fair pay and humane policies. But their advocacy paved the way for what Gen Z would later take even further.
To Millennials, the priority became life outside work.
Gen Z: The Push for Quality Life, Not Just a Balanced One
If Millennials wanted life outside work, Gen Z wants a life of quality outside work.
And for them, work is merely the tool to fund and protect that life.
As one Gen Z participant confidently put it: “I want to have a holistic life… work is my means to do everything I want — travel, family, sports.”
They don’t want to escape work but they want work that does not harm them. They value compensation not as status, but as empowerment. They prioritize lifestyle, wellness, and meaningful experiences.
Gen Z is also the first generation to treat mental well-being as non-negotiable. They know the language of mental health. And they talk openly about it.
“Normalized na siya. Wala nang stigma,” one young worker shared.
Gen Z is unabashedly straightforward. They speak up. They negotiate. And they refuse unreasonable requests.
One supervisor described them as “disciplined in saying ‘no’ to work.”
Another young professional explained their instinct to question practices that don’t make sense: “I should be wrapping up — bakit uutusan pa ako?”
They critique norms not to disrespect authority but to fix inequity, inefficiency, or sheer irrationality.
They even embrace the label “mareklamo,” reframing it as courage: “Real change happens because someone goes out and says, ‘This is not it, guys.’”
More than any previous generation, Gen Z scrutinizes a company’s integrity. They care about whether an organization aligns with their values — especially on issues like social justice, transparency, inclusion, and sustainability.
One respondent asked explicitly: “Is my job serving a higher purpose?”
They’re not satisfied with corporate “mission statements.” They want proof manifested in culture, leadership, and daily decision-making.
To Gen Z, integrity is not branding — it is employer accountability.
When Boomers stayed, it was out of duty. When Gen X stayed, it was out of pride. When Millennials stayed, it was out of balance.
When Gen Z stays, it is because the work supports the life they want to live.
And if it doesn’t? They leave. Not out of defiance, but out of clarity.
“I want to protect my life,” one young worker said. Not their ego. Not their image. Their life.
It is the most rational career philosophy yet. And we can see that the future of work is healthier because they demand it. They are the end of unnecessary suffering disguised as professionalism.
They are not escaping the system. They are upgrading it. — Trizia Ann Magalino, Consulting Project Manager and Consulting Associate, Acumen (www.acumen.com.ph)
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