Millennial men’s views on gender, leadership, and equality are shaped long before their careers begin: through family dynamics, schooling environments, peer groups, and the broader social context they grow up in.
For many, that means holding a mix of influences.
Traditional views sitting alongside more contemporary ones. Clear messages about respect and equality, but also exposure to environments where very different behaviours were normalised.
As they move into professional roles - particularly in male-dominated industries - those early influences don’t disappear. Instead, they begin to show up in how decisions are made, how people are treated, and how situations are interpreted.
In this episode of The Other Side of Here, Tanya Andrews speaks with Matt McCormick, a Structural Engineer and Practice Director at ADG Engineers, about how those influences play out in practice.
The conversation explores the moments that start to shift perspective, from being called out on everyday behaviours, to recognising differences in workplace experience, to reflecting on decisions that may have been shaped by unconscious bias.
It also highlights something often overlooked: the role of observation.
How simply paying attention to other people’s experiences, and being willing to question your own, can become one of the most powerful drivers of change.
Rather than presenting a polished or perfect perspective, this episode offers something more useful: a real-time view of how awareness develops, and how that awareness begins to translate into different ways of thinking and acting at work.
It continues the season’s broader exploration:
What shapes how millennial men understand gender equality, and how does that influence how they actually show up at work?