What the Class of 2026 Is Really Bringing to the Workforce: Loneliness, AI, and the Mentor Gap
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
The Class of 2026 is the loneliest generation ever to walk across a graduation stage, and the workforce is not ready for them.
Generational futurist Ryan Vet, an expert in generations and AI keynote speaker, unpacks why the college Class of 2026 is unlike any cohort before it. They are the first traditional graduating class whose entire college experience was shaped by generative AI, whose adolescence was marked by political polarity, and whose childhood absorbed the aftershocks of the Great Recession.
In this episode, Ryan answers the questions leaders are actually asking.
What makes the Class of 2026 different from previous Gen Z graduates?
They were born in 2004, the same year Facebook launched. ChatGPT became free to the public the same semester they began college. They are the first cohort whose entire undergraduate experience was rewritten in real time by generative AI.
Why is Gen Z the loneliest generation at work?
Gallup's 2025 State of the Global Workplace report found Gen Z employees are nearly twice as likely as Gen X and three times as likely as Boomers to report daily loneliness. Only 23 percent of remote-capable Gen Z workers prefer fully remote work, lower than every older generation.
What does Gen Z actually want from the workplace?
Mentorship. 83 percent of Gen Z workers say a workplace mentor is important, yet only 52 percent have one (Adobe, 2023). Deloitte's 2025 Gen Z and Millennial Survey found most Gen Z employees feel their managers are too busy with tasks to offer real guidance.
How should leaders talk to new graduates about AI?
The honest conversation is not, "Don't worry, AI won't take your job." It is, "Here is what AI is going to change about this role, here is what I still need a human to do, and here is what I am going to teach you that no model can replicate."
The biggest takeaway: this generation does not need more flexibility. They need more meaningful connection.
Read the full essay: www.ryanvet.com/collide/what-the-class-of-2026-is-really-bringing-to-the-workforce
Subscribe to the Collide newsletter: www.ryanvet.com/collide
Send us Fan Mail
About Ryan VetRyan Vet is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist, and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold.
Join 20,000+ Leaders for Weekly InsightsIf you want deeper research and behind-the-scenes insights on generations and the future of culture and society, join Ryan’s weekly newsletter:
👉 https://ryanvet.com/collide