Zombie – a will-less and speechless human held to have died and supernaturally reanimated
Career Zombie – a will-less and speechless human held to have died on the job and marginally reanimated
So what’s the difference in the two? The first makes for good television. The second is very, very real – and chances are good you will become one.
Don’t believe me? I can prove it – and the numbers back me up. Let’s focus on the group must susceptible to becoming Career Zombies – THE MILLENNIALS.
Last year Gallup released what may be the most definitive study of Millennials in the work place. The results were staggering.
Consider that in a survey with over 1 million respondents:
- Only 29% report they remain engaged in their field of choice
- 50% plan to leave their place of employment in the next year
This from a group that already constitutes 38% of the workforce – and 75% by 2025.
Seventy one percent of Millennials don’t want to be in their jobs – disengaged and dying in their careers.
Zombies.
No longer passionate about their work, unable or unwilling to move, and only going through the motions – and this from arguably the most talented of us.
The future of our country.
Now before you begin to think the Zombification of the U.S. workforce is limited to just the youngest workers – think again. The affliction strikes all generations – and costs our economy billions each year – to the tune of $450 to $550 billion as a matter of fact.
The march of the employed walking dead.
In my years in the corporate world I saw the evolution of that march – and over time began to appreciate some of the causes. Here’s a good way to describe the descent – I’ll borrow a story from a good friend and ex-Special Forces operative, Jan Rutherford to provide context.
Jan describes the incredibly challenging training he went through to earn his Green Beret and one example I think, perfectly defines what and why burnout can be pervasive in the workforce.
Every day Jan and the other trainees participated in a rucksack run – long, incredibly exhausting, and pushing each soldier to his limit. Now keep in mind the average human couldn’t come close to completing this kind of “burdened run.” But a majority of these specially selected participants did – until the day came that the drill sergeant didn’t stop the battalion when they got to their predetermined stopping point.
Instead he said, “Keep running!”
Suddenly the game changed. For the soldiers, old “agreements” or assumptions about their world went out the window. Jan says an amazing thing happened then – some of these tough, well-conditioned athletes began to struggle and some of them finally, to drop out.
Why?
The argument could be made that it wasn’t the physical will that collapsed – it was the mental. Now the soldiers no longer knew why they were running – or how far. A pre-set destination they were equipped to manage – but one that seemed interminable was devastating.
I would submit the very same thing occurs in many careers. The job – when it has no purpose in the context of a larger career – or seems without any endpoint – or no direction, is no longer tolerable – and the burnout cycle begins in full.
Here then are the five stages of the Career Zombie Descent into Employment Hell.
Watch for them – the symptoms are universal – and the results – devastating.
Stage 1 – Loss of purpose – best characterized as the vanishing passion that once characterized the career vision. Without purpose the career threatens to default to its weaker shadow– a job. I’ve seen hundreds, perhaps thousands of disillusioned employees who lose the sense of “why” they work – and begin to struggle.
Stage 2 – Loss of direction – minus the purpose that once fueled the role the job suddenly becomes more burdensome. This is where the career oriented professional now fully becomes just an employee – and the blood that once coursed through the veins of that ambitious driver begins to grow cold. (And yes, the similarities to the rucksack run are fairly stunning.)
Stage 3 – Loss of interest – the metamorphosis is now taking place in full. “I no longer know where I’m going – or why – what am I doing here?” Start times suddenly are more difficult to get up for. The reports you once invested more time than necessary on you now begin to mail in. Now the run has no end – and the psychological collapse is in full gear.
Stage 4 – Loss of engagement – typified by full sub-human symptoms. You no longer want to be here – you dream of finding a way out. The memory of what was once a bright future seems distant, if it can be recalled at all. In the rucksack run, here is where the runner slows and begins to watch his compatriots pull further away. Tap out is about to begin.
Stage 5 – Total burnout or said another way, Full Zombie.
They’re real you know – the Career Zombies. And they are on the march. Like the staggering, mindless corpses we see on the big screen and our television sets they are spreading.
The stages are clear.
The defenses are less so – but they are there.
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