Making employees your most effective brand advocates
How can your business use employees as the most effective brand advocates, improving recruitment, retention and reputation along the way?
If your workplace isn’t meeting the needs of Gen Z, chances are it’s not really working for anyone. They’re just the ones willing to say it out loud.

Debunking myths and designing workplaces the next generation will stay for.
We’ve all heard the Gen Z stereotypes: Lazy. Entitled. Quick to quit.
Except… the data tells a different story.
And if your organisation is still clinging to the stereotype of a frivolous, disloyal youth workforce, you’re not just misinformed — you’re unprepared.
At The Formula, we’ve been tracking the attitudes and behaviours of employees across Northern Ireland in our 2023 Employee Tracker series. And when we break that data down by age, a very different version of Gen Z emerges.
Only 13% of 18–24s say they are actively looking for a new job.
17% say they’re happy in their current role — the highest for any age group.
Their top priorities? Work-life balance, flexible structures, values alignment, and wellbeing support.
This generation isn’t flaky. They’re focused. They want security — but not at the cost of identity. They want to work hard — but not for a company that sees them as disposable. And yes, they want purpose. But doesn’t everyone?
So, why is Gen Z still being painted as a flight risk?
Much of this stereotype stems from a backlash to what came before. Millennials were praised for their “hustle mindset” — side gigs, networking, constant upskilling. Gen Z is now being judged for opting out of that lifestyle.
But this isn’t laziness. It’s clarity.
As The Guardian recently reported, young people today are “rejecting hustle culture” in favour of long-term security and meaningful, balanced careers. They’ve seen what burnout does. They’ve watched their parents get laid off after years of loyalty. They’re not rushing to sell their time to the highest bidder — they’re asking deeper questions about the value exchange.
And that’s something smart employers should welcome.
In a 2023 LinkedIn survey, 90% of Gen Z respondents said they would leave a job that didn’t align with their personal values. Our own 2023 Employee Tracker supports this. Younger employees consistently rate:
They’re not walking away from work. They’re walking toward workplaces where they can bring their whole selves, not just their skills.
If you want to future-proof your workforce, here’s the uncomfortable truth: you don’t need a better retention strategy for Gen Z — you need a better employee experience.
Here’s where to start:
The youngest members of your workforce are not the problem. They’re the pressure test.
If your workplace isn’t meeting the needs of Gen Z, chances are it’s not really working for anyone. They’re just the ones willing to say it out loud.
At The Formula, we help businesses decode these insights and turn them into action. Not just to retain talent — but to become better places to work, full stop.
Because when people feel seen, supported, and aligned — they don’t leave.
And Gen Z? They might just be the generation that stays — if you give them a good enough reason.
Want to understand what tomorrow’s workforce needs today?Let’s talk about how to evolve your employer brand and build the kind of culture people want to grow with.