But almost simultaneously, the itch appears: "And all I’ve learned? And all the resources I have?" And not only professionally, but in life and in dealing with people.
In this stage, thanks to the recognition and prestige they’ve earned, new opportunities often come naturally. Now is the time to reinterpret everything learned to use it to their advantage, and to give back to others and the community. It’s about thinking how to capitalize on, disseminate, and multiply knowledge, experiences, and even valuable connections.
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Watch the video
Self-esteem is solid, and so are the achievements. They’ve overcome many challenges and experienced numerous changes throughout life. Some have not only pursued their careers but also mentored students and apprentices, enabling them to continue deriving satisfaction from helping others grow.
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Today they explore the possibility of cultivating a new hobby or learning something different. Perhaps the moment has arrived to enjoy life. A delicate and fascinating counterpoint: the urge to give to oneself, and the desire and commitment not to discard all the experience acquired.
Many have children, some even grandchildren. But these new older adults do not come as they did before: they care for kids, sometimes, and play with them, only what pleases them. They help their children, as much as they can.
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For them, the family legacy is guaranteed. Now they are considering another legacy: the knowledge and professional skills. They are convinced that it’s worth capitalizing on what they’ve learned to share with the community. This is the moment when so many decide to reinvent themselves.
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I know people who write books or publish articles in newspapers and magazines. Others run those same magazines, produce their own radio programs, or create a new project in a domain they had never explored. There are those who lead or actively participate in a NGO or reinvent themselves as consultants in their specialty.
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A new effort or a great opportunity? Perhaps a way to reconcile that prodigious tension that accompanies maturity: enjoying life more and leaving a legacy to the world.
To this clearly identifiable profile, I like to call them Vintage Millennials: Vintage by age and Millennials by vocation. They are a creative, innovative, and enthusiastic generation. Restless, seeking to continue growing and learning.
A collaborative content piece from the prestigious Beyond and Infonegocios.Miami community, developed by renowned Sonia Abadi, based on Sonia’s book: "Network Thinking: Connecting Ideas, People, and Projects."
Sonia Abadi web: www.soniaabadi.com
There are those who, like economist Sebastián Campanario, speak of the Senior Revolution. Others, like Madrid-born journalist Raquel Roca, describe this generation as Silver Surfers: senior professionals with silver-tinted talent, producers and recipients of a new economy, the Silver Economy. They are recognized as surfers because they want to stay on the crest of the wave and do not accept a present or a future that is invisible or inactive.
Human beings are living healthily up to a hundred years; biologically we are ten years younger. We are entering a new era of longevity that affects everything and, in particular, work.
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In the Silver Economy, those of this generation are not only considered new consumers but also new producers. Like the young, they are called prosumers, since they not only consume products designed for mature age but also continue to produce goods and services. They are highly active on social networks, voicing opinions, generating trends, and driving cultural changes.
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Our long life invites us to develop as agile workers, in continuous learning, and to explore new alternatives to face a longevity in professional life that almost no one anticipated.
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However, biases and invisible barriers still survive that sustain forms of workplace discrimination. Sometimes triggered by companies, but other times by those who have not yet dared to recognize themselves and position themselves as Vintage Millennials.
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The future will belong to the companies that implement a solid age-management strategy, because having silver talent will make the difference.
But expertise and experience are not enough to be a genuine Vintage Millennial. Senior professionals need to master new communication resources and new ways to share their ideas.
Complete YouTube video of Sonia Abadi developing the concept:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_e2UlDjh5k
If we want to be heard, we cannot continue communicating with old formats; we must adopt alternative modes of communication and incorporate new languages.
Professionals and experts will continue writing papers and books, giving lectures and talks. But to be part of this exquisite and diverse generation we need to disseminate our work through other media: tweets, short texts, podcasts, videos, LinkedIn posts, online meetings, webinars, and undoubtedly Artificial Intelligence and other tools still in development. The challenge is to discover them, explore them, and find ways to monetize them.
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For Vintage Millennials these tools are not demands but opportunities for greater reach, expansion, and virality of their ideas.
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On these communication platforms, image paired with words, voice and its nuances, humor as a form of intelligence, facilitate the meeting between ideas and people. Music, as a backdrop inviting emotion to meet intellect, is also part of the expressive richness that helps reach more people.
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Content overload and the speed of events can be unsettling and irritating, but they also bring wealth, diversity, multiplicity, and the possibility of counting on an inexhaustible capital of knowledge. And the fascinating alternative of meeting other expert and curious minds on social networks.
Today Vintage Millennials can afford to give a knowing nod to Millennials and Centennials, with whom they share work and innovation spaces. But they also enjoy inspiring other seniors not to miss the opportunity to participate in the adventure of being active participants in the present and shaping the future.
Infonegocios Miami: a publication written by the Anglolatina business community.
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