'I would rather clock out eternally': This Gen Z TikToker quit her office job and stated she's happier struggling to pay bills than being a ‘corporate drone’ — this is why

'I would rather clock out eternally': This Gen Z TikToker quit her office job and stated she's happier struggling to pay bills than being a ‘corporate drone’ — this is why
'I would rather clock out eternally': This Gen Z TikToker quit her office job and stated she's happier struggling to pay bills than being a ‘corporate drone’ — this is why

Remember back in 2022, all the blowback Kim Kardashian received for saying “nobody wants to work these days” during a Variety interview? Well, Gen Z is now shouting that exact sentiment from the rooftops — just for different reasons.

Andra Berghoff (@hopeyoufindyourdad) received over 476,000 likes on her TikTok about Gen Z’s overall disdain for office work culture.

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The Minnesota native goes on to describe her brief stint in a marketing role at a health care company. She says she was paid poorly and did “little to nothing” in office, 9-5, five days a week.

“If I had to do this corporate drone thing for the rest of my life,” Berghoff adds in the video, “I would rather clock out eternally.”

Gen Z’s seemingly anti-work attitude appears to stem more from their cost-benefit analysis rather than from a lazy work ethic.

So what’s a working Zoomer to do?

Wage stagnation leads to apathy

The over 12,000 comments on her TikTok prove that Berghoff isn’t alone in her struggles.

“People forget boomers got pensions[,] they had an incentive to stay and the pay was equitable,” said a comment with more than 28,000 likes. “[I]t’s no longer that way.” Just 15% of private industry workers in the U.S. had access to pension plans in 2022, according to government data.

Recent data shows that wage stagnation over the last few decades is having a huge impact on Americans’ purchasing power.

The minimum hourly wage was $3.10 in 1980; today, it sits at $7.25. This may sound like a 50% increase, but a dollar in 1980 has the equivalent of today’s $3.73 of purchasing power. If you factor in inflation and cost of living, the minimum wage would need to be $11.58 for Americans to have as much purchasing power as they did in 1980.

It’s not just younger workers who can’t make ends meet. Berghoff says that she was gobsmacked to hear that her 40-year-old coworkers weren’t being paid much more than her.

“There were people in their 40s in the company who were making the same amount of money as me, still in the same struggling to get by position,” Berghoff says in her TikTok clip.

“And I was like: ‘This is it? This is life?'"

In fact, in the face of the steep cost of living, baby boomers are now becoming homeless at a rate not seen since the Great Depression.

With this kind of wage stagnation affecting workers of all generations, can you blame Gen Z for being disillusioned with traditional employment?

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Gen Z prioritizes work-life balance

Berghoff eventually left the health care company because her marketing role was “soul crushing” and her health suffered.

“I’ve sadly been happier doing odd jobs here and there, struggling to pay bills, and just living life and having fun,” she says.

This sentiment is shared by 73% of Gen Zers, who prioritize a healthy work-life balance over a higher salary, according to a recent ResumeLab survey.

This may be due to the rocky start that many of Gen Z are having as they begin their careers.

They have faced and are facing events like the pandemic, the climate crisis and inflation. This has led this young generation to have the least positive outlook of all generations, according to a 2022 McKinsey study. And that translates into work.

Gen Z has a point

As Gen Z starts to take over the workforce, companies can’t ignore their demands for higher salaries and more work-life balance.

For instance, a survey from student well-being platform TimelyCare found that 36% of this year’s college seniors prioritize companies with mental health benefits in their job search.

Older generations are starting to make mental health a priority as well.

Data from workplace mental health non-profit Mind Share Partners shows half of the surveyed millennials (some of whom are now in their 40s) left their jobs because of declining mental health.

So what are they doing instead? Side hustles and freelancing. From writing to nannying to renting out extra space, young Americans are finding ways to make ends meet outside of the 9-to-5 grind.

Roughly 43% of all Gen Zers and 46% of millennial professionals took on freelance work in 2022, according to freelance marketplace platform Upwork.

Berghoff warns employers that they need to listen to her generation – or else.

“Gen Z, to their core, takes the motto, ‘work to live, do not live to work’ very seriously,” she says. “If corporations don’t start understanding that, it’s just going to keep getting worse for everybody.”

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This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

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