How Videogames Can Help Your Boss Understand You

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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How Videogames Can Help Your Boss Understand You

Older managers and bosses complain that working with Generation Y is a difficult, thankless task. Maybe they just don't play enough videogames.

It's a refrain repeated all too often by Generation X-ers and their elders regarding Generation Y (also known as the Millennials), those born between 1980 and 1995: They're too indulgent. They're too narcissistic. They have no empathy, and expect to succeed every time. They don't stick with jobs. They think they're special. For a manager or a senior coworker, managing Millennials can feel like herding cats - an impossible and thankless task.

Or maybe it's just that they don't have the right mindset or the right tools to deal with them.

That is the essence of a speech given last week by Alex "Archon" Macris - CEO and Publisher of The Escapist - at the Fidelity Technology & Leadership panel at NC State. Given that the average age of the staff here at The Escapist is 26, one would think that he has a pretty good handle on the subject, too.

The secret, says Macris, is to see the world how the kids see it - as a videogame. After all, more than 90% of Millenials are familiar with games, having grown up alongside them. So why not incorporate game design into your management?

[blockquote]You are the Hero
Videogames place the player as the hero of the game world. Whether you are Master Chief, saving the Milky Way from the Flood; or Niko Bellic, gangster in Liberty City, the story revolves around you. It's important to note how different this is from any other entertainment. In books or movies, you might empathize with the hero; you might vicariously experience what he experiences; but you are ultimately along for the ride. In videogames you ARE the hero. Even in massively multiplayer games, the most popular games have been the ones in which each and every one of the millions of subscribers gets to be the level 80 hero who kills the big bad evil. The latest version of World of Warcraft even gives each player their own private version of the world, called a 'phase.'. Since, in reality, we can't all be the hero, videogames now give us each our own reality. It's the ultimate solipsistic pastime.

The Takeaway: Each member of the Reset Generation sees himself or herself as the hero of their own story. You, their boss, are not the hero. You are the old wizard that gives them the tutorial when they start the game. And what they want from you is not work. They want a quest. So where possible, give them meaningful work with an obvious "victory condition".

***

Feedback is Constant
Videogames provide constant feedback to their players. The best-designed game developers deeply understand behavioral psychology, and use positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, and punishment to shape the player's relationship to the game. From the pleasing "ding!" of leveling up in a massively multiplayer online game to the visceral pleasure of seeing the opponent blown into bloody chunks of sweet, sweet gore during a first person shooter match, videogames give the player what he wants when he plays well. Likewise, bad play is immediately punished with sounds and imagery of pain, suffering, defeat, and sometimes even outright mockery.

The Takeaway: The Reset Generation expects immediate feedback on their work performance. A mentoring relationship can go far towards giving them the feedback they need, but you also need to explain that the business world does not center around them. [/blockquote]

Whether you're a manager trying to herd younger workers - or possibly even your peers - or one of those younger workers wondering how you might come off to your bosses and coworkers, it's a rather informative talk. If you've got 51 minutes to spare, and don't mind a bit of scratchy audio, it's definitely worth a watch and a listen.

Life really is like a videogame after all. Who knew?

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OANST

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Aug 10, 2009
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How about I just fire the lazy wastes of money and hire someone else?
 

For.I.Am.Mad

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May 8, 2010
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I don't like being called a Millennial or Generation Y. They should F off, they spent their youth selfishly doing drugs and talking about free love, which was just an excuse for unprotected sex, then they sit here and judge us because they can't have fun anymore. They raised us. They wanted us to be the God Children Generation. Of course it was never about us it was always about them and their selfish ego.

Personally, I wish the baby boomers would just get out the way. They almost burned the goddamn country down. Who the are they? Even when 'talk' about us it's always about them. 'They won't live as long we did.' 'They won't be as wealthy as we were.' 'We are and will always be the best.'

Up yours baby boomers. You never grew up and you're still popping pills to this day. The difference now is that doctor writes out a prescription.

Oh yeah the less my boss pays attention to me the better.
 

Charli

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Nov 23, 2008
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John Funk said:
Life really is like a videogame after all. Who knew?
Well we don't get inspiration for video games from the Pod people of planet Zelchon Twelve.
It has to come from somewhere. ;)
 

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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OANST said:
How about I just fire the lazy wastes of money and hire someone else?
Because, if you'd watch the video, there are many more Gen Y-ers than there are Gen X-ers, and with the Baby Boomer generation retiring there is expected to be a rather large labor shortage in the coming decade?

And because if you have someone who already is a cohesive fit with your team and who has the necessary skillset/ability, it's far more economical and productive to actually make them productive rather than firing/hiring/training someone who you don't know will fit well?

Really, that's actually covered if you watch the darn thing.
 

Loonerinoes

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Apr 9, 2009
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Hah! I didn't know if this was gonna get an article here, since the video's quality is a bit choppy, but glad to see that didn't stop ya'll. It's well-worth the hour of listening indeed. And the closing remarks about the Chinese for example...damn worth considering and what totally sealed the deal for me I think. That ability to think not just about the generations of the western culture and the US (and actually yes - his deductions about generation Y, of whom I am a part of, do indeed apply to a good portion of Europe too I think), but acknowledging that there is an entirely different mindset over there about which we usually forget when we consider these things.
 

Orcus The Ultimate

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Nov 22, 2009
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This is about Cybernetics, aka systems creation and control, in this case it would be Mind programation of working politics?

if you speak spanish, french or italian check this website:
http://www.syti.net/Cybernetics.html

it has lots of interesting stuff about social control, feedback and auto-regulation etc.
 

Jumplion

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Tenmar said:
That was a great video, thanks for sharing.

OT: It all depends on the type of work and who's doing it and such. I'll try to squeeze in some time to see the video, it looks pretty interesting.
 

mooncalf

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Jul 3, 2008
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Both my immediate superiors have played WoW regularly at one time or another, so we get along well, hehe.
 

cerebus23

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May 16, 2010
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I fired up the link and clicked on the video and thought oh go it is an hour long, then i watched it and got to say it was a darn good speech and breakdown of the ins and outs of the x vs y generation.

Well worth an hour of peoples time to sit down and watch, sorry some of your jokes bombed i thought they were funny even the ones went over the entire room's head.

My problem with baby boomers is that it is all about them, and when you get some of the real older bosses they will never look towards anything positive but jump on any mistake you make no matter how small. Pointing out failures is cool and all but point out the good things you do on occasion boosts morale and does not make your workers cringe in fear any time you turn the corner.

I have worked for some really scummy bosses in my day my first job was an utter horror of a family run company complete with inter office politicing, tag team gang up, one of the sons liking to beat their girlfriends, and half the back shipping department i think were sporting kkk hoods on the weekends, and yet being stuck in the front office was a utter horror show. Happiest day of my life when i just told the owner to go blank himself and quit.