As startups continue to disrupt industries with bold ideas and agile execution, the arrival of Generation Z in the workforce is transforming how we think about culture, leadership, and innovation.
At NextGenSoft, where we build high-performance teams to deliver cutting-edge solutions in cloud, DevOps, data, and Gen AI, we’re witnessing Gen Z professionals reshape the way modern startups operate.
The recent PMI LIM 2025 in Manila—particularly the powerful session by Jonathan Yabut—reinforced a message that many startup founders are already sensing:
Gen Z isn’t here to fit in—they’re here to rebuild how we lead, collaborate, and grow.
Born between 1997 and 2012, Gen Z is the first fully digital-native generation. They’ve never known a world without the internet, mobile apps, AI assistants, or real-time access to global ideas.
What defines them:
Jonathan Yabut emphasized that Gen Z wants empathetic leadership—not hierarchy, but humanity. They look for mentorship, feedback loops, and inclusion, even in fast-paced startup environments.
“It’s not about managing tasks; it’s about inspiring trust and creating safe spaces to grow.”
Gen Z thrives on micro-volunteering and task-based contributions. In startup terms: they excel when they know the why behind the what, and they’re empowered to contribute in bursts of deep focus rather than static 9-to-5 routines.
They expect startups to be creative playgrounds. Gen Z doesn’t wait to be told to innovate—they challenge norms, question inefficiencies, and suggest tools before you even finish explaining the problem.
At NextGenSoft, our Gen Z team members bring a unique lens to building Gen AI and data platforms and their curiosity often fuels our best breakthroughs.
According to Deloitte’s 2024 Gen Z Report, impact > incentives. They want startups that care—not just about revenue, but about sustainability, ethics, and social responsibility. Culture matters.
Slack, Discord, WhatsApp, Loom. If your onboarding plan is a 30-page PDF—prepare for silence. Gen Z wants quick, clear, and collaborative communication that meets them where they are.
Bringing Gen Z into your startup isn’t about managing a younger workforce—it’s about reshaping your entire operating model to become more adaptable, human, and future-ready.
Here’s how:
Foster Psychological Safety – Create an environment where feedback and experimentation are encouraged.
Give Real Ownership – Let them lead initiatives with autonomy and purpose.
Coach, Don’t Command – Shift from top-down direction to empathetic mentoring.
Embed Innovation Everywhere – Don’t isolate creativity—build it into your culture and sprint planning.
Adapt Your Communication – Shorter. Sharper. More visual. Less formal.
Final Thoughts
Gen Z isn’t a risk for startups—they’re your biggest unfair advantage.
They move fast, challenge everything, and lead with values that build stronger, more resilient cultures.
At NextGenSoft, we’re committed to enabling Gen Z leaders with the tools, freedom, and purpose they need to lead the next wave of digital innovation.
So don’t just prepare Gen Z for your startup—
Prepare your startup for Gen Z.
Inspired by the session “What Leaders Are Made Of: The Art of Building and Managing Engaged Teams” by Jonathan Yabut at PMI LIM 2025.