When we talk about attracting Gen Z, we're not talking about the future workforce. We're talking about people who are already in it.
The oldest Gen Z professionals are approaching 30, managing teams, influencing purchasing decisions and shaping the future of their professions.
As of this year, Generation Z generally refers to people born between 1997 and 2012.
That means Gen Z are currently aged approximately:
For membership organisations, however, the most relevant Gen Z audience is usually:
|
Age |
Career Stage |
|
18-21 |
Students, apprentices, first jobs |
|
22-25 |
Early-career professionals |
|
26-29 |
Developing specialists, emerging managers, future leaders |
This matters because many membership organisations have historically focused recruitment and engagement on professionals in their 30s and beyond. Yet today’s 22‑year‑old could be:
For years, professional bodies, employers and membership organisations have been asking a familiar question:
“How do we attract younger people?”
But that may not be the right question. A more useful one is:
“Why should Gen Z choose us?”
Anyone who spends time on social media understands the feeling. The conversation is happening. Messages are flying. The opportunity is there. Then, suddenly, someone important goes quiet.
For many membership organisations, professional bodies and employers, that’s beginning to feel uncomfortably familiar.
Not because Gen Z is apathetic.
Not because they’re uninterested in careers.
And certainly not because they don’t want to develop professionally.
The truth is more challenging: they may simply be having the conversation somewhere else.
While many organisations are still asking how to attract younger members, recruit emerging talent and build future leaders, a generation aged between 14 and 29 is rewriting the rules of engagement.
They are:
Traditionally, membership organisations could rely on a fairly predictable pipeline. Today, that pathway is far less certain.
Young professionals are asking more searching questions of us, about our member-led clients:
If they don’t see a clear answer?
They move on. Quickly.
That’s why recent UK figures showing that more than one million young people are now classified as NEET (Not in Education, Employment or Training) should concern every membership leader, not just policymakers.
This is not only a workforce issue. It is:
The next generation isn’t disappearing. But they are becoming harder to engage through traditional channels.
So the critical question for employers, associations and professional bodies is this:
Has Gen Z left the chat, or have we failed to join the conversations they’re already having?
Our work in membership recruitment makes one thing very clear: Gen Z candidates are not disengaged. Far from it.
They are curious, thoughtful and often strongly driven by values. At the same time, they are more selective than previous generations about where they invest their time, energy and ambition.
Gen Z candidates are asking more direct questions about culture, flexibility, progression, learning and purpose. They want to understand not just the role on offer, but what that role can grow into.
They are asking:
And perhaps most importantly:
Will this role help me grow?
That question is pivotal.
Gen Z candidates are not simply looking for a job title. They are looking for momentum.
They want employers who can describe the journey, not just the responsibilities. They want professional bodies that can demonstrate relevance, not just heritage. They want membership organisations that can prove how belonging to a community opens doors, builds confidence and accelerates careers.
This is where membership organisations have a real opportunity to lead.
By understanding what younger candidates ask during recruitment, professional bodies can better support their own members, many of whom are grappling with the same challenge:
How do we engage and retain the next generation of talent?
The answer begins with listening.
Unlike previous generations, Gen Z does not automatically assume that joining a professional body, climbing a traditional ladder or staying with a single employer for decades is simply “what you do”.
They are looking for something more valuable:
If they can’t see it? They’ll scroll on!
Gen Z, those typically born between 1997 and 2012, have grown up in an era defined by uncertainty:
Where previous generations were often told, “Find a job and stick with it”, Gen Z has learned that circumstances can change overnight.
So they are approaching their careers differently.
Not because they are entitled.
Not because they are lazy.
But because they are asking questions we arguably should have asked all along:
These are not unreasonable questions. In many respects, they are exactly the questions modern professions need.
Recent UK data shows that over one million young people are now classified as NEET, Not in Education, Employment or Training.
Pause on that for a moment.
One million.
That is not just a youth employment statistic. It is:
Because today’s disengaged young person may become tomorrow’s missing professional, missing volunteer, missing member or missing leader.
In response, we’re seeing a sharp rise in interest around apprenticeships, vocational routes and alternative professional pathways.
“Show me a route in.”
For decades, many professions followed a familiar pattern:
Get a degree.
Get a job.
Join the professional body.
Work your way up.
Retire.
Repeat.
Gen Z is not rejecting professional careers. They are rejecting assumptions.
They don’t want to be told:
“Join because everyone else does.”
They want to hear:
“Here’s how this helps you become who you want to be.”
That is a fundamentally different conversation.
Here is a challenge for every membership organisation.
When was the last time you reviewed your employer value content through the eyes of a 22‑year‑old?
Gen Z are not discovering more about your goals and values through brochures, annual reports or lengthy PDFs. They are finding intel via:
For Gen Z, social media is not a distraction. It is often the first stage of research.
They are:
They are not sitting back, waiting to be told. They are actively investigating.
The key question is:
When they start looking, what do they find out?
One of the most significant shifts we’re seeing is the renewed interest in apprenticeships, not because apprenticeships are new, but because perceptions have changed.
Increasingly, young people view apprenticeships as a genuine career accelerator:
For many, apprenticeships are no longer a “second choice”. They are becoming the first choice.
Membership organisations have a powerful role here:
Few sectors are better positioned to champion future talent.
Despite the stereotypes, Gen Z is not primarily seeking beanbags, unlimited snacks or a “fun office”.
What they want is straightforward:
They want purpose
They want to know their work matters.
They want development
They expect ongoing learning from day one, not only after promotion.
They want transparency
Plain speaking over corporate jargon. Authenticity over polished statements.
They want flexibility
Not because they don’t want to work, but because they want work to fit into life, not overwhelm it.
They want community
And this is where membership organisations have a distinctive advantage—because community is what you have been building for decades.
Here is the uncomfortable reality.
Many organisations are still trying to attract tomorrow’s professionals with yesterday’s playbook.
Meanwhile, Gen Z is asking:
That last word - belong - is crucial.
Good news? We can help you here, by positioning your organisation, team and culture sensitively, in line with increasing Gen Z expectations:
Most importantly, they will help their members answer the same questions being asked by the next generation entering the workforce.
Ultimately, the conversation about Gen Z is not only about Gen Z.
It is about how willing organisations are to evolve.
The strongest membership organisations have always been catalysts for professional growth. Now they can become something even more significant:
Architects of the future workforce.
With more than one million young people currently outside education, employment and training, the issue is no longer whether we have a challenge.
The real question is:
Who will step forward to solve it?
Membership organisations are uniquely placed to lead.
The future does not need more organisations telling young people what they should do. It needs organisations showing them what is possible.
Wr think that is a challenge worth belonging to.