by Julie Tuggle-Nguyen
Creating the culture you want in your organization takes time, effort, and intention. One of the greatest factors shaping that culture is your team’s age diversity. September 24 is International Age Diversity Day, a timely reminder of how generational differences influence the way we work together.
Today’s workplace is more age-diverse than ever, with five generations working side by side. That means your business could include employees spanning more than 50 years in age, with each generation bringing different skills, communication styles, priorities, and approaches to work. For small businesses, this reality can be especially powerful — age diversity can strengthen your team, or if left unmanaged, it can create tension that undermines engagement, satisfaction, and collaboration.
To build a strong culture, leaders must embrace the richness and experience that each generation brings and intentionally create an environment of mutual respect — one where people can contribute authentically, learn from one another, and grow together.
The Multi-Generational Workforce Today
Never before have so many generations worked together at once, and it’s changing the dynamics of today’s workplace. Baby Boomers and even Traditionalists are staying in the workplace longer, often occupying leadership roles. As a result, Generation X is frequently being passed over, with leadership transitions moving directly to Millennials. At the same time, technology, automation, and outsourcing are reducing the number of traditional entry-level jobs, leaving Gen Z with fewer opportunities to learn through early career experience.
These shifts affect more than just career paths — they shape how people experience your culture. When some feel stuck behind older colleagues or left out of leadership transitions, frustration grows. When younger employees don’t see clear ways to advance, they disengage. Culture suffers not because of age differences themselves, but because organizations fail to value and integrate those differences.
The Cultural Benefits of Embracing Age Diversity
When small business leaders approach age diversity with intention, it becomes a cultural advantage. A team that values every generation’s perspective can:
- Spark innovation by combining the fresh ideas of younger workers with the wisdom of experienced ones.
- Strengthen problem-solving. Different perspectives lead to more robust solutions.
- Enhance customer connections. Employees can relate to a wider range of clients.
For small businesses in particular, age diversity can be a competitive advantage, allowing you to draw on a deeper talent pool and adapt more quickly to change.
Bridging the Generational Gap
To build a culture that thrives across generations, leaders must look beyond managing tasks and focus on how people connect and collaborate. Here are strategies to turn generational differences into cultural strengths:
1. Encourage open dialogue. Invite employees to share how they prefer to communicate, learn, and collaborate. Transparency builds understanding.
2. Create cross-generational teams. Pair younger employees with experienced ones on projects to foster knowledge-sharing and break down stereotypes.
3. Leverage generational strengths. Younger employees often excel with technology, while seasoned employees bring wisdom in navigating people and workplace dynamics.
4. Provide leadership opportunities for every age. Giving team members of all ages the chance to lead reinforces a culture where everyone has a voice and their contributions matter.
5. Design flexible learning opportunities. Offer training in multiple formats — online, in-person, or self-paced — so everyone can engage in ways that suit them.
6. Celebrate contributions at all ages. Recognition reinforces the idea that value comes from impact, not years of service.
7. Clarify career paths. With fewer entry-level jobs and slower leadership turnover, employees of all ages need to see how they can grow within your business.
Your Role as a Culture Builder
As a small business leader, you set the cultural tone. By embracing age diversity, you create an environment where employees feel respected, differences are valued, and growth is possible for everyone.
On International Age Diversity Day, let’s remember: the most successful teams are the ones that leverage the full range of skills, perspectives, and experiences their people bring. When you commit to a culture of mutual respect and inclusion, you don’t just unite your team — you unlock their collective strength. And in a small business, that strength is one of your greatest assets for growth and long-term success.
Julie Tuggle-Nguyen is Chief Human Resources Officer at Midwest BankCentre.