77% of Gen Z bring parents to work, alarming managers: Resume Templates

WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES — A recent Resume Templates survey reveals that a significant 77% of Gen Z workers are involving their parents directly in their professional lives, from job interviews to daily work tasks.
This trend, fueled by pandemic-era socialization and evolving parenting styles, is prompting concern among hiring managers and experts about the long-term professional development and perception of young workers in the workforce.
Parental involvement sparks workplace concerns
The data from Resume Templates involving 831 Gen Z adults employed full-time illustrates a profound cultural shift. This reliance extends beyond hiring, as nearly three-quarters of surveyed full-time employees receive help with work assignments, and 45% have had a parent speak directly to their manager.
These figures point to a generation that may have missed key milestones in developing professional independence, a phenomenon experts link to their formative years occurring during the remote-first pandemic environment.
This dependency is creating a tangible rift in the workplace, as hiring managers are increasingly aware of its consequences.
A separate study from Resume.org shows that 56% of managers find Gen Z applicants unprepared for interviews, while 47% cite a lack of professionalism; 11% have directly observed a candidate bring a parent, partner, or friend to an interview.
This behavior, including one in six managers noting phone use during interviews, undermines a candidate’s credibility and signals a potential lack of maturity and problem-solving skills to employers.
Career setbacks and stereotypes ahead
Scholars agree that such a tendency can significantly harm the career opportunities of young employees. When a parent is permitted to intervene in the hiring process or contact a supervisor once hired, it may become significantly more difficult to secure jobs and promotions and be entrusted with additional responsibility.
It strengthens a feeling of the necessity to be hand-held, which does not fit in the picture of being independent and accountable in a professional environment. Career consultant Julia Toothacre notes this is often a confidence issue, with young workers turning to parents because “they don’t know what to do.”
“They’re asking for support because they don’t know what to do, or they don’t feel confident in what to do in the world of work,” Toothacre said.
“So, they’re turning to the people that they know the best, which are parents, to say, ‘What do I do?”
The concern is that these habits will perpetuate permanent negative stereotypes regarding Gen Z as being unprofessional or unprepared, and this might overshadow their other strengths.
Although it could be claimed that these trends can be reduced over time and experience, it is important to note that the first effect is a difficult transition into the working world, determined by the influence of technology, helicopter parenting, and the pandemic shocks.
As Moms for Liberty co-founder Tina Descovich stated, the role of parents is to prepare children for the future, not to do things for them as adults, a line experts say must be drawn at the office door.

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