Everyone Wants Better. But Do We Even Agree on What “Better” Means?
Lately, one thing keeps popping up in conversations:
Business owners saying, “Finding the right talent is harder than ever.”
Meanwhile employees are saying, “Work-life balance matters more than anything.”
And social media? Constantly screaming:
“Protect your peace.”
“Set boundaries.”
“You deserve better.”
But… what exactly is “better”?

We’re living in the era of social fatigue, where everyone is tired, overstimulated, emotionally aware, burned out, healing, setting boundaries, chasing purpose, and somehow still expected to perform at 100%. There’s barely a clear right or wrong anymore — only perspectives trying to survive.
Recently, I sat down with a few business owners who shared the same frustration:
Managers with impressive titles, but little ownership. Hard to reach during emergencies. Minimal initiative. Strong at delegating, weak at problem solving.
And honestly? I paused.
Because I also understand the other side.
The younger workforce today grew up differently. They watched millennials glorify burnout, hustle culture, unpaid overtime, and sacrificing mental health “for passion.” So naturally, Gen Z came into the workforce asking:
“Why should work consume my entire life?”
Fair question.
But here’s the thing:
The gap between generations is getting wider because both sides are speaking different professional languages.
For leaders and business owners:
You can’t expect Gen Z to behave exactly like millennials did. The world changed. Priorities changed. The definition of success changed. You need to pick your battles. Do you want creativity, adaptability, and bold ideas? Or resilience, loyalty, and operational endurance? Because every generation comes with different strengths — and different trade-offs.
There’s no more “one package fits all.”
And for employees:
Master your craft. Seriously.
Don’t get too comfortable too early. The world moves fast. The title that feels secure today can become irrelevant tomorrow. Build multiple skills. Stay curious. Learn how the business actually works beyond your job desk.
And when you work with someone more experienced than you? Don’t immediately see them as intimidating. Treat them as a walking case study. Observe how they think, solve problems, communicate under pressure, and make decisions. Be an empty cup sometimes. Good attitude and willingness to learn will open doors faster than arrogance ever will.

The F&B industry especially has changed dramatically.
Ten years ago, companies held almost all the power.
Now? Talent has a voice too.
Employees review companies publicly. Companies review employees quietly. Workplace culture becomes content. Boundaries become negotiation points. Salaries become transparent. Everyone is watching everyone.
Honestly? It’s kind of exciting.
And slightly terrifying at the same time.
Maybe we’re evolving.
Or maybe we’re all still figuring out how to work with each other in a world that keeps changing faster than people can emotionally adapt.

