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Internet Basics

Online Commodities

Consumer and Creator

1. Creator = Consumer

2. The Active Consumer

3. “Creator-GTM”

3.A. Where the Viral Things Are

4. The Anonymous Economy

5. Pre-founder: People-focused investing

Content is King -- Bill Gates, 1997

Things To Do.

Work to Be Done

Statements; No Mission

⬜ Creator Financing

Untraditional Talent

Villains/Heroes, Love/Technology

Creator Extras

A Spectrum of Influence

Influencing Influencers

Investment

Total Content Market (TCM)/Content TAM (C-TAM)

“Organic” = unpaid?

Rethinking Consumer LTV

Introducing: On-Page Collaboration, LiveWriting, anti-Press Publish

VC Managers: Finding your style

Women’s Consumer (2022)

Translation

“GenZ”

Personal Journal

An intro to Personal Journal

Alcohol and VC

How to be Jealous

Not On Your Side

“Pedigree”

“Levers”

“Cleanup”

“Examples”

My love letter to Journalists

Unfortunately

Why I dropped out

Advice for a Y1/Y2 woman in VC

Advice for a Y3 woman in VC

Women and Wikipedia

Manifesto

Dating in Your Industry

Invest in the Opposition

Forced Content.

Me & Paul

Very Specific Advice

Young People

Content vs. Journalism

To Be Free

<aside> ⚡ Tell me your thoughts

</aside>

© EM 2024

1. Transitioning into the modern workforce

Most students go to college for the chance of better employment.

But the bar set for entry-level employees is getting higher every day. Most professional entry-level jobs are requiring at least a few years of experience. On average, they need 1-3 years. Traditional internships last three months. So the average college student would need to take four total internships.

In reality, 60% of students take an internship while they are in college. 27% take two and 13% take three.

Internships in 2020:

In short, they’re burnt out. More than half of 18-to 25-year-olds are considered quitting their jobs in the almost-entirely virtual workforce. They also hate traditional remote work. Instead, they’ve decided to become half of the freelancing economy. Opting for better pay and flexible hours.

Still, according to The Workforce Institute, despite the boom in the freelance economy, Gen Zers still hesitate to go all-in on untraditional workplaces (full-time freelance work), with top reasons including unwillingness to give up the stability (47%), predictable pay (46%), workplace structure (26%) and health benefits (26%) associated with “traditional” work.

This leads us to believe that there are still multiple factors up in the air on how long it will take for a young person to decide on planning for a fully gig-driven career, since traditional paths and the cultures that come with them need significant improvement in order to retain Gen Z talent. One company I’m excited about that is looking to optimize workforce development programs is Symba (a platform engaging and tracking temporary and new early-career hires.)

3. What they’re doing about it

What they are doing about it: There are a few ways that GenZ are taking matters into their own hands to tackle an unhappy and forever-changing work environment:

These practices can be valuable to both the company and the employee by helping the company understand whether an individual is uniquely suited for the job, while also ensuring the hiring process is tailored to Gen Z through digitally-native experiences.