Alastair Greener Generationally Speaking

Alastair Greener

Engaging conversations around navigating generational communication

  1. 5d ago

    Cultural Intelligence Across Generations: How to Lead Across the Divide

    Alastair welcomes Victoria Rennoldson, a multi-award-winning global leadership coach, international speaker, bestselling author, and podcast host specialising in strategic communication and cultural intelligence. A cusp Millennial who began her career at Boots before founding her own business, Victoria now works with leaders and organisations worldwide, helping them navigate the communication challenges that arise when different generations, nationalities, and organisational cultures collide. In this episode, Victoria and Alastair explore what today's multigenerational boardrooms are really grappling with, from the rise of younger leaders in their mid-30s, to the frustration of Gen Z employees who feel flexibility is applied unfairly, to the question of what actually gets people back into the office (hint: it's not pizza Fridays or beanbags). Victoria introduces her Cultural Intelligence framework, explains why curiosity is the essential starting point for any cross-generational relationship, and shares what vulnerable, human leadership truly looks like in practice. Victoria Rennoldson Takeaways: Cultural intelligence (CQ) starts with curiosity — genuinely wanting to understand someone's perspective before drawing conclusions about their generation, culture, or valuesDon't confuse generational labels with individual identity: see the person in front of you, not just the stereotypeYounger generations expect their leaders to show a human side — vulnerability, including simply saying 'I don't know, but we'll find out together', builds far more trust than projecting certaintyHybrid working has become the primary generational flashpoint: flexibility must be applied equitably or it becomes a source of deep resentmentWhat genuinely brings people together in the office is authentic cultural exchange (e.g., bring-a-cultural-dish events) — not surface-level perksLeadership styles are shifting rapidly: organisations must equip managers to lead in flatter, more transparent, psychologically safe ways, not just promote those who did well under the old modelAdvising young people on careers: focus on passion and transferable skills — the specific jobs that will exist in 10 years are impossible to predictVictoria Rennoldson Links https://culturecuppa.com/bookhttps://linkedin.com/in/victoria-rennoldsonhttps://culturecuppa.com/podcast/ Generationally Speaking Links: Generationally Speaking Website Generationally Speaking on LinkedIn Alastair on LinkedIn

    34 min
  2. May 12

    Millennials, Sport, and the Sandwich Generation

    Alastair is joined by International archer and Civic Engagement Manager Lizzy Rees who reflects on growing up in a household of five millennials, competing at elite level sport, and working across generations at university. Lizzy shares insights on how sport funding evolved post-Lottery investment, how Gen Z students engage differently, and why millennials are navigating delayed milestones while becoming the dominant workplace generation. With Alastair she explores communication shifts, values-driven students, and how sport can bridge generational divides. Highlights include: Growing up in a highly structured millennial householdThe transformation of UK sport funding and athlete wellbeingWhy Gen Z won’t show up just for free pizzaThe realities of hybrid communication across generationsMillennials approaching “sandwich generation” responsibilitiesLizzy Rees Takeaways: Structure builds discipline — but freedom builds resilienceGen Z are highly values-driven and boundary-awareUniversities must adapt communication methods constantlySport’s social value now rivals its competitive valueCross-generational understanding requires stepping outside comfort zonesLizzy Rees Links Lizzy on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/lizzy-rees/ Lizzy on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/lizzy_does_archery/ Generationally Speaking Links: Generationally Speaking Website Generationally Speaking on LinkedIn Alastair on LinkedIn

    33 min
  3. Apr 14

    Gen X Raising Gen Z: Anxiety, Schools and Smartphones

    In this episode Emma Clark joins Alastair live from Australia to explore rising anxiety inschools, generational differences in parenting, and the reality behind Australia’s under-16social media ban.A former English teacher and now co-founder of Anxiety Uncovered, Emma shares herdeeply personal story of childhood trauma, high-functioning anxiety, eventual burnout andhow that journey now shapes her work supporting young people.Emma and Alastair unpack what’s really happening in schools in 2026, whether the socialmedia ban for under 16s in Australia is working in practice, and how parents and educatorscan better bridge the generational divide. 5 Highlights Emma’s powerful upbringing story and the long shadow of high-functioning anxietyWhy schools today are seeing unprecedented levels of anxiety-related absenceThe reality of Australia’s social media ban and how easily it’s bypassedThe generational shift in how young people talk about mental healthThe “Three H’s” framework: Held, Helped, or HeardEmma Clark Takeaways: Anxiety doesn’t need to be “severe” to deserve attentionGen Z’s openness about mental health reduces stigma across generationsBlanket bans on social media may miss deeper structural issuesParents need education about the digital world — not just restrictionsBridging generational gaps often starts with asking what support someone actually wantsEmma Clark Linkswww.anxietyuncovered.comhttps://www.instagram.com/anxietyuncovered/https://www.instagram.com/emma.j.clark/Generationally Speaking Links:Generationally Speaking Website Generationally Speaking on LinkedIn Alastair on LinkedIn

    39 min
  4. Mar 3

    Gen Z, Graduates, and Getting Ready for the Real World

    Alastair speaks with higher education professional Charlotte Marshall about what student life and employability really look like right now. From supporting “hard to reach” students to preparing Gen Z for a workplace that doesn’t come with pastoral support, Charlotte offers a grounded view of the transition from education to employment. The conversation progresses to collaboration, communication across generations, the emotional weight of rejection in early careers, and Charlotte’s one piece of advice that cuts across age groups. That is to not take it personally. Highlights The idea of being a “peak millennial” who is fluent in changeWhat universities can and can’t realistically do to prepare students for workWhy the workplace feels harsher than education (and why that’s not always bad)AI is a useful tool, but not the answer to everythingThe emotional cost of modern job huntingCharlotte Marshall Takeaways: Collaboration is a skill you practise, not a personality traitRejection is structural, not personal and resilience comes from repetitionMiscommunication is usually clumsy, not maliciousSupport structures help, but self-management still mattersCuriosity and respect are the fastest route to generational understandingCharlotte Marshall Links https://www.linkedin.com/in/charlotte-marshall-050614194/ https://www.linkedin.com/school/bath-spa-university/ Generationally Speaking Links: Generationally Speaking Website Generationally Speaking on LinkedIn Alastair on LinkedIn

    31 min

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Engaging conversations around navigating generational communication