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What happens when four generations share one nonprofit workplace, but each generation brings a completely different relationship to work, authority, technology, flexibility, and purpose? In this eye-opening conversation, Julia Patrick sits down with Katie Warnock of Staffing Boutique to explore one of the most consequential workforce shifts facing nonprofit leaders right now: the rise of Gen Z in the sector. Katie explains that this next-generation workforce is digital-first, mission-aware, highly collaborative, and deeply resistant to outdated systems and top-down leadership habits. For nonprofit organizations, that creates both friction and opportunity. If your internal operations are clunky, if your leadership style depends on “because that’s how we’ve always done it,” or if your organization cannot connect daily work to visible impact, younger talent may not stay long. As Katie puts it, “Mission alignment is huge.” This discussion goes far beyond stereotypes about younger workers. Instead, it frames the issue as a strategic business matter for nonprofits. Retention, recruitment, management structure, workplace flexibility, and leadership communication all come into play. Katie makes a powerful distinction between work-life balance and work-life integration, noting that younger workers are not willing to sacrifice mental health, fitness, hobbies, or autonomy for a job title. They want work to fit into life, not life to be consumed by work. The conversation also reaches into fundraising and donor behavior. Julia and Katie connect the workforce conversation to the next wave of philanthropic engagement, pointing out that younger donors often want proof, performance, and measurable outcomes rather than emotional appeals alone. Katie says it plainly: “They want to know the numbers before they launch a project.” That same instinct shows up in how they evaluate employers, missions, and charitable giving. For nonprofit executives, this episode is a call to rethink leadership assumptions. The next generation is not waiting to adapt to legacy culture. Organizations that want to attract talent, retain strong performers, and earn long-term donor trust will need to respond with sharper systems, better communication, real flexibility, and visible evidence of impact. 00:00:00 Welcome and Katie Warnock Introduction 00:02:00 Who Is the Next Generation Workforce 00:03:27 Digital First Expectations and Tech Credibility 00:05:04 Real Time Information and Leadership Tension 00:08:26 Mission Alignment as a Retention Strategy 00:10:08 Portfolio Careers and Work Life Integration 00:12:32 Group Projects Collaboration and Managing Directives 00:17:10 Flexibility Remote Work and Performance Expectations 00:20:39 Why In Office Roles Are Harder to Fill 00:24:18 Data Driven Thinking and Younger Donor Expectations 00:27:15 What Nonprofits Must Change to Reach Gen Z #TheNonprofitShow #NonprofitStaffing #WorkforceStrategy