A TikToker’s explanation of why Gen Z workers are being let go has gone viral, touching off a wider debate about workplace expectations, initiative, and what “doing your job” actually means. The video, posted by @littlearcsclub, argues that the core issue is not pay or generational attitude, but a fundamental misunderstanding of what initiative looks like in practice. The story gained traction when reported by the Daily Dot.
@littlearcsclub laid out her case with a straightforward example. An employee is asked to contact someone at another company to obtain documents needed for an upcoming meeting.
In one version, the worker sends the email, marks the task complete, and the documents never arrive. In the other, the employee follows up, tries alternate contact methods if needed, and ensures the documents actually land, all without being told to do so.
The debate quickly moved well beyond Gen Z
The TikToker was clear that the second employee did not work overtime or take on tasks outside their role. The distinction, she argued, is understanding that the assignment was never just to send an email but to secure the documents, and acting accordingly.
Responses on both TikTok and Reddit were largely positive, with many viewers crediting the video for clarifying something they had struggled to articulate. One commenter wrote, “I’m Gen Z about to get fired, and this video made me understand where I’m screwing up.”
An administrative assistant pushed back on the generational framing entirely, noting, “This isn’t just Gen Z, but also, there isn’t training happening anymore, people just expect you to know how to do everything without instruction.” This dynamic drew comparisons to other viral debates about unconventional workplace and classroom expectations, including one involving a teacher using a PS5 mid-lesson that divided the internet.
One Redditor cited a mentor’s maxim: “Your job is to empty the trash can. If I have to tell you the trash is full, you aren’t doing your job.”
Another, who works with college interns, noted the behavior is common among young workers but not universal, and can be addressed through proper training. They also pointed out that managers who react harshly to small mistakes create environments where employees avoid risk altogether, adding, “Initiative involves risk, and people won’t take risk without a sense of safety.”
Not everyone landed on a sympathetic read, amid broader online arguments about generational work habits that have been circulating on platforms like Reddit and X. Redditor u/Comprehensive-Ear283 wrote that among their Gen Z coworkers, the issue is not a lack of understanding but a lack of willingness: “I have to teach many of my coworkers what follow-through is and they still just refuse to do it, or they say, ‘it isn’t my job, that’s extra work.'”
Published: Mar 26, 2026 08:30 am