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Millennial managers have seen enough. They’re taking ‘sanity days,’ joking about who’ll be laid off next and trying to stay out of the ER from stress

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“I ended up in the ER,” says a senior communications director in his late 30s who works in the public sector, describing waking from a nightmare with chest pains, pins and needles in his left arm, and being short of breath. He was convinced he was having a heart attack. The director, who requested anonymity given the public-facing nature of his role, told Fortune that a doctor diagnosed him with a panic attack, while his therapist suggested it was related to burnout from stress at work, while stopping short of making that diagnosis.

“Essentially, he said, ‘Your org has culpability, they have done this to you.’”

As Fortune reported in July, millennials broke the managerial tipping point in 2025, as the cohort aged roughly 29 to 44 has displaced Gen X as the largest percentage of leaders in the workforce. But what does it mean for “the burnout generation” to be the ones in charge? They’ve found themselves leading in a climate dramatically different than the one their own bosses walked into—often with minimal mentorship or guidance along the way.

Over the past three months, Fortune has heard from more than a dozen millennial managers, coast to coast, private-sector to nonprofit, and found a once-optimistic cohort now sandwiched between old-guard expectations, a daily onslaught of modern pressures, and the promise and peril of new work trends. Several of them, like the comms director who visited the ER, requested anonymity to speak freely about their own struggles and those of their colleagues and organizations.

Some common refrains emerge. Millennials entered the workforce seeking to work for empathetic organizations and leaders who would care about them, and now they’re on the receiving end of a heightened version of those same expectations from Gen Z subordinates. They also revealed a crisis of mentorship, as few of them could reference healthy models of leadership or specific training regimens that equipped them for the responsibilities they have. On the front lines of what Glassdoor chief economist Daniel Zhao describes as an ongoing burnout crisis, millennial managers are forging new models of empathy and flexibility, but often at significant personal cost.

‘Not very well prepared’

“Millennials as a generation are not very well prepared to take over and … be in charge of all the workforces,” said Andrew Rotz, a financial wellness advisor at Fruitful, who contrasted his experience with his service in the U.S. Navy. As a junior officer in the military, he said, you get “hands-on, on-the-job training” to prepare you for being “in charge of larger and larger organizations.” In the private sector, it’s more like, “Oh, you’ve been here a while, you’re doing a good job, here’s a promotion. That doesn’t instill confidence in the rest of the organization.”

Rotz, who is in his late 30s, added that he’s not saying the military is a perfect model, citing “internal politics,” among other things, “but it’s much better thought out than any civilian process I’ve seen and mostly gets it correct.”

He urged employers to increase workplace transparency, as he has seen major decisions being made too often based on subjective and half-baked perspectives, or a more fully-thought-out process not being shared widely enough. In one instance, he described being responsible for hiring and training a team within roughly 45 days of his own start date with “zero insights into our objectives, metrics, goals” because he wasn’t privy to the strategy behind the org’s decisions. “It ended up being just blame, stress, and lack of accountability” when it became clear that the brand-new team wasn’t going to meet its deadlines. Rotz added that he was being activated from the Navy Reserves to Active Duty for a while and would likely be deployed overseas when this article was published.

Numerous interviewees described abandoned ambitions, or a reluctance to climb higher. “I have 0% interest in moving up,” said the comms director who visited the ER. “I manage with empathy and flexibility but above there’s still a stiff upper lip,” he said, describing a scenario where middle managers who care about their staff get caught in the middle on an “old-style attitude” and a younger cohort who unanimously reject the traditional career ladder. Of his Gen Z staff, he said, “They’ve all said, ‘I don’t want it.’” He said he worries about the next generation of leadership because the millennial management class is so burned out, and his own ambition has been capped: “Why do i want to spend my life in meetings?”

Jane Swift, the former governor of Massachusetts who currently leads Education at Work, a nonprofit focused on the intersection of higher education and the workforce, told Fortune she sees the erosion of structured training programs and successor planning as a crisis in the making: “So we’ve done away with all these training programs, and it all happened when we stopped having these job ladders, right?” Referencing her own political affiliation with the Republican Party and its cliches about instinctively siding with bosses, she said this is a nonpartisan issue, bigger than the old talking point of “blaming the workers” because “people wanted to change jobs all the time.”

Swift described a chicken-or-the-egg problem where employers stopped being loyal to employees but employees also figured out that they needed to job-hop to advance in the careers. The end result is no “job ladders” like the ones she encountered when she entered the workforce in the 1980s, where you come into a training program with a clear progression afterwards. “We’re not training people as managers, so we have to go and figure that out,” but entry-level training is lacking, too. She said she feels “crazy” talking to some business leaders, because “AI is eating” entry-level jobs, but most of them want people with a few years of experience first. “Nobody trained millennials to be managers,” she said, “because we did away with these training programs.”

Economic experts are increasingly raising the possibility that the ladder to success may be taking on a different shape in the 2020s. Alex Bryson of University College London, who focuses on Gen Z’s rising sense of “despair,” told Fortune that he stumbled on a striking quote in his work, although he hasn’t seen research to back it up more substantively: “Moving on up the ladder, it feels as if, perhaps, for some of them, somebody’s removed some of the rungs.”

Nick Maggiulli, chief operating officer at Ritholtz Wealth Management and author of the New York Times best-seller The Wealth Ladder, told Fortune that “something weird’s going on” because the economy “wasn’t built to handle this many people with this much money.” He said that the wealth ladder isn’t meant to be climbed forever, and you often need to step back and ask yourself: “Do I need to keep climbing? Is this right for me?”

An empty feeling

Several millennial managers described hit-the-ceiling moments where more money or status brought little additional happiness, and often more problems to solve. A 37-year-old radiology director at a health system in Massachusetts said he’s gotten multiple pay increases and makes double what he did 10 years ago, but after a certain monetary threshold around $150,000, he stopped feeling the impact of a higher income. “I still feel just the same … probably just as happy or unhappy.” (He also noted that inflation and his four kids have eaten into his wallet a fair amount.)

One particular promotion, he recalled, “sort of felt empty. I remember the day my boss brought me [the financial terms] and nothing felt different. I just thought, ‘I have more things to solve now, more problems to solve.’”

Across healthcare, education, tech, and non-profit sectors, managers described relentless cycles of attrition, regime change, and ever-ratcheting expectations from above. Some of this is pandemic-related. The comms director who went to the ER over stress said that he believes there was a need to “take the foot off the pedal” when the pandemic ended, but he saw an older generation of managers realizing, “Oh, that’s how hard they can work.” He said return-to-office mandates were designed for the lowest-performing 5% of the workforce instead of the top 5%, and this is backwards.

A software engineer who works in big tech described emotional whiplash coming out of the pandemic. “It’s been rough the last couple years, honestly, with layoffs and a lot of uncertainty, and return to office.” She said she had “some really difficult conversations” about the end of remote work, on top of which she has to maintain a notoriously high standard at what she described as a ruthless company. “Doing great at other companies is not enough for here.”

She said a gallows humor has set in among her managerial peers, as they openly talk about what entrepreneurial project they’ll start when their own inevitable layoff arrives. Their Slack channel is called #buying-small-biz, she said, and it grew as an offshoot of one where they talked about how much they hated the end of remote work policies. “We all have to be thinking about what’s next, and we’re like, ‘Okay, cool, what business are we gonna start? When inevitably, you know …. Everybody knows what’s coming.” Commenting on the plight of herself and fellow managers, she added: “We’re definitely squeezed.”

Sanity days

Kaylan, a 38-year-old manager who leads a team at a major healthcare system that assists with escalated claims and benefit issues, similarly recounted how persistent understaffing carried potential medical risk. Calling herself a “high achiever,” she said that when most of her team juggles three projects on any given day “at one point I was probably working on 15 different projects in some way, shape, or form.”

She said she stopped and took stock of her workload when her own director was admitted to the hospital. Referring to this person as a mentor-type figure who has supported her growth and her career, she said her director didn’t elaborate on their hospital visit, but she suspects it was from stress. “That made me open my eyes and say, ‘You know, I don’t want to burn myself out to the point where I’m so stressed that I, too, end up in the hospital.’” She said that she took that cue to begin working with a therapist and began talking about different ways to implement boundaries for a healthier way of working.

Given their close relationship, she said it was a “wake-up call” for both of them, and they joke about mental health, somewhat darkly. She says she has a lot of PTO days unused and “I jokingly tell my director that those are my sanity days. And he laughs, because he’s like, ‘Man, I should probably take some sanity days with you.’” She clarified that they are really just “mental health days,” but both she and her director are better at giving good advice than taking it. She said she thinks the workforce in general has to start doing something differently “so we don’t all end up in the hospital because of stress.”

The myth and trap of the ‘cool boss’

There’s also a peculiar tension in the millennial management style: Determined not to replicate the rigid, hierarchical approach of their Gen X and boomer predecessors, millennials often strive to be the “cool boss”—open, transparent, and supportive. But sources told Fortune this approach can muddy the waters between leadership and friendship, engendering new vulnerabilities.

The radiology director described the start of his managerial career in a manner similar to what Rotz described: someone who seemed capable who was elevated without much training or guidance. In his mid-20s, he said, he was “thrust into a leadership position somewhat against my will.” He described a lack of standout mentors while saying that he has had some good mentorship on the clinician side of his practice, and one boss in particular was great “but also had immense responsibilities and so our 1:1s become more operational and less about my personal growth.” This boss sent him to a leadership program that lasted six months and still impacts his management style today: “It was great.” As an individual contributor, though, he said he underwent a “horrible onboarding program” and he worked to fix that when he got into management himself.

The radiology director said he struggled for years with managing people who started as his peers, trying to balance being “the cool leader” and navigating the situation as a new authority figure. “I let the lines blur because I was able to retain some of the people who were still my peers,” he said. “I did have to start setting boundaries because one of my buddies [and direct reports] would text me, saying, ‘Hey, I’m hungover.’”

A senior engineer at Netflix distinguished between millennials who try to be a “cool boss or a friend boss” and their more reserved Gen X counterparts: “My millennial manager is much more in tune with the human side … but the boundary has always been clear.” He framed it as an issue with an “intense” workload that can stretch far beyond a traditional 9-to-5 commitment. “If we work late one day, we come to work later the next day, or something like that. It can be intense, because you end up thinking about work when you’re outside, because there’s so much happening.”

Heather Hagen, director of employment services at a nonprofit in Colorado, spoke positively about the mentorship she’s received and about leading with empathy for her team. Hagen said she’s fascinated by the idea that millennials wear a “mask” as managers, that sometimes slips off when they get tough with their reports. She said she chooses to take on more responsibilities at work so her staff doesn’t get burned out, but acknowledges that she’s creating a culture of heightened expectation for her reports. “Maybe that’s kind of self-serving in the end, because I know that if I have a solid team who’s doing the work, I don’t have to deal with other people’s burnout, or other people leaving.” She described it as “I want this for you, but also, like, if everything goes bad, it would really be a problem for me.”

Hagen said she learned earlier in her career when it was “kind of like the veil lifted.” A former executive director told her “the reality of the finances” would always determine management priorities, even at a non-profit. She added that she thinks many millennial managers understand this, but they still seem to want to “package it up in a way that feels more caring and genuine to our teams.”

Are you a millennial who’s a manager, or do you have a millennial for a manager? Fortune would love to hear from you: get in touch at nick.lichtenberg@consultant.fortune.com



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Meet 25 rising execs inside the Fortune 500

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Good morning. Major technology shifts often spur the rise of a new generation of leaders. Satya Nadella’s track record in building Microsoft’s cloud business earned him the top job in 2014. Arvind Krishna’s early bet on cloud and AI made him an obvious choice to run IBM, as did Ginni Rometty’s reputation in disruptive technologies before him. Doug McMillion’s push for e-commerce proved pivotal in becoming CEO of Walmart and transforming the retailer while there. Go back to 1989 and a digital-first Stan Bergman was champing at the bit to transform Henry Schein.

But technical savvy alone does not a leader make. For a glimpse of who’s likely to take the lead in this next era for the Fortune 500, check out theFortune Next to Lead list that’s out this morning. My colleague Ruth Umoh spent months talking to board directors, management consultants, leadership advisors, recruiters, and current and former CEOs to identify 25 rising executives inside the Fortune 500 who exhibit the skills and mindset of a new breed of CEO. 

Candidates were evaluated across several dimensions, from the scale and impact of their role with the enterprise to their vision and influence beyond the company. There’s Josh D’Amaro of Disney, who oversees a worldwide experiences division embarking on a $60 billion expansion of parks, resorts, cruise ships, and next-generation guest experiences. Within Microsoft, Scott Guthrie’s record at Azure has put him at the center of the company’s cloud and AI strategy. Donna Langley at NBCUniversal is redefining the studio’s multi-platform strategy, while General Motors’ Mark Reuss oversees a broad operational portfolio, from engineering and manufacturing to battery strategy and global markets, making him a central architect of GM’s long-term competitiveness. Keep an eye, too, on Marianne Lake of JPMorgan Chase and Kate Gutmann of UPS.

As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts on candidates you think deserve a spot, and what qualities you think will determine success in the next generation of Fortune 500 CEOs.

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

Top news

New jobs data

Today is a quirky jobs day that will shed some light on the state of the U.S. economy. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is releasing jobs numbers for November and October. But the data will be patchy because of disruptions caused by the government shutdown; there will be no October unemployment report, for instance. “We’re going to have to look at [the data] carefully and with a somewhat skeptical eye” because it may be “distorted by very technical factors,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said.

PayPal as a bank

PayPal is taking advantage of the Trump administration’s looser rules towards fintech companies and applying to become a bank. The payments company says the designation will allow it to lend more to small businesses. 

Introducing the U.S. ‘tech force’

The Trump Administration on Monday unveiled what it’s calling the U.S. “tech force” of 1,000 early career engineers and other specialists to research and develop AI and financial products for the federal government. Companies like Nvidia, Palantir, Amazon and Google will partner with the government on the initiative and second some of their own top talent to join its ranks. 

Ford’s EV bust

Ford will record a $19.5 billion impairment for the rollback of parts of its EV strategy. The Detroit carmaker is contending with lower-than-expected demand for EVs and plans to halt production of some pure electric vehicles in favor of hybrid models. 

Fed Chair finalists

President Trump could announce his pick for Fed chair before Christmas. Fortune’s Eleanor Pringle introduces us to the finalists and dissects their on-record opinions about the running of the central bank. This weekend, prediction markets were betting that the race had narrowed to a Kevin vs. Kevin contest

McKinsey gets lean

McKinsey is planning to shirk its non-client facing departments by about 10% in coming months as it contends with a slowdown in its traditional services and flatlining revenue. Governments in China and Saudi Arabia, for instance, have cut back on using consulting firms. 

Companies’ ‘93-7 split’ 

Bill Briggs, Deloitte’s chief technology officer, told Fortune’s Nick Lichtenberg that companies are pouring 93% of their AI budget into technology and only 7% into the people expected to use it. That lopsided investment is all wrong, Briggs says, since it focuses on the physical “ingredients” of AI and not the culture, workflow, and training needed to make the technology effective.

The markets

S&P 500 futures are down 0.25% this morning. The last session closed down 0.16%. STOXX Europe 600 was down 0.05% in early trading. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was down 0.46% in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 1.56%. China’s CSI 300 was down 1.2%. The South Korea KOSPI was down 2.24%. India’s NIFTY 50 was down 0.64%. Bitcoin went to $87K.

Around the watercooler

Google cofounder Sergey Brin said he was ‘spiraling’ before returning to work on Gemini—and staying retired ‘would’ve been a big mistake’ by Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Former Meta integrity chief says new report reveals ‘disappointing’ ad fraud epidemic at the social-media giant by Lily Mae Lazarus

‘I had to take 60 meetings’: Jeff Bezos says ‘the hardest thing I’ve ever done’ was raising the first million dollars of seed capital for Amazon by Dave Smith

What happens to old AI chips? They’re still put to good use and don’t depreciate that fast, analyst says by Jason Ma

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Claire Zillman and Lee Clifford.



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80% of American Christmas trees are fake. They’re also tariffed

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On a recent December day, Mark Latino and a handful of his workers spun sheets of vinyl into tinsel for Christmas tree branches. They worked on a custom-made machine that’s nearly a century old, churning out strands of bright silver tinsel along its 35-foot (10-meter) length.

Latino is the CEO of Lee Display, a Fairfield, California-based company that his great-grandfather founded in 1902. Back then, it specialized in handmade velvet and silk flowers for hats. Now, it’s one of the only companies in the United States that still makes artificial Christmas trees, producing around 10,000 each year.

Tariffs and trees

Tariffs shone a twinkling light this year on fake Christmas trees — and the extent to which America depends on other countries for its plastic fir trees.

Prices for fake trees rose 10% to 15% this year due to the new import taxes, according to the American Christmas Tree Association, a trade group. Tree sellers cut their orders and paid higher tariffs for the stock they brought in.

Despite those issues, tree companies say they aren’t likely to shift large-scale production back to the U.S. after decades in Asia. Fake trees are labor-intensive and require holiday lights and other components the U.S. doesn’t make, said Chris Butler, CEO of the National Tree Co., which sells more than 1 million artificial trees each year.

Americans are also very price-sensitive when it comes to holiday décor, Butler said.

“Putting a ‘Made in the U.S.A.’ sticker on the box won’t do any good if it’s twice as expensive,” Butler said. “If it’s 20% more expensive, it won’t sell.”

Americans prefer fake trees

About 80% of the U.S. residents who put up a Christmas tree this year planned to use a fake one, according to the American Christmas Tree Association. That percentage has been unchanged for at least 15 years.

Mac Harman, the founder and CEO of Balsam Brands, which sells hundreds of thousands of Balsam Hill trees each year, said Americans like to set up their trees on Thanksgiving and leave them up for weeks, which dries out fresh-cut trees. Others prefer fake trees because they’re allergic to the mold spores on real trees, he said.

Americans also like convenience; 80% of the fake trees sold each year have the lights already strung on them, Butler said.

That preference is one reason artificial tree production shifted away from the U.S., first to Thailand in the early 1990s and to China about a decade later. Winding lights around the branches is time-consuming and tedious, Harman said.

“Where are we going to get 15,000 people in America who want to string lights on Christmas trees?” Harman said.

Labor-intensive work

It takes an hour or two to make an artificial Christmas tree, from molding and cutting the needles to tying branches together and attaching the lights, Butler said. Workers in China, where 90% of fake trees are made, are paid $1.50 to $2 per hour, he said.

Harman said the workers who wrap the lights on Balsam Hill’s trees are so efficient “it’s like watching an Olympian.”

One of Balsam Brands’ Chinese partners employs 15,000 to 20,000 people; another in Indonesia has up to 10,000, he said. Many are seasonal workers, since orders for Christmas décor slow down between October and February.

Balsam Brands, which is based in Redwood City, California, studied whether it could make faux trees in Ohio during the first Trump administration, when President Donald Trump threatened -– but eventually delayed –- tariffs on imported Christmas décor, Harman said.

The company hired consultants and considered automating some work. But it concluded a tree that currently sells for $800 would cost $3,000 if it was made in the U.S. Harman said Balsam couldn’t even find a U.S. company to make the pair of gloves it includes in each box for fluffing out branches.

American-made trees

Lee Display employs three or four people for most of the year, adding more during the holiday rush to help with installations and displays. About half its business is making custom displays for companies such as Macy’s, while the other half is selling directly to consumers.

Latino said he likes that he can produce an order quickly instead of waiting for it to ship from overseas.

“You have more control over it. I like to think that everything here is either my fault or my mistake or my careful planning and skill,” he said.

The tariffs still affected Lee Display. Latino’s son James, who leads business development and marketing, said the company didn’t import lights or decorations from China this year and relied on items it already had in stock. It’s getting low on lights, so next year it will have to pay more to import them, he said.

Responding to tariffs

Some artificial tree companies are branching out so they’re less reliant on China. National Tree Co., which is based in Cranford, New Jersey, moved some manufacturing to Cambodia in 2024, and could source all its trees from outside China by next year if it wanted to, Butler said.

But diversifying their suppliers didn’t make those companies immune from the impact of tariffs either. In April, the Trump administration threatened a 49% tariff against products from Cambodia. That rate was eventually reduced to 19%. Tariffs on artificial trees from China also bounced around but now average 20%, according to the American Christmas Tree Association.

Butler said his company imported fewer trees this year and also raised prices by 10%. He said he used a lot of the money to offer customer discounts since demand was weak because of consumer worries about the economy.

“It’s a discretionary item. People say, ‘I can wait one more year,’” Butler said.

Balsam Brands cut its workforce by 10%, canceled travel, froze raises and even stopped serving lunch in the office once a week to absorb the impact of tariffs, Harman said. It also raised tree prices by 10%.

Harman said his sales are down 5% to 10% this year in the U.S. but up 10% or more in Germany, Australia, Canada and France. That tells him tariffs have decreased U.S. demand.

“If a merry Christmas is measured in how many decorations people put up, by that measure it’s going to be a slightly less merry Christmas,” he said.

___

AP Video Journalist Terry Chea contributed from Fairfield, California.



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Jim Carrey nearly quit ‘Grinch’ — Then the founder of SEAL Team Six came to the rescue

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For his role in the movie How the Grinch Stole Christmas, which came out in 2000, Jim Carrey’s tortuous costume and makeup had him on the verge of walking away from a $20 million paycheck.

In an interview with Vulture, the actor said the first day of makeup took eight hours. He nearly quit and suffered from panic attacks after having to wear painful green contacts, makeup that made him breathe through his mouth the whole time, and a full body suit made of itchy yak hair. But before he walked away, producer Brian Grazer hired the founder of SEAL Team Six to help Carrey suck it up.

“Richard Marcinko was a gentleman that trained CIA officers and special-ops people how to endure torture. He gave me a litany of things that I could do when I began to spiral. Like punch myself in the leg as hard as I can. Have a friend that I trust and punch him in the arm. Eat everything in sight. Changing patterns in the room,” Carrey told Vulture in the interview, which was published on Friday.

“If there’s a TV on when you start to spiral, turn it off and turn the radio on. Smoke cigarettes as much as possible. There are pictures of me as the Grinch sitting in a director’s chair with a long cigarette holder. I had to have the holder, because the yak hair would catch on fire if it got too close,” he added.

Carrey said he later learned that Marcinko was the founding officer of SEAL Team Six, the famed special-operations unit. Marcinko passed away at age 81 in December 2021.

Director Ron Howard and Grazer, who were also part of the Vulture interview, recalled Carrey struggling onset because of his Grinch costume.

Howard said the pain he endured was less physical than mental as the makeup was “destroying” Carrey’s skin. It was determined by medical professionals that Carrey couldn’t work in the makeup five days in a row, so he would have a day off or only be off-camera feeding dialogue on Wednesdays, he added.

“Jim started having panic attacks. I would see him lying down on the floor in between setups with a brown paper bag. Literally on the floor. He was miserable,” Howard said.

Carrey even offered to return his entire $20 million paycheck, with interest, Grazer said. But, instead Grazer found Marcinko. 

“I said, ‘Listen, you can quit on Monday, but just spend time with this guy on the weekend,’” Grazer said.



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