Horrible.<p><i>That generation, born between 1946 and 1964, had a collective fascination with butt-kicking, entrepreneurial achievement.</i><p>Look at where all the "butt-kicking" corporate warriors got us!<p><i>So-called millennials, born between mid 1970s and 1990s, have received a radically different message--one captured in part by President-elect Barack Obama's stance on the benefits of "spreading the wealth around."</i><p>The author seems to suggest that cleaning up the messes of power's previous custodians, as Barack Obama will have to do, couldn't <i>possibly</i> be preparation for anything useful in the corporate world.<p><i>Not that millennials are damaged goods. Corporate recruiters drool over them for their ability to adapt and fit into bureaucratic enterprises. Overachieving, nobody-tells-me-what-to-do entrepreneurial types don't go so gently into that good night.</i><p>I thought the complaint about our generation was that we had sharp elbows, demanding to assert our individualism at work and be treated "as colleagues rather than as subordinates".<p>If any generation is bureaucratically-inclined, it's the Baby Boomers. We've accepted that there's no point in climbing corporate ladders that are going to vanish as we attempt to traverse them.<p><i>Rather than seeking to come out on top in zero-sum games, millennials strive for consensus.</i><p>Is that a bad thing? Although driven by competition, isn't business supposed to be positive-sum? It's only "zero sum" in stagnant corporations that have given up on measuring and encouraging production and, instead, fall back on political success for allocating rewards.<p><i>Dr. Steven Berglas spent 25 years on the faculty of Harvard Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry. Today he coaches entrepreneurs, executives and other high-achievers.</i><p>So he's a professor and a life coach, and he's berating us for our lack of entrepreneurial spirit?