TL;DR: A wave of high-performing 35-45 year-old (Y-Generation/Millennial) professionals are being laid off. This isn't a failure of their competence; it's a brutal "asset mismatch." The three core assets they spent a decade building—1. SOP-Driven Experience, 2. People-Management Skills, and 3. Corporate Loyalty—are being systemically devalued by AI and the "Company of One" mindset of Gen Z. This is a strategic breakdown of why your assets have become your biggest liabilities, and how to re-architect your value stack for the AI era.
James here, CEO of Mercury Technology Solutions.
A disturbing and counter-intuitive trend is becoming clear in the 2025 talent market: the most vulnerable professionals are no longer the inexperienced, but the experienced. We are seeing a wave of layoffs disproportionately targeting the 35-45 year-old cohort. These are not low-performers. These are the high-achieving, battle-hardened Millennials who, by all traditional metrics, should be at the peak of their value.
They are not being fired for incompetence. They are being overwritten.
The reason for this is a structural shift in what companies value. The very assets this generation was told to build, the assets that defined their careers, have become liabilities in the age of AI.
I call this the "Experience Curse." Let's deconstruct the three "poisoned assets" that are leading to this crisis.
Poison #1: The Curse of the Playbook (Experience)
The Millennial generation's greatest strength was their mastery of the "playbook" (SOP). We are the generation that learned to take a chaotic process, apply a framework, and build a stable, scalable system. We built the funnels, the nurture sequences, and the management dashboards. We prided ourselves on this hard-won experience.
In the eyes of Gen Z, this is just rigidity.
Gen Z grew up in a world where new platforms, tools, and models emerge daily. Their problem-solving process is not to optimize a known path; it is to find a new tool to bypass the path entirely.
When a Millennial leader sees a problem, they look to their successful playbook from three years ago. When a Gen Z professional sees the same problem, they ask, "What new AI tool was released this week that can just fly over this problem?"
In this new environment, your "experience" is making you slow. It has become Incumbency Inertia. Companies no longer want people who are "experienced." They want people whose learning speed makes experience disposable.
Poison #2: The Illusion of People Management (Management)
The second great Millennial achievement was the climb from individual contributor to "manager." We spent a decade learning the soft skills of how to lead teams, manage human friction, communicate up, and mentor down.
Then AI arrived.
- The Old Model: 1 Manager leads 10 human employees.
- The New Model: 1 "System Architect" (often a savvy Gen Z) directs 10 AI agents.
Project management, data analysis, content generation, and progress tracking—tasks that once required an entire team and a manager to coordinate it—can now be accomplished by a single individual with an automated system.
As I've said before, companies are realizing they don't need more "managers" (a cost center). They need more "leveraged individuals" (an efficiency multiplier).
You spent your career becoming an expert at managing people. But in the near future, the "people" (in the context of the task) may not need to be managed at all. That is the terrifying reality.
Poison #3: The Trap of Rented Loyalty (Loyalty)
This is the most dangerous poison of all. The Millennial generation was largely educated with the belief that loyalty to a company—viewing your job as a "career" or "calling"—would be rewarded. We were loyal to the brand.
This is the most dangerous collective illusion of our generation.
Gen Z operates on a different, far more resilient model. They are not loyal to any company. They are loyal only to themselves. They intuitively grasp the "Company of One" mindset that I have spoken of before. Their work is just one "client" in their personal services portfolio.
This is a fundamental shift in asset ownership:
- The Millennial's Value is a "Rented Asset": Their identity is tied to their employer ("I am a Director at Company X").
- The Gen Z's Value is an "Owned Asset": Their identity is independent ("I am a product strategist, currently consulting for Company X").
When the company's needs change, the Millennial loses their job, their "career," and often, their sense of self. The Gen Z professional simply loses a "client"—and immediately begins servicing the next one.
To put it in the most brutal, honest terms: You were loyal to the company, but the company was only loyal to your function. When that function became obsolete or automatable, your loyalty became worthless.
Gen Z, by being loyal only to themselves, is never obsolete. They are the company—a company that is agile, mobile, and constantly seeking new markets.
The Strategic Mandate: Your Personal Re-org
For every Millennial professional feeling the anxiety of this shift, the strategic directive is clear: Stop trying to save your job. Start building your own enterprise, even while you are still employed.
The game isn't just changing; it has already changed. It's time to build your new, non-obsolete asset stack:
- Turn Your Expertise into "Answer Assets": Your knowledge, when trapped inside your company, is a "rented asset." When you turn it into public-facing content—white papers, frameworks, analyses—it becomes an "Owned Asset" that builds your authority. This is the core of our GAIO philosophy.
- Build Your Skills into a "System": Stop being just the "doer." Become the "architect" of a system that can be scaled, automated, or taught.
- Build Your Name into a "Brand": Your personal name must become more valuable than your job title. This is the "Trust Layer" (SEVO) I've discussed. It is the only true, durable moat in the AI era.
The world is no longer rewarding the "Loyal Employee." It is rewarding the agile, resilient "Company of One." Which one will you be?
Mercury Technology Solutions: Accelerate Digitality.