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  <title>Mack Marston — The Next Generation, Unfiltered</title>
  <description>Episode Summary In this final installment of a multi-episode tradition, Cam sits down with his youngest son, Mack Marston, 19, days before Mack heads off to the University of Alabama. What starts as a father-son farewell turns into a remarkably candid window into how the next generation thinks about work, learning, responsibility, friendship, technology, and what a good life actually looks like. For business leaders, managers, and anyone hiring or leading young people today, this conversation is required listening.  About Mack Marston Mack is 19 years old, the youngest of four children, a recent high school graduate, and a former varsity football player. He starts at the University of Alabama in the fall, likely majoring in biology with an eye toward dentistry — or possibly finance and the markets, which he's already dabbling in. He works on a farm this summer, plays guitar, listens to Dire Straits and Pink Floyd, and has approximately 18 close friends from two different schools. He is, by any measure, well ahead of where most 19-year-olds are in self-awareness.  What Business Leaders Should Hear 1. He knows exactly how he learns — and it's not from a lecture. Mack articulates clearly that his best academic experiences came from teachers who varied their delivery: reading, writing on the board, hands-on practice, real-world application. When a teacher lectured exclusively, he disengaged — and so did everyone else. His AP Statistics teacher connected math to card games. His history teacher rotated methods daily. Those subjects stuck. The implication for leaders: Training programs, onboarding, and internal communication built around one-way information delivery will lose this generation fast. If you want them to retain it, vary the method. Connect it to something real. 2. Understanding beats memorization every time. Mack got a 95 or above in calculus not because he drilled formulas, but because he understood why the formula worked and what it was for. He explicitly distinguishes between understanding and rote retention — and has little confidence in the latter. The implication for leaders: Don't hand Gen Z a policy manual and expect compliance. Explain the reasoning. When they understand the &amp;quot;why,&amp;quot; they perform. When they don't, they disengage or work around it. 3. He's already self-managing and accountable — and he knows it. At his summer job this week, his coworkers unanimously pointed to Mack as the most responsible person on the team. He keeps track of everyone's hours and pay. He made his own lunch, did his own laundry, and cleaned his own room throughout high school. He was given increasing responsibility year by year at home and internalized it. The implication for leaders: This generation isn't allergic to responsibility — they're allergic to being handed responsibility without context or trust. Mack was given ownership gradually, and it built genuine accountability. Micromanagement will kill that. 4. Social intelligence is a core competency for him. Mack has 18 people he considers close friends — from two different high schools, built through introduction, genuine interest in meeting new people, and consistent follow-through. While his peers tend to stay within one group, Mack moves between them. He shakes hands when he walks in a room. He says &amp;quot;please&amp;quot; when he orders. He noticed — unprompted — that these small social signals matter in how people are perceived. The implication for leaders: Don't write off Gen Z as socially awkward or screen-addicted. Some of them — including the ones you want on your team — are building social capital deliberately and skillfully. Look for the ones who know how to enter a room. 5. He thinks AI will make the world dumber — and he's already navigating it. Mack describes classmates who use AI to write their papers, then run them through &amp;quot;humanizers&amp;quot; to fool detection software. He predicts AI will displace accounting and math-heavy roles. He also believes nursing and medicine will become more valuable precisely because patients want human touch, not machines. He's thinking ahead about where the work will be. The implication for leaders: The young people joining your workforce have already formed opinions about AI's role. The sharp ones — like Mack — are thinking about where human judgment and human presence remain irreplaceable. That's a valuable instinct to cultivate. 6. A good life, in his own words, is about comfortable stability and things to work on. When asked to describe a good life — not a successful one, a good one — Mack didn't describe a title, a salary, or a status symbol. He described: a job you don't hate, enough money to live without panic, meals on the table, hobbies that give you something to accomplish, and not worrying too much. He specifically named playing guitar, learning a new song, and doing things around the house as examples of what &amp;quot;working on something&amp;quot; means. The implication for leaders: This generation isn't as driven by prestige or promotions as the generations before them. They want to feel capable and engaged — at work and outside it. If your culture only rewards climbing, you may miss what actually motivates them.  Standout Moments   Mack's final play of his high school football career: caught a touchdown pass in the end zone with no time left, thrown by a 6'5&amp;quot;, 280-pound defensive lineman who was being tackled as he released the ball. Mack describes being immediately punched by his offensive linemen in celebration. &amp;quot;I kind of forget I did that,&amp;quot; he says.   On his Spotify listening age being calculated at 86 years old: &amp;quot;I just listen to old songs.&amp;quot; His musical heroes are Eric Clapton, Dire Straits, and Pink Floyd. Once he started playing guitar, he says, the old music started sounding better.   On what this family does that other families don't: &amp;quot;We clean our rooms before the house cleaners come.&amp;quot; (He offers this with complete sincerity.)   His bold prediction for college: a 3.8 GPA as a biology major. Cam is appropriately skeptical given the fraternity commitments ahead — and says so.    Key Takeaways for Managers and Leaders  Vary how you communicate and train. One-size delivery doesn't stick. Explain the reasoning, not just the rule. Understanding drives performance. Give responsibility gradually and genuinely. Watch what happens. Don't mistake quietness at home for disengagement everywhere. Mac is more animated with friends than with family — that's healthy, not concerning. Look for young people who shake hands, say please, and know how to enter a room. They exist. The best ones are already thinking about AI and automation more clearly than most adults in the room.  </description>
  <author_name>What's Working with Cam Marston</author_name>
  <author_url>http://www.whatsworkingcam.com</author_url>
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