Hi, my name’s Lizza. And I’m a mumager.
But not in the way you’d imagine. Or at least, how I pictured a mumager to behave: bribing a toddler with ice-cream (or in my two-year-old’s case, frozen bread – don’t ask, I don’t understand either) to do something cute for a video, in the hopes of that child going viral and becoming to TikTok what Justin Bieber was to YouTube.
That’s not what a mumager is. According to a recent Bustle article, as Millennials now find themselves in positions of power, the era of the mumager has arrived. This is a Millennial manager or boss, who feels responsible for the emotional wellbeing of her team in contrast to “the more authoritarian bosses of the Gen X or Boomer eras”. The coined term is a portmanteau of mum and manager, inspired by this viral TikTok vid where the Gen Z creator declared her love for Millennial bosses for “giving dream parents energy”.
@jennadevriesmusic #stitch with @joshuaturek Its giving dream parents energy. #millennialboss #millennialbosses #millennialsbelike #millennialsatwork #fyp ♬ original sound - JennaDeVries
Now before I go on, I should say that I’m not a fan of broad sweeping generalisations like this, and the term “mumager” sounds so patronising, especially when we all know there are a million different ways to “mum”.
But when I read that article, I realised…
Shit, whatever label you put on it, that’s me. I’m one of those Millennial managers.
That was me in my previous jobs, every time someone needed to offload about what was wrong at work or at home.
That was me every time I took on all of those problems, believing it was my responsibility to fix every one of those issues, even though an outsider could easily see it was not.