The growing prevalence of multigenerational workforces has fundamentally reshaped how leadership effectiveness and employee engagement should be understood in contemporary organizations. Employees from Baby Boomer, Generation X, Millennial, and Generation Z cohorts increasingly work together for extended periods, bringing distinct expectations regarding work values, communication, feedback, and career development. At the same time, employee engagement has become a strategic priority for organizations seeking resilience, innovation, and sustainable performance in volatile and uncertain environments. Despite extensive research linking leadership styles to engagement outcomes, much of the existing literature continues to rely on universal leadership prescriptions and underestimates the role of generational context in shaping engagement responses. This paper addresses this limitation by reconceptualizing leadership effectiveness as a problem of generational alignment rather than leadership style superiority. Drawing on recent advances in employee engagement research, leadership theory, and studies of age-diverse workforces, the paper develops a generation-centered leadership–engagement framework that explains how alignment between leadership behaviors and generational expectations mediates engagement outcomes. The framework identifies four core dimensions of generational expectations—work values, communication preferences, feedback and recognition need, and career orientations—and positions leadership styles as adaptive mechanisms that translate organizational intent into cohort-specific engagement experiences. The paper makes three contributions. First, it advances engagement theory by framing engagement as a relational and context-dependent outcome rather than a stable individual attribute. Second, it extends leadership theory by shifting attention from universal leadership styles to leadership–context fit in multigenerational settings. Third, it offers practical implications for leadership development and human resource strategy by emphasizing diagnostic capability, behavioral flexibility, and generation-aware leadership practices. Overall, the study provides an updated theoretical foundation for understanding and managing employee engagement in increasingly age-diverse organizations
Mohammed et al. (Thu,) studied this question.