Employees speak up at Wayfair, Google. Have millennials killed being afraid of the boss?

Not happy with the leadership at your company?

You may not have to keep your mouth shut anymore. Gone are the days when speaking up got you automatically fired.

Employees, especially millennials, feel increasingly emboldened to publicly criticize their employers, organize protests and pursue change at the top on issues such as gender equality and immigration.

Among the latest examples: home goods seller Wayfair and technology companies Google and Amazon.

Wayfair walkout

Wayfair, the online furniture seller, came under fire this week from its employees for selling goods to a contractor that supplied a migrant detention center.

Hundreds of Wayfair workers protested the company's actions Wednesday in Boston's Copley Square after CEO Niraj Shah dismissed calls to refuse to do business with contractors of border detention camps along the U.S.-Mexico border.

“We don’t want our company to profit off of children being in concentration camps,” said Madeline Howard, 29, a project manager at Wayfair, during the rally. "We want them to have a code of ethics that blocks orders like this from happening again."

Madeline Howard, a Wayfair worker, at Wednesday's walkout on the company's recent $200,000 sale to a detention center contractor.
Madeline Howard, a Wayfair worker, at Wednesday's walkout on the company's recent $200,000 sale to a detention center contractor.

Like the Wayfair employees, 38% of American employees say they've "spoken up to support or criticize" their employer's "actions over a controversial issue that affects society," according to a study on employee activism released in May by communications and marketing firm Weber Shandwick.

Millennials are particularly bold, with 48% saying they've spoken up, compared with 33% of Generation X and 27% of baby boomers.

"Being an employee is actually a great gift to change the industry for which you work. If you want to invoke change, the best way to do so is to go into the industry where you want to see the change and fight for it."

"Employees, and particularly millennials, are very tied to the values of the organization and have expectations about their companies – and when they're frustrated, if their values are being violated, they speak up," said Leslie Gaines-Ross, chief reputation strategist of Weber Shandwick.

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Executives are noticing as employees agitate for change.

Amazon climate change

At Amazon, some 8,000 employees concerned about climate change have signed onto Amazon Employees for Climate Justice. The worker group won the support of two independent shareholder advisory services for a proposal pressing Amazon to account for its emissions and has continued to advocate for action since the company and investors rejected the resolution in May.