For more than 30 years, we have been working with people. And we have learned something that does not appear in any business manual: the best teams are not the ones whose members are most alike, but the ones that complement each other best.
A team made up of a single generation is comfortable. Predictable. Everyone speaks the same language, shares the same references, and thinks in similar ways. And that is precisely where the problem lies.
What Each Individual Brings Through Their Uniqueness
A professional with twenty years of industry experience can spot a problem before it becomes a crisis. They have seen market cycles, managed unexpected situations, and understand the nuances that no manual can teach. That expertise is invaluable.
A professional in their twenties brings something different: the ability to challenge established ideas without fear, digital agility, and a fresh perspective on processes we may have repeated for years without questioning why.
“Experience tells you something won’t work. Youth encourages you to try it anyway. And sometimes, it turns out it does work.”
Neither is always right, but together, they rarely get it wrong.
Why It Matters to Us
At Emsa, we work with strategic products in industries where mistakes are not an option. Precision matters. Experience matters. But so does the willingness to propose solutions that no one has tried before.
That is why we invest in intergenerational teams, not as a statement of intent, but as a business decision. When a senior professional and a junior colleague work on the same project, decisions become more robust, approaches more creative, and results far more difficult to challenge.
And there is something else: young talent grows faster when experienced role models are close by. Senior talent stays engaged and relevant when someone is there to ask the uncomfortable questions. Everyone benefits.
At Emsa, we believe that differences make us stronger.
That is what doing real chemistry means to us.
We Care about Talent.