The Workforce Institute at Kronos Incorporated has released its annual predictions of the top trends that will impact the global workforce in the coming year.
Top five workforce predictions of 2020
Holistic employee wellness takes centre stage as total rewards strategies drive recruitment and retention in a tight economy. Competition to attract and retain top talent – both for office and frontline workers – will further compel employers to expand and innovate total rewards packages that support employees in and outside the workplace. The spotlight on mental health, financial wellness, childcare, shifts that work for all, and an individual’s sense of meaning at work will burn even brighter as Gen Z floods the workforce. Ever-increasing natural disasters and crises will challenge employers to prepare and respond with efficiency and compassion. As employees continue to expect more from their employers, organisations that take a proactive, equitable, and inclusive approach to supporting the entire individual will reap gains in productivity, engagement, and loyalty.
Modernising and regulating paid time off, family leave, and income stability will be hot button issues in a U.S. election year. Governments and employers alike are facing increased pressure to provide today’s multi-generational workforce with schedule flexibility, paid leave, and stable living wages. In 2020, policies will continue to be revised by both organisations and legislation with a focus on people-centric solutions that allow employees to celebrate, recover, manage life events, care for others, and grieve on their own timeline. Revising time-off policies and enacting creative scheduling solutions will arm organisations with a competitive edge for top talent in parts of the world with low unemployment while helping businesses comply with and stay ahead of growing regulation.
Guidelines, ground rules, and guardrails. Handling political discourse, activism, and the employer-employee relationship in divisive times. In a time of global economic and political turbulence, employers must determine how they’ll manage controversial and potentially divisive dynamics in the workplace. The groundswell of employee activism and looming political elections worldwide will challenge even the strongest corporate cultures. Organisations that lean into more formalised diversity, equity, and inclusion strategies – built on a workplace culture foundation that fosters respect, openness, and trust – while establishing guidelines and ground rules for discourse and behaviour at work will be better-suited to maintain a productive workplace. Corporate leaders will likely be called upon to set the tone for civility and tolerance from the top.
Alternative talent pools will fill the talent supply chain and help close the skills gap globally. Despite record unemployment in many countries, there are millions of unfilled jobs as employers yearn for qualified candidates. Organisations must broaden traditional talent pools to attract workers, including recruiting veterans, persons with disabilities, retirees, gig or contract workers, second-chance workers, and candidates with tangentially relevant skills. Employers should consider expanding open job descriptions to welcome those with non-traditional skills and work histories to apply. Many organisations will rethink their labour operating models to not only grow their workforce but support existing employee development through reskilling and multiskilling that can be utilised across the business, potentially granting workers more responsibilities and a healthier growth path.
Practical AI uses, access to data will narrow chasm between the HR ‘haves’ and ‘have nots.’ The call for human resources (HR) to be strategic has been ringing for years, however most organisations are still on the journey to HR agility and technological advancement. ‘The haves’ – who tend to be larger, sophisticated organisations – are experimenting with emerging technologies in advanced ways as many ‘have nots’ drown in manual work, unable to consider future of work automation. In 2020, this chasm can narrow for organisations that choose to modernise their workforce solutions and processes with a strong change management strategy. Those who walk before they run, taking baby steps to rethink the intersection of people and processes, will benefit most from practical AI applications that unburden managers and HR teams. More accurate labour forecasting, automated scheduling, and easier employee shift swapping will make a realistic difference in operations for all, while voice-enabled smart devices and chatbots will drive informed decisions for those further along the HR and workforce management maturity curve.
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