As organizations look to create a Talent Advantage, they need to find ways to channel the workforce flow. Here are five things to keep in mind:
1. Talent flow and health
The interplay of foundational flow of talent and organizational talent health is defining the future race for talent. To channel the talent flow their way, organizations should focus on culture, total rewards and learning and development. Even as tenures are shorter and the workforce is more readily jumping to new companies to find what they value most, organizations have an opportunity to create an environment in which employees thrive while there and promote the organization to others. In addition, leaders should develop robust workforce planning, hiring and talent management tools to integrate market data for hiring and retention strategy.
2. Total compensation means more
Pay remains a concern of employees, but employee concerns are more nuanced and comprehensive, meaning employers need a more holistic and personalized view of rewards programs. Catering rewards offerings to the particular needs of employees by their stage of life, personal circumstances, or general preference, will improve the employee value proposition. Ultimately, an individual is grading compensation on the big picture: cash salaries in addition to rewards programs that recognize performance and address personal needs.
3. Work is untethered, but human connection holds organizations together
Offices and desks have moved from second personal spaces to social hubs. Employees may not have assigned seating and now look at the office as a shared space for teaming. More dispersed teams require the purpose of real estate to meet purpose of organization and people. Employers should evaluate their mix of work sites, utilization and space design to rationalize their footprint and maximize culture and location investments. They should also create a thoughtful approach leveraging mobility teams to enable work location flexibility with an exceptional experience, while being mindful of tax, legal and compliance considerations.
4. GenAI and work technology
The accelerated rate of GenAI adoption has shown general positivity around new technology influencing productivity. The employers that have been most willing to adopt GenAI are also seeing generally healthier talent flow. It’s important that organizations meet employees where they are with use of work technologies including and beyond GenAI, while working to personalize technology adoption for each role, recognizing the potential of productivity gains at all levels of the organization.
5. Skills needs are shifting, requiring new sources and strategies
The half-life of skills is shortening, requiring organizations to rethink ways to fill them. While employers might prefer internal learning and development programs, they should also consider external upskilling opportunities for employees who are more comfortable with third-party accreditation. Employers may also want to seek or create a pipeline to talent pools in other geographies, understanding the particular opportunities and risks that may create. Ultimately, organizations need to find the right constellation of internal and external ways to channel the right skills toward them.