By 2020, the workplace will have undergone tremendous change to
transform into the most diverse that the world has ever seen,
characterised by multiple generations working together. Workers will
possess different skills, experiences, habits, and motivations, with a
larger percentage of these workers being freelancers and contractors
rather than full-time employees.
This is the employment picture painted by an Oxford Economics survey
sponsored by SAP, which takes a forward look at what employees and
executives around the globe think about topics such as workforce
development, the role of millennials, organisational leadership, and the
skills gap.
This survey dubbed “Workforce 2020” was conducted with 2 718
executives and 2 872 employees and has revealed that most companies are
not prepared to capitalise on the forthcoming workplace changes.
Businesses are struggling with managing talent, cultivating leadership,
encouraging learning, and understanding their employees. As a result,
these companies may not be making HR a top priority.
Regional outlook
Within EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa), companies and workers
are unprepared for the growing need for technology skills. In Kenya for
instance, only 53% of employees get ample training on workplace
technology, whilst a mere 37% have access to the latest technology.
“The current need for technology skills (data analytics, cloud,
mobile, social media) will only grow in future,” said Brett Parker, MD:
Southern Africa for SAP Africa. “This means that both employees and
businesses alike stand to benefit from better training and education
opportunities.”
Overall, executives are rethinking compensation, training, and human
resources technology, as 82% of companies within EMEA say they are
increasingly using contingent, intermittent, seasonal, or consultant
employees. However, only around 26% say that this requires changing HR
policy.
Focussing on the local workplace environment
At a local level, South African employees are concerned about their
jobs. They feel that there are not enough opportunities for advancement
in their careers, that their positions are either changing or becoming
obsolete and that the staffing levels at their companies are not
adequate.
The research highlighted the factors that help foster employee
loyalty and engagement within their companies, with these being higher
compensation, more comprehensive benefits, and assigning mentors to
staff. These sentiments are being echoed around EMEA as well, as 43% of
employees say higher compensation would increase loyalty and engagement
with their current job.
On the other side of the workplace coin, employers looking to retain
staff find success by offering bonuses and merit-based rewards,
supplemental training programs for individuals to have them develop new
and sought after skills, and benefit plans for the families of
employees.
Leadership has left the building
Within South Africa, both executives and employees agree that
leadership is lacking and also feel that local companies are not focused
enough on developing future leaders.
This, as only 44% of employees say that leadership at their companies
is equipped to lead their organisations to success, with just 40% of
executives believing the same.
The need for having the right leadership in place is further
highlighted by 44% of executives agreeing that their expansion plans for
growth markets will remain limited unless the right leadership is in
place.
The Millennial Misunderstanding
Millennials entering the workforce is one of the top trends impacting
on modern workforce strategy, and yet only 20% of South African
executives say that their companies give special attention to the
particular wants and needs of millennials.
This goes against the regional trend, as 50% of executives within
EMEA say they rely upon younger employees or recent graduates to fill
entry-level positions and more than half (54%) of executives say that
their companies’ workforce strategy has changed as a result of
millennials entering the workforce.
“Much has been written about how Millennials are different in their
use of technology, social networks and attitudes toward work, but the
‘Workforce 2020’ study shows that they are surprisingly similar to their
non-Millennial co-workers when it comes to workplace priorities,” added
Parker.
“For instance, compensation is viewed as an important benefit for
both millennials (60%) and non-millennials (65%). Additionally, both
millennials (39%) and non-millennials (33%) prioritise the meeting of
their income goals. This illustrates that although millennials are
different, they are not as different as companies may think.”
Source: itnewsafrica.com
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