close

From time-to-time, the Future of Work Exchange will feature various thoughts and commentary on the evolving world of talent and work. One of Boston’s greatest sportswriters, Dan Shaughnessy, publishes a collection of various commentary on New England sports in The Boston Globe and calls it “picked-up pieces.” So, here are some picked-up pieces from across the industry, which we call “FOWX Notes,” on the Future of Work Exchange for the week ending August 27:

  • Now that the FDA has given full approval to the Pfizer vaccine (with Moderna’s vaccine expected to follow suit shortly), it gives more businesses the necessary leverage to mandate vaccines for its staff and workforce. With cases and hospitalizations soaring across the country, many businesses will err on the side of health and safety and begin to mandate that their employees (and contingent workers) be inoculated for in-person work. I fully expect an incredible amount of conversation about this topic in the months ahead as those that choose not to be vaccinated have to grapple with their beliefs versus their jobs.
  • There’s a question here that we’re missing, though, that may arise beginning in September: will boosters be mandated for those workers that are eight months past the date of their second Pfizer or Moderna jab (or their one-dose J&J vaccine)? A casual scroll through a personal Facebook feed tells us that there are some individuals that were open to being vaccinated months ago but will draw a hard line at a booster dose. Something to watch, indeed.
  • Worker wellness, well-being, and burnout are all very real and very counterproductive issues that are plaguing the business world today. The time has come for business leaders to truly prioritize worker wellness and mental health if they are also prioritizing productivity and better business outcomes, since the two sides cannot converge. With a return to school for working parents, it remains to be seen what types of disruption the Delta variant will unleash. This could add another stressful load to the remote workforce if there’s any type of return to the models that schools had to employ for the 2020-2021 year. Mental health is more important than ever, and businesses must be conscious of their wellness plans well into the latter months of the year (with empathy continuing to be at the forefront of core management approaches).
  • One thing that many businesses miss regarding the remote and hybrid work models is how they play into talent acquisition and talent engagement strategies. Remote work isn’t just a Future of Work transformation for the existing workforce, but also a valuable tool in how companies attract new, future talent. The days of early pandemic levels of unemployment are long gone (knock on wood) and “The Great Resignation” that has been ongoing since the spring is resulting into the re-emergence of the long-vaunted “war for talent.” Businesses that are beginning to think about return-to-office plans must keep in mind that, in a world where there if fierce competition for talent, they must offer more than compensatory perks if they are going to attract top-tier workers. Remote options are alluring to today’s highly-skilled workforce, and, many talent acquisition execs will quickly realize that the remote/hybrid models also enable access to new candidates that may not have been historically considered for roles based on their location.
  • Proposition 22 was the most expensive ballot measure in California’s history ($220 million, by some estimates) and was recently ruled unconstitutional by Alameda County Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch. Gig tech apps like Uber, Lyft, and others bankrolled the ballot measure, but the rebuke was a decision based on the fact that Prop 22 does not allow “gig workers” to collectively bargain or unionize (hence the “unconstitutional” ruling). Although nearly 60% of voters passed Prop 22 back in November during the general election (which is essentially an exemption to AB5, which was passed in 2019 as a measure to determine a worker’s status as an independent contractor or an employee), the ruling thrusts the measure back through the California court system, where it could take up to a year to reach the state’s Supreme Court. Within its ruling, the court stated that Prop 22 was more about the proponents’ economic interests as well as having a “divided, un-unionized workforce.” Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash are fuming and vowing to appeal, which will provide more fodder for discussion as Prop 22’s now-unconstitutional status slithers through the California court system well into 2022.
  • The upcoming Future of Work Exchange Report for 2021 (an Ardent Partners and FOWX research study) finds that the top Future of Work accelerant due to the pandemic was the increase in remote/hybrid work and distributed teams (noted by 72% of businesses), which is not surprising given the environment in which we now live and work. What was interesting and of note is that 70% of organizations that participated in our study also noted that greater digital transformation efforts were accelerated over the past year. Businesses learned very quickly that a flexible technological architecture was a necessity during evolving times, and even greater so as the global market faced incredible challenges. Whether it’s the automation of manual- and paper-based tasks (which became harder to execute in a remote environment), a deeper data-driven approach to core business functions, or a future-ready organization that is equipped to be more agile and dynamic in how it responds to the challenges of tomorrow, becoming a “digital enterprise” should be a top priority for today’s organizational leaders.
Tags : FOWX NotesHybrid ModelMental HealthRemote WorkWellnessWorker Wellbeing