close

search for: diversity

Why “The Human Factor” Should Be the Top Future of Work Focus for 2023

The concept of “humanity in the workplace” is not entirely new. While there are plenty of leaders that merely view their workforce as numbers and faceless drivers of productivity, there are also many leaders that prioritize the physical and mental wellbeing of their talent. So, what sets aside 2023 as an outlier for focusing on these attributes more so than in months past?

As the COVID-19 pandemic expanded and ultimately disrupted billions of lives, many workers used this time as an opportunity for personal introspection, reevaluating their goals in life and at work (and their career journeys to date). Workers newly entrusted within their organizations also felt empowered to take ownership of their careers. Many discovered renewed passions for social causes, a need for work-life integration, and career journeys that defined their sense of self. Those pursuits began playing out at the end of 2021 — referred to as “The Great Resignation” — and continued throughout most of 2022. The millions of workers who left their jobs during this period sent a message to their employers that a new set of workplace criteria was being considered. Issues like empathy, diversity, equity, inclusion, and other business culture considerations were identified as critical needs of the new-normal enterprise. Suddenly the need for a strategy to develop, communicate, and realize corporate values became an important way to retain current talent and attract new workers.

This sets the stage for 2023 as a critical year for “the human factor,” as businesses now have to contend with managing through economic uncertainty, an increasingly-tightening labor market, and a delicate balance between hanging onto pandemic-era reliance on remote and hybrid workplace models and desiring workers to return to in-person collaboration. Simply put: leading with a human edge might be the only way for enterprises to truly enhance talent retention while improving the ways they get work done in a challenging business environment.

Throughout the past 18 or so months, many business leaders were anxious to call their workforce back to the office out of fear of waning productivity and a loss of visibility and control over their teams. What they discovered, however, was a sense of empowerment that had been missing from the ranks of professionals for far too long; while compensation and benefits will always, always be critical factors in selecting (or staying at) a job, aspects such as flexibility, better working conditions, transparency into career journeys, etc. became top-of-mind and non-negotiable attributes of their roles. While we know this as “The Great Resignation,” this was, in fact, a true “talent revolution” that signaled a new era of work and labor.

Throw all of these concepts into a blender marked “2023” and what we get is a workplace environment that requires so much more than just appreciation and empathy. Leadership in the year ahead does not just need to implement more humanity, it requires it to truly be effective in what would be (yet another) watershed year for the business arena.

While not all industries fear the specter of a recession, there are many workers are shifting their mindsets from “revolution” to “survival,” a sharp turn from the months past when, on average, over four million professionals voluntarily resigned from their positions for a 16-month period. This type of thinking can wreak havoc on already-stressed professionals who are facing burnout and wellness issues, leaving leaders with only one option: infuse humanity into core leaderships strategies in order to develop a stable workplace that is supportive of its talent.

“The human factor” has been oft-discussed since the pandemic began. Many of us faced personal reawakening in the face of mortality and sickness, watching as the world faced a public health crisis unlike anything we had experienced before. People reevaluated their lives and the role of their careers as part of their identities, meaning that there was much more at stake than just “work.” Workers desired purpose, craved flexibility, and wanted an overall sense of alignment between their human personas and workplace characters. This translated into the need for business leaders to be more human in their management approaches.

Which, of course, leads us to a new year and new vision. Upcoming Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange research found that nearly 70% of businesses see worker burnout as a core challenge, in addition to another 74% who perceive recession risks as a driver for worker anxiety. This all means that leaders have to strike a balance between managing costs and driving productivity and ensuring that they emotionally support their talent in a more deliberate and meaningful way. Empathy-infused management, flexible workplace options, more appreciation, and enhancing worker wellness and wellbeing (especially mental health) are all critical attributes in this regard.

However, there is one overarching strategy that leaders can adopt to ensure that their workforce is engaged, productive, rested, and stable in 2023: place humanity in the center of all business strategies. By doing so, enterprises will create a workplace environment in which talent feels trusted and valued. In the wake of uncertainty, this is the most powerful approach of all.

read more

BEST OF 2022: The “Heart” of Workplace Culture

[The Future of Work Exchange will be back next week with all-new content and insights to kick off the new year. Until then, enjoy our “Best Of” series that revisits some of our most-read articles from 2022.]

Earlier this year, the Future of Work Exchange featured a piece that discussed why the Future of Work movement required more humanity:

“This is where the “human element” enters the picture. Today’s business leaders don’t have to wrap every one of their approaches in a sheen of empathy, they just need to integrate more humanity into how they manage and structure their workforce, as well as how the overall enterprise gets work done. This transformative strategy towards leadership requires a bit of “reimagination” and a dedication to emotions and being purposeful with those emotions.”

Today’s business leaders have been bombarded with recommendations from both sides of the Future of Work coin, feeling they must improve their technology utilization and acumen and enhance they way they manage and lead. It’s the type of pressure that can be too much to bear, especially considering that 1) we’re still in the midst of a pandemic, 2) there’s a war raging on the other side of the world that is both a humanitarian and economic crisis, 3) supply chain disruptions are still the norm, and, of course, 4) a tight and competitive labor market is one giant staffing nightmare (hello, Great Resettling!).

But, the truth is this: no matter how much like it feels we’ve returned to “normal” in some aspects of our lives (back to concerts? Movies? Restaurants?), the business arena is one that will forever be altered by the many Future of Work accelerants that transformed it over the past near-26 months. And it cannot be said loudly enough: the workplace itself has changed and must continue to change in the months ahead.

There’s a “heart” in the center of every organization, one that beats in tune with the way the enterprise treats its workforce, partners, suppliers, and customers. A once-in-a-lifetime pandemic forced us, as people, to give more heart to ourselves and each other. We’ve seen this in parallel with many businesses around the world…but there are too many out there that haven’t bought into this concept. The Future of Work, in 2022, is about empathy. It’s about emotional intelligence. It’s about the humanity within ourselves, our leadership, and our workforce. It’s about the way we treat each other when things are great…and when things aren’t so great.

That beating heart at the center is reflected in workplace culture. It’s reinforced by the way leaders allow staff the flexibility they need to get work done and be normal, functioning humans, parents, caregivers. We’ve talked about conscious leadership, empathy-led leadership, and other non-technological shifts that have welcomed the Future of Work into businesses across the world. The best workplace cultures are ones that prioritize enterprise values and support “beyond-perk” attributes for their staff, such as hybrid work models, true flexibility, and behaviors that reflect corporate, ethical, and social responsibility.

The heart of workplace culture must pump with purpose, fueling both leaders and workers alike with a sense of inclusion, diversity, and wellbeing. These non-technological attributes, when combined, form the foundation of a corporate culture that is appealing to new and existing workers, helping to redefine talent retention. And, critically, in a business arena in which approximately 43%-to-47% of talent operates remotely (according to Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange research), the permeation of a positive and human workplace culture means that even staff that aren’t in the physical location will benefit from this major shift in business leadership and corporate transformation.

read more

BEST OF 2022: “Perceptive Hiring” is the Future of Work

[The Future of Work Exchange will be back next week with all-new content and insights to kick off the new year. Until then, enjoy our “Best Of” series that revisits some of our most-read articles from 2022.]

The world of talent will never be the same. Entering Year Three of a pandemic that has transformed the way we all think about both business and our personal lives, the average enterprise cannot leverage what are now archaic means of hiring to find the necessary skillsets and expertise to thrive in an increasingly globalized corporate arena.

The Great Resignation continues unabated. The Talent Revolution is at hand, with workers across the world becoming more aware of their desire for flexibility, empathy, and purpose. Although unemployment is at a near-53-year low, businesses are finding it harder than ever to fill both tactical and strategic roles.

The hard truth we face as business leaders is this: it doesn’t matter how much we increase compensation or how many additional perks are bult into job offers. Workers today need more than “smart hiring” strategies for reachout, engagement, and negotiations. Those attributes that were mentioned above (flexibility, empathy, and purpose) are not going to be streamlined within what we call smart hiring.

We need more…so much more.

Enterprises today are flush with data and information. This is a critical, “table stakes” aspect of the new world of work, as the ability to harness powerful data from VMS, ATS, CRM, HRIS, direct sourcing, and other platform sources enable hiring managers and other business leaders with “smarter” talent engagement and talent acquisition capabilities. Advanced technology today provides executives with the necessary intelligence to understand who the best candidate may be for a particular role and project (by analyzing work history, expertise, skillsets, certifications, etc.), augmenting with additional data (such as diversity information) to present an ideal professional that should be hired.

In essence, this has always been a goal of “total talent management,” in which the very realm of total talent intelligence (gleaned from both contingent and FTE workforce management systems) assists hiring managers to make quicker decisions based on the knowledge of the company’s overall talent pool.

The above aspects (total talent, diversity, skillsets, expertise, etc.) are all complementary pieces to the new era of workforce engagement. Businesses frankly cannot survive in a truly disruptive labor market without these modes of talent intelligence, given that staffing shortages have become an unfortunate norm.

However, back to the point above about “needing more”: if we think about how far we’ve come in regards to splicing data into talent engagement, how innovative artificial intelligence and machine learning have come, and just how advanced our workforce management software systems are, it’s pretty incredible to think that we don’t have to spend days analyzing resumes and pontificating about the qualities of dozens of candidates for a single job. All of that work has been automated and augmented (the Future of Work, right?). If we could just take that a step further, take those processes and embed even more data and insights…what would happen?

We’d transform “smart hiring” into “perceptive hiring,” in which more than just workforce history, skillsets, and expertise factor into a candidate being matched to a job or position. There are so many factors that play into the human elements of today’s business professionals, including their soft skills, workplace preferences, culture, and other elements of candidates as people and not just profiles on a screen.

How can we ensure that 1) the candidate will adapt and/or evolve to the enterprise’s culture, or, 2) that the business is a great cultural fit for the candidate? It’s not a one-way street anymore; we’re in the middle of a Talent Revolution that has resulted in workers becoming the gatekeepers to their own professional futures. We’d perceive more from the candidates and their personas beyond the traditional measures of hiring. We need to continue thinking about the best possible ways to find and retain key talent, especially in the face of The Great Resignation, however, we should also want our workforce to be a product of, well, more.

Four-plus million people have been voluntarily leaving their jobs since October of last year…and it’s not just a compensation issue. Workers are humans, and humans can suffer from burnout, anxiety, and a lack of engagement with positions that don’t satisfy a larger purpose. The pandemic and its fallout changed many of us, changed the way we think, operate, and, most importantly, speculate about the future. Candidates want more than a well-paying gig…they want work with a purpose that satisfies something deeper.

If we could leverage AI, next-gen analytics, and new innovations to spark a deeper perception of candidates, we would have the ability to solve talent retention issues and ensure that the workforce was tethered to a workplace culture (as well as the work itself) that met these necessities. This profound perception of candidates, linked to the smart hiring strategies and technology we have today, will become a way to develop and foster a strong, engaged workforce in the face of evolving times.

In essence, perceptive hiring is not “this worker is the ideal fit for this role,” but rather “this person is the ideal fit for this role.”

read more

BEST OF 2022: Candidate-Centricity Should Be the Nexus of 2023 Hiring

[The Future of Work Exchange will be back next week with all-new content and insights to kick off the new year. Until then, enjoy our “Best Of” series that revisits some of our most-read articles from 2022.]

Sometimes it can be incredibly taxing on our minds to configure the many, many ways the Future of Work influences the way we live, the way we work, and the ways those two intersect. From new technology and innovative platforms to conscious leadership and overall business transformation, the very notion of the “future of how we work” involves so many intricacies that it can make our collective heads spin.

However, in a vacuum, we have to look at the future (and, in this case, the very near future) and configure specific aspects of corporate operations in such a way that they align with the external forces now driving success…or failure.

Talent has become the top competitive differentiator in a market that is increasingly globalized, unpredictable, and disruptive. Businesses that source the best talent, utilize that talent to get work done effectively, and retain that talent are always going to be the ones that thrive in a business arena that is evolving at a breakneck clip.

We’ve witnessed (and, more importantly, experienced) the highs and lows of talent engagement, hiring, and talent acquisition over the past two-plus years: pandemic-led layoffs, the rise of workforce agility, The Great Resignation, The Great Resettling, quiet quitting, quiet firing, and worker empowerment. It’s surely been a roller-coaster for talent acquisition execs, hiring managers, HR leaders, and other executives that hold some responsibility for workforce management within the typical organization.

At the end of the day, however, all of these talent-led transformations lead to one conclusion that should form the foundation of talent acquisition strategies in 2023: a candidate-centric model is the best path forward, considering the risks of an economic recession, continued global disruptions from war and supply chain issues, and, critically, the ramifications of the “talent revolution” that businesses have experienced since March 2020.

There are many reasons why running a candidate-centric hiring model makes sense in the year ahead:

  • Workers are done with being overpowered by their managers and employers when it comes to poor working conditions and a lack of appreciation.
  • Talented professionals have undergone a mental transformation during pandemic times that have forced them to reevaluate the impact of “work” and “career paths” on their personal lives as humans, leading to a desire for more purposeful work.
  • Workers desire true flexibility, not just a free weekly lunch or a ping-pong table in the break room. The flexibility for personal care, child care, elder care, etc. is all-important in today’s workforce; professionals crave the ability to attend their children’s’ events or harness the real power of remote and hybrid work to ensure that they have a proper work-life integration.
  • Candidates have more choices than ever before, regardless of the state of today’s economy. Businesses must stand out from the pack and offer a truly emotionally-engaging experience for their potential workers that leaves a real impression; will candidates gain a sense of trust, as well as an understanding of workplace and corporate culture?
  • Building on the above attribute, candidates desire a seamless and frictionless experience when applying for a job, negotiating terms, and following through the onboarding process. These may seem like more tactical aspects than strategic, but they go a long way towards developing a positive candidate experience for potential workers.
  • Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) is one of the most crucial elements of workforce management today. As frequently stated on the Future of Work Exchange Podcast, “A diverse talent pool is the deepest talent pool.” Candidates want to know that they will be part of a diverse workforce that also includes a truly inclusive workplace culture.

There’s more to developing a talent-oriented hiring strategy than just being committed to the candidate; enterprises must look to the aspects above and understand that, in a volatile labor market, they need to do so much more than they have ever done before to attract the best-fit, top-tier talent, skillsets, and expertise. The candidate experience is paramount and candidate-centricity hiring models are essential to thriving in 2023.

read more

The Six Trends That Will Shape The Future of Work in 2023 (On-Demand Webinar)

Last week, Ardent Partners and the Future of Work Exchange hosted an exclusive webcast focused on the six critical trends that will shape the Future of Work in 2023 and beyond. The Six Trends That Will Shape The Future of Work in 2023 featured an in-depth discussion on the various strategies, approaches, technology, functionality, and innovation that are set to pave the way for work optimization in the year ahead. The Exchange‘s Managing Director, Christopher J. Dwyer, discussed:

  • How “non-technological” strategies, such as diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I), will have a massive impact.
  • Why direct sourcing and omni-channel talent acquisition will play major roles in 2023’s talent acquisition initiatives.
  • How the transformation of business leadership (including conscious leadership styles) will be required for workforce management.
  • The roles of extended workforce, VMS, direct sourcing, and MSP solutions on talent engagement and workforce management, and;
  • How businesses can best prepare to thrive in 2023 by leveraging the power of their talent and talent strategies.

Check out the on-demand edition of the webcast below, and be sure to participate in our new research study to gain complete access to our entire research calendar, which will include studies, reports, and thought leadership pieces centered around direct sourcing, total talent management, DE&I, HR’s role in the Future of Work, extended workforce management, and much, much more.

read more

The Future of Work Exchange Podcast, Episode 705: A Conversation with Athena Karp, CEO and Founder of HiredScore

An all-new episode of the Future of Work Exchange Podcast, sponsored by Beeline, features a discussion with Athena Karp, CEO and Founder of HiredScore. Athena and I discuss the power of artificial intelligence in talent technology, its impact on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I), and what lies ahead for the Future of Work movement in 2023.

Tune into Episode 705 of The Future of Work Exchange Podcast below, or subscribe on Apple Music, Spotify, Stitcher, or iHeartRadio.

read more

Future of Work Predictions for 2023 (Part II)

Welcome to an exclusive series here at the Future of Work Exchange that will feature predictions, insights, and trends for 2023 that will shape the Future of Work in the months ahead. We polled technology and solution provider executives and asked them how they believe the world of work and talent will continue to evolve in 2023 and beyond:

Kevin Akeroyd, CEO, Magnit

“2023 will mark the year when the three largest opportunities within contingent workforce management stop being ‘discussions’ and ‘buzz words’ and start gaining real adoption and driving real value for companies. The C-suite is finally paying attention and necessary corrections are coming fast in these critical areas:

  1. Direct Sourcing. In the current economic environment, saving $300-$400 million out of every $1 billion in staff augmentation contingent spend that goes to the disintermediary vs. to the talent or the enterprise’s bottom line is simply too much to continue to ignore.  
  2. SOW. This another area where $300-$400 million out of every $1 billion in professional services procurement contingent spend in known/acknowledged waste is simply too much to continue to ignore.
  3. Data/Analytics. The industry spends billions on annual survey data to edify FTE salaries, which is 50% of their workforce. They spend virtually nothing to edify Contingent Labor rates, which is the other 50% of their workforce. That has to, and will, change, starting in 2023.”

Amy Doyle, and Global Leader, Talent Solutions TAPFIN

“Talent practices and strategies will need to keep better pace with increasingly rapid evolution of work. What worked to get us here is quickly losing impact.  Mere execution – driven by growth of our ecosystems is not enough; organizations and solution partners alike are prioritizing the value of strategic partnerships in enabling agility and collaborative innovation.”

Kevin Poll, SVP of Strategy and Business Development, WorkLLama

“I think a big trend for 2023 will center around how companies are branding themselves to all talent and delivering similar experiences to candidates, regardless of how a person engages with the company (full-time, SOW, contractor, freelancer). As companies move towards an omni-channel talent acquisition strategy, a consistent candidate experience is critical. Not only does it increase engagement and referrals, but a positive candidate experience can also turn even rejected candidates into brand ambassadors, increasing the quality of future candidates and lowering cost-to-acquire. Without a total talent approach to finding, attracting, and nurturing candidates, companies lack a holistic talent strategy, which can hurt their bottom line.”

Sunil Bagai, CEO, Prosperix

“2023 will be about volatility as some companies downsize and others ramp up. Amidst this chaos, businesses will be seeking to increase workforce productivity in lieu of financial constraints, improve visibility and insights into their entire workforce, and find a balance between local, remote and offshore teams. 

A few tenets will remain strong in 2023, including the intentionality of remote work so it is flexible and meets the social and performance needs of the business. Additionally, the pursuit of meaningful work will be more prevalent as bad managers, lack of business transparency and poor culture drive individuals into new work environments that are more aligned and enriching.”

Jessica “JJ” Reeder,

“Productivity is passé. As the world faces a global crisis in employee engagement (Gallup reports only 20% of workers are engaged) and as many companies tighten their budgets, the question to ask is not “How much are we producing?” but “Are we producing the most effective outcomes?”

Organizations with people-first organizational cultures are attracting the world’s best talent by promising healthier work-life integration, flexible schedules, and an investment in professional development. What that translates to is employees exerting a greater sense of control over when, how, and where they work, but with a higher quality of output and higher probability of long-term retention.

In 2023, companies that want the best people doing their best work will understand the importance of planning, goal-setting, and focus on shared objectives. Rather than overworking people to the point of burnout, we’ll see more great leaders steering their teams toward a vision, and empowering them to reach it.”

Steve Dern, EVP of Talent Solutions, Evaluent

“Direct sourcing will include not only technology implementation, but the strategic inclusion of diversity EOR/AOR suppliers who can provide curation services, allowing traditional talent acquisition teams to focus on the internal hires that remain mission critical.  As direct sourcing yields benefits to evergreen hiring needs, these solutions will expand their reach across the enterprise.  A key component of this success will rely on the proactive marketing of the brand and culture of the organization, positioning itself as a destination of choice for both potential employees and contingent workers alike.”

read more

What Trends Will Shape the Future of Work in 2023?

It’s a great question, and, fortunately, the Future of Work Exchange has some answers. Join us on Wednesday, December 14 at 1pm ET for an exclusive webcast that will discuss the six major trends that will shape the Future of Work in the year ahead.

Next week, we’ll highlight the high-impact trends that promise to transform the way enterprises think about work, talent, leadership, and business operations. Tune into the webinar to learn:

  • How “non-technological” strategies, such as diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I), will have a massive impact.
  • Why direct sourcing and omni-channel talent acquisition will play major roles in 2023’s talent acquisition initiatives.
  • How the transformation of business leadership (including conscious leadership styles) will be required for workforce management.
  • The roles of extended workforce, VMS, direct sourcing, and MSP solutions on talent engagement and workforce management, and;
  • How businesses can best prepare to thrive in 2023 by leveraging the power of their talent and talent strategies.

Click here to register for next week’s event and join us for an exciting webinar that will highlight the trends that will impact how we work in 2023. Tune in!

read more

Key Providers for 2022: Talent Solutions TAPFIN

The Background:

The Future of Work dictates one main measure: enterprises must evolve alongside specific global factors or fail to thrive in an increasingly-dynamic business arena. The world of talent and work has certainly played a major role in this progression, with many attributes of workforce management, talent acquisition, and talent engagement forcing businesses to reimagine the ways they find, source, and manage their candidates and workers.

Today, businesses require robust solutions that enable them with the proper tools and strategies to tackle this new world of work; “traditional solutions” are no longer considered as such, with Managed Service Providers (MSP) evolving in parallel to the ecosystem around them by providing deeper offerings such as direct sourcing, DE&I support, advanced services procurement, and next-generation talent acquisition.

Enter Talent Solutions TAPFIN.

Why They Were Selected:

Powered by staffing giant Manpower Group and driven by over 40 years of industry-leading success, Talent Solutions TAPFIN has long been a dominant player in the workforce management landscape. Its robust blend of contingent workforce/MSP, RPO, and Right Management offerings positions the company as a leader in the extended workforce industry.

The solution’s innovative PowerSuite technology stack allows the company to effectively blend its Best-in-Class offerings, while TAPFIN’s powerful IntelliReach analytics portal and data visualizer converges artificial intelligence-led data with various third-party sources (client, suppliers, market, etc. data) to provide customers with scenario-building and predictive analytics capabilities.

An early dynamo in the direct sourcing space, Talent Solutions TAPFIN also offers robust services and technology in this arena through the PowerSuite stack and a comprehensive ecosystem of top direct sourcing platforms.

In Their Own Words:

ManpowerGroup® (NYSE: MAN), the leading global workforce solutions company, helps organizations transform in a fast-changing world of work by sourcing, assessing, developing and managing the talent that enables them to win. We develop innovative solutions for hundreds of thousands of organizations every year, providing them with skilled talent while finding meaningful, sustainable employment for millions of people across a wide range of industries and skills. Our expert family of brands – Manpower, Experis, and Talent Solutions – creates substantially more value for candidates and clients across more than 75 countries and territories and has done so for over 70 years. We are recognized consistently for our diversity – as a best place to work for Women, Inclusion, Equality, and Disability and in 2022 ManpowerGroup was named one of the World’s Most Ethical Companies for the 13th year – all confirming our position as the brand of choice for in-demand talent.

Talent Solutions TAPFIN brings together our RPO, TAPFIN, and Right Management offerings to deliver technology-enabled, innovative workforce solutions to our clients. Our integrated solutions provide end-to-end, data-driven solutions for talent attraction, acquisition, development and upskilling, and retention at scale.

The Outlook:

Talent Solutions TAPFIN is a pioneer in two distinct senses: 1) it is still considered an original powerhouse MSP-led organization that was one of the first distinct managed service leaders in the market decades ago, and, 2) it has evolved its offerings in such a way that it is a true, Future of Work-oriented MSP that can provide innovative value to the modern business in many meaningful ways.

TAPFIN was one of the first MSPs to go to market with a remote work offering when the COVID-19 pandemic hit; in today’s frenetic world of work, the ability for an MSP to blend remote and hybrid work support into the fabric of its core solutions (such as how users engage, source, onboard, and track remote candidates) is a pure differentiator.

In addition to the aforementioned offerings, other attributes of Talent Solutions TAPFIN’s arsenal such as its advanced services procurement offering (which blends internal expertise and vested partnership approaches to boost negotiation power and enhance supplier relationships) and embedded DE&I prove that the solution is the ideal complement to a Future of Work-led business world.

read more

Conscious Leadership as a Future of Work Transformation Attribute

The Future of Work Exchange (FOWX) and Ardent Partners recently hosted their complimentary webinar, The Five Things You MUST KNOW About the Future of Work, which discussed the critical capabilities that enterprises can unlock to truly optimize the way they address talent acquisition, extended workforce management, and, most importantly, work optimization.

Over the previous weeks, we’ve recapped four of the five things discussed during the event.

In our fifth and final installment this week, we’ll be exploring conscious leadership as a Future of Work centerpiece.

Business Leadership Dictates Business Transformation

It is now time to share another thing to know about the Future of Work, which is conscious business leadership. This aspect speaks to the fact that the Future of Work is more than technology. Ask 10 different people their definition of the Future of Work and they’ll give 10 different answers.

However, business leadership really dictates business transformation. Consider diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I). While there are technologies that aid in understanding how an enterprise performs in those areas, the mindset of such programs comes from strategic thinking. The same is true for purposeful work and flexibility. Technology often sits in the center with talent alongside it, but it’s the transformation of business thinking that is going to spark the next future state of work.

Leadership Recalibration

The next future state will lead to a rethinking of business leadership. More specifically, a reimagining of our business leaders’ minds to be more empathetic and flexible to understand the perspectives of workers. If business leaders are in tune with the emotions of their workforce, it allows them to understand how workers are feeling and how that is affecting their productivity. Analyzing what is occurring within worker emotions and how, as business leaders, can help and support, can supercharge the effectiveness of their overall leadership. When this occurs, both the talent and the leaders win.

Conscious Leadership Leads the Way

Conscious leadership is the only way forward. While a bold statement, it is true. Business leaders who are conscientious are going to retain their staff, build trust between themselves and their workforce, avoid aspects of “quiet quitting”, lead with empathy and flexibility, and understand the perspectives of their employees. And again, talent is the number one competitive differentiator. Conscious leadership is one of the ways we foster a better relationship with our teams.

Finally, leaders must enable true workplace flexibility to improve corporate culture. Rigidity is really the antithesis of the Future of Work. A flexible workplace culture where we are open, honest, and inclusive of people and their schedules, emotions, and purpose is the ideal corporate culture. This is the way every organization should be run. And ultimately, it is going to help organizations get work done in a much more efficient manner.

read more
1 2 3 4 5 6 11
Page 4 of 11