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Key Providers for 2022: WorkLLama

The Background:

There are many slivers of the Future of Work movement that traverse beyond the concept of “work optimization.” In recent years, the very idea of “the evolution of talent” has translated into businesses harnessing the power of new and alternative talent sources while also tapping into the robust functionality of direct sourcing and digital staffing platforms.

Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange research has found, over the past two years, that the 1) development of talent communities/talent pools and 2) the initiation of direct sourcing programs are two of the top five priorities for enterprises as they think about how they address work and talent. To effectively achieve these goals and implement robust strategies and processes for direct sourcing, organizations require innovative technology and automation that can revolutionize the ways they engage, source, and manage top-tier talent.

Enter WorkLLama.

Why They Were Selected:

Before entering the enterprise market a few years ago, WorkLLama was battled-tested in the world of staffing; this time spent in that arena allowed the solution to hone its functionality and quickly become a dominant player in the direct sourcing technology marketplace. Through their continued progression, WorkLLama has become a major purveyor of the “Direct Sourcing 2.0” movement, in which advanced functionality, artificial intelligence, access to superior talent, an enhanced candidate experience, and the enablement of repeatable and scalable direct sourcing processes all contribute to a more advanced program.

“Direct Sourcing 2.0” follows the next generation of direct sourcing strategies and is fundamentally rooted in the linkage between key technological arenas, a renewed focus on the candidate experience, a seamless connection between talent pools and the projects and roles that require specific expertise, and a retooled “hiring manager experience” that takes into account Future of Work-era innovation.

Through its dynamic mix of ATS, CRM, and progressive direct sourcing tools, WorkLLama is a pure a reflection of Direct Sourcing 2.0. In addition, the platform has proved that it has the capabilities to transform the ways businesses find, engage, and manage talent through its total talent-ranging functionality and automation.

In Their Own Words:

WorkLLama is a total talent acquisition and engagement suite. Our platform harnesses the power of AI with a complete suite of applicant tracking system (ATS), candidate relationship management (CRM), and direct sourcing tools to help companies build communities of highly engaged talent for all hiring needs. Visit us at www.workllama.com. Follow us on LinkedIn.

The Outlook:

Although WorkLLama has become one of the market leaders in the direct sourcing technology arena, there is so much more to the platform than just functionality related to talent curation, talent pool development, and candidate management. Innovative offerings such as its AI-fueled, conversational bot (Sofi), simple and automated referrals, and in-mobile-app candidate assessments are examples of how the platform will thrive in the coming months and years.

In addition, WorkLLama has partnered with three major solution providers over the past several weeks; these partnerships will extend the vision, capabilities, and ultimate value of the WorkLLama suite of offerings:

  • The company’s partnership with global workforce solutions giant Randstad Sourceright as its preferred direct sourcing platform is a hallmark union that will push WorkLLama’s powerful functionality into the global market.
  • WorkLLama’s recent partnership with background screening platform Checkr will enable faster time-to-hire and improve the overall candidate experience by integrating screening with its already-robust talent acquisition functionality.
  • By partnering with EverHive, the relationship between the two providers will meld the direct sourcing offerings across WorkLLama’s technology suite with EverHive’s contingent workforce management offerings, resulting in a boost to extended workforce programs that require direct sourcing automation to enhance access to top talent.

WorkLLama’s bright future in the workforce solutions market is buoyed by its dynamic offerings and commitment to the Future of Work.

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Defining the VMS Technology Market: New Future of Work Exchange Research Study Now Available

Ardent Partners and the Future of Work Exchange have long been preeminent sources of analysis of the extended workforce industry and its associated technologies and solutions. With the introduction of our Technology Advisor (and Solution Advisor) series several years ago, the analyst team has been able to assist thousands of business leaders with the necessary information, insights, and intelligence as they traverse the complex solutions landscape within procurement and spend management, procure-to-pay, contingent and extended workforce management, direct sourcing, and digital staffing.

Today, we announce the publication of the much-anticipated VMS Technology Advisor, a report that assesses and evaluates 11 of the major Vendor Management System platforms that are currently helping organizations around the globe automate key extended workforce management processes, provide access to talent intelligence, and reinforce contingent workforce spend management.

The new report, which is available here, evaluates Beeline, Coupa Contingent Workforce, ELEVATE, Eqip, Pixid, Prosperix, PRO Unlimited, SAP Fieldglass, Utmost, VectorVMS, and VNDLY (a Workday Company).

The 2022 VMS Technology Advisor deep-dives into each provider’s strengths within requisition management, services procurement, SOW management, analytics and intelligence, direct sourcing, Future of Work readiness, total talent acquisition, total workforce management, global capabilities, and other key attributes inherent in today’s leading VMS platforms.

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The Future of Flexibility

“Flexibility” has become the de-facto, hot-button phrase to describe how the Future of Work should operate. However, if we dig deeper, the very notion of flexibility transcends the confines of remote and hybrid work.

Take a deep breath for a moment. Think about your current role before the pandemic. Now think about it in the throes of 2020 and 2021. Now think about your role today and how you’re working. Chances are there are some very stark differences between these three moments in time.

For one, the very modes of work have shifted tremendously over the past two-plus years. Those that worked remotely found the transition was easy: just stay the course. Those that already had a hybrid schedule understood how to change their mindsets while also transforming their leadership and collaborative styles. And for those in which remote work was a new concept, there were some growing pains.

As we sit more than halfway through 2022, there are more questions than answers in regard to the concepts of flexibility in the workforce, the workplace, and the work itself. While flexibility has become a core piece of our pandemic-era business lexicon, the truth is that there is so much more to the idea of flexibility than what we’ve experienced thus far:

  • Flexibility also translates into agile thinking regarding the makeup of our workforce. This doesn’t just mean that businesses should increase their utilization of non-employee talent (which, of course, has become a value-driver during these uncertain times), but rather dig deep into all available talent sources and develop a truly agile workforce. Talent marketplaces, digital staffing outlets, and direct sourcing strategies can all enhance the depth of current talent communities and ensure that businesses can be flexible when needed (market conditions, business issues, etc.).
  • Flexibility should cascade down into attributes such as purpose, work-life integration, etc. For far too long, being a “dedicated worker” meant a gold watch at the end of a very, very long tunnel. Now, in the wake of the biggest health crisis of our lifetime, talented professionals seek more from their jobs; the realm of “purpose” and “work-life integration” both translate into workers craving meaningful work that enables them with flexible hours, flexible projects, and a flexible model that allows for unplugged time, more task-oriented collaboration (rather than open-ended coordination), and the ability to reevaluate career paths more frequently.
  • Flexibility means reviewing workplace structures to provide a malleable foundation rather than a rigid “return-to-office” setup. If there’s anything we learned about the coronavirus behind COVID-19, it’s that it’s become an unpredictable harbinger of disease and disruption. Fall and winter surges fill hospitals over capacity, shutter public attractions, and force governments to reevaluate social safety and public health regulations. This all means that hardline, return-to-office planning should not only be canceled, but outright replaced by a flexible foundation that is based on science, the overall productivity of the organization, and what works best for the workforce. Too many business leaders believed that this far into the pandemic was the ideal time to bring workers back to physical locations, when they should have been experimenting with new models and assessing what was best for the business and the mental wellness of its talent.
  • Flexibility should apply to workforce technology and process automation, as well as data science and artificial intelligence. AI and data don’t need to be at the center of every single facet of the contemporary business, but it needs to be at the forefront of how businesses shape talent acquisition and address how work is done. Enterprises must understand the flexibility inherent in today’s crucial workforce and talent tools, like VMS, MSP, direct sourcing, and digital staffing, and tap into the modules that they may have ignored in months and years past. Requisition management and financial/administrative tools are table stakes, however, leveraging “deeper” functionality such as AI-led analytics, expansive candidate matching, candidate experience tools, talent community development, total talent intelligence, and digital recruitment are all incredible doorways into making workforce technology more flexible for an evolving business.
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Revisiting the Core Tenets of Direct Sourcing

Direct sourcing has a permanent place here at the Future of Work Exchange. As businesses face the massive transformations of the world of work and talent, they will continue to require advanced strategies and solutions for finding and engaging top-tier skillsets and expertise. While we’ve spent a fair amount of time discussing the next phase of direct sourcing (“Direct Sourcing 2.0”), there are still many organizations that have yet to undertake the direct sourcing journey.

In the 2020 research study, The Direct Sourcing Toolkit, Ardent Partners and the Future of Work Exchange unveiled a series of recommendations and guided strategies for successfully developing and implementing a direct sourcing program. With so many organizations yet to undertake this journey, it is imperative to revisit these guidelines for direct sourcing success:

  • A deep understanding of total enterprise skillsets is required. No matter the industry, each organization is comprised of a collection of skillsets that, in aggregate, contribute to how work is done. Direct sourcing programs thrive on “skillset intelligence;” without it, initiatives lose their flair. If hiring managers understand which skillsets are in abundance or in high demand and which will be needed in the near future, building initial talent attraction strategies will be much more effective.
  • Integrated procurement, HR, and talent acquisition competencies are necessary for early-stage direct sourcing. The capabilities of these three units are required for a direct sourcing program to succeed: 1) procurement’s influence will drive hard cost savings through talent channel optimization, 2) HR’s impact will guide hiring managers and stakeholders to engage the strongest candidates, and 3) talent acquisition will drive the strategic vision for how to source talent based upon current and expected needs.
  • Focus on both brand and experience. The employer brand can be powerful in today’s labor market; many candidates want to ensure that they work for organizations that share their cultural and societal values. Also, the omnipresent notion of the “candidate experience” should guide direct sourcing processes such that job recruits experience a positive journey no matter if they are merely sitting in a talent pool or actively engaged for an open position or project.
  • Segmentation is more valuable than it initially seems. Segmenting talent pools may seem like a basic strategy; however, it can pay incredible dividends. Talent pool segmentation, be it via geography, compensation, skill, remote or in-person, certification, etc., allows hiring managers to quickly focus in on the talent required for a highly-complex project or initiative. Taking the time during the front-end of the direct sourcing process to segment talent pools can be hugely impactful to the overall program.
  • In direct sourcing, selecting and utilizing the right solutions is job one. The inherent power of today’s contingent workforce, human capital, and digital staffing solutions provides enterprises with the ability to automate crucial aspects of talent pool development and integrate these sources into the business’ broader talent acquisition processes. MSP solutions, VMS technology, and direct sourcing platforms all contribute to create a human- and technology-led direct sourcing program, helping to launch the initiative and ensure that all hiring managers have the ability to quickly access available talent pools.
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Flexibility Is a Catalyst for the Next Great Iteration of the Workplace

There’s enough discussion around the technological component of the Future of Work movement: artificial intelligence, machine learning, blockchain, digital staffing, etc. While “innovation” in and of itself is one of the three major foundational legs of the Future of Work (the other two being “the evolution of talent” and “the transformation of business thinking”), there’s so much more to the very notion of work optimization than just automation and new technology.

As we’ve learned over the past two-plus years, the workplace itself has become a living, breathing entity that has the power to determine the overall productivity of a business, and, more importantly, how emotionally tethered the workforce is to the greater organization. For the record, it’s not just a matter if or when a business offers remote or hybrid work options, but rather how deeply rooted flexibility truly is within all facets of how work is done and how the workforce is ultimately managed.

Now would be the best time to bring up the annoying factor in every business-related conversation: “The Great Resignation” continues unabated, sparked by a veritable “Talent Revolution” that has restructured the way workers perceive their jobs, roles, and career paths. The very concept of flexibility is not just a “perk” for talent; it’s become a determining factor in whether or not a professional chooses to remain with an enterprise or search for greener pastures.

From here, flexibility is catalyst for the next great iteration of the workplace. There are undeniable roots from the larger idea of flexibility, including empathy-led leadership (more flexibility in how leaders lead), leveraging new models to get work done (distributed teams, new functional collaboration, etc.), more humanity within the fabric of the workplace, and, of course, more malleability in where workers work (remote work, hybrid workplace, etc.).

And, when we bring up this idea of “flexibility,” it doesn’t just translate into specific aspects of the workplace, but rather all of them. That’s right: the next iteration of the workplace centers on how work is done rather than on archaic principles of control and authority, including:

  • Promoting an inclusive workplace that welcomes and values all voices, no matter their differences, disabilities, etc.
  • Relying on empathy-led and conscious leadership that takes into account worker emotions and perceptions.
  • Offering various outlets of paid leave (maternity, paternity, wellness, etc.).
  • Embracing flexible work models, including fresh takes on shift-based work, four-day work-weeks, collaborative-led schedules, etc.
  • Supporting remote and hybrid work options (including offering proper hardware, software, leadership support, etc.).
  • Augmenting these remote and hybrid models with digital workspaces.
  • Measuring both employee engagement and productivity, and;
  • Detailing flexible work options within new job requisitions (to attract talent).

Interested in learning more about the critical role of flexibility in today’s transformative world of work? Join the Future of Work Exchange at its inaugural in-person, roundtable-styled conference on June 14 in Boston:

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Instant Analysis: Beelines Receives Major Investment From Stone Point Capital

Earlier this morning, global Vendor Management System (VMS) and Extended Workforce Management Platform Beeline announced that the company received a majority investment from funds managed by Stone Point Capital, a leading private equity firm based in Greenwich, CT. New Mountain Capital, existing investor, will remain a minority investor in the solution, and will maintain representation on the company’s board of directors.

The acquisition represents an ideal scenario for the industry’s largest independent provider of workforce management technology, as the move will allow Beeline and its team to execute on a progressive roadmap and introduce new and innovative solutions in a market dominated by Future of Work accelerants.

“New Mountain was a great home for us and we appreciate the opportunity to continue to partner with them,” said Beeline’s CEO, Doug Leeby. “We are thrilled to be part of the Stone Point Capital family; I’m confident that their support will allow us to follow through on our long track record of innovation and growth in this exciting industry.”

The move will allow Beeline to continue operating as the largest independent extended workforce/VMS technology solution, as well as serving as a catalyst for the company to enhance the way its customers find, engage, source, and managing the growing and evolving non-employee workforce.

The Future of Work Exchange highlights the following in its instant analysis:

  • Extended workforce management technology is a must-have in a “Great Resettling”-fueled business world. Ardent Partners and FOWX research have found that 47% of the average company’s workforce is considered non-employee, a figure that is expected to grow in 2022. Beeline already has a long track record of success, however, the strategic investment will enable them with even more support to continue the platform’s global scalability, especially considering the new influx of extended talent that will be entering the market as “The Great Resignation” continues.
  • Beeline will become a major player in the acquisitions market. The workforce solutions ecosystem has never been more robust: talent marketplaces, digital staffing outlets, direct sourcing platforms, and progressive point tools (i.e., candidate assessment and skills validation) are all critical pieces of the Future of Work puzzle. Beeline will have the capabilities to increase its acquisition activity, perhaps by building on moves such as what they did last year with the JoinedUp acquisition.
  • A major strategic investment = more runway to build on the role of VMS in the Future of Work. We know the story by now: VMS was once considered “eProcurement for staffing” until the contingent workforce grew in size and strategic prominence. Today, it’s a vaunted enterprise solution that serves as the nexus of all things related to independent talent. Beeline’s VMS and extended workforce platform is well-positioned to help its clients thrive in a Future of Work-led world with this investment, as it can build on its unique functionality in a way that supports progressive ideas, such as remote talent acquisition and hybrid work augmentation.
  • Data-centric enterprise technology computing will be enhanced across Beeline’s product offerings. The Stone Point investment means that Beeline can devote more R&D to intelligence-fueled functionality and enable its user base to make more data-oriented talent decisions. Data sits at the center of talent engagement and talent acquisition today, and in response, FOWX believes Beeline will continue to invest in its intelligence capabilities to bring more insights into all pieces of the end-to-end workforce spectrum.

“The extended workforce is a critical facet of the Future of Work movement,” said Leeby. “As this workforce grows and evolves, Beeline will continue to do so in parallel. With Stone Point behind us, we have an opportunity to innovate around the unique needs of today’s workforce and provide solutions that can help our customers succeed in a transformative world of work and talent.”

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The Extended Workforce and the Future of Work: A Conversation with Jason Posel, Founder and CEO of GreenLight

“Transformation” has become a common theme in the world of talent and work. Businesses are grappling with how to effectively manage a consistently-shifting labor market that has become volatile in the wake of The Great Resignation. A major by-product of the ongoing “Talent Revolution” is that more and more talented professionals are choosing a more flexible career path; with this influx of new extended talent, businesses must balance critical attributes such as contractor compliance, adherence to federal and regulatory and labor laws, and, of course, talent visibility.

I had the opportunity to chat with Jason Posel, CEO and founder of GreenLight, a leading technology platform focused on workforce management, global freelancer payments, worker classification, and regulatory compliance, about the Future of Work, the extended workforce, and more:

Christopher J. Dwyer: Jason, it’s great to chat with you. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Jason Posel: I’m originally from London, but have spent the majority of my career in the United States – split between Palo Alto and Miami. I’m what they call an industry veteran within the staffing industry. I led a company that did what we do at GreenLight with legacy technology for big names and managed over one billion dollars in spend for them.

CJD: You’ve been in the workforce management technology space for a number of years. If anything, the past two years have brought about incredibly change in the world of talent and work. From your vantage point, what has been the biggest transformation?

JP: I think one of the biggest changes is the worker’s mindset. They want to be independent. In most cases, that’s not possible; labor laws make things complicated and there simply isn’t the infrastructure to make operating as an independent contractor easy. No one who decides to take control of their own careers wants to have to deal with taxes, benefits, invoicing, timekeeping, insurance, etc. That’s why we are focused on fixing this infrastructure gap: by connecting onboarding and risk management with the tools and benefits that people need to be independent.

CJD: The extended workforce is drawing ever closer to encompassing half of all global talent within the enterprise realm. As GreenLight focuses so much on compliance and visibility, what’s the best pathway forward for businesses that want to tap into this growing, agile workforce?

JP: They need to make sure they offer a great experience to their extended workforce – as close as it could get to being an employee. Great HR support, great benefits. You want your extended workforce to be flexible, but you still need to make an attractive offer to make sure they don’t leave before you capture the ROIs of onboarding them. The post-hire experience for contractors is so laggard, especially compared to the innovation focused on finding talent. It shouldn’t be…and we are changing that.

CJD: One of the most impressive attributes of the GreenLight platform is its dynamic slew of functionality that is tailored for the modern workforce.

JP: Yes – the people that take advantage of the extended workforce that goes through GreenLight are educated buyers. Unlike SMEs or startups, they care a lot about risk and work with us to make sure they get exactly what they need. GreenLight’s value proposition goes beyond paying payroll with one click; our platform needs to be ready to accommodate the needs of each of our clients. We’ve been an incredibly intuitive platform with a huge focus on the user experience. We built features specific to managing the unique needs of the contingent workforce, and we made it all accessible through APIs, so we can easily integrate with any type of talent matching technology – direct sourcing, VMS, ATS, and marketplaces. We also offer AI-powered worker classification, integrations with partners like Checkr for background checks, and Berxi for business insurance.

CJD: I’d like to chat a bit about the evolution of talent and how so many more organizations are leveraging talent marketplaces, digital staffing, and human cloud offerings. How does GreenLight provide its users with real-time visibility into these talent sources?

JP: Large enterprises don’t want to have to use another platform, so we bridge the technology gap by integrating with the tools companies already use to source talent. The data that our clients need is then easily accessible either through our UI or via API.

CJD: It’s obvious by now that the average enterprise has experienced a very sharp uptick in the utilization of global, remote freelancers. How does this affect the impact of global payments technology?

JP: This uptick you mention has made apparent the need for new infrastructure that allows companies like us to send and receive payments in a seamless way, with great reporting tools, and with APIs.

CJD: What’s a Future of Work prediction you have for the second half of 2022?

JP: Lots of niche talent marketplaces that focus on one single job function will be born. Those who land big clients that care about risk will need to use platforms like GreenLight to grow. We’ve met platforms that believe they don’t need to care about everything that happens after the job match-makings they facilitate, but come back after a few months to us when they are ready to scale.

Connect with Jason on LinkedIn and visit www.greenlight.ai for more information about GreenLight and its technology.

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Prosperity and Disruption: Prosperix’s VMS Network is a Future of Work Innovation

Vendor Management System (VMS) technology, along with Managed Service Providers (MSP), are typically considered the two most traditional and widely-used solutions in the greater workforce management technology market. Rightfully so: each of these on their own drive services-based (MSP) and end-to-end automation (VMS) for their clients in such a way that there may never be a time when Best-in-Class organizations aren’t utilizing one of the two (or, in many cases, both) to gain visibility and control, and, of course, optimize, the way extended talent is brought into the organization and ultimately managed.

Today, the landscape looks much different than it did even a couple of years ago. The pandemic brought about revolutionary change in how executive leaders perceive their operating structures, finances, technology utilization, and, critically, their workforce. The talent acquisition arena has been permanently altered, with enterprises finding that there is so much more to engaging top-tier talent than simply filling out a job requisition and expecting candidates to flock to open roles.

“To remain competitive, businesses must brace for more dramatic changes than ever before,” said Sunil Bagai, CEO of Prosperix. “The rapidly-evolving landscape requires new solutions and ways of thinking that allow businesses to become more agile, resilient, and more capable of meeting the seemingly endless demands today’s business landscape presents.”

When we examine the talent technology market today, there are many variables that have accelerated just as quickly as those Future of Work attributes (such as remote work, hybrid workplaces, etc.) that were quickened due to the pandemic’s far-reaching grasp. Talent marketplaces and digital staffing platforms enable users with on-demand and real-time access to pre-vetted, top-tier talent that align with dozens of project- and role-based perquisites.

Direct sourcing solutions actively assist enterprises with the ability to curate known and new talent into talent communities, nurture those communities with relevant and engaging content, and ensure that all recruitment streams leverage these talent pools. “Direct Sourcing 2.0,” a concept heralded by the Future of Work Exchange as the next iteration of direct sourcing, involves the application of artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other innovative functionality to drive repeatability and scalability of core direct sourcing mechanisms.

Within 2022’s evolving world of work and talent, San Jose-based Prosperix is taking all of the above into consideration as it launches its new “VMS Network” offering. Prosperix’s core VMS solution is not just a standalone VMS platform, but rather an extended workforce management tool that enables a dynamic connection between enterprises and talent via a robust, on-demand network of suppliers, candidates, and businesses.

“When we built our VMS Network solution, we understood that providing exponentially greater access to talent would be a game changer. And that’s proving to be the case,” Sunil said. “Clients become a node in an open, connected network where their jobs are matched to a network of suppliers and talent pools. This network effect enables jobs to be filled in record time, with amazing quality, and at lower costs. Additionally, the interconnectedness of the network allows us to leverage data and algorithms in ways that were not possible with siloed VMS systems. This is revolutionary for the industry, and we are excited to be the first to bring this compelling new technology to market.”

The Prosperix VMS Network is unique in the sense that it effectively blends a fully-digital talent network (akin to what most talent marketplaces offer) with a powerful, end-to-end series of functionality that leverages modernized reporting, analytics, and intelligence that drive better business outcomes and better matches between candidates and open positions/projects.

And, on top of those features, Prosperix leverages a candidate-centric approach that provides, among other things, candidates with their own career dashboard where they can apply to matched jobs across an ecosystem of clients and stay up-up-to-date on their job applications. This is aligned with the company’s overall purpose as a technology platform: to fuel human, workforce, and business prosperity.

As we wrote about the solution in 2021 upon its rebranding: “Prosperix’s messaging is incredibly unique in today’s workforce solutions market, leading with an edge that differentiates the company from others in the space. Understanding that it is the convergence between the “human” and “technology” elements of workforce management that will help both candidates and businesses prosper in the face of continued evolution across the greater world of talent and work.”

“I don’t think any business is standing still today. Most are adapting just to survive, and those that embrace change as the norm have the potential to thrive. Our VMS Network makes it possible for businesses to achieve greater scalability, agility and resilience, so they can more easily manage the expected while being better-prepared for the unexpected. And they can do all of this while attaining extraordinary hiring outcomes,” Sunil said.

Ardent Partners and the Future of Work Exchange believe that there is still much, much more change ahead for the world of talent and work. As “The Great Resignation” continues its rampage and the “Talent Revolution” becomes a foundational element of the Future of Work movement, solutions like Prosperix will be a guiding light for enterprises that not only want to tap into the power of the extended workforce, but also leverage next-generation technology to drive workforce prosperity.

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The Role of Talent Marketplaces in the Future of Work

Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange research finds that nearly 80% of leading organizations are currently leveraging digital staffing channels and talent marketplaces to fuel their talent acquisition strategies. And in today’s hyper-competitive, Great Resignation-led labor market, enterprises require on-demand solutions that not only align with their talent-based needs, but also support greater extended workforce management processes, operations, and programs.

Last month, the Future of Work Exchange partnered with Bluecrew for an exclusive webcast focused on the role and impact of talent marketplaces and digital staffing within the Future of Work movement. If you missed the event, now’s your chance to check it out:

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Two Years Later…

In some regards, it feels like it was just yesterday. To some of us, it feels like forever ago. On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 pandemic and began what was (and continues to be) a tumultuous disruption on all things related to both our personal and professional lives.

Do you remember that week? I’m sure you do. The rampant confusion, the anxiety, and the uncertainty? Do you recall the moment it “hit” for you? Was it that week, or was it when your company instituted an immediate work-from-home policy? Was it the moment that your kids were forced to stay home from school?

We all have our own stark reminders and memories of the earliest days of the pandemic. I remember picking up my son’s ride-on truck at a local fix-it shop; the owner, a retired industrial mechanic, asked me to keep a distance and had a surgical mask in his fleece pocket. “I’m closing down the shop for at least the next 30 days,” he told me as I was leaving.

There was a haze over our family that Friday, when the country began to panic-buy items at stores (we certainly remember this, right?). My wife and mother-in-law went to our local Target and came back with $400 in various household staples. The moment it really sunk in, however, was reacting to a robocall from the town’s school superintendent, who stated that the following week’s classes were canceled in lieu of the emerging health crisis. It was only a matter of days before my kids began their first days of remote learning, not to return to a classroom for nearly nine months. And it was only a little a month from then when my uncle, a person whom is ingrained in many of my childhood memories, succumbed to COVID in April 2020. I look back, too, on the day of his funeral, an overcast morning in which limited members of my family would be masked and several feet apart around his grave site, something I know so many of you experienced, as well.

No matter where you were on March 11, 2020, there is no doubt that the pandemic touched your life in some profound manner. When we look back on two years of disruption, transformation, uncertainty, and trauma, there are various ways that we, as humans, have been changed. I’ve often said (many times on the Future of Work Exchange Podcast), that it’s incredibly tough to point to a “silver lining” during a pandemic that has killed over 6 million people across the world. I’d rather think of it this way: we were forced into change, both personally and professionally, and from that, our world was transformed. Think about how many facets of everyday work life have been altered; think of the Future of Work tenets that were rapidly accelerated over the past two years:

  • Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) becoming the preeminent, non-technological components of the Future of Work coming to bear.
  • Remote and hybrid workplaces not only serving as lifelines for business continuity, but dramatically transforming the way enterprises think about how they get work done.
  • The extended workforce not only rising in size and prominence, but also in strategic value: 82% of businesses in Future of Work Exchange research stated that the non-employee workforce served as a means of flexibility and agility during the most trying times of the past two years.
  • The criticality of “flexibility” in all of its forms permeating throughout the symbiotic world of talent and work.
  • The rise of empathy-led leadership and business leaders integrating more “human” elements into how they manage their workforce.
  • More emphasis on the overall experiences of both candidates and hiring managers as they traverse both a “Great Resignation” and a “Talent Revolution.”
  • The continued importance of digital transformation, especially as the events of 2020 forced businesses to operate without traditional in-person processes in place.
  • “Recruit from anywhere” becoming a viable, trusted, and powerful way for businesses to leverage talent marketplaces, digital staffing, direct sourcing, and enhanced candidate outreach to find, engage, and source top-tier talent.
  • Direct sourcing emerging as perhaps the most innovative, talent-led strategy within the talent acquisition spectrum.
  • Purposeful work becoming a foundation of how workers and professionals plan the next steps of their careers.

In totality, the past two years have been a time of trauma, disruption, and loss. They’ve also sparked a revolution of talent, a reimagining of how work gets done, and new applications for technology and innovation.

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