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Agile Workforce

Key Providers for 2021: Bluecrew

The Background:

With 47% of the average company’s total workforce now comprised of “contingent” or “non-employee” workers, Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange research has discovered that the power of the Gig Economy has traversed beyond a specific set of verticals and industries. Sectors such as light industrial, health care, and the realm of blue-collar and hourly work have all realized the inherent value of an agile workforce that was essentially designed to help in an era when dynamic workplace structures are what separates businesses from the competition.

One of the challenges faced by these sectors in the past was the sheer complexity of talent acquisition prowess required to effectively engage talent based on variable demand and the unique inner-workings of shift-based and hourly work.

Enter Bluecrew.

Why They Were Selected:

Bluecrew’s unique value proposition, which centers around a “Gig Economy meets traditional contingent labor” approach, allows the company to enable a truly “elastic workforce” within its client base by tapping into Bluecrew’s liquid base of vetted workers. Augmented with industry-leading candidate matching technology that is driven by machine learning, Bluecrew provides its clients with a fully-automated administrative portal that balances both talent acquisition and workforce management.

In a business world that now runs on flexibility, the Bluecrew marketplace and workforce management platform are solutions that are actively helping enterprises tap into on-demand talent and develop true workforce agility.

In Their Own Words:

Founded in 2015, acquired by InterActive Corp (IAC) in 2018, and recognized by Fast Company in 2020 as one of the most innovative workplace companies, Bluecrew is disrupting traditional hourly staffing (a $130 billion addressable market, almost exclusively offline) by pioneering “Gig 2.0”. 

Hourly workers – we call them Crew Members – are Bluecrew’s lifeblood. We employ thousands of W-2 workers who are dependable, looking for flexibility, and ready to accept short- or long-term jobs, which they are intelligently matched with by our Elastic Hourly Workforce (EHW) platform. Bluecrew’s EHW combines multiple products and services into an end-to-end, intuitive solution for Crew Members to manage their work lives, and for our workplace customers to manage their hourly workforce.

Our workplace customers are challenged with variable demand; longer term, more predictable variability such as seasonal and cyclical, and less predictable, shorter-term variability like absenteeism and large, unexpected customer orders. This variability in demand creates complex challenges to effectively and efficiently manage hourly labor which until Bluecrew, has been left unsolved.

The Outlook:

Sectors such as light industrial, retail, hospitality, and other hourly-based industries are anticipated to experience upwards of 35%-to-40% growth in the utilization of non-employee labor over the next few years, reinforcing the need for both on-demand access to vertical-specific talent marketplaces (and other on-demand channels of skillsets) and end-to-end workforce management. This expected growth will result in more headaches for hiring managers that are seeking to fill roles quickly, efficiently, and with data-driven approaches at the helm to result in the best-aligned fit between workers and open jobs.

Bluecrew’s innovative “elastic workforce” approach to the hourly workforce market positions the solution to thrive in evolving times, especially considering the expansion of workforce agility into industries that are expecting to increase their utilization of non-employee talent in the months and years ahead. As these sectors continue to realize the hard-line benefits of the extended workforce, it will be platforms such as Bluecrew that will help fuel the ultimate optimization of how work is done.

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Key Providers for 2021: myBasePay

The Background:

The extended workforce continues to grow at a rapid pace. Today, 47% of the average company’s total workforce is comprised of “contingent” or “non-employee” workers, which include traditional temporary workers, gig workers, independent contractors, freelancers, and SOW-based labor/professional services. Over the past five years, this number has increased by nearly 40%, proving that the agile workforce has become a key contributor to the Future of Work movement.

Several years ago, as the contingent workforce began its stratospheric rise in growth and utilization, many businesses remained focused on three key elements as this spectrum of talent began to dominate how work was done: visibility into suppliers and the talent itself, annual cost savings on contingent workforce spend, and, perhaps most importantly, the compliance ramifications of utilizing a non-employee workforce.

Today, there are essentially two sides to the 2021 contingent workforce management (CWM) program: 1) the strategic planning that pushes extended talent into the realm of true business agility through top-tier skillsets, access to new sources of expertise, and the innovation happening in talent engagement and talent acquisition, and, 2) the operational components that keep CWM as a well-oiled, effective, and sharply-run program that is not open to various labor, cost, and regulatory risks. Businesses must strike an efficient balance between these two perspectives to ensure that the agile workforce brings both value and flexibility to the greater organization.

Enter myBasePay.

Why They Were Selected:

Future of Work Exchange research finds that nearly 60% of businesses are prioritizing control over compliance and risk management within their contingent and extended workforce programs. While aspects such as remote work, artificial intelligence, and other top-of-mind topics usually steal the headlines in the Future of Work arena, the truth is that compliance and risk mitigation for the non-employee workforce is just as critical as the “newer” elements of talent management and work optimization.

In less than a year, myBasePay has transformed the way businesses think about both the back- and front-ends of their talent acquisition programs through its unique array of compliance management automation, contingent workforce management efficiency, and tools to enhance the overall lifecycle of the non-employee worker.

In Their Own Words:

By the year 2030, half of the US workforce will consist of contingent workers. Simultaneously, organizations are struggling with skills shortages, changing labor regulations, and disruptive technologies.  How can organizations leverage this trend to improve their competitive strategy and thrive in the new economy?

myBasePay’s mission is to help organizations focus on growth and talent development. We aim to achieve this with our employer of record (EOR) model and AI-powered technology enabling us to create an ecosystem where organizations and contingent workers can thrive through transparency, trust, and collaboration.  

Our platform is like having a legal, admin, HR, compliance, and payroll department all rolled into one integrated solution, so organizations focus on growth and finding great talent.

Since our official launch in March, we have:

  • Raised $60M in funding.
  • Set up 67 enterprise customers on our platform. 
  • Achieved 50% growth rate with a $35M projected revenue by year-end. 
  • Focused on diversity and inclusion since day one. Our internal team is led by a Navy Veteran CEO, 58% female, 71% of female staff are working moms, and 67% minority. 

Contingent workers can bring unparalleled agility, flexibility, and adaptability to any organization looking to adopt a flexible work model as their competitive advantage.

The Outlook:

myBasePay is a true turnkey solution for both CWM programs and contingent workers alike, helping to facilitate a spectrum of efficiency within engagement, sourcing, classification, onboarding, and other key facets of the typical talent management initiative. Future of Work Exchange research finds that 84% of businesses were forced to “reimagine” their workforce management operations and processes in light of the disruptions experienced over the past 18 months. If digital transformation was not on the radar for procurement, HR, and other functional leaders before the pandemic hit, these challenging times made it patently obvious that manual processes were no longer acceptable and must be stricken from the workplace.

myBasePay is uniquely positioned as an agile contingent workforce solution that not only provides users with easy-to-use and AI-fueled talent management functionality, but also industry-leading worker classification, onboarding, and compliance management offerings.

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Contingent Workforce Weekly, Episode 605: As the Summer Ends, Business Agility and Flexibility Will Be Paramount

Welcome to an all-new edition of the Contingent Workforce Weekly episode, sponsored by DZConneX, a Yoh company. As the summer ends, the arrival of fall brings continued uncertainty to both the business and personal lives of the world’s workforce, especially as millions of children (who cannot yet be vaccinated) head back to school. Businesses will need to prioritize the “art of flexibility” as the world of work continues to evolve.

Tune into Episode 605 of Contingent Workforce Weekly below, or subscribe on Apple Music, Spotify, Stitcher, or iHeartRadio.

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Key Providers for 2021: The Mom Project

[Editor’s Note: Over the next several weeks, the Future of Work Exchange will unveil its “21 for 2021” list of key solution providers that are shaping the Future of Work through innovative technology, progressive functionality, and overall impact on the evolving world of talent and work. On deck for today: The Mom Project.]

The Background:

In the world of “digital staffing,” which is a wide-encompassing industry that includes talent marketplaces, talent clouds, talent communities, on-demand staffing outlets, freelancer management systems (even though “FMS” as an acronym is seemingly defunct), as well as direct sourcing technology, it’s not often that businesses have access to an end-to-end workforce management platform that also prioritizes talent engagement with a deep community of gender- and ethnically-diverse professionals.

Future of Work Exchange research finds that 62% of businesses expect more focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) initiatives over the next year, proving that the technology spectrum within workforce management needs to evolve to meet this expected shift moving forward.

Enter The Mom Project.

Why They Were Selected:

The world for working parents has dynamically shifted…again. The Mom Project’s Greg Robinson (COO and co-founder), who appeared on the Contingent Workforce Weekly podcast earlier this year, said that he and his team fear that we will see another mass exodus of women from the workforce due to the pandemic and its wide-sweeping ramifications. The Mom Project is looking to change that through its unique ability to connect enterprises with qualified and diverse candidates in a nimble, agile, and on-demand manner. That alone warrants selection as a solution that is shaping the Future of Work, but there’s more to the story.

On top of its 500,000+ (and growing) network of diverse candidates, The Mom Project also offers progressive workforce management technology such as true total talent management functionality, an AI neural network learning engine (that incorporates customer culture and DE&I attributes) that helps users identify key DE&I trends and patterns, and automation that assists enterprises in building ready-to-engage, pre-vetted talent from both non-employee/contingent and direct hire/FTE perspectives.

The Mom Project is one of the most progressive and innovative workforce/talent solutions in today’s evolving technology landscape.

In Their Own Words:

More than one million American women will become parents this year, joining the ranks of the working parenthood — a vital segment of the workforce. Simultaneously, businesses are challenged to retain talented employees as they navigate through this period of life, and struggle to find the experienced talent they need to grow.

The Mom Project is the expert partner helping companies create stronger, more diverse workforces that are well-prepared for the Future of Work. These are the big picture problems that C-suites, boards, investors and hiring managers across the country are focused on. We’re proud to be the consultative, action-oriented partner working hand-in-hand with our customers to drive lasting change.

  • Our platform drives community engagement and trust, driving a premium pipeline of over 500,000 members, growing by 20,000 members a month.
  • Our thought leadership and hands-on collaboration with hiring managers and recruiters ensures talent doesn’t get stuck mid-way, and that mom is primed to thrive in her new role.
  • Giving back to our 501.3(c) nonprofit, RISE, ensures that we’re continuously preparing the candidates of the future.
  • Co-branding drives talent perception and pipeline, and each hire becomes a story to further elevate partners as employers of choice for working families.

Women staying engaged in the workforce on their terms is good for families. It’s good for business. It’s good for everyone. .

The Outlook:

Over the next two years, 62% of businesses expect to address DE&I objectives and initiatives with workforce management technology and similar automation, according to Future of Work Exchange research. This statistic reflects just how critical diversity, equity, and inclusion truly is within the digital staffing solutions arena and its crucial place as part of greater talent management strategies.

The Mom Project is uniquely positioned to continue its rampant growth in the market from three perspectives: 1) it is one of the most visible workforce management platforms that is actively prioritizing and truly aligning DE&I within the very fabric of its functionality, 2) it offers one of the industry’s deepest communities of gender- and ethnically-diverse skillsets and talent, and, 3) its progressive technology platform enables a spectrum of innovative talent acquisition, talent engagement, and workforce management solutions that harness the incredible power of artificial intelligence and machine learning while forming a foundation of total talent management automation.

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Key Providers for 2021: Glider AI

[Editor’s Note: Over the next several weeks, the Future of Work Exchange will unveil its “21 for 2021” list of key solution providers that are shaping the Future of Work through innovative technology, progressive functionality, and overall impact on the evolving world of talent and work. On deck for today: Glider AI.]

The Background:

Artificial intelligence has become a prevalent piece of the total talent management puzzle, with incremental upticks in adoption over the past several years. Specific pieces of digital recruitment, talent acquisition, and contingent workforce management have been augmented with predictive analytics, scenario-building, and candidate workflow management.

In the evolving world of talent and work, AI has gone from a “nice-to-have” enhancement to a clutch functionality that can drive a competitive advantage. “Talent” in and of itself is a viable differentiator, and businesses must ensure that the expertise they are hiring from various channels of staffing are truly “top-tier” from background, performance, and assessment perspectives.

Enter Glider AI.

Why They Were Selected:

Future of Work Exchange research finds that 62% of businesses will harness the power of AI for candidate assessment over the next 12-to-24 months, a figure which reinforces the need for better awareness, control, and visibility into pre-recruitment processes. Glider AI’s unique talent intelligence platform provides its users with fully-automated tools to boost candidate assessment and allow hiring managers (and other talent management executives) to remotely execute deep, skill-based recruitment strategies with a robust layer of strength and rigor.

The Future of Work Exchange was developed to help HR, talent acquisition, procurement, finance, and other key executive leaders understand how work and talent are changing and how they best optimize how work is done. Platforms like Glider AI prove that the “age of AI” is not just a phase, but a truly impactful spectrum of innovation that can effectively transform the way businesses structure their talent engagement and talent acquisition strategies.

In Their Own Words:

The Glider AI talent intelligence platform helps you put your hiring on autopilot with active screening, interactive assessments, and virtual interview tools. With Glider’s AI-based talent analytics, you can stack-rank candidates against their peers to hire top talent -every time! Our real-world assessments, coding simulators, auto-coding tests, and non-tech task simulators, empower you to hire for competency over credentials.

Glider’s auto proctoring and plagiarism checks take the guesswork out of hiring by ensuring high test integrity and candidate authenticity. With features like Diversity Toggle and Accommodation features for disabled candidates, Glider helps you create a recruitment process that is entirely skill-based, unbiased, and fully automated. 

Glider helps enterprises, recruitment agencies, and Managed Service Providers create, execute, and manage their entire hiring process remotely for any role- full-time or contingent, tech or non-tech. Our skill-based hiring approach, helps you reduce your time to hire by 50%, improve your interview to offer ratio by 3X and helps you achieve 98% candidate satisfaction.

Employer branding, ATS/VMS integration, compliance, customized processes, pre-built test library, candidate report, talent analytics, data confidentiality, mobile optimization, 24/7 support – we go all the way to make quality talent your reality.

With Glider, you get – talent quality first, bias never, integrity always.

The Outlook:

It’s clear that the talent solutions landscape is changing; no longer can enterprises solely rely on “traditional” platforms alone to facilitate the ideal alignment between work and available talent. While core contingent workforce management technology and services have evolved in recent years and continue to drive the utmost value to their users, the stakes are too high today for businesses to not tap into dynamic platforms that can drive augmentative power.

In addition, the remote and hybrid workplace environment in which we live and work includes many workforce management processes that suffer from a lack of in-person execution. The Future of Work Exchange Report for 2021’s data indicates that 84% of businesses are essentially “reimagining” core workforce management processes, including recruitment, hiring, talent engagement, onboarding and offboarding, etc. A sizable chunk of that reimagined effort is digitally-transforming pieces of workforce management via artificial intelligence, RPA, and other facets of enterprise automation.

Glider’s unique offering blends true AI with the precision required to effectively generate deeper candidate assessments in a remote setting, while also providing a groundswell of talent intelligence to execute more informed recruitment and talent acquisition decisions.

Glider AI is exceptionally positioned to thrive in a talent solutions marketplace that craves next-generation intelligence and a richer gateway to top-tier talent and skillsets.

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FOWX Alert: PRO Unlimited Continues Aggressive Technology Transformation, Acquires Workforce Logiq

[Editor’s Note: “FOWX Alert” – The Exchange’s coverage and analysis of the Future of Work industry’s most important news, including major announcements, M&A, and other breaking stories.]

To say that global workforce management solutions provider PRO Unlimited has been aggressive in disrupting the market is a vast understatement. In the span of less than a year, the company has:

  • Acquired of the industry’s leading rate intelligence solutions, PeopleTicker.
  • Introduced new functionality and offerings that are transforming diversity, equity, and inclusion for the market.
  • Launched an exclusive partnership with Eightfold to push AI-driven talent intelligence into PRO’s technology (particularly its flagship Wand VMS product).
  • Acquired Dutch MSP Brainnet Group.
  • Optimized client hiring decisions through its unique RatePoint tool.
  • Launched its NorthStar HCM consulting and advisory team, which blends market expertise and talent intelligence into an agile add-on offering, and;
  • Been acquired by EQT Partners, which is actively allowing the solution to fulfill its promise of becoming a true end-to-end workforce management platform.

And, this week, PRO Unlimited announced that it will acquire Workforce Logiq, one of the workforce management technology landscape’s biggest and most mature players. This news is yet another indicator that PRO will continue its aggressive approach towards realizing its goal of becoming an on-demand, agile, and flexible end-to-end platform for managing non-employee and extended talent.

What is particularly interesting about this acquisition that both PRO and Workforce Logiq are like-minded solutions; both have industry longevity on their side and offer hybrid Managed Services Provider (MSP) solutions and Vendor Management System (VMS) technology. In addition, both companies have harnessed innovative approaches towards workforce management technology, particularly in the arena of artificial intelligence and predictive analytics (in fact, we just spoke with Workforce Logiq’s Chief Strategy Officer, Joe Hanna, about this topic on FOWX).

“Both companies have a similar “platform” vision with two like-minded executive and product teams,” said Kevin Akeroyd, CEO of PRO Unlimited. “We essentially both saw the market in the same way, so we knew that [the acquisition] was already heading in the right strategic direction. The cultures between PRO and Workforce Logiq are incredibly well-aligned, as well, and there are many talented people that are now part of the PRO family.”

Together, the two solutions will represent a massive disruptor in the contingent workforce management (CWM) solutions marketplace. This acquisition will allow PRO to expand its global reach even further and enable existing Workforce Logiq clients the sheer breadth of offerings under the PRO umbrella. Ardent Partners and Future of Work Exchange instant analysis is as follows:

  • PRO Unlimited will undoubtedly make immediate use of WFQ’s impressive array of AI-led innovation. WFQ seemingly went from a standard MSP/VMS hybrid under the ZeroChaos brand to purveyor of AI-led workforce management solutions in short order when it moved to the Workforce Logiq brand, including its 16 patent-pending analytical technologies and toolbox of AI-led reporting functionality.
  • The ENGAGE Talent factor could be the most interesting facet of this deal. Back in 2019, I wrote that Workforce Logiq’s acquisition of ENGAGE Talent was a workforce management solutions gamechanger. “ENGAGE Talent’s technological sweet spot (predictive AI-powered algorithms) enables users to anticipate talent supply chain gaps, analyze real-time global labor conditions, and develop deep talent-based scenarios for short- and long-term contingent and full-time total workforce planning.” ENGAGE is/was one of WFQ’s most prized and innovative market offerings; we fully expect PRO Unlimited to take advantage of this deep tool to advance its intelligence-led technology.
  • PRO’s industry coverage becomes even more expansive than it was before the acquisition. While both PRO and Workforce Logiq are “household” names in the CWM solutions market, each paved its own path through dozens of unique verticals. PRO’s acquisition of WFQ opens the solution to clients in some very large industries, including automotive, healthcare, and telecom.
  • Strengths of both solutions, particularly DE&I and direct sourcing, will become more robust under the unified company. PRO’s recent enhancements of its direct sourcing and diversity, equity, and inclusion offerings was a strong way to kick off 2021. Workforce Logiq was an early pioneer of the direct sourcing model (even nicknaming it “self-sourcing” back in 2019) and has long been a force when it comes to improving DE&I in staffing and talent acquisition. These two very critical aspects of the Future of Work will become even stronger under the unified PRO/WFQ brand.

Beyond the obvious “scale” factors of the acquisition (such as combining two of the industry’s largest providers from RPO, payrolling, and other standard workforce management operations), there is something much larger – and more critical – at play: the fact that PRO Unlimited now has incredible positioning as an end-to-end workforce management solution that leads with innovation, data, and intelligence. Workforce Logiq’s main differentiators from the MSP pack have always sat in its wide-ranging abilities to plug-and-play real-time labor market, job role, rate, and other forms of deep intelligence into its core managed service operations. That PRO now has these functionalities at its fingertips is a true competitive transformation for the platform.

“There are incredible synergies here between the two solutions,” Akeroyd said. “Adding Workforce Logiq’s deep ocean of data and their innovative analytical tools to PRO’s end-to-end platform are going to be very impactful in how we continue to transform contingent workforce management for our customers. This is an acquisition that truly allows us to accelerate on our vision.”

(Financial terms of the acquisition, which is expected to close in Q4, were not disclosed. Stay tuned to the Future of Work Exchange for more insights on the evolving workforce management technology landscape.)

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Contingent Workforce Weekly, Episode 604: A Conversation with Matt Pietsch, Chief Strategy Officer at High5

An all-new edition of the Contingent Workforce Weekly episode, sponsored by DZConneX, a Yoh company, features a discussion with Matt Pietsch, Chief Strategy Officer at High5. Matt and I chat about the digital staffing industry, the evolution of direct sourcing, the outlook for the Future of Work movement, and much more.

Tune into Episode 604 of Contingent Workforce Weekly below, or subscribe on Apple Music, Spotify, Stitcher, or iHeartRadio.

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Services Procurement and the Future of Work: A Conversation with Paul Vincent, Global Head of Services Procurement at Randstad Sourceright

Last week, Randstad Sourceright announced the appointment of Paul Vincent as its Global Head of Services Procurement. In this Future of Work Exchange feature, Paul joins us to talk about how he views the current SOW management landscape, how this exciting topic fits into the greater Future of Work movement, and his new responsibilities at Randstad.

Christopher J. Dwyer: Hi Paul, it is great to chat with you once again, and congratulations on your new role. Pandemic aside, we’ve definitely seen some changes in the services procurement landscape over the past couple of years. Curious to hear your thoughts on these changes and how you feel MSPs can effectively tackle these challenges.

Paul Vincent:  It’s good to catch up with you again, too, Chris, and let me start by commending you on the launch of the Future of Work Exchange. The site looks really smart, and I am sure it will become a valued resource for the talent industry.

The services procurement marketplace has unquestionably become more liberated during the past couple of years. Every MSP now seems to be selling some kind of SOW solution and buying organizations are clearly becoming more receptive to a proposal for help. VMS providers are building more tailored functionality into their platforms and there is a growing array of complementary digital tools which can further strengthen an MSP’s product offering if positioned correctly.

So, we are definitely entering a period where SOW-based spend is going to be increasingly supported by workforce solutions providers in some way. The $64M question is going to be: what way is the best way?

This is where I think the market gets most interesting. There is still quite a big difference between an MSP who really understands the nuances of the services procurement landscape versus one that fundamentally still treats this part of the workforce as a subset of an organization’s contingent staffing population.

For example, when you see an MSP only talking about classification, compliance, and control, then this is a tell-tale sign that they are not really thinking about how to best serve the people who have the need and budget for the services themselves. These people, who after all are the primary stakeholders for any SOW management solution, need an MSP who can give them speed, simplicity, ready access to the highest-performing and most innovative service providers, and ultimately the best bang for their budgetary buck.

CJD: One of the things I admire about your work in the market all these years is that you have a deep understanding of both the client and service provider sides of SOW and services procurement. What are two or three of the most valuable insights that this experience has given you?

PV:  This is a tough question, Chris, as there are so many insights I could share. However, if you pushed me for my top three then I would probably select these ones.

Firstly, it is important to remember that price and perceived value are very different things. It is a common misconception that users of SOW-based services will want to pay as little as possible and this is a mentality trap that procurement professionals and MSPs can get themselves into. In a staff augmentation world, hiring managers typically don’t want to pay more than the prevailing market rate. In a services procurement world, business users want to pay an appropriate price and as it is their budget, then ultimately, they will need to decide on the price that most aligns with the value they perceive they are going to get from the service provider in return. The role of a good procurement advisor is to help their business stakeholders to identify and then critically evaluate the various commercial options open to them. Then they need to ensure that their stakeholder’s preferred option is properly encapsulated within a well-documented statement of work.

Secondly, whilst the SOW management triangle has three interdependent relationships (i.e., between the business user, centralized procurement, and the service provider), the most crucial relationship is always the one between whoever wants the work done and whoever is going to be doing the work. An effective SOW management solution will facilitate this relationship so that it is as commercially agile as possible. Those procurement functions and MSPs who seek to control this relationship instead will never be sustainably successful.

Finally, I passionately believe that an MSP should be delivering value throughout the entire SOW life cycle. However, in my experience, many MSPs seem to limit their boundary lines to the supplier selection and contracting phases in the process only. I have never understood this – because there is a huge amount of value that can be offered across the project definition, delivery, and evaluation phases, and this value often just gets left on the table.

CJD: These are great insights, Paul, and what resonates with me in particular are your observations about the breadth of the MSP value proposition when it comes to services procurement. So, turning to your new role and an obvious question is: what has attracted you to Randstad Sourceright?

PV:  I am thrilled to be joining Randstad Sourceright and there were two main reasons why I could not let this opportunity pass me by. The first is the hugely ambitious and exciting vision that CEO Mike Smith has set for the organization, and in particular the impact and contribution that he expects services procurement to play. The more Mike talked me through his strategic intent for services procurement, the more I felt this was a journey that I wanted to be part of.

Secondly, I will have a chance to work with a very skilled team. Randstad Sourceright already has a number of sales, operations, and subject matter experts working on SOW-related activities across the organization and further recruitment activity is underway. All of this talent will now be unified globally under my leadership and a joint strategic vision focused on creating measurable business value for our clients. I am especially going to enjoy working with Scott Brewer, who will run our SOW center of excellence. Scott has laid some impressive foundations during the past 18 months and there is a strong platform to grow from.

CJD: This role sounds like the perfect fit for you. What do you see as your key priorities during the first few months?

PV: Well, like in any new role there are going to be many people that I will need to get to know across the organization. But I expect the bulk of my time will be spent getting a really good understanding of our current SOW proposition and what we are delivering across the active client programs. From what I have seen, I think the offering is already pretty compelling, particularly from an analytics point of view, but as I finalize our new team structure and future ways of working, I will get a feel for the areas which might have scope for further development.

CJD: Maybe it’s because I’ve known you for so long, but I have to imagine that you already have some ideas as to how you would like to see RSR’s SOW offering evolve…am I correct?

PV: You’re right, you know me well and I do have some ideas already germinating, but it’s important that I take the time to really understand the current offering first and to gather a range of input from across the organization. What I can tell you is that Mike has set me a very clear objective – which is for Randstad Sourceright to be regarded as the undisputed market leader driving services procurement value for our customers. I am very energized by this goal, and I have every intention of delivering it!

CJD: I am very sure you will, Paul, and we look forward to hearing more from you here on the Future of Work Exchange. Best wishes on your new role at Randstad Sourceright, and thanks again for taking the time so soon after your new appointment.

Connect with Paul on LinkedIn, or visit Randstad Sourceright for more information on their solutions and offerings.

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The Agile Workforce Runs on Talent Marketplaces and Talent Communities

Last year, Ardent Partners predicted that the global business landscape would experience a sharp uptick in the utilization of non-employee labor as a direct result of the pandemic’s sweeping impact on business and human interaction. Going into 2020, 43.5% of the average organization’s total workforce was considered “contingent.” In 2021, that number sits at nearly 47% and there are strong indications that this percentage will grow as the transformation of talent and work continues forward.

Additionally, 82% of all businesses state that the challenging times of 2020 created a bigger need for extended and non-employee talent. The past 12 months have clearly revealed that workforce scalability is an essential link to economic survival in the now-chaotic, hyper-competitive world of global business. Operationalizing that scalability is the very root of workforce agility, from which businesses can tap into talent pools, marketplaces, clouds, and communities to enhance the work done by the trusted FTE workers, and a range of services and other recruitment streams to build, in real time, a dynamic response to a crucial enterprise initiative. The contingent workforce has become the foundation of workforce scalability, and rightfully so: businesses that survived 2020 and look forward to thriving in the second half of 2021 are actively harnessing the dynamic power of the agile workforce to get work done.

In its upcoming Future of Work Exchange Report for 2021 research study, we discovered that Best-in-Class organizations (top-performing enterprises based on a series of key workforce, quality, visibility, etc. metrics) are 32% more likely to tap into digital staffing outlets for talent acquisition needs. These solutions, which typically include talent marketplaces and talent communities/clouds, offer vetted and high-quality talent for either general positions or specific verticals (such as light industrial, engineering, graphic design, coding, etc.). These offerings are often considered enterprise-grade solutions that facilitate real-time and on-demand talent engagement with independent, freelance, or contract workers via a web-based network or portal.

Talent marketplaces typically offer “white-glove” or high-touch talent management services (akin to Managed Service Providers) to help their clients source the best-fit talent for their project requirements as well as the automation of core workforce management processes (such as requisition management, talent pool development, and back-end financial operations). The utilization of talent marketplaces and digital staffing outlets has increased by over 700% over the past six years, according to our research.

Ardent Partners recently published a definitive guide to the digital staffing and talent marketplace solutions arena, the 2021 Digital Staffing Marketplaces Technology Advisor. Click here to register and download your copy today. This new report will assist executives and professionals understand this evolving solutions landscape and help them find, engage, and source top-tier talent and skillsets.

Download your copy of this critical new research study, and feel free to reach out if you have any questions regarding the new report, the digital staffing technology landscape, how to find the best-fit talent marketplace for your organization, etc.

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The Permanence of Workplace and Workforce Transformation

Around this time last year, there was a spirit of optimism that had been missing for over six months. The waning weeks of 2020’s winter brought disruption like never before, with the spring months forever etched into our minds as a period of uncertainty, fear, and anxiety. The summer of 2020 brought a sliver of hope that coronavirus cases would recede in anticipation of a better fall. We unfortunately know how the story goes from there: inching cases from September through the end of November brought one of the globe biggest’s winter surge before millions of COVID vaccines were administered through the late weeks of winter 2021 and through the spring. And yes, now we’re living a Delta variant world, but there’s at least some science-led expectancy that its enhanced transmissibility will result in a shorter surge than the ones earlier in the year.

If we look back to last summer, though, for just a moment, there was an aura of variability that sparked a temporary wave of thinking in how businesses managed their workforce and structured their workplace environments. “At some point, hopefully soon, we’ll get back to normal.” We’ve been saying it for months since then, hoping that there will be some sort of signal that it’s okay to get back to full office, cluttered highways, and crowded meeting rooms. Maybe there’ll be a point in time when those carefree, pre-pandemic days will once again be a steadfast reality, right?

Wrong.

If there’s anything that we should be discussing now, it’s the permanence of transformation. The pandemic left an indelible mark on how we get work done, from the way we engage talent to the means of aligning skillsets with specific roles and projects. In our personal worlds, we think, act, and move differently. Even those of us who are vaccinated routinely wear masks in grocery stores and other crowded areas. While there will absolutely be a day that we can battle COVID as an endemic piece of our seasonal virus gauntlet (much like the flu or the common cold), the truth is that we are all different from the collective experience of the past 18 months, which will soon be “the past two years” and then the “past 36 months.” We’re looking at a future of on-and-off mask mandates, vaccine boosters, and “embers” of hotspots where inoculation is low. We’re standing up against a continued fight against a “goldilocks” of a virus that will be with us forever.

That modicum of permanence, that we’ve been fundamentally changed…why can’t we accept that in how we conduct business? Do we really think that there will be a day sometime soon when we throw out all of the productivity gains we’ve seen from a shift to remote work? What about the realization that businesses can effectively engage top-tier talent no matter the location? And is there a point in time when enterprises suddenly stop relying on the extended workforce?

Well, no, of course not. Which means that the evolution we’ve collectively experienced as business professionals over the past 18 months is permanent, a series of uniform changes to how we think about talent and how we think about how work gets done. Consider that:

  • Nearly half (47%) of the total workforce is considered “non-employee,” another sharp increase from the year before and likely a result of the workforce agility gained from tapping into this on-demand, top-tier talent.
  • 75% of businesses state that the pandemic forced them to reimagine how they apply skillsets to projects and how they structure their workforce.
  • 70% of enterprises believe that the extended workforce effectively allowed them to be more adaptive during the challenging times of 2020.
  • 82% of businesses expect worker flexibility and related issues (such as empathy) to permanently transform how work is done.

Look at how fast the past year-and-a-half went by and the major talent/work shifts during that time period: remote and hybrid work as fundamental layers of survival, executive leaders managing with empathy and flexibility, the agile workforce becoming even more of a tool for thriving in changing times, etc. Change can be relative in most cases, but today, it is certainly not. We’ve all collectively experienced change in our personal and professional lives, and now the permanence of workforce and workplace transformation needs to be embraced as the current and future state of work. Businesses that don’t adapt and don’t buy into the foundational revolution of change will not only be left behind, but may find themselves never being able to catch up. Everything that’s happened in the greater world of work and talent, be it the viability of hybrid work or the massive shift to worker flexibility, is part of a permanent fixture of change and progression.

Workers understand what’s at stake and it’s the main reason why resignations are at an all-time high in the scope of business history. Worker experience (what we call the “talent experience” here at FOWX) is paramount for career development and work/life balance. Flexibility has cascaded down into the very fabric of the workforce and will forever become a crucial piece of the overall talent experience.

Given the uptick in extended talent utilization, the workforce has changed. Given the uptick in remote and hybrid work, the workplace has changed. Given the requirements and criticality of flexibility and the employee experience, the worker has changed. Permanently.

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