Trends Changing the Nature of Work
It once took weeks for a letter to be sent
across the country. Sending an e-mail takes only seconds today. technology and connectivity have changed, the
ways in which human resources professionals approach how their workers function
should also change. Technological development, outsourcing, changing attitudes
and values of workers, demographics and diversity, and globalization are among
the trends.
Technology. The line between work
life and personal life is still blurred by smart devices that allow continuous
connectivity. Kushner said, 'I think one of the problems in HR is trying to
find out how to get workers involved without making them work around the clock.
Telecommuting and flexible hours are just the first steps down that pathway” of
navigating the issues surrounding constant connectivity and work/life balance,
he said.
Outsourcing. Companies have come to define
which work is critical and which work is not, Kushner said. “Organizations will
move in the future to outsourcing the noncore competencies of the workplace,”
he said. He clarified that companies are now using more "free
agents," who come in for projects and provide specialized knowledge while
expanding their skill sets, then move on to other organizations. The problem
for HR as this trend persists, according to Kushner, is that it causes us to
look at our organizational approach and build our HR strategies around how work
is performed in our organization and by whom
Changing worker
attitudes and values. There was a time when, Kushner said, people
stayed in one job throughout their lives. A worker in the U.S. today has an
organizational life expectancy of just 3.5 years, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. That will be a challenge for HR, he said, as it struggles to
"reconcile how we engage our employees in such a way that they want to be
here, but recognize that they have outside the workplace interests."
Demographics and
diversity. People live longer and for
the first time ever, "we'll have five generations in the workplace in the
next 10 years," Kushner pointed out. You're going to have traditionalists,
Boomers, Gen X, Gen Y, and what I call wireless Gen. There are individuals who
have grown up with technology in their hands; they understand it; they know how
to use those resources.
“Within HR, it’s going to change the way we think of some of the
traditional ways we strategize all sorts of things in an
organization”—especially training and development, he said.
Today, he explained, “institutional knowledge is passed down and
around—you end up in a mutual training paradigm. That’s an amazing change in
the way we’ve done this for thousands of years.”
Globalization. Before Oracle acquired it,
Sun Microsystems had workers working on special projects around the world in
the U.S., India and Europe. "We get 24 hours of working time now.
Geographically, this dispersion of work is the best possible way to get work
finished, Kushner said. If you are in HR, he said, you should "look at the
goals and objectives of your organization" and align the HR plan
accordingly.
Conclusion
Trends in the size and composition of the
workforce and in the rate of technological change and economic globalization
would have consequences for the future of jobs. Employees may work in more
decentralized, specialist firms; slower labor growth may allow employers to
hire relatively low labor force participation groups; greater focus will be put
on retraining and lifelong learning and higher wages will be driven by
potential productivity growth and will impact the distribution of wages. Given
this, there might be a need to reexamine certain policies.
Reference
Kompier, M. (2013). Workplace violence and the
changing nature of work in Europe: Trends and risk groups. European
Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, 22(05), 588-600. Retrieved
11 22, 2020, from
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1359432X.2012.690557
RAND. (2017). The Future at Work—Trends
and Implications. RAND Corporation research. Retrieved 11 22, 2020, from
https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_briefs/RB5070/RB5070.pdf
SHRM. (2013, June 21). Trends Changing
the Nature of Work. Retrieved 11 22, 2020, from SHRM:
https://www.shrm.org/hr-today/news/hr-news/pages/5-trends-changing-the-nature-of-work.aspx

I think one of the challenges in HR is trying to figure out how to have engaged employees without having a Technology its vain which h will work around the clock, This is my Opinion.
ReplyDeleteThe trends include technological advancement, outsorcing, changing worker attitudes. Proper description. Thanks.
ReplyDelete