The Employee Experience Is The Future of Work - 10 HR Trends For 2017
The Employee Experience Is The Future of Work - 10 HR Trends For 2017
The Employee Experience Is The Future of Work - 10 HR Trends For 2017
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the next journey for HR leaders will be to apply a consumer and a digital lens to
the HR function
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The same can be said for forward looking HR departments like those at IBM and
General Electric. HR leaders such as Diane Gherson at IBM, and Susan Peters at
General Electric, are transforming HR to deliver an employee experience that is
human centered, uses the latest digital technologies, and is personalized,
compelling, and memorable.
Watch on Forbes:
Applying a consumer and digital lens is much more than just incorporating new
solutions in HR. Being employee-centered and digital is about having a new
mindset, plus a set of consumer-focused and technological skills to creating new
HR solutions. Above all, it requires a belief in the power of leveraging the latest
consumer technologies inside HR. This starts with how a company engages
prospective new hires. Consider how Zulily, an e-commerce company selling
clothing, toys, and home products, invites candidates applying for a job on
its social media team to submit an Instagram post that best represents
themselves and what they would bring to the team. Or consider how MasterCard,
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BMO Financial Group, Cisco, and Silicon Valley Bank develop new HR solutions
by conducting hackathons to co-create new ways forward with employees.
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Scrum Master.” The result: recruiters were able to deliver top talent to clients
within 2 to 6 weeks versus an average of 10-15 weeks. Agile is not only being
applied to recruiting but also to learning and development. I've interviewed many
heads of learning and identified a number who considered themselves
intrapreneurs of the learning function rather than learning and development
subject matter experts. What they did differently was apply an agile approach to
corporate learning by making it easy for employees to find, rate, tag, and
consume learning. They saw their job as learning curators rather than content
creators. Companies like IBM, Visa, MasterCard, Adidas, and General Electric, to
name just a few, are adopting new intelligent digital platforms to create a Netflix-
like experience for corporate learners.
#3) Partner With Real Estate To Create Spaces That Promote Culture
In a TED talk, Susan Cain made the case that most workplaces are, “designed
mostly for extroverts and their need for lots of stimulation.” She highlighted how
introverts are highly talented individuals with a very different set of
characteristics. So companies should ask, “How can we accommodate both our
introverts and our extroverts in our work spaces?” Try asking yourself four simple
questions regarding the work space you have in your organization:
Although a majority of American workers go to offices with open floor plans (70%
of us, according to the International Facilities Management Association),
companies are beginning to acknowledge that this isn’t always the best for getting
work done. In fact, research from Steelcase conducted with a global sample of
12,480 employees across 17 countries documents that workers who have control
over where and how they work, and are free to choose a work space to fit their
task at hand—either focused work or collaborative work—are 88% more engaged
at work. The decision is not whether or not to design an open space, but rather
how to give employees choice in where to work based upon the activity they are
working on.
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The HR takeaway: work space is not just a building, but part of the HR agenda to
extend the company’s culture and engage employees.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a huge market, predicted to surge from $8 billion this
year to $47 billion by 2020, according to IDC. Some say it resembles the Internet
in the mid 1990’s, and will be built into all kinds of products and services.
Marketers are already using bots—or artificial intelligence computer program
designed to simulate a conversation through written or spoken text—to deliver
personalized conversational experiences online. During 2016, we saw a surge of
interest in chatbots with the creation of digital co-workers, meaning a piece of
software that works alongside you at your job and participates in the day to day
activities of your company as an active and engaged member of the team. Using
chatbots to create conversational experiences is becoming the new digital
interface.
Enter Amy Ingram, the AI powered personal virtual assistant launched by x.ai
who schedules meetings and is so “human-like” she has been asked out for dates,
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says Dennis Mortensen, CEO of x.ai. Or Talla, a chat bot who handles recruiting
tasks such as suggesting interview questions or finding similar candidates on
LinkedIn, or Howdy, a workplace automation tool for your team.
The latest prediction from Gideon Mann, head of data science at Bloomberg LP, is
that "Over the next five years, automation will seep into more and more aspects of
our work and personal lives. Increasingly, it will be hard to distinguish what is
being done by a person and what is done by a machine. As a result, the
fundamental nature of how humans work will be transformed and we'll have to
work smarter." We are already seeing predictions that bots are poised to take over
from apps in the workplace.
Will automation lead to fewer jobs? The more interesting question is how will our
current jobs evolve and what type of training is needed to up skill employees who
hold jobs where automation will be hardest hit. According to World Economic
Forum the jobs most at risk are in routine white collar jobs, manufacturing and
truck drivers as self driving takes hold.
The workforce of the future won’t be all full time employees. Rather, it will be
blended, or composed of full time employees as well as consultants, contractors,
freelancers, part time employees, and other contingent workers, collectively
known as Gig Economy Workers. Multiple studies, conducted by Intuit, The
Freelancers Union, and, most recently, Katz Krueger, professors respectively from
Harvard and Princeton, predict the percentage of the workforce who are Gig
Economy Workers range from 15.8% to 34%.
This percentage of workers who are contingent is growing, but not just due to
online platforms like Uber, Field Nation, or Work Market. It’s offline alternative
work options that are actually growing the fastest. Recent estimates by Indeed
document that job searches showing the most growth are for specialized and
technical roles such as Data Scientists, Digital Marketers, Network Engineers,
and Talent Acquisition Leads. Glassdoor Economist Dr. Andrew Chamberlain
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confirms that the job growth he sees is also in specialized and technical roles
requiring creative judgment, flexibility and long-term relationship building.
Chamberlain believes these specialized jobs may be the least likely to function
well on a gig economy platform.
This does not mean that the blended workforce (comprised of full time workers
and Gig Economy Workers) is disappearing. They are and will be a permanent
part of the changing composition of the workforce. But the composition of gig
workers will morph over time. Forward-looking HR leaders should take action
now to plan for a blended workforce and address issues such as; how do you on-
board and integrate gig workers or what types of training can gig workers have
access to?
These digital natives want digital experiences both in their personal and
professional lives. The Future Workplace Forecast has uncovered an innovative
way for companies to provide digital career development: career mobility
platforms allowing employees to test drive new roles and broaden their skills
while they keep their current jobs at the company. The Future Workplace
Forecast was conducted among 2,147 global heads of HR and Hiring Managers
and shows how companies are creating new ways for employees to try out new
roles. HR leaders believe this can lead to increases employee engagement (49%),
improved employee productivity (39%), and improved employee teamwork (39%).
As the war for talent heats up, with the U.S. unemployment rate falling to 4.6 in
November 2016, the lowest jobless rate since August 2007, retaining employees
will be crucial and career mobility platforms are one way to potentially increase
employee engagement while stemming job hopping.
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recent survey conducted by SunTrust Bank found that 70% of working adults felt
a moderate or high level of financial stress in their lives. The solution: an online
financial fitness program to help their employees save $2,000 for an emergency
and take one paid day off for to improve their financial health through setting up
a will, doing a family budget, or going through the online Financial Fitness
program offered free to all SunTrust employees.
Companies are also integrating the latest technologies into wellness programs.
Chris Boyce, CEO of Virgin Pulse, says wellness programs are leveraging Internet
of Things (IoT) and embedding artificial intelligence into well-being solutions. AI
tools like Amazon’s Alexa, and beacons, which use Bluetooth, enable users to
know how they are meeting their health and fitness goals without using a mobile
phone or a web browser. Well-being in the workplace is becoming an expectation
for how we will work and live our lives.
What will the “new normal” look like for the HR function? McKinsey coined the
phrase the “new normal,” referring to the fundamental changes in the business
landscape following the 2008 recession. For HR, I see the “new normal,” as the
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I also see more specialized consumer marketing type roles such as Mark Levy,
Global Head of Employee Experience at Airbnb, or Stephen Hamm, Chief
StoryTeller at IBM. Finally, we will see more HR organizations beyond Airbnb to
have an entire department focused on Employee Experience. It’s this
convergence of technology and consumer marketing which holds the most
promise for how HR will transform itself.
You can either be fearful or excited about these changes. I see new opportunities
to improve the value and importance in HR. What are you doing to prepare for
this? What new roles will your organization create to prepare for this
transformation? Share your comments with me here!
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