4 Trends Influencing the Future of Work
October 1, 2024 – The last few years have created an urgent need for executive leaders to become adaptable and intentional in the face of both sudden and ongoing change. “As the workplace is continually being reshaped by these changes, there are several trends that demand the attention of these leaders, compelling them to evaluate and respond strategically in order to build resilient, innovative, and inclusive workplaces,” says Slayton Search Partners’ John Doyle in a recent report. Slayton Search Partners addresses four critical workplace trends that leaders must consider as they plan for the future.
1. The Ongoing Conversation of Remote Work
The conversation around remote work is, perhaps, beginning to stagnate; at least one in ten employees are working from home exclusively, while at least one in four are hybrid, according to a report from Forbes. “This seems to have become the post-pandemic norm,” Mr. Doyle said. “Yet employers haven’t perfected what work-from-home practices should consistently look like. Leading and managing employees within a virtual workplace is particularly challenging, with little training in place for improving and evolving best practices.”
Furthermore, while the data still shows that most remote employees report feeling more productive, the jury is still out on whether that’s true, according to Mr. Doyle. “It seems to depend on how productivity is measured and whether other factors are taken into account like cost savings and retention rates,” he said. “Additionally, for some industries, such as banking and financial services, regulation regarding home offices has been shifting ever since the onset of the pandemic. At the time, regulators loosened their stringent supervision rules to adapt to shelter-in-place orders. Now, however, these rules are being revisited and, in an effort to maintain compliance, some firms are abandoning remote work altogether.”
However, the fact is that a significant portion of the U.S. workforce likes and desires to work remotely—and this shift in expectations is opening up new questions, a report from Deloitte. For example, the Slayton report explains that some leaders who have been curious how new workplace models might impact productivity and engagement, have experimented with four-day work weeks. Some studies even show that one in three workers would accept a pay cut in exchange for a shortened work week. What would that mean for the way organizations operate? In what industries and scenarios could a model like this achieve greater success?
John Doyle has more than 20 years of executive search experience, specializing primarily in the human resources function. He has recruited chief human resources officers, as well as group level HR generalists and functional specialists across a wide variety of industries for companies of all sizes. As an HR professional, Mr. Doyle has directed the development of recruiting, training, and management assessment strategies for client companies coast to coast.
“Executive leadership must ask these questions in the context of their own four walls,” Mr. Doyle said. “In a world where professionals are looking for greater meaning and more autonomy at work—whether that’s remote, hybrid, or otherwise—leaders need to evaluate the unique needs of their teams and respond accordingly.”
2. Longer Life Expectancies and Career Trajectories.
When social security was first established, with retirement benefits granted at age 65, the average life expectancy was just 58 for men and 62 for women. Currently, U.S. life expectancy is an average of 76 (down from 78 pre-pandemic) and is into the 80s in other countries around the world.
What this means in the context of employment is that careers are steadily expanding in longevity. The BLS predicts that the labor force participation rate for employees age 65 to 74 will be 30.2 percent in 2026, up from 26.8 percent in 2016, while the rate of those age 75+ will be 10.8%, up from 8.4 percent. These percentages have been steadily increasing over the last several decades.
“Leaders will need to consider what this means for career development programs as well as their hiring profiles for various positions,” Mr. Doyle said. “With longer career spans, it’s likely that people will gain a greater diversity of experiences across different industries and different types of roles, disrupting traditional career paths and sparking many “second-act” careers. Additionally, for CHROs, there might be the question of how to manage and nurture a multi-generational workplace and how to combat ingrained ageism.”
Finally, employers will likely encounter new and complex questions regarding how Social Security, Medicare, 401(k) contributions, Required Minimum Distributions, and any other government-regulated benefit might be impacted by employees continuing to work well past the normal retirement age, according to Mr. Doyle. “There will likely be other unforeseen consequences requiring HR leaders to develop creative solutions to address the multigenerational workforce of the future,” he said.
3. Reframing the Role of Technology
As director at the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, Thomas Malone, poignantly says: “We have spent way too much time thinking about people versus computers, and not nearly enough time thinking about people and computers. Way too much time thinking about what jobs computers are going to take away from people, and not nearly enough time thinking about what people and computers can do together that could never be done before.”
“When faced with pressures of cost cutting and scaling, companies are no stranger to the efficiencies that are possible through the use of technology. In many instances, this looks like a tool or software replacing a transactional function and ensuring there is someone to QA that work as it’s completed,” Mr. Doyle said. “However, there is a growing focus on human-centric technical infrastructure, in which there is greater opportunity for collaboration between man and machine. In this case, technology augments rather than replaces, and human intelligence builds upon what technology is capable of. It’s easy to see how this works with AI in the picture, with the proliferation of AI-powered “assistants” to empower professionals and leaders to achieve more in new, better, and bigger ways. Insight from Deloitte suggests that there is an even greater spectrum of possibility for human-tech collaboration, including machine as peer and as manager.”
Related: Integrating Business and Talent Strategies: How Diagnostics Fuel Growth
As leaders strategize around the role of technology in their workplace, they must also be aware of how the growing remote workforce and deeper infiltration of technology in people’s personal lives impact how professionals interact with an organization’s digital infrastructure, Mr. Doyle explains.
4. Shifting Focus from Shareholders to Stakeholders
It’s a rare organization that isn’t in some way driven by profit and long-term financial performance. The shareholders and their economic interests have traditionally been the number one priority. But according to a Deloitte report this model is evolving, with a growing focus on the stakeholder. Those stakeholders include the obvious ones—the employees, customers, and vendors—but also the less common ones: the community and even the environment.
How Strategic HR Leaders Unleash Workforce Potential
The hot U.S. labor market has shown remarkable resilience in recent years. Despite gradual stabilization—driven by a decrease in job openings and recent upticks in the national unemployment rate—the tumultuous echoes of the Great Resignation and quiet quitting continue to disrupt industries. As the war for top talent wages on, hiring, retention, and employee engagement will remain top business priorities in the new year.
“The CHRO role will be central to success amidst growing workforce challenges,” says Slayton Search Partners’ John Dyle in a recent report. “In 2024 and beyond, CHROs must once again become strategic partners to the CEO to unleash the full value of human capital.”
“In practice, this looks like an increase in ESG initiatives as well as a more intentional approach to building trust and transparency among stakeholders,” Mr. Doyle said. “Leaders need to begin the quest to better understand the societal and environmental impacts of their business and start leaning towards practices that nurture the long-term welfare of all stakeholders. Beyond acting for the greater good in these instances, the data shows that employee engagement significantly increases when an organization’s values and initiatives shift in this way. That in turn sparks greater retention and productivity, which inevitably impacts the bottom line in a way that also benefits shareholders.”
Preparing for the Future Workplace
Change, of course, is inevitable, but the first few years of this decade exponentially shifted our workplaces—from employment models and work environments to demographic shifts, emerging technologies, and stakeholder values, Mr. Doyle explains. “Executive leaders across all functions must seek to stay in tune with these evolving trends as the workplace is steadily reshaped around them,” he said. “Efforts to creatively and intentionally address these shifts will position organizations to stay ahead of the competition and achieve new levels of growth and innovation.”
Established in 1985, Slayton Search Partners focuses on finding executive talent in the consumer, retail, financial services, insurance, industrial, and private equity sectors. The firm said that its network of industry leaders invariably leads it to opportunities outside of its core practice areas. Evolving markets, emerging technologies, and changing consumer habits have impacted all industries, said the search firm, and that the need for strong executive talent is far-reaching.
In 2022, professional services firm The Judge Group acquired Slayton Search Partners. The Judge Group is a provider of consulting, learning, and talent services with over 50 years of experience. The acquisition of Slayton Search Partners brings a retained executive search capabilities to Judge’s broad portfolio, the company said. “The acquisition of Slayton combines two leading providers of search services with decades of experience and expertise,” said Marty Judge, CEO.
Related: Adapting to the Evolving Candidate Landscape
Contributed by Scott A. Scanlon, Editor-in-Chief and Dale M. Zupsansky, Executive Editor – Hunt Scanlon Media