Эпоха человеческого капитала:кадровый потенциал как...
TRANSCRIPT
1 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Wednesday 25th November
The Human Age:
Talent as the Driver of Business Success
HUGH PIPER, OPERATIONS DIRECTOR (STRATEGIC CLIENTS), MANPOWER UK
3 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Disruptive
Forces
Impacting
the World
of Work
Talent in the Human Age – Certain Uncertainty
Economic Recovery
• Globally uneven
• Recession risk
• Slow job creation
• Income inequality
Shifting Demographics
• Population decline
• Shrinking workforce
• Youth unemployment
• Gender inequality
Rapid Advances in
Technology
• Disruption
• Collaboration
• Mobility
• Sheer speed
Employers need to capitalize on transient competitive advantage quickly – to do this, talent is critical
5 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
World of Work Trends
RISE OF CUSTOMER
SOPHISTICATION
Rising Customer Sophistication
requires businesses to deliver greater
value and efficiency.
DEMOGRAPHICS
The Talent Mismatch is deepening as
the working age population declines
and the nature of work changes.
INDIVIDUAL CHOICE
Individual Choice will be exercised by
those with in-demand skills. The
Rise of Voice means business must
take note of external social forces.
TECHNOLOGICAL
REVOLUTIONS
Accelerated technology is changing
where, when and how we work. The
rate of change is unprecedented.
World of Work
Trends
6 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Shifting Demographics
• By 2050, Europe will have almost twice as
many people over the age of 65, as under 15
• By 2020, the US economy’s demand for labor
will outstrip supply by almost 18 million people
• By 2050 China’s over 65s will likely constitute
a population larger than the entire population
of the United States
• In North and West Africa, more than one-
quarter of the population is under age 15
and unemployment rates for young people
exceed 30%
World Population
7 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Five Generations in the Workplace by 2020 Each generation has different motivations and expectations for work.
Traditionalist Hierarchical 1928-1945
Gen X Pragmatic 1961-1979
Gen Y Immediacy 1980-2000
Gen Z Digital natives 2001-Present
Boomer Idealistic
1946-1960
8 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Technology and the Displacement of Jobs
Compared to the Industrial
Revolution, change is happening
10 times faster and at 300 times
the scale, or roughly 3,000 times
the impact.
Standing still and holding on to
what used to get results is no
longer possible.
11 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
• How do I become more employable? • How do I compete? • How do I develop my career?
• How do I grow and develop?
• How do we provide more innovative solutions?
• How can we connect employers and talent?
• How do we develop talent to match client needs?
• How do we provide scale to manage these programmes
• What value is there to my business retaining staff?
• How to I attract the right talent? • How do I retain my core talent?
• At the right cost? • With the right skills?
• What do I need? • What do they need?
• How do add value to our student’s learning – equipping them with
skills for the future • How do I provide education with
relevance for employers? • How do we make our university stand out to students for our links
with business’?
Future Talent Today
Innovation in Resourcing – Learn whilst you Earn
13 ManpowerGroup | Wednesday, November 25,
2015
Become A Talent Destination
People Practices
• Today’s practices were created with outdated assumptions – so why are will still using them?
• What new practices will we need in order to attract, develop and retain the talent?
Work Models • How do we manage talent to drive productivity?
• How do we manage a diverse workforce?
• How do we inject flexibility into our workforce mix?
Talent Sources • Do we know all of our talent supply options?
• How can we optimize the talent we have?
• What talent strategies can we deploy to reach under-tapped and untapped talent pools?
Talent
Management
Talent
Development
Talent
Resourcing