Joyce Gioia-Herman - Future Workforce Trends

 

Joyce Gioia

Future trends, especially about the workforce and workplace; employee retention issues; the global war for talent; moving into the future with your head and your heart.

Impending Crisis: Too Many Jobs, Too Few People
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The labor shortage will be much more severe than most people realize. By 2010, we'll be 10,033,000 people short in the United States. Bottom line: corporate leaders must begin now to change the way they do business. This issue is not only strategic, but highly competitive, as well. Competition for competent workers will drive competition for customers and capital. See the evidence, get the advice, understand the situation. Read this book . . . before your competitors do! Click Here to learn more.
 

How to Become an Employer of Choice
Runner-up for the Best Business Book of the Year

Get the best workers to consciously choose to work for you-instead of joining your competition. Become an "Employer of Choice." As the labor shortage intensifies, competition for qualified, dedicated employees will become even more challenging. In our strong economy, people have choices of where they will work. Learn how to inspire workers to choose you. This book has the secrets!  Click Here to learn more.

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Contact Joyce Gioia
The Herman Group

PGreensboro, North Carolina 27410
336-282-9370
info@hermangroup.com

joyce@hermangroup.com

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Our Growing Global Workforce

Fortunately, CEOs around the world do not share the waffling confidence among consumers in the United States. Of the 1,100 executives from 52 countries polled by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) for their 13th annual "Global CEO Survey", almost 40 percent expect to add people in 2010. Only 25 percent expect further reductions in force.

In Brazil, a full 60 percent plan to increase their head counts, while in the Asia Pacific region and in Canada, about half of CEOs anticipate doing so. Only 39 percent of US CEOs expect to add staff; most (almost two-thirds) will increase modestly (5 percent or less).

The most encouraging statistic is that worldwide, 81 percent of CEOs are confident of their 2010 prospects (up from 64 percent) and only 18 percent remain pessimistic (down from 35 percent). Moreover, 31 percent of responding CEOs reported feeling “very confident” of their short-term prospects---an increase of 10 percentage points from 2009.

Executives in developing nations were more upbeat than their counterparts from developed nations. While 80 percent of North American and Western European respondents were optimistic about growth in 2010, 91 percent of CEOs in Latin America and China/Hong Kong and 97 percent in India said the same.

However, looking ahead to the next three years, the results were even more impressive: more than 90 percent of CEOs polled were confident of growth---a large number of executives thinking positively!

In spite of all of this optimism, many respondents are still fearful of a protracted global recession (65 percent) and over-regulation (60 percent). In fact, more than two-thirds of CEOs disagreed with the notion that governments have reduced the overall regulatory burden, while 65 percent agreed that regulatory co-operation will help mitigate systemic risks successfully.

ExecuNet's latest Recruiter Confidence Index data reinforces the PwC study: executive recruiter confidence is at an 18-month high and more companies are adding new executive jobs. Sixty-four percent are "confident" or "very confident" the executive employment market will improve during the next six months.

"Perception is everything!" Confidence is up and we will see more hiring worldwide. The United States will likely not lead this recovery.

Looking Forward. . .

Joyce Gioia-Herman

 

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More on topics: ExecuNet | Executives | Global CEO Survey | Over Regulation | PricewaterhouseCoopers | Protracted Global Recession | PwC | Recruiter Confidence Index

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