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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« Mixed Outlook for College Grads | Home | Herman Trend Alert: Where the Jobs Are/Will Be, Part 1 »

Economic Recovery Promotes Jumping Ship

There is an attitudinal shift happening in today's labor marketplace, and it is not good news for employers. As we have said in previous Herman Trend Alerts, increases in consumer confidence result in churning in the labor marketplace. More people are able to find jobs; others feel confident enough to quit them without firm offers. They are seeing more hiring and a strengthening economy.

It is interesting to note that in the United States more people quit their jobs in the last three months than those who lost their jobs. After 15 straight months of time in which layoffs exceeded voluntary departures, it appears that the job market is finally shifting. My guess is that the same phenomenon is being seen in some other countries, notably Brazil, India, Malaysia, and Singapore, whose economies are well into recovery already.

In September 2009, the number of people in the US who voluntarily left their employers fell by 40 percent to 1.72 million, the lowest level since the government began tracking the data in the year 2000. That figure was down from nearly 2.9 million in December 2007, when The Great Recession began.

In a related development, one-quarter of our business community's most promising employees are increasingly disengaged and many are actively seeking new employment opportunities. A recent study on employee engagement, conducted by the Corporate Executive Board's Corporate Leadership Council (CLC), found that 25 percent of the "employer-identified, high-potential employees" plan to leave their current companies within the next year. Compare that figure to the one from 2006 and we have seen an increase of 250 percent.

Moreover, 21 percent of today's employees identified themselves as "highly disengaged". This group has increased nearly 300 percent since 2007. Based on its findings, CLC believes that businesses must place greater emphasis and urgency around leadership succession planning to ensure future success and preserve the bottom line.

As in 2002 to 2003 in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks, workers are corporate cocooning. The pressure to increase productivity, while reducing staff, has left today's workers feeling overworked, under-appreciated, and burned-out. Once more people feel confident that they will be able to find other jobs, we will see unprecedented churning in the labor marketplace.

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Looking Forward. . .

Joyce L. Gioia

 

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More on topics: Corporate Cocooning | Corporate Executive Board | Corporate Leadership Council | Economy | Employers | Herman Trend Alert | Job Market | The Great Recession

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