8 major HR Trends for 2018 by HR TREND INSTITUTE
"1.
From PTB to EI
Dave
Ulrich’s “Human Resource Champions”
has probably been the book with the largest impact on the HR profession in the
last decades. Unfortunately, many people did not read the book, but only saw
a picture with the four archetypical
roles for HR. For many the book was summarised in one key message: you must
become a Strategic Business Partner. As strategy was a role of top management,
this meant you had to get close to management, or even better, become part of
top management! Many of today’s CHRO’s have grown in this area. Therefore, HR
has focused too much on pleasing top management, and forgot to develop one of
the other key roles Ulrich described: Employee Champion.
The tide is slowly turning, from PTB (please the boss) to EI (employee intimacy). Really understanding the wishes, needs and capabilities of employees is getting more important, and this employee intimacy is required to design relevant employee journeys. Read our earlier blog post: To a more human and holistic HR.
The tide is slowly turning, from PTB (please the boss) to EI (employee intimacy). Really understanding the wishes, needs and capabilities of employees is getting more important, and this employee intimacy is required to design relevant employee journeys. Read our earlier blog post: To a more human and holistic HR.
2.
Renewed focus on productivity
In
the last years, there has not been a lot of focus on productivity. We see a
slow change at the horizon. Traditionally, capacity problems have been solved
by recruiting new people. This has led to several problems. When you need many
people, it is difficult to apply very stringent selection criteria. Because you
compromise on quality, and because if you grow you generally need more coordination
mechanisms (often management), productivity goes down. When focusing more on
productivity, the benefits for the organisation and the employees can be big.
You need to hire less people, and the potential of the employees is better
used. People analytics can help to determine what the characteristics are of
the best performing people and teams. The findings can be used in recruitment
and in people and team development. Read: 3 reasons to stop counting
heads.
3.
Power to the people (or: Bring your own everything)
Many
organisations are still used to work in a top-down way. In those organisations,
also HR finds it difficult to approach issues in a different way. Performance
management is a good example. Changing the performance management process is
often tackled as an organisation wide issue, and HR needs to find the new
uniform solution. In line with the trend called “the consumerisation of HR”
employees are expected to take more initiative, being tired of waiting for the
organisation and HR, and wanting to be more independent of organisational
initiatives. If you want feedback, you can easily organise it yourself, for
example with the Slack plug-in Captain Feedback. A
simple survey to measure the mood in your team is quickly built with Polly
(view: “How to measure the mood in your
team with Slack and Polly“). Many employees are already tracking
their own fitness with trackers like Fitbit and the Apple Watch. Many teams
primarily use communication tools as WhatsApp and Slack, avoiding the
officially approved communication channels. HR might go with the flow, and tap
on to the channels used, instead of trying to promote standardised and approved
channels.
4.
The end of fixed jobs
The
slow shift has been going on for years now. The Tayloristic organisation, where
everybody has a clearly defined and assigned job, often does not work so well.
Especially when the assignments are not so clearly defined, more flexibility is
required. The jobs become more flexible, and employees get the opportunity to
craft their own job, to make the best fit with their wishes, needs and
capabilities. Some organisations go beyond job crafting. When there is an
assignment, there is a process to look at the capabilities (qualitative and
quantitative) required for this specific assignment. The wishes, needs and
capabilities of people connected to the organisation are known, or captured as
part of the process. A team is established, where the availability of people
and the requirements of other teams must be considered. Teams are not build of
people with specific fixed jobs, but of people who have specific skills that
are needed to deliver the assignment. People with broad skill sets, can use
certain skills in Team A, and other skills in Team B at their next assignment.
The leader of Team A, who has specific skills in building new teams, might be
the agile coach in Team B, as she is also very good in agile coaching. In this
new situation, it is not possible to assign static job names to people.
Read: The end of static jobs.
5.
Learning in real time
The
learning domain has been slow in using the opportunities offered by technology.
Loads of money is still wasted on classroom training for groups of employees on
very broad subjects, often not directed at immediate application, but for
possible future use. There are signs this is changing. Big chunks of material are
divided in more digestible small pieces (micro learning). Employees will have
easy access to learning material when they need it (just in time). Knowledge
and skills can be learned in a playful manner (gamification), and VR and AR
learning solutions make learning more real (and fun). The learning experience
can be tailored to the individual capabilities and needs of employees. A
challenge will remain to monitor and measure the performance of people, to be
able to find (or design) the most appropriate learning solution.
6.
Hospitality and Service
HR
operations has been highly undervalued. The last years we have seen an upgrade
of HR Operations. Most likely HR can add most value in the HR operations area.
The requirements for the people in HR operations are different though, and
probably we need a new breed of HR professionals who can run HR as a service
organisation. In HR services both IT and hospitality are important.
Organisations that measure how employees experience their journey, often find
that employees are not very happy with how they can find relevant HR
information (often on the intranet). A top-notch HR service centre is very
important for a positive candidate and employee experience. 24/7. Friendly
chatbots that help employees and managers. High level professionals that can
help when the programmed processes do not offer a solution and when the issue
is too difficult for the chatbot.7.
Shrinking HR teams
Most
HR professionals will work in HR services. The number of jobs in HR services will
decrease, as the level of automation increases. Example: the sourcing work many
recruiters were doing, is rapidly taken over by intelligent machines. HR
advisors/ assistants/ business partners will become less necessary (see also
trends 1 and 3). Read: “Basic architecture HR“.
HR is certainly a profession. Top HR professionals will be needed in HR
services, and on a high-level HR architects can (and should) play an important
role in the transformation of organisations.
8.
Letting go
Earlier
this year we published “8 talent management trends for
2018“. One of the trends we labelled: “A more organic approach to
talent management”. This trend is related to trend number three in this list
(“Power to the people”). A quote from our article: “Planning and control
are overrated. Most talent management programs cost a lot of money, and do not
deliver on the high expectations. HR and management are used to design and
implement programs, and life might feel empty without. I was speaking about
talent management with a friend, who is working at a medium sized
multinational, recently. She said she was now advocating a “go with the flow”
approach. Talent in their organisation often starts initiatives without any
corporate involvement. The main task of the corporate team is to stimulate and
not to stop these initiatives, and not to force them to a global approach
immediately. An interesting organic approach.” Surely this approach can also be
applied to other areas in HR."
https://hrtrendinstitute.com/2017/11/27/8-major-hr-trends-for-2018/
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