HROTodayGlobal

HROTG_Autumn_2013

Issue link: http://www.e-digitaleditions.com/i/210252

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 18 of 67

Talent Management blended workforce solution can impact their talent management. This type of solution can drive powerful benefits and positive outcomes, said Kate Harper, director of talent strategy for Capita. "Strategic workforce planning is not necessarily high enough on the agenda," Harper said. But clients are more receptive of the blended concept when tackling a specific problem like poor retention rates of temporary workers, she said. "We used the problem and the challenge as a means to sit down with the client and say, 'Hold on,'" Harper said. "If they started to think innovatively about the solution beyond the boundaries of this just being a temporary resourcing solution, can we find an alternative and a better way of doing it. And the answer in this case was 'Yes, we can.'" Too many organisations also still experience turf fights over ownership between HR and procurement, she said. Both have their own agenda: For procurement, costs typically drive the solution, and for HR, the driver is typically quality of talent, she said. Capita works with other outsourcers in a way that is in "the highest interest of the client," with a "blended approach [that] can really benefit the outcome." "So even if the client was not ready, we affected some positive change, and offered more insight of the total workforce solution," Harper said. Some of Randstad Sourceright's clients have voiced objections to "having all your eggs in one basket," but a senior-level executive acting as an ambassador "can drive change," particularly if they involve business unit leaders early in the process to help shape the model and approach. Technology is also a challenge. Currently the market lacks a software system that effectively manages both permanent and temporary forecasting and hiring needs. Oftentimes, organisations need to "manually blend" management information reports using data about workforce utilisation, turnover rates, and other metrics from software used by all their business partners. "We have to build this idea of a blended solution, even if we're not operating both contracts on common technology, we make sure we develop all of our staff to 'think blended,'" Harper said. Still, outsourcers working on a blended workforce solution are waiting for the technology industry "to see the future of this and really step up to the next level," Parfitt said. Global Approach Blended workforce solutions are gaining in popularity in Europe, particularly the U.K. and Germany, Parfitt, Browne, and Harper reported. "We're so used to following where the U.S. leads us, but in the U.K., we've had more opportunity to pursue this than our U.S. colleagues, some of that due to the sheer size of their models and the way that RPO has developed over there," Parfitt said. Is it industry driven? Randstad Sourceright hasn't seen specific industries pursuing this "en masse"—rather it's been much more about the culture of particular organisations, she said. "It also doesn't necessarily involve first generation RPO or MSP, it more depends on the appetite within the business for combing these and getting control overall," Parfitt said. Browne expects to see industries such as engineering and information technology start to embrace blended workforce solutions because of the scarcity of skills required for their positions. She has also seen progress in this model within the financial services, utilities, and telecommunications sectors. Regarding the public sector in the U.K., there are "cultural issues" to take into account when considering a blended workforce solution, Harper said. "There has been quite a lot of public condemnation of the high use of contract workers in the public sector and some sensitivity around the cost implications and when laying off larger numbers of permanent public sector workers, whether they should be replaced by contract workers," she said. "Perception does have a big impact on the sector's appetite for saying, 'We want to look at blended workforce solutions, but it's too early to say anything beyond that.'" The Future More and more organisations are warming to such a blended workforce solution, and viewing outsourced providers more as workforce consultants on talent, Harper noted. "We're moving beyond the sense of being an RPO provider or a MSP provider (to the) idea of consulting and information gathering," she said. "To do this properly is to be a true consultant related to talent." Having brand consistency across all hiring areas is becoming increasingly important, and a blended workforce solution can help develop that consistency, Parfitt said. "With social media, there is no such thing as a private internal world," she said. "Everything is open out there, so organisations need consistency in all candidate communications." Blended workforce solutions also are not just topical answers to the current economic problems—they are actually critical for the long term, Browne said. "We should not let the softness of the current economies to mask skills shortage, and we should encourage companies that they need to be flexible to bring good employee propositions for the next generation of workers," she said. AUTUMN 2013 | www.hroglobal.com [19]

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of HROTodayGlobal - HROTG_Autumn_2013