1. Inspire your team with a clear vision and mission for the business
2. Innovate around talent issues, think outside of the box, be different. Keeping the knowledge workers who might be retiring will be key (so think how you can provide some interesting avenues that these retiring workers can "ease" into retirement, so often, retirement is immediate and ends)
3. Develop staff by ensuring that you put into place trainings, seminars, mentoring programs (and don't cut these at the first sign of financial distress).
Now, on another note, for those that are in the HR field, talent shortage is positive news. When I meet with organizational heads, their most critical business issue is understanding their talent issues and future workforce planning needs. They are information rich, but intelligence poor, i.e., they have a tremendous amount of information on their staff but it is not aggregated which cannot provide insight. As an HR professional, you can be the true business partner that can have an impact on the business results. A firm that can help the organizational heads and HR professionals identify talent issues proactively and provide impactful insights will be very successful one.
Here is a quick blurb on the talent shortage.
Talent Shortage Looming
With baby boomers poised to retire, employers need to start planning for the future, experts say.
By: Ana Patricia
http://www.inc.com/news/articles/2008/08/retirement.html?partner=rss
Employers need to start planning for a looming workplace talent shortage as legions of baby boomers approach retirement, according to the Life Options Institute, a New York-based retirement planning group.
"The coming talent shortage may force employers to overcome their age bias and introduce new opportunities with which to utilize this powerful asset," Joan Strewler-Carter, the group's co-founder said in a statement.
That includes encouraging retirement-age workers to remain on staff on a part-time basis to help train new employees, Strewler-Carter said. She cited a Merrill Lynch Retirement Study released in 2006 that found a growing number of baby boomers were willing to work past retirement.
Baby boomers are currently the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. labor force, according to the Labor Department. By 2014, about 20 percent of the workforce will be made up of workers over 65, estimates show.
Among other challenges, Strewler-Carter said employers will have to learn to adapt to the different needs of working retirees in the years ahead.
No comments:
Post a Comment