19.01.2023
The employed recession: businesses that fail to prioritise talent will struggle to survive
- Don’t let fear-mongering influence decisions: The knee-jerk approach to cost and resource cutting that happened at the start of the pandemic and in previous recessions has had a long-term detrimental impact on economic growth. During this employed recession, businesses need a skills-led strategy, rather than a procurement-led approach.
- Focus on the skills agenda: Maintaining a focus on skills growth is crucial even in a tough economy. Companies need to focus on redeploying and retraining resources rather than losing them altogether in order to bolster crucial skills that are in increasingly short supply.
- Stop ignoring what candidates are saying: Authenticity is key in today’s economy and employers need to not only show that they are listening to what talent pools are saying, but are also making tangible changes as a result.
- Accept that flexibility is here to stay: Demand for flexibility won’t go away, regardless of the preferences of the C-Suite. Firms need to embrace fluid working styles rather than trying to shoe-horn candidates into old-fashioned setups that simply won’t work.
- Change leadership styles: Leading and inspiring a workforce that’s more flexible requires a new management style that’s led by a ‘trust contract’ where staff are given the autonomy to choose how and where they work.
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