THE
NEW AGE WORKFORCE
Increased
diversity, participative work environment, longer life expectancies, knowledge
workers, women as entrepreneurs, flexi
work-hours, third place work concepts,
greater strive to maintain work-life balance are the few aspects that characterize
the NEW AGE WORKFORCE.
If we look at the changes in workforce conceptually,
it is noticeable that:
- Baby Boomers are attaining the standard retirement age.
- X generation is placidly preparing to move towards the top management positions.
- Y generation is progressing from academic level and filling a large section of middle and lower-level jobs.
So,
with that perspective we have four different generations working together in
this era: Traditionalists, Boomer, Gen X, and Millennial; who were born,
brought up and educated through entirely different modes.
Focusing on the new age workforce, i.e. Millennial,
employees today have better knowledge regarding their work-areas, organizational
policies, rewards and benefits and greater awareness of their skills and
competencies as compared to the earlier picture. Millennials have a particular
style and manner of doing things and they are changing ways in which work gets
done. They prefer working in teams and
use effective technology to work quicker and better. Their social mindset is
also a significant factor, they like being connected and staying informed.
The
workforce is highly diversified with people from different regions, people with
different religions and from different ethnicity and backgrounds who come
together and work in groups for a common purpose. For instance, the Nike factory
employees’ more than 500 workers who come from about 44 countries and speak 19
languages. When the plant issues any notice or written announcements, they are
printed in English, Chinese, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Vietnamese, and
Haitian Creole.
Talking
about gender diversity issues in the corporate, we have almost 55% of women
employees in the corporate who affect the organizational policies, power and
positioning. Diversity
will be a critical competency for leaders and employees in the coming time.
According
to Families and Work Institute’s National Study of the Changing Workforce: Among Millennials (under 29 years old), women
are just as likely as men to want jobs with greater responsibility.
The new workforce represents distinctive desires to
build create or invent something of their own. The thumb rule is to integrating innovation into the
organizational DNA to make the workplace more participative and autonomous. This
new-age workforce is more ‘achievement oriented’ rather than money or role focused.
The employees want feedback to be provided on their performance and give
greater significance to coaching and mentoring. They are
knowledge workers with a different set of intrinsic and extrinsic motivators. The
Gen Y highly values meaningful and challenging work.
One of the major challenges that
organizations would face in attracting the next workforce, or preparing the
current one, setting up a new workforce culture to better understand
transnational teams, online collaboration, globalization and business process
transformation. Managing Gen Yers expectations and channelizing their energy is
what the organization needs to focus on to deal with this new age workforce.
We are different! |
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