Revealed: Top three priorities for HR in 2019

‘Employees want their 9-to-5 to look like their 5-to-9, and organisations that deliver on that will gain a competitive advantage’

Revealed: Top three priorities for HR in 2019

Given the realities of today’s tight labour market, the focus on developing and retaining top talent is critical, according to Brian Kropp, group vice president of Gartner’s HR practice.

“Our most recent Global Talent Monitor report found that only 53% of workers worldwide have a high or somewhat high intent to stay in their current positions, compared with 60% of workers in 1Q18,” said Kropp.

“Ultimately, employees want their 9-to-5 to look like their 5-to-9, and the organisations that deliver on that idea will gain a competitive advantage.”

Kropp’s comments come following new research from Gartner which looked at HR leaders’ top three key initiatives in 2019. These included: building critical skills and competencies, strengthening the current and future leadership bench and improving employee experience.

Indeed, Gartner surveyed 843 HR leaders globally (including New Zealand and Australia) — at the enterprise, business-unit and subfunction levels — and these three initiatives clearly emerged as priorities. The survey showed that:

  • Building critical skills and competencies is a priority for 85% of heads of learning and development.
  • Seventy-eight percent of talent management leaders are prioritizing building the leadership bench.
  • More than half of all HR leaders agree that improving employee experience is a priority.

Moreover, Sari Wilde, managing vice president of Gartner’s HR practice, said the organisations that are successful today and, in the future, will be those that win when it comes to talent.

“This means helping employees build critical skills and developing employees into leaders, which is especially critical given that less than two-thirds of managers think their employees are able to keep pace with future skill needs.”

In order to deliver against these initiatives, heads of HR must develop a strategy that focuses on the following key levers of improvement:

Developing “Connector Managers”
Ineffective managers are the single biggest problem in the workplace today — 48% of HR leaders say their organisation’s managers are not effectively developing employees. Most organisations yearn for “Always On” managers, who commit to constant employee coaching and development.

However, “Connector Managers” are the most likely to improve employee performance by fostering meaningful connections among employees, teams and the organisation to develop an employee’s specific capabilities — at the very moment that employee is primed to learn.

Connector Managers triple the likelihood that their direct reports will be high performers, and increase employee engagement by up to 40%.

Demand-driven succession management
Among HR leaders, 47% said their organisation struggles to develop effective leaders and 45 percent said their succession management processes didn’t yield the right leaders at the right time. Adding to the complexity, most organisations expect more than 40% of leadership roles to be significantly different within five years.

Traditional succession planning assesses current roles and gaps in leadership supply. By switching to demand-driven planning, HR leaders can assess leadership needs that will enable the organisation to achieve strategic goals, not just fill potential future vacancies in current roles.

Employee experience
Today, work experiences do not match the experiences of individuals outside the workplace. However, employees want the ease of their personal life, fuelled by digital technologies that enable seamless, effortless experiences, to be duplicated at work.

To start delivering on this requires a change in focus for HR from just asking what employees want (or worse still, assuming what they want) to listening to what they need and determining what they really value. Supporting what employees value increases employee performance by 20%.

 

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