For many years, people viewed contract, freelance, and gig employment as “alternative work,” options considered supplementary to full-time jobs. Today, this segment of the workforce has gone mainstream, and it needs to be managed strategically.
Originally conceived of as contract work, “alternative” work today includes work performed by outsourced teams, contractors, freelancers, gig workers (paid for tasks), and the crowd (outsourced networks). The world is seeing rapid growth in the number of people working under such arrangements. By 2020, for instance, the number of selfemployed workers in the United States is projected to triple to 42 million people. Freelancers are the fastest-growing labour group in the European Union, with their number doubling between 2000 and 2014; growth in freelancing has been faster than overall employment growth in the United Kingdom, France, and the Netherlands. And many people are alternative workers part-time: Deloitte’s latest millennial study found that 64 per cent of full-time workers want to do “side hustles” to make extra money.
For organisations that want to grow and access critical skills, managing alternative forms of employment has become critical. Many countries are seeing declining birth rates, reducing the size of the labour pool. Forty-five per cent of surveyed employers worldwide say they are having trouble filling open positions, the largest such percentage since 2006. Among companies with more than 250 employees, the percentage struggling to find qualified candidates rises to 67 per cent.
At the same time, retirees are reentering the workforce, people are spending time caring for chil¬dren and aging parents, and individuals are going back to school. These trends create more depth and scale across the range of alternative talent pools.
THE BREADTH OF THE ALTERNATIVE WORKFORCE
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