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
Denne historien er fra July 2019-utgaven av CEO India.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra July 2019-utgaven av CEO India.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Five Ways To Win The Consumer Of 2030, Now
To win the data and technology-enabled “smart consumer” of tomorrow, discover the five things every consumer-facing business must do right now
TWENTY FOR ‘20
WILL THE NEW DECADE BE AS TRANSFORMATIVE AS THE LAST? EY EXAMINES THE QUESTIONS THAT WILL SHAPE THE NEXT DECADE
ROBOTS ON THE MOVE
THE MARKET FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ROBOTS IS POISED TO TAKE OFF WITH A VENGEANCE, FUELED BY NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN 5G TELECOM SERVICES AND AI CHIPS
POST-DIGITAL CULTURE SHOCK
COMPANIES AROUND THE WORLD ARE FOCUSING ON DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION, BUT MANY ARE OVERLOOKING THE CULTURE CHANGE NECESSARY FOR SUCCESS
FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL
Winning sales organisations excel at these five essential capabilities
Shooting for the Stars
MANFRED BAUMANN SHARES HIS INSIGHTS INTO PROFESSIONAL PORTRAITURE
FLYING WHILE BLIND
I AM NOT ONLY AN EXPERIENCED TRAVELER; I AM AN EXPERIENCED BLIND PERSON…
THE ALCHEMIST OF HOSPITALITY
Puneet Chhatwal, the CEO and MD of Tata Group’s hospitality arm Indian Hotels Company, talks about how his company is reimagining and repositioning some of its most renowned brands, raising the hospitality bar, with an eye on the evolving customer and emerging concepts and trends
Robots Can Go All The Way To Mars, But They Can't Pick Up The Groceries?
In the popular imagination, robots have been portrayed alternatively as friendly companions or existential threat. But while robots are becoming commonplace in many industries, they are neither C-3PO nor the Terminator. Cambridge researchers are studying the interaction between robots and humans – and teaching them how to do the very difficult things that we find easy.
How To Create A Growth Mindset?
A growth-oriented mindset must be cultivated among the employees for business growth and sustenance. It requires a good understanding of people and what drives them