Workforce is changing; HR practitioners must follow suit
Siwar Zein
The way we work has been irrevocably changed by the challenges we have been faced with in this difficult and uncertain year.
Today, more people are working from home than in office as organisations shift towards a fully remote or hybrid work model to adhere to social distancing protocols and other measures put in place to curb the spread of Covid-19.
The success of a remote work environment means that several organisations are now looking at making this a more permanent shift.
A LinkedIn survey found that while 43 per cent of respondents are currently working remotely, a whopping 45 per cent of them are looking to continue with remote work post-Covid and create a more fluid and flexible way of working.
However, the move towards remote work means that employees need a new support system in place to cater to the change and unique needs that spring from working from home.
This necessitates a reimagining of the functionalities of every organisations’ human resources (HR) department and an overhaul in its systems, processes and guidelines.
HR professionals are responsible for managing the entire employee lifecycle.
This ranges from recruiting to onboarding, training, employee development, morale and engagement programmes, workplace conflict resolution, company reorganisations and much more.
But, in a remote environment, the factors do not play out in much the same way. For example, in building manager capability, HR professionals need to review the way they approach the management and support of workforce within the context of a new way of working.
Motivation building, maintaining team engagement and now more importantly, demonstrating inclusive practices in day-to-day engagements as they navigate the hybrid workplace, will be key areas that HR professional will need to collaborate and support people managers in organisations.
Employees also need greater support as remote models can lead to an increased or decreased workload, a push for productivity that can lead to burnout and increased anxiety.
Remote work can have a significant impact on an employee’s wellbeing if the correct systems are not in place to help them adjust to this new environment and find balance as they experience a blur between the work and home environment while also handling household responsibilities in a constantly connected space.
Essentially, there is no clear break between work and personal time in the way we experience it when packing up and leaving the office to go home.
The ability to cater to the new needs of a transformed workforce requires an understanding of exactly what those needs are. To do so, HR practitioners must look at relevant data and derive insights from it to drive change that will generate value for employees and the organisation.
Leveraging technology and science will provide a new layer of intelligence to explore behavioural patterns and to provide insights that will help organisations understand and support employees and the business in new ways. I believe that workplace analytics will be key to enabling this.
Each person has own unique needs and ways of working — and HR departments are increasingly being called upon to take charge and design best practices that work for and are tailored to each individual.
Insights from platforms such as Microsoft’s MyAnalytics give employees the opportunity to analyse own work style, from who they collaborate with most regularly to how much uninterrupted time they have to focus.
They can then use the data and insight to make changes to own work style. Additionally, Microsoft’s Workplace Analytics platform allows organisations to operate with the help of real-time behavioural analytics which give an overview of exactly how the business works and unearths where there is a need to drive culture change enabled by data and artificial intelligence (AI).
Employees will need support from their organisations to help adapt to the ever-changing nature of work and enable the learning, skilling and re-skilling necessary to survive and thrive in a digital skills economy.
This will require the consistent mapping and re-mapping of skills needed for future and new jobs and providing the guidelines and training materials to equip employees with relevant skills.
There is an advantage to create custom and curated learning paths to make learning more relevant and engaging for employees.
Platforms such as Microsoft Learn can provide employees with courses and content designed to help individuals upskill on emerging technologies that are growing in importance and are being scaled as a result of accelerated transformation.
In much the same way as a culture change in the workforce is necessary to derive more value out of the technologies being adopted and integrated into business systems, processes and operations, so too is there a need for a culture change within HR itself. — The writer is the HR director, Microsoft Middle East & Africa Emerging Markets