The new world of work – with an increasingly diverse workforce, changing business models, digital transformations, and evolving employee demands – requires companies to energise, inspire, and invigorate their people.
They can do so by redesigning their employees’ total work experience and improving the health and benefits choices available to them.
Disruptions brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic introduced a myriad challenges for the workforce, from adapting to working from home or juggling home schooling to anxiety about catching COVID-19 or being placed on furlough. Beyond these challenges, employers must prepare for a world facing significant potential crises, from climate change to cybersecurity. Employers also must protect against heightened risks in areas such as misconduct and lack of succession.
Our 2023 People Risk Report: Pulse Check found that talent practices was a consistent top 5 risk area in Australia and New Zealand.
The inability to create a strong talent pipeline, a compelling employee value proposition, and growth opportunities within the organisation will lead to an unmotivated workforce and the loss of key workers.
Forward-looking employers are revisiting their talent management strategies, policies, and procedures to reinvent their employee value proposition to ensure a depth and breadth of much-needed talent and appropriate and engaged behavior aligned to company objectives and values.
Helping people in the moments that matter boosts employee resilience and the workforce’s ability to cope. Equally, the ongoing desire for flexible working has implications for reinventing benefits in a post-pandemic world.