The Borneo Post

Five workplace prediction­s for 2019

- By Jena McGregor

SOME prediction­s about life at work in 2019 are hard to know: whether the economy will slow down, and if so, when. Others seem like sure bets: The # MeToo movement will continue, with more women coming forward with tales of misconduct on the job, while issues such as diversity, flexibilit­y and gender equity will remain at the fore.

Others fall somewhere in between. We asked several experts on workplace technology, data, compensati­on and other issues to make prediction­s on the rest - their bets on the likely- but-notobvious trends they believe will take hold, the challenges managers will face and the new perks employees could see. Some are quirky - a phone booth in the office? - while others will remind us of the risks that exist for our personal data at work. Here are five trends you may see when you’re back in the office to start the new year.

BENEFITS: Family leave for non-parents will become more common.

In recent years, extended parental leave - even a promised year off at some tech companies - has become all the rage for new mothers and even fathers as companies try to recruit and retain millennial workers. But Carol Sladek, who leads Aon Hewitt’s work-life consulting programme, believes more companies in 2019 will start to extend “family leave” to nonparents who want time off to care for an ageing parent, grieve for a lost family member or help with a sick spouse.

“It’s come up in almost every conversati­on I’ve had in the last six months,” she says of her discussion­s with clients. More companies may decide to broaden family leave coverage out of a sense of equity, as employees sense that “‘ I’m sitting here trying to care for my 83-year- old father, and Jane, sitting next to me, gets 18 weeks of paid maternity leave. That doesn’t feel right,’ “she said.

While the Family and Medical Leave Act allows employees to take up to 12 weeks to care for an ailing family member, many employees don’t know about it, and it only guarantees unpaid time off. A benefit of paid leave for family care may not “explode” in 2019, Sladek said, but she expects enough growth that Aon Hewitt plans to include it in its annual benefits surveys. COMPENSATI­ON: A wage gap between old and new workers will create new headaches.

As the labour market remains tight and people switch jobs more often, there’s a different kind of wage gap forming, said Brian Kropp, the group vice president for Gartner’s human resources practice. Companies have to dangle more to lure in new workers, making pay disparity grow between workers who’ve been in a job with a company for years and those who’ve been newly recruited.

“In today’s labour market, the best way to get a raise is to go find a job at another company ,” Kropp said. Employers are “not as willing to pay more for the people they’ve got. It’s a really interestin­g dynamic.”

Yet as pay transparen­cy becomes more common - with more employees opening up about what they are paid or websites such as Glassdoor making such data more available - the problem could lead to morale issues between workers and headaches for managers. Companies, Kropp said, will need to make more frequent adjustment­s.

PRIVACY: Workers will demand that employers do more to insure their personal data.

A “global awakening” about threats to the privacy of our data as consumers will spill over into concerns about the personal data we give our employers, predicts Kristina Bergman, the CEO of Integris Software, which helps organisati­ons manage the personal informatio­n they store and meet compliance mandates.

“There are an increasing number of protection­s in place for consumers - things like the ability to opt in and opt out, or needing consent to use their data,” she said. “Employees, however, have less control over how their employers use their data.” Yet plenty of data is at risk. Beyond social security numbers and bank account informatio­n from direct deposits, data like what movies you watched in a hotel room on a business trip (charged to a corporate credit card) or what vacation days you took could reveal other personal tastes or even religious informatio­n to outside parties.

Bergman predicts more pressure for employers to provide some of the same options to their workers that customers have, such as being able to request access to informatio­n that companies have about them.

OFFICE DESIGN: The office phone booth will become a workplace staple.

People may hate the open office design - and there are plenty of reasons to, including their stifling of col labour at ion and the incessant noise and lack of concentrat­ion - but it’s probably here to stay, albeit with design tweaks around the edges: more small conference rooms and collaboura­tion areas for people to find some privacy or host a meeting. Furniture designs that allow people to put up barriers around their desk.

And increasing­ly, says Jonathan Webb, vice president of workplace strategy at the design firm KI, office“phone booths” or “privacy pods” for people to have private conversati­ons without taking up an entire meeting room designed for a larger group.

While they’ve already begun showing up in some workplaces, such booths are poised to become commonplac­e in 2019, Webb says.

“People are going to start to figure out how to make these things more efficientl­y” - lowering the high price for companies to purchase them - “and make them a little more flexible in their design,” he said. ( KI is working on its own version, he said.) The Wall Street Journal reported in November that in 2015, only one booth-maker was part of the commercial- design industry’s trade show in Chicago. In 2018, there were more than a dozen.

WORKPLACE TECH: Email will move past its peak and continue its demise.

Companies have been moving toward messaging and away from email for internal communicat­ions for years, but 2019 will be the year email moves past its peak - at least at work, predicts Josh Bersin, an industry analyst who studies workplace technology.

“If you’re working with less than 200 people at a time, you really don’t need email - it’s a waste,” he said.

The popularity of messaging tools such as Slack will continue, he said, but he also believes greater adoption of Microsoft’s Teams - its take on the group messaging app that’s integrated into Office 365 - will be a gamechange­r. Although Teams was released in 2017, it’s still being adopted or turned on by many corporate IT department­s, and Bersin believes 2019 will be the year it takes off because of how closely it’s embedded with other Microsoft software or features.

Both Bersin and Kropp also see greater adoption of workplace tech tools that “nudge” managers or employees via texts or other alerts that could divert users, too, from traditiona­l emails (though the nudges are likely to come through email initially, too). — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Members work on laptop computers in a common room at the Embarcader­o WeWork Cos Inc. offices in San Francisco on Oct 19, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo by Michael Short
Members work on laptop computers in a common room at the Embarcader­o WeWork Cos Inc. offices in San Francisco on Oct 19, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo by Michael Short

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