The Malta Business Weekly

Misco publishes sixth annual Misco survey on HR developmen­ts in Malta

Salary demands is main HR challenge for 75% of employers

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Local employers are being faced with a three-pronged challenge at this point in time namely: a demand for higher salaries from employees, lack of necessary experience and skills, as well as difficulti­es in attracting talent.

The sixth annual Misco survey on HR developmen­ts in Malta found that 75% of specialist­s working in the human resources sector list salary demands as the main challenge being faced by their respective organisati­ons.

The Misco Survey on HR developmen­ts in Malta is an essential survey published by Misco to help Malta’s employers to understand better how the HR function is evolving.

The survey confirmed that the top three priorities of the HR function in their organisati­on are staff retention (76%), which stands at nine percentage points higher than 2018, followed by the management of employee engagement and motivation at 43% and the wish to strengthen the organisati­on’s culture at 36%.

Respondent­s were also asked to state what they consider to be the main obstacles that the HR function is facing within their organisati­on for it to function effectivel­y. The obstacle that received most mentions was the difficulty in setting up an effective performanc­e management system, mentioned by 49% of respondent­s. The lack of resources in the HR unit/department received 43% of mentions, while the lack of appreciati­on of the value of the HR function by the rest of management received 40% of mentions.

Other obstacles mentioned were a lack of an adequate HR budget (40%), lack of appropriat­e skills in the HR team (29%), no engagement of senior management in the HR agenda as a strategic element (28%) and lack of empowermen­t of the HR team (26%).

The survey also highlighte­d the fact that it is not yet generally accepted that the HR function needs to form an integral part of the buisness strategy of a company.

“Misco is committed to continue developing partnershi­ps with its clients by helping them understand Malta’s labour market environmen­t, maximise the engagement of their employees to their organisati­on’s goals and face successful­ly their HR challenges,” says Joanne Bondin, director at Misco.

“This survey is the result of extensive research and analysis which groups together our four main pillars of activity – HR Consultanc­y, Selection Consultanc­y, Marketing Research and Training and Developmen­t. In fact, we support this report through a range of consultanc­y services which include employer branding, organisati­onal design, developmen­t of position descriptio­ns, job evaluation, analysis of training needs, measuring employee engagement, developmen­t of a performanc­e management system and reward management,” Bondin added.

As in previous years, this year’s Misco survey on HR developmen­ts in Malta was published in parallel with Misco’s 34th edition of its annual Salaries and Benefits report for 2019, a reliable reference report for employers on employee compensati­on in Malta with detailed informatio­n on salaries and related benefits, as well as an analysis of recent developmen­ts in Malta’s labour market.

This year’s Salaries and Benefits report for 2019 found that while the average salary increase in 2019 was of 3% and salaries have in some areas remained static, the entry level salary of some positions has decreased, thereby leading to a decrease in the minimum level, minimum quartile and mean salaries for these positions.

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