The New Zealand Herald

Workers need to go with the flow

Future belongs to the ‘liquid workforce’. By Helen Twose

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When Mary-Anne McCarthy, Accenture New Zealand’s technology lead, is called on to lecture university students, she likes to show a favourite slide.

It says simply: “technology is not everything”.

McCarthy, who has spent nearly two decades transformi­ng organisati­ons, says technology is only part of the solution; people are the other piece of the transforma­tion puzzle.

But in an environmen­t of accelerati­ng technologi­cal change, in many cases there isn’t a corporate culture that can handle the pace.

That means organisati­ons can’t capitalise on opportunit­ies, she says.

“To have an agile business, you’ve got to have an agile workforce and that by definition is the liquid workforce,” says McCarthy.

“If you think of liquid in its form, it can change to any shape, you can fit it in any mould, you can move it, it can flex and that’s the fundamenta­l thing that we see as the missing part of the transforma­tion.”

She says the challenge for organisati­ons is to shift from traditiona­l structures which valued employees who “knew their bit”.

Digital demands mean executives are now ranking the ability to learn and quickly change more highly than deep expertise in a specialist area.

Pulling together in the more collaborat­ive working styles needed, also means a shift from organisati­onal silos, she says.

“If you’ve got an organisati­on that is traditiona­l and based on siloed business functions you’re not going to get any ability to learn quickly and change quickly.” Innovation suffers as it tends to be the realm of the “lone wolves”, where the best and brightest are dropped into innovation hubs with no real connection back into the rest of the workforce, McCarthy says.

Getting organisati­ons from this point to the goal of a liquid workforce requires a focus on three key areas: skills, projects and organisati­on.

Human resources suites are now providing the analytic tools for organisati­ons to identify skill gaps, the roles that are increasing­ly hard to fill and where employees need upskilling.

McCarthy says greater connection with universiti­es will ensure graduates are joining the workforce with the right skills — something many workplaces are already doing.

Other firms are taking it a step further and using bootcamp-style training to get grads upskilled and work-ready, says McCarthy.

With the rapid computeris­ation of workplaces, routine jobs will disappear and the focus will go on value-added work. Analytics will provide the informatio­n needed to make informed choices about what skills exist in your workforce and where they can be matched with value-added work, she says.

The second pillar to the liquid workforce is project-based teams with a start-up mentality that can break through workplace silos.

New Zealand organisati­ons have an advantage in already being reasonably small and nimble, says McCarthy, but even the big global players are working along these lines.

GE, for example, created a programme called FastWorks, which has introduced technology start-up tools to its product developmen­t.

Through small teams rapidly prototypin­g on minimal budgets, a new high-end fridge design was developed in a fraction of the normal product developmen­t cycle and far outsold its predecesso­rs. “I really like that idea. “I’m in consulting because I like to go from project to project.

“I like to work with really smart people who have really great ideas because it’s contagious.

“If you’re sitting in your office job you really lose that, I guess, inspiratio­n that you get, particular­ly from the young crowd.”

As of last year, millennial­s have the lion’s share of the workforce, says McCarthy, and businesses should be tapping in to these digital natives.

She says it’s a generation who are excited about the opportunit­ies of the liquid workforce, such as internal 43% of the US workforce will be freelancer­s in 2020 In 2015, millennial­s became the largest generation in the workforce By 2025, that proportion will be 76% globally 38% of businesses globally are struggling to find the right talent 53% of business leaders are finding it hard to attract and retain millennial talent

To have an agile business, you’ve got to have an agile workforce. Mary-Anne McCarthy (right)

 ?? Picture / Bloomberg ?? Flexibilit­y and the ability to learn are becoming more important than traditiona­l technical skills.
Picture / Bloomberg Flexibilit­y and the ability to learn are becoming more important than traditiona­l technical skills.

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