Chicago Sun-Times

CAREER CLOUT

TIGHT LABOR MARKET GIVING MORE AMERICANS

- Paul Davidson | @ Pdavidsonu­sat | USA TODAY

More Americans are switching to different industries, and sometimes even careers, when they change jobs in a sign that the tight labormarke­t is giving workers more leverage with employers.

Michael Fick has been jobhopping the past couple of years — from general manager of a restaurant to mortgage loan originator to business developmen­t specialist for a company that operates mobile and manufactur­ed home communitie­s.

He says his restaurant experience — in customer service and overseeing a business — helped him land the other two sales gigs, which required similar skills. He now earns more than twice his restaurant salary and works about 40 hours a week instead of 60, leaving more family time. But he also cites a more favorable market.

“Things were changing and the market was getting better,” says Fick, who lives in Ferndale, Mich. “There were certainly options out there.”

About half a million U. S. workers left one job for another in the fourth quarter, up from 406,000 in the same period in 2015 and 365,000 two years ago, according to estimates by private payroll processor ADP. That trend largely has been reported by the Labor Department and reflects a more vibrant jobmarket.

But ADP, which, unlike Labor, can track employees as they move among jobs, also finds that more of them are shifting into new sectors, such as a marketing manager who leaves retail for finance. In eight of the 10 major industries tracked by ADP, the share of job- switchers who came from a different industry increased from late 2014 to late 2016 while the share swapping jobs within the same industry fell. That’s up from seven of 10 sectors that met that criteria in the third quarter.

For example, 45% of workers switched jobs within health care in the fourth quarter, down from 51% two years earlier. Meanwhile, the share of new health care workers who had worked in profession­al and business services rose to 17% from 15%, and the portion who had worked in the grouping that includes retail, transporta­tion and utilities rose to 15% from 13%.

ADP handles payrolls that cover about 20% of private- sector workers and uses that data to make estimates for the entire private labor force.

While the data can be volatile, staffing companies say the trend mirrors what they’re seeing. After the recession of 2007 to 2009, employers had their pick of unemployed workers and many insisted on hiring those who had previous experience in the same industry. Now, with the unemployme­nt rate near a 10year low at 4.8%, many employers are struggling to find job candidates and are being far less selective.

“They’re having to as a result of ... a lack of available talent,” says Amy Glaser, senior vice president of Adecco Staffing. A growing number of banks and retailers, for example, are hiring restaurant general managers to oversee branches and stores, she says.

The trend also is being driven by risk- takers who are more confident they’ll find a new position and are less fearful of being laid off.

“Employees are in the driver’s seat and are able to steer their careers in different directions,” says Sonny Ackerman, vice president and general manager for Manpower U. S.

Whilemost workers who switch to a different industry stay in the same occupation, a growing number are hopping on different career tracks, staffing executives say.

Some low- and mid- level manufactur­ing workers are moving to call- center customer service jobs, Ackerman says. And fast- food cashiers are being eyed for the warehouse jobs.

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GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O

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