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Gen Z, pay transparen­cy, flexibilit­y move top of mind in 2023 workplace trends

- By Arcelia Martin

The past year has been rife with evolving ideas about what future workplaces might look like. There’s been a shift in what workers expect from their jobs and who those workers are.

Employees are no longer interested in burning the midnight oil, said Mandy Price, co-founder and CEO of Kanarys, a tech company that provides organizati­ons with diversity, equity and inclusion data. “What we’ve already seen is a more human-centric approach when we start to think about workforces,” Price said.

The Dallas Morning News spoke to a half dozen experts and employers on workplace trends expected for the upcoming year. In 2023, more workers will demand pay transparen­cy and flexibilit­y, while employers plan to invest in their existing talent and work to understand a new generation joining a more virtual workforce.

UPSKILLING

Companies are looking to invest in existing employees rather than hiring new ones. From the thousands of groups Kanarys has been tracking and CEOs they’ve been following, Price said business leaders are planning to upskill.

“They already have so much institutio­nal knowledge about the organizati­on,” Price said. “And [companies] want to be able to invest in their current workforce.”

As new innovation­s and advancemen­ts change what’s needed from different jobs, there is a need for upskilling, Bryan Daniel, chairman of the Texas Workforce Commission, said at a December Dallas Regional Chamber event.

Daniel points to a mismatch between the skills employers need and those in workers’ tool sheds, ranging from managerial abilities to software maintenanc­e. Investing in Texas’ existing workforce will be beneficial to the state’s growth, he said, as the state competes to retain talent.“There are 49 states trying to get the jobs that Texas employers have created, all the time,” Daniel said.

GEN Z BECOMES A FORCE

By 2025, more than a fourth of the workforce will be Gen Z, or people born between 1997 and 2012. The younger cohort of workers is more vocal and diverse than its predecesso­rs. The group is prioritizi­ng pay and work-life balance. The generation expects something completely different in the workforce than the generation­s before them, Price said.

Gen Z workers are struggling with financial anxiety and pushing for more purposeful and flexible work, according to a Deloitte Gen Z and Millennial report surveying 14,808 Gen Zs and 8,412 millennial­s.

Those who were satisfied with their employers’ societal and environmen­tal impact said they are more likely to want to stay with their employers, according to the Deloitte report.r jobs in less than a year, compared withs 40% of all employees, according to a report by Lever, a software company tracking hiring.

Those who were satisfied with their employers’ societal and environmen­tal impact said they are more likely to want to stay with their employer, according to the Deloitte report.

“They’re not looking to be at an organizati­on and be there long term for 20, 30 years,” Price said of Gen Z workers. “The way they think of the workforce and their place in it is just very, very different.”

FLEXIBLE HOURS, WORKWEEKS

Since the start of the pandemic, the number of women in the workforce has yet to rebound.

To retain employees, companies will need to find ways to support workers and their caregiving responsibi­lities. More than one-fourth of women said the biggest career obstacle is taking time off for caregiving and lack of affordable child care, according to a GOBankingR­ates survey. Caregiving is an emerging group 12% of companies are tracking, a Syndio report found.

“There will be pushback around how to balance those caregiving responsibi­lities with the requiremen­ts of actually being in office,” Price said. “Companies need to either provide a hybrid or workfrom-home option.”

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