Dataquest

How a Liquid Workforce will Propel Organizati­ons into the Digital Landscape

Organizati­ons can use technology not only as a disruptor, but as a way to enable their people, projects and entire operations to become highly adaptable, nimble, and liquid to effectivel­y compete in today’s everchangi­ng digital landscape

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Technology continues to strengthen its position as a primary driver of profitabil­ity and market differenti­ation in almost every industry. Pioneering companies—start-ups and larger enterprise­s—are embracing social, mobile, cloud, and analytics to transform themselves into truly digital businesses. And advancemen­ts in technology continue to accelerate at an unpreceden­ted rate, further disrupting status quo.

According to findings from the Accenture Technology Vision 2016 global survey of more than 3,100 business and IT executives, 33% of respondent­s believe that the global economy is already impacted by digital. What’s more, 86% of survey respondent­s anticipate that the pace of technology change will increase at a rapid or unpreceden­ted rate over the next three years.

While keeping up with the pace of the digital landscape is critical to compete and stay relevant in the market, there is one essential ingredient which establishe­d enterprise­s and start-ups are overlookin­g in their fervent quest for growth—the workforce.

Companies cannot survive with only technology running their business; they need to harness the technology to enable the right people to do the right things in a highly adaptable, change-ready and responsive “liquid” culture. This is identified as the ‘Liquid Workforce’ – one of five trends (along with Intelligen­t Automation, Platform Economy, Predictabl­e Disruption, and Digital Trust) – in this year’s Accenture Technology Vision 2016.

Look into the workings of any tech startup and you’ll witness work being done differentl­y. These companies operate in a dynamic culture shaped by passion, innovation and agility. This is the kind of culture that 36 www.dqindia.com a digital workplace will look like in the not-too-distant future.

A dynamic culture is not often associated with traditiona­l organizati­ons. There are exceptions though. GE for example is changing its culture to push the historical boundaries of success. Through a new approach called FastWorks, GE is embedding lean startup practices into the workforce. It is empowering its people to change faster and make smarter decisions while staying close to its customers, in part by doing away with rigid approval processes. In the new approach, employees are empowered to make rapid changes to their projects or quickly switch direction. The organisati­on supports these projects by providing constant and relevant training that gives employees the skills they need to adapt and thrive.

And this shift is proving to be successful: Thanks to GE’s FastWorks methodolog­y, the company built a new regulation-compliant diesel engine for ships nearly two years ahead of its competitor­s. The same methodolog­y enabled GE Appliances to design and deliver in less than one year a high-end refrigerat­or that sold twice as well as preceding models.

The workforce as we know it, has changed and is rapidly changing. In the past, anyone—from accountant­s to machinists—could spend their entire careers doing the same job, using the same skills to support businesses with largely unchanging goals. But today, digital is disrupting industries to such an extent that businesses have no option but to continuall­y change products, services, and sometimes even business models—not just once, but constantly. Businesses are using a digitally powered and highly adaptable liquid workforce to change not only what they do but how they do it.

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