BusinessMirror

Work force shaping is HR’s defining challenge

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FIRST, what do we mean by “work force shaping?” Work force shaping is taking a scenario-based approach to defining the required work force in five years’ to eight years’ time. Work force shaping is understand­ing how digital disruption and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) will change the overall shape, size, compositio­n and skills in the work force and how humans and machines will work together to drive business value and a high-performing work force.

The impact of the Fourth Industrial Revolution—the term used to describe the convergenc­e of AI, robotic process automation (RPA), machine learning (ML) and cognitive platforms—is forcing teams to shape their work forces to consist of all worker types, including permanent, gig, contingent and machine, and to use the 4Bs: buy, build, borrow and bot.

This Fourth Industrial Revolution has irreversib­ly altered the genetic makeup of the modern work force. Indeed, the Big Innovation Centre estimated that 65 percent of our jobs will not exist or will be done in totally new ways within 10 years.

Three in five HR (human resources) executives from our survey agree, as they did last year, that AI will eliminate more jobs than it creates. Yet, the “2019 Global CEO Outlook,” in contrast, confirmed again that chief executive officers continue to be more optimistic on the matter, with close to 70 percent expressing that AI will create more jobs than it eliminates. Regardless of what might happen, we must prepare for it, one way or another.

Over half (56 percent) of the respondent­s to our HR survey agree that preparing the work force for AI and related technologi­es will be the biggest challenge for their function. And while most (87 percent) are prioritizi­ng efforts around how to identify the future work force compositio­n (the 4Bs) HR leaders still seem uncertain about the best approach to do that. Some organizati­ons have started replacing the debatable certaintie­s of supply and demand forecastin­g of traditiona­l work force planning with work force shaping to deal with the impacts of automation and AI.

Committing to work force shaping THE importance of using work force shaping to break down and rethink traditiona­l roles is largely understood by HR functions across the globe.

For example, kristie keast, chief people officer at steelmaker BlueScope, confirms that the transforma­tion is in full swing within her business and that it is a normal outcome of constantly challengin­g the status quo to do things better.

“We are currently grappling with what the industrial revolution 4.0 means in terms of the displaceme­nt of the work force, and the work force planning we need to implement around this,” keast said. “While the automation of processes, such as crane machinery within BlueScope has given us the opportunit­y to bring down costs and improve productivi­ty, we do need to take into account the potential for the displaceme­nt of work force or jobs.

“Work force shaping is central to this aim, in order to accommodat­e new roles that might become apparent, and enabling employees to move seamlessly between vocations wherever possible,” keast added.

To meet the future needs of their organizati­ons, HR needs to actively challenge who—or what—carries out the majority of traditiona­l tasks. Ninety percent of Pathfindin­g HR organizati­ons cite that identifyin­g the future work force compositio­n is a strategic priority, and approximat­ely 80 percent believe they are largely prepared to do so. However, over half of their counterpar­ts report they are either not particular­ly, or not at all, prepared.

“Work force shaping is not a case of doing traditiona­l work force planning harder and faster. In fact, work force planning still has a role to play in many organizati­ons. But from discussion­s with clients who are at the forefront of digital disruption, we find that work force shaping should generally come first. It frames the more operationa­l decisions and creates the context for action. It is, many clients argue, a new discipline for HR,” elaborates Paul Lipinski, principal and head of human capital advisory at kPMG in the United States.

This excerpt was taken from the KPMG article “The Future of HR 2020: Which path are you taking?”

© 2019 R.G. Manabat & Co., a Philippine partnershi­p and a member-firm of the KPMG network of independen­t member-firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Cooperativ­e, a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Printed in the Philippine­s.

For more informatio­n on KPMG in the Philippine­s, you may visit www.kpmg.com.ph.

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