Actualidad

Workers: Optimists about the Future of Work

The BCG Henderson Institute and Harvard Business School presented Future Positive: How Companies Can Tap Into Employee Optimism to Navigate Tomorrow’s Workplace, a research project detailing a global forecast based on the perceptions of 6,500 business leaders and 11,000 middle-skill workers about the future of work. During times in which public debate about the future of work seems to be dominated by widespread fear of change, the BCG and HBS research has concluded that, in general, workers see opportunities in change and are optimistic about their future job prospects.

Of the 11 countries analyzed in the report, Spanish workers, after the French, give the greatest responsibility to the government in their preparation for the future. Even so, they still consider that they themselves are primarily responsible for their own training.

When facing the issue of transforming their organizations to adapt to the future of work, the findings reveal that business leaders underestimate the optimism of a workforce that claims to be happy in their jobs and eager to do the necessary future adjustments. To successfully face this challenge, business leaders have to put aside their preconceived notions and bridge the gap between their perceptions and the reality of their workers positivity.

«The workers who shape and will shape work environments in the coming years are diverse. What the findings of this report show is that business leaders are overlooking a key partner in their efforts to prepare for the future: their own workforce,» says Joseph Fuller, a professor at Harvard Business School and co-chair of the project Managing the Future of Work. «Rather than fearing the future of work, employees around the world are absolutely willing to accept change and take action. It is the responsibility of business leaders to recognize this opportunity and be proactive in supporting their employees and generating concrete action plans.»

«It might be surprising, but generally across all of the countries studied, employees do not consider technology to be the culprit of an uncertain future, but rather as an opportunity.» The workers who have participated in our research are optimistic and look to the future with confidence. They also believe that technology can be part of the solution,» says Judith Wallenstein, partner at Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and director of the BCG Henderson Institute in Europe. «Business leaders need to take advantage of their employees willingness to help create new organizations based on progress and learning that is fit for the future.«

Researchers asked middle-skill workers and business leaders to describe their point of view on the trends and forces that can influence their work in the coming years. These topics included: new technologies, teleworking, government responsibility, and regulatory changes.

The report includes concrete recommendations for companies, highlighting a series of innovative businesses that have already begun the preparation of their workers and the adaptation of their companies for the future. Some examples of initiatives that these companies have undertaken include: the use of artificial intelligence tools to determine if a candidate has the cognitive ability to be a high-performance worker, the commitment to train workers to learn new skills through disruptive standards, and the use of technology to provide a completely service-oriented business model.

Data from the Report

Managers have a misconception about the outlook of their employees on the future of work:

  • 39% of business leaders believe that the lack of employees with new skills is already having an impact on their organizations. In addition, they frequently cite (29%) that their workers fear of change as the reason preventing them from preparing for the future.
  • Almost half of the workers worldwide (46%) consider themselves personally responsible for preparing for changes and 45% believe that changes in the working environment will result in better wages. 75% say that they will probably or definitely need to prepare to adapt to the future trends in work.

Middle-skill workers (without university training) are happy in their current positions:

  • 52% of workers without university training are happy in their current jobs.
  • Swedish workers are the happiest with their current employment situation (66%), ahead of Americans (64%).
  • Additionally, 45% of workers around the world indicate that their employment situation has improved over the last 5 years.

While business leaders try to find out which trends will be key to the future of companies, the most common significant issues have been:

  • Development and training of the workforce (30%)
  • Sudden changes in customer needs (27%)
  • Expectations of employees in relation to labor flexibility (27%)

Business leaders point to several reasons as to why their organizations are not preparing for the future:

  • Half of business leaders (50%) believe that their organizations have other strategic priorities.
  • 39% believe that the impact of change in their organization is still far away.
  • More than a third (34%) of business leaders claim that their organization lacks visibility about future trends and their specific impacts.

Workers believe that changes and technology will have a positive effect:

  • Almost half of the workers (45%) believe that changes in the workplace will result in better wages.
  • In general, 61% of workers are optimistic about the impact that technology will have on their work in the future.

Workers and business leaders agree that they do not perceive the impact of technology as a priority issue.

 

Future Positive: How Companies Can Tap Into Employee Optimism to Navigate Tomorrow’s Workplace

Full report

Methodology

In order to understand the readiness of companies and workers to adapt to the broad array of forces affecting the workplace – beyond technology- Harvard Business School’s Project on Managing the Future of Work and Boston Consulting Group’s Henderson Institute conducted two global surveys. The first canvassed 11,000 middle-skills workers from 11 countries to learn how those with education levels less than a four-year bachelor’s degree perceive the effect of 15 forces of change (see Table I) on their future prospects. The second polled 6,500 C-suite and senior leaders in 8 countries to understand how to prepare companies and their workforces were to tackle the 17 tectonic shifts (see Table 2) underway.

Jaque al Rey Steven Spielberg

Que toda campaña de comunicación ha de ser sostenida en el tiempo es una evidencia. Las peculiaridades de cada sector o compañía determinan una estrategia específica y, sin embargo, el común denominador de la comunicación es el tiempo y la dedicación, además, por supuesto, de la profesionalidad. En un mundo...

Lucía Casanueva en The Objective——‘Infraperiodismo’, protocolo e intrusismo

El periodismo es una profesión noble. Aunque no siempre sea un ejercicio para admirar. Que una sociedad dé la espalda a la virtud no significa que el bien haya perdido fuelle o que el mal se consienta con más elasticidad. Como fija el diccionario de la Real Academia de la...

Proa Comunicación organized the 4th Madrid SnowZone Championship for Journalists

El IV Campeonato para periodistas Madrid SnowZone superó el récord de participantes con la asistencia de más de 50 periodistas, entre los que destacó Mercedes Milá. Organizado por PROA Comunicación, el evento congregró a un total de 23 medios nacionales: Telecinco, La Sexta, RTVE, Telemadrid, Cadena SER, Discovery, Movistar+, Europa...

Proa Comunicación Attends the Presentation of the Resport «The Challenge of STEM Vocations»

The lack of guidance and academic difficulty are two key factors in the drop of enrollment in technical careers, according to the conclusions of the study “The challenge in STEM vocations,” presented this Tuesday, September 24 in Madrid and attended by Proa Communicación. The report, carried out by the Asociación...

La comunicación, palanca de crecimiento de la banca privada

Uno de los mayores retos que tenemos los profesionales de la comunicación financiera es ayudar a los objetivos de negocio de las entidades de banca privada. Un reto que, tras más de 20 años gestionando la reputación de entidades de banca privada, gestoras, brokers, o compañías de seguros, se ha...

José María Segovia explica las claves de una buena prestación de servicios profesionales y la importancia de la reputación

José María Segovia, ex presidente de Uría Menéndez, explicó el viernes en un Observatorio Proa las claves de una buena prestación de servicios profesionales, entre las que destacó la obsesión por la excelencia y el perfeccionismo. También señaló como muy importante la gestión de los recursos humanos, en la que,...

Más conversaciones, más ideas, más PROA.
Síguenos en nuestras redes.

Recibe ideas con criterio

Cada semana compartimos reflexiones, tendencias y claves sobre reputación, comunicación estratégica, asuntos públicos e innovación. Contenido pensado para profesionales que valoran la información con rigor y perspectiva.