Posted tagged ‘Talent Shortage’

How Mercer’s HCM Views Impact HRO

June 11, 2012

Would you build a $4.5bn facility in Africa if you were not sure you could find the skilled workers to run it? That was the comment of a real CFO at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos. Human capital management (HCM) was one of the hottest topics at the forum drawing C-suite leaders into a full day of discussions. Concern about talent shortages has reached #2 on the risk management list, and top business leaders are recognizing talent as both a key competitive factor in growth and its lack as a risk factor limiting growth, especially in emerging markets.

This was the opening conversation at Mercer’s analyst forum focusing on its Talent, Rewards, and Communications (TRC) consulting practice and its approach to global talent growth. The TRC group is led by Pat Milligan, Senior Partner and President, and it accounts for $600m of Mercer’s $3.8bn 2011 revenues.

The forum was also about Mercer’s approach to its own growth. Mercer has increased its feet on the ground in emerging markets and is adding to its portfolio of services. Having completed seven acquisitions in the last sixteen months, including ORC Worldwide and CENSEO, expect to see more strategic acquisitions in the near future as Mercer leverages its cash on hand to build scale. Mercer’s TRC practice already has a great start with 55% of revenues from outside of the U.S. and 18% growth in 2011, 11% organic.

Mercer is focusing on more than consulting as a standalone service.  It is combining consulting with enabling technology and data to continue to win in its very competitive market space. Along with discussions on talent management, there were demonstrations of technologies and tool kits to gather, monitor, and manage information that helps clients make better people decisions, such as Mercer iknow and Human Capital Connect. 

Most clients cannot afford to immediately “rip and replace” their current tools and technologies, so Mercer will also help clients who say, “make what I have work.”  Its new Belong portal will be the front door to bringing together the information, tools, and applications – whether it’s Mercer’s own or a client’s blend of programs. Offering HR portals is not new, but Mercer is building in data extractors to offer the most needed information, dashboards, and limited functionality within the portal without having to go out to the full application.

There are other critical components to consider. This is where HRO comes in as part of the build and operations team to ensure cost-effective and viable end-to-end HR services for the participants, HR generalists and COEs, managers, senior leadership, and the enterprise itself.

Whether as a single source of consulting, solutions, and services or by using an ecosystem of preferred partners, is your HRO service provider(s) capable of helping you go from strategy to design, build, operate, and improve your HR capabilities and services to deliver full business value?

Linda Merritt, HRO Research Analyst, NelsonHall

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Focus on Talent Management

September 22, 2011

For those following my blogs, you know I am keenly focused on talent management.  A future and past event prompted my thoughts.

The future event I’m referencing and looking forward to attending is Infosys’ BPO Analyst Day on October 19th, which also includes a separate HRO breakout session.  At the event, I will be moderating a six member panel discussion titled “Globalization, Convergence and Social Media, and Talent Management: What is the defining role of HR in shaping tomorrow’s business.” The panel will consist of clients, industry experts, and the global HR leader of Infosys.

More than ever talent management is critically important. In my June 13th blog titled ManpowerGroup Solutions Analyst Day – It’s All About Talent – Part II, I wrote about the global talent shortage.  Social Media, including its use in the attraction and engagement of talent, will be critical. This is a global phenomenon and companies are beginning to look across borders to meet their demands for talent.

I’m excited to moderate Infosys’ panel discussion since I attended Ochre House’s Annual HR Directors Symposium last week in the U.K.  The event was focused on “re-defining business value through a talent centric approach.” Executives from 50 companies attended and ranged from the Global Head of Engagement to the Director of Global Talent and Organizational Development among others.

Ochre House’s event started with presentations that included:

  • Talent Economics: The Business Case by Gyan Nagpal, CEO & Principal, PeopleLENS Global Associates
  • People for the Future by David Stephenson, Head of Learning and Development, Telefonica UK
  • Beginners Mind: Characteristics of a Talent Centric Organization by Simon Wright, former CEO & President, Virgin Entertainment Group.

Breakout groups included “Talent: HR’s Future in Business Value Creation.” I’ll share some ideas generated in a future blog, but a few thoughts standout and are worth mentioning now:

  • Simon Wright, during his presentation, said HR is good at providing data, but needs to bring solutions.  HR cannot sit back and wait for business leaders to ask.
  • David Stephenson said all organizations need to innovate, the people who think different move the world forward. Although he used examples such as Steve Jobs, the point is that HR professionals can shape business and move it forward.
  • Chris Eaton, former Regional Manager at Smiths Medical who joined in a panel discussion, said people with good technical skills are often put in leadership positions and people management is not high enough on the prioritization list.
  • An audience member chimed in the discussion saying HR and the business is too busy doing transactional work to focus on talent.

HRO to the rescue! Not just for administration, but to help attract, engage, and retain talent. HRO vendors and the retained HR can’t replace line managers and business leaders, but can help by providing the tools, training, advising, coaching, and facilitating the processes.

Gary Bragar, HR Outsourcing Research Director, NelsonHall

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ManpowerGroup Solutions Analyst Day – It’s All About Talent – Part II

June 13, 2011

In my blog last week I wrote a bit about RPO and briefly about the broader content presented at ManpowerGroup Solutions Analyst Day June 8th.  Now I’d like to take a broader view. A takeaway for me is there is no doubt in my mind that ManpowerGroup truly gets that there is a talent shortage globally, which is rapidly getting worse, and is actively helping its clients to attract and retain talent. Though unemployment rates may be high, there is a mismatch between availability of skills and demand for skills. Access to talent is going to be critical for companies to succeed! Estimates are that unemployment levels of skilled talent are 4-5% while unskilled talent is nearer the 20% range.

According to ManpowerGroup’s 2011 Talent Shortage Survey, 34% of employers are having difficulty filing vacancies. In the U.S. 52% of U.S. employers experience difficulty in filling mission critical positions. This is not just high-tech positions we are talking about but includes manufacturing, where an ever-increasing number of workers are retiring. It’s not just a U.S. problem, it is a global problem, including countries such as Japan, China and Australia, where 30,000 engineers are needed. As an example, to help solve the Australian problem, engineers in India are being looked at in addition to partnering with educational institutions to develop those skills.

At the end of the analyst event we were given a booklet written by ManpowerGroup, called “Entering The Human Age, Thought Leadership Insights”. In the introduction written by ManpowerGroup CEO Jeffrey Joerres, it states that “a new era is upon us, the Human Age, when optimizing human potential will be the single most important determinant of future business success and growth. From 2011, 10,000 baby-boomers will turn 65 every day for the next 19 years. To thrive and grow, companies and governments will need to engage and motivate older workers to remain in the workforce longer, and find a way to engage and train their youth, particularly by aligning training and education systems with the skills required by employers”. Sounds to me like an opportunity for learning providers to be ready to help! There is much more valuable information and insight to be had at http://www.manpowergroup.com/humanage/index.html

In sum a very worthwhile day and if you are an RPO provider, Learning BPO provider and/or anyone in the talent management business, you are in the right job to help your clients succeed in the new Human Age.

Gary Bragar, Lead HRO Analyst, NelsonHall