Showing posts with label Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jobs. Show all posts

Future Workplaces and Work

The future of work is often spoken about at events all over the world. Of course, there are implications for where we work too. The topic of remote, on-site, and hybrid working is a major topic of debate as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. But what are the challenges for corporate real estate, from design, build, to occupation and services? How might the future of work impact the future of workplaces?

To consider Future Workplaces and Work I am drawing on my contribution to a panel discussion at a recent CoreNet (the world’s leading association for corporate real estate and workplace professionals, service providers, and economic developers) event, by sharing four scenarios about the workplaces of the future: A World of Multiple Actors; De-centralised, Autonomous Workforce; Ultra-Flex Office Accommodation; and Caught by Indecision.

Listen to the podcast on You Tube by clicking below or on Spotify’s Anchor podcast platform. 

You can learn more about me and my work by connecting with me as follows:

Email steve@stevewells.uk
LinkedIn linkedin.com/in/steve-wells-futurist-speaker
Twitter twitter.com/informingchoice   
Articles and Media informingchoices.blogspot.com
YouTube youtube.com/user/InformingChoices
Website stevewells.uk

Credits:
Image https://pixabay.com/illustrations/render-3d-design-office-open-space-2001817
Intro music Aleksandr Karabanov https://pixabay.com/music/introoutro-stomp-logo-3-13783 
Outro music Yuri Gagarin https://pixabay.com/music/beats-birds-in-the-trees-1176 

Recruitment in a Digitised World

The BBC 3 programme, Computer Says No explores the use of algorithm and computer-automated hiring. The automated process could be used to screen CVs and even conduct video interviews. In one example, the programme also looks into the alleged use of automated systems in letting people go.

Questions raised by the programme include the impact on accuracy – and therefore the decisions taken by the systems - of race, gender, emotion, and regional UK accents.

So what’s wrong with traditional recruitment processes and how might we see recruitment evolve in the future? To discuss this question, I was joined on the podcast by Director and Co-Founder of Working the Future, Cat Barnard.

We discussed:

  1. The existing characteristics (pros and cons) of the current recruitment process.
  2. The potential risks of taking people out of the loop and using technologies like AI, ML, and facial recognition being used in recruitment.
  3. What an effective future recruitment process might look like.

Listen to the podcast on Spotify’s Anchor podcast platform or click below to listen on YouTube

You can learn more about Cat and her work by connecting with her as follows:

LinkedIn linkedin.com/in/cathrynbarnard
Twitter twitter.com/workingfuture1
Email cathryn@workingthefuture.com
Web workingthefuture.com

Image Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/analyst-recruiter-research-6492859

Opportunities and Threats of a Jobless World

With a current mindset, it’s hard to see the opportunities of a jobless world created through the growth of pervasive and ever-smarter automation technologies. Commentators will often focus on the challenge presented to economies and welfare systems of high unemployment driven by technological shifts. But what if the politically-driven economic paradigm of seeking 100% employment shifts? Are there opportunities as well as risks to a world transitioning towards a jobless future?

To discuss the Opportunities and Threats of a Jobless World I was joined in this episode of the podcast by strategic communicator and futurist Gina Clifford back.

Listen to the podcast on You Tube by clicking below or on the Anchor podcast platform

You can learn more about Gina and her work by contacting and connecting with her as follows:

Email gina.clifford@gmail.com
LinkedIn linkedin.com/in/ginaclifford
Twitter twitter.com/G1naClifford

Image Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/characters-jobs-work-fun-career-1372458

Informing Choices Mini-Pod - The Future of Continuous Change on Work

Even without the Covid19 pandemic, the world was undergoing complex changes that were drastically transforming the way businesses access and leverage the skills required for optimal business growth. Add to that underlying change the possible – some might say highly likely – rapid switch to technology enabled home, remote, and hybrid working and suddenly building and maintaining future-fit organisations becomes a crucial imperative.

Given this context of continuous change, what is the Future of Continuous Change on Work? To consider this question, I am joined on the podcast by future of work specialist Cathryn Barnard. Together, we explored:

  • How do continuous change and ambiguity shape how we plan for the future of work?
  • Continuous change is exhausting and yet, likely to be our reality for some time to come. What are the implications for how we work and stay in work?
  • How might work change in the future to accommodate the need to alleviate stress and the mental health implications of continuous change?

You can listen to the podcast on You Tube by clicking below or on the Anchor podcast platform here


You can learn more about Cathryn and her business at
workingthefuture.com.

Image Source: Gerd Altmann https://pixabay.com/photos/time-clock-time-spiral-spiral-3103599/

Informing Choices Mini-Pod - The Future of Recruitment

The dynamics of recruiting are changing, and changing fast. For tech-savvy recruiters, there’s a whole gamut of options: from automated applicant tracking systems, to video-based interview platforms, to gamified skills assessments, to simulations of on-the-job scenarios using virtual reality. All of which can take place in a remote environment.

The Covid pandemic has accelerated remote working and is likely to leave behind a more decentralised hybrid work model. Overlay that with the post-pandemic economic scenarios and we have an increasingly uncertain future environment. So what is the Future of Recruitment? 

To consider this question, explore how recruitment has recently evolved, how it looks set to change into the future, and explore the role technology might play, I am joined on the podcast by Human Resources Consultant, International Job Coach, and Mentor Ron Mayne.

You can listen to the podcast on You Tube by clicking below or on the Anchor podcast platform here


You can learn more about Ron and his business through his website at
yournewtomorrow.eu, contact Ron by email, and connect with him on LinkedIn

Image Source: Tumisu https://pixabay.com/photos/job-interview-hiring-hand-shake-3790033/

Informing Choices Mini-Pod - The Future of the Way we Work

The future of work is one of those subjects that has been covered regularly by futurists and organisational development specialists over the years. But the pandemic has brought many developments into where and how we work into sharp focus; increasing automation, home and remote working versus office based, for example.

To talk about The Future of the Way we Work, strategic foresight and change leadership advisor Rob Caldera joined me on the podcast in which we addressed the following questions:

  • In the aftermath of the 2020 pandemic, how might companies change the way they work so that they are more resilient and responsive to sudden, disruptive events?
  • Will remote work become the norm rather than the exception in the post-pandemic future?
  • What might become of corporate culture in companies composed mostly of contingent workers who work remotely in distributed, autonomous teams?
  • As AI becomes a necessary technology to enable the agility needed to thrive in the future, how far might businesses be willing to push the use of this technology?
  • What are the implications of these observations to leading change programs now?

You can listen to the podcast on You Tube by clicking below or on the Anchor podcast platform, here


Learn more about Rob and his work on
LinkedIn, on his website, and follow him on Twitter

Image Source: Alexas Fotos https://pixabay.com/illustrations/office-work-vacations-recovery-1548297/

Rethinking Work and Jobs in the Exponential Era

By Rohit Talwar, Steve Wells, and Alexandra Whittington 


Will any of the jobs that exist today still be around in 20 years? Is automation destined to rewrite all our futures?

Across society, we are beginning to acknowledge that smart technologies could transform every aspect of business, work, government, and our daily lives. We are already used to seeing faceless robots undertaking repetitive manufacturing tasks, and smart applications determining our credit ratings, autopiloting planes, and delivering an array of functionality to our mobile devices. But this is just the start; the next waves of development will see the coming together of artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, big data, and cloud services. The combinatorial effect of these exponential technologies is really what creates the opportunity for machines to interact with humans through the provision of services rather than simply delivering us data, analysis, and decision support.

If we look further into the future, the workplace of tomorrow is going to be very different from today. Imagine a workplace with humans, augmented humans, robots, holograms, and display-based AI manifestations all working in the same space. As a human, do you trust your robot colleague? What happens when the robot is smarter than you? How will we respond when the AI application working 24/7/365 complains that we are simply not learning or working fast enough to keep up with it? As a Human Resources Manager, how do you manage and monitor such a work force?

The Future of Work

It seems that whatever the country, whatever the economic context, the critical question is becoming ever more pertinent: What is the future of work in an era of exponential technology development? Artificial intelligence is arguably the big game changer and becoming more commonplace. We already see narrow AI in use in internet searches, customer targeting applications, and in predictive analytics. But AI has much greater capability that will emerge into every aspect of our lives in the future. Increasingly devices will learn more about us, provide an ever-increasing range of support, and take on more of our tasks. We are automating a lot more activity in literally every sector, and that is set to continue at an accelerating rate.

Future of Business

At Fast Future, in our book The Future of Business, we identified thirty different trillion-dollar industry sectors of the future which we grouped into clusters. We expect these clusters and the under- lying industries to be impacted radically by exponential technology developments:

  • Information and communications;
  • Production and construction systems;
  • Citizen services and domestic infrastructure;
  • New societal infrastructure and services;
  • Transformation of existing sectors such accounting, legal, and financial services;
  • Energy and environment.

So, we can see the significant disruptive potential that technology offers to emerging sectors and the new players within them.

The McKinsey Global Institute forecast which technologies will drive the economy of the future. They predict that mobile internet, the automation of work knowledge, the Internet of things (where many factory, office, and household devices and appliances are connected to the internet), and cloud computing will all form part of a transformative information technology (IT) backdrop and be the most significant creators of new economic value. They also singled out advanced robotics and autonomous vehicles as playing a significant part in future economic growth.

Future Skills and Management Challenges

Given the importance of the issue, it is not surprising that there have been several research projects exploring what this scale of technological change could mean for the future of work. Pew Research (2014) posed the question, “Will networked, auto- mated, AI and robotic devices have displaced more jobs than they have created by 2025?” Their key findings were:

  • 48% of respondents said that robots and digital agents will displace significant numbers of blue-collar and white-collar workers;
  • Society would see increases in income inequality, significant numbers of unemployable people, and breakdowns in the social order;
  • Conversely, 52% said technology will not displace more jobs than it creates. Lost jobs would be offset by human ingenuity creating new occupations, and industries; and,

This group also pointed out that current social structures (e.g. education) are not adequately preparing people for the skills needed in the future job market.

A 2013 study on the Future of Employment by Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne of the Oxford Martin School explored the probability of computerization for 702 occupations and asked, “Which jobs are most vulnerable?” The study found that 47% of workers in the US had jobs at high risk of potential automation. The most at-risk groups were transport and logistics (taxi and delivery drivers), sales and services (cashiers, counter and rental clerks, telemarketers, and accountants), and office support (receptionists and security guards). The equivalent at risk workers were 35% of the workforce in the UK and 49% in Japan.

A 2016 McKinsey Global Institute report looked at the automation of the global economy. The findings were based on a study that explored 54 countries representing 95% of global GDP and more than 2,000 work activities. The study found that the proportion of jobs that can be fully automated by adapting currently demonstrated technology is less than 5%, although for middle-skill categories this could rise to 20%. It also said that based on current technologies, 60% of all jobs have at least 30% of their activities that are technically automatable. The research found that, ultimately, automation technologies could affect 49% of the world economy; 1.1 billion employees and US$12.7 trillion in wages. China, India, Japan, and the US account for more than half of these totals. The report concluded that it would be more than two decades before automation reaches 50% of all of today’s work activities.

The World Economic Forum’s 2016 study into The Future of Jobs saw an increasingly dynamic jobs landscape. It estimated that 65% of children entering primary school today will work in job types that don’t yet exist. While the study saw job losses in routine white-collar office functions, it saw gains in computing, mathematics, architecture, and engineering related fields. The report identified several job categories and functions that are expected to become critically important in the future:

  • Data analysts – leveraging big data and AI;
  • Specialized sales representatives – commercializing and articulating new propositions; and,
  • Senior managers and leaders – to steer companies through the upcoming change and disruption.

So What for HR?

We are heading into a world of wicked problems that will require not “Ordinary Management,” but “Extraordinary  Leadership.” The leadership and management style required when working in uncertain situations can be challenging. For Ordinary Management we apply accepted best practice approaches; it’s the domain of trend extrapolation, tame problems, and technical challenges. But in the increasingly disruption filled world we are heading into, we require Extraordinary Leadership because our challenges are difficult or impossible to solve due to unpredictable trend paths, incomplete and contradictory information, and changing requirements that are often difficult to define or agree upon. We need the ability to navigate a rapidly changing reality, make decisions with imperfect information, and to tune our intuition to “sense and respond” when surrounded by an array of relatively weak signals of what might happen next.

A critical requirement here is to determine the organizational capacity to work in new ways including envisioning the future and making sense of complexity—it seems to us that HR could play a big role in developing these core capabilities.

We are in a rapidly changing world, one that is increasingly technology driven, one that will host more generations in parallel—with their divergent work/life wants and needs—than we have seen before. One that is highly likely to see a revolutionary change in jobs as we know them today, one that will see the birth of new jobs, and the demise of others. One that could ultimately see not working as the new normal.

Here are some questions that HR directors and senior leaders might want to consider:

  • How is HR helping to create a generationally and technologically diverse culture?
  • What role is HR playing in driving culture changes that help align the organization with the constantly evolving interplay between customer strategies, their resulting requirements, and our own business propositions and capabilities?
  • How is HR using technology to streamline and automate activities such as performance management, learning and development, resource planning, and sourcing and thus free up time for these more strategic tasks by?
  • Is there an opportunity for the Human Resources function to transition to one of Resource Management—adopting a more business–wide strategic role—to meet the organization’s business objectives?

This article is based on an excerpted chapter from the book Beyond Genuine Stupidity – Ensuring AI Serves Humanity (Talwar, R., Wells, S., Whittington, A., Koury, A., & Romero, M. (Eds.). (2017). BEYOND GENUINE STUPIDITY: Ensuring ai serves humanity. London, UK: FAST FUTURE Publishing). To read the full article, click here.

Image Credit: Gerd Altmann / https://pixabay.com/images/id-797267