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New Study Finds 64% is average score for Future Career Readiness

Future Workforce Readiness Research Study Revealed

Busyness is leading to False Confidence in being Prepared for Future of Work

Harmonics, the Irish partner of OI Global Partners (one of the world’s largest career consulting partnerships), has released the findings from its Future Workforce Readiness Research Study. The purpose of the study was to measure the preparedness of the workforce for the massive changes ahead in the new world of work. In doing so, it also looked at how organisations can prepare their workforce for the Future of Work.

The study examined how the workforce is thinking in relation to their career now and their future intentions and found that 42% have hit a career ceiling, feel frustrated or are in a toxic situation. Alarmingly, 1 in 5 are actively seeking to leave their employers and pursuing a new role externally. This was highest for males (24%) in the 35-44 age category and for females (23%) in the 45-54 age category.

When looking at comparisons between male and female respondents, the study noted that 34 is the age when the career growth trajectory declines for women.  In the 25-34 age category, 38% of female respondents described themselves in a career growth stage. This drops to 31% in the 35-44 age category and lower again to 22% in the 45 – 54 category. The study also observed that females identify themselves as having ‘Hit a Career Ceiling’ more so than their male counterparts for all these age bands.

John Fitzgerald, managing director of Harmonics and author of the research study said, “Our study shows a very high percentage are either disengaged with their employer or don’t see opportunity for career growth. It highlights the opportunity that exists for organisations to engage with their employees in meaningful career development conversations -especially in a market where talent is so scarce.  This silent dissatisfaction is workforce data that requires urgent attention and can create obvious wins with the correct interventions.”

Among the key findings of the survey, 64% is the average score for Future Career Readiness. However, when broken down, the results showed a clear disconnect between a persons perceptions of their future career readiness versus their actual level of readiness. The key theme emerging is a lack of readiness to take advantage of workplace change that is happening now.

According to Mr Fitzgerald, “People think they are better prepared than they actually are. While they may be confident in their professional and personal development, the busyness of daily work tasks and lack of longer-term planning may be leading to an over-confidence in their capability to succeed in the future of work. There was a distinct lack of preparation for the impact of AI and automation and awareness of how they can bridge the gap so they can stay ahead in their careers.”

“The speed of change in the global economy means employers are almost always in a restructuring and change mode. Plus, the rise of AI and automation is leading to new ways of working. For organisations, this means traditional workforce planning is no longer fit for purpose and job descriptions are in constant flux. For individuals, climbing the traditional career ladder no longer makes sense as a lifelong career strategy,” he continued.

Over 500 working professionals from 21 countries worldwide participated in the study during spring 2019.  The majority of respondents were from Ireland.

Harmonics designed the Future Career Readiness Index, an online tool, to help organizations take an ‘instant pulse’ on how their workforce is thinking in relation to their career now and their future intentions.

“Future career readiness is the critical indicator that illustrates the gap between your current and future workforce readiness to change. Yet it is the one thing that never gets measured,” concluded Mr Fitzgerald.

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Mid-West Global Summit

Future Proofing Organisations & their Workforce

Harmonics, in association with OI Global Partners, will host a global summit where local senior business leaders from some of the largest employers in the Mid-West region will meet change, leadership and coaching practitioners from the US, South America, Canada, UK, Europe and Australia to share their diverse insights on Change.

The exponential change we are seeing in corporate organisations means the structures and systems that served us well in times of certainty are now impeding progress as we move to more agile models to adapt and pivot quickly to stay ahead of change.

This summit will explore Future Proofing from multiple perspectives.

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Disrupt Yourself

Growth is cyclical; we have seen this in the economy with boom times and recessions. The mistake many people make is to become over confident in the boom times and believe they are invincible. What they need to do is disrupt themselves and reinvest in their skills to stay in growth.

Here’s a case in point:  I met Ger, a busy executive in the insurance industry, and we discussed the projects his company was working on. He cited robotisation and automation as big projects in his sector. He was busy working on these projects and loving what he was doing.

I then asked him about the project timelines and what was next for him beyond these projects. He said he simply hadn’t had the time to consider the future as he had immersed himself in the work. I sounded a signal, warning him not to take his eyes off his career future while he worked on his current projects.

I had been giving a Future of Work talk for Ger’s employer, and afterwards we had a brief coaching session. He said the talk had given him food for thought and that he had been blindly busy, not paying enough attention to his long-term career. He admitted that as he had risen through the organisation by people recommending him for new roles, he had never stood back and thought about what he wanted to do.

I shared the innovative S curve model with him. He needed to take control of his next move rather than depend on others.

Disrupting ourselves while we are in growth can be hard to do, because we are likely to be happy as we are. We have not been educated to go and find roles for ourselves; we tend to depend on managers and recruiters to find our next moves.

Research by Deloitte shows that the younger, mobile talent start thinking about their next move within eighteen months of taking on a job. This is alien to the older generation who grew up on a diet of structure and stability. But it is within your control at any age to decide how you want to grow your career.

Career progression is not just promotion

Don’t get hooked into believing the bright lights of promotion are the only indicators of career progression. As organisations have become flatter, there are simply fewer steps to climb on the career ladder. I would prefer it if people would talk about a skills ladder, considering what new skills they want to learn in their next career move. I know money is important, but having the most valuable skills will mean you can earn the most money on lucrative projects which don’t always mean a step up the ladder.

Future Proof Yourself

The above is an extract from the book ‘Future Proof Your Career’. Written by John Fitzgerald, Future Proof Your Career is a practical book which deals with one of the great problems of modern life: how to make it through a 50-year career when all the rules for career success have changed. Get it now on Amazon

Another resource that will help you is the Future Career Readiness Index. It’s a powerful free online tool that evaluates the five key characteristics of a future-ready mindset. The assessment takes less than 10 minutes to complete and allows you to benchmark your readiness for the future of work against that of others globally. You will receive your own personalised rating and a free comprehensive report that offers rich insights into the key areas to accelerate your future career.

To gain access and learn more, visit www.futurecareerreadiness.com

Please feel free to get in touch and share your thoughts at futureproof@harmonics.ie