Technology and telecommunications companies employ outdated tactics for
recruiting and retaining talent, according to a new report from professional
services firm Deloitte.
The study of more than 150 technology and telecommunications companies in
North America found that most firms in those sectors rely on financial
incentives to attract and retain employees. But today’s workforce values greater
freedom in schedules and control of where and how they work over financial
compensation, Deloitte said in the report, released Wednesday, March 5.
“The conflicting perspectives between technology and telecommunications
employers and employees suggest that the respondents are significantly
challenged in how they capture their fair share of talent in the near term,”
Jeffrey Alderton of Deloitte Consulting said in a statement.
The report comes amid mixed signals regarding the technology and
telecommunications job market. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, U.S.
payroll employment in the computer and electronic products sector dipped by
1,200 jobs from December to January, to 1.26 million. Between January 2007 and
January 2008, employment in that sector fell by 35,100 jobs. In addition,
payroll employment in the telecommunications sector dropped by 9,200 between
January 2007 and January 2008, to 1.03 million jobs.
But payroll employment in computer systems design and related services rose
by 78,500 between January 2007 and January 2008, to 1.39 million jobs.
The Deloitte survey, conducted last spring, found upbeat hiring expectations.
Two-thirds of respondents expect their workforce to grow by at least 6 percent
over the next 12 months, and only 6 percent expect their workforce to shrink,
Deloitte said.
Even so, technology and telecommunications companies surveyed are generally
less worried than companies in other industries about a prolonged global labor
crisis, Deloitte said.
“This may be due to the fact that technology and telecommunications companies
are considered ‘sexy’ and, therefore, have an easier time attracting talent,”
Deloitte said. “It may also be attributable to their younger workforces, which
are less affected by baby boomer retirements.”
In the report, Deloitte said that 71 percent of companies surveyed said they
use financial rewards and incentives to attract and retain talented employees.
That was by far the most-mentioned strategy. Training and development programs,
cited by 48 percent of respondents, was second, followed by implementation of
career growth plans, mentioned by 36 percent.
Deloitte cast the focus on financial tactics as behind the times. “Workers
today aren’t as interested as they used to be in hefty compensation packages and
fancy retirement plans,” Deloitte said. “What they really want—more than
anything else—is direct and personal control over when, where and how they
work.”
The report also argues that young “Millennial” workers aren’t the only ones
interested in a significant say over their jobs. “It turns out that recent
retirees who are re-entering the workforce want many of the same things as their
younger counterparts,” Deloitte says. “So do ‘Gen Xers,’ although they are
probably too afraid to ask.”
Many companies have taken steps in the right direction, Deloitte says.
The survey found plans to ramp up such things as mentoring and training. The
next step, according to the report, “is for companies to develop such programs
as mass career customization that make personalized career development a
standard operating practice, rather than a one-off exercise reserved for special
circumstances.”
—Ed Frauenheim