ompanies today are dealing with all sorts of challenges that are shaping how
they do business—a tighter labor force, the start of baby boomer retirement, talent
shortages in certain professions and escalating health care costs.
These challenges will shape how employers tackle an array of workforce demands,
from recruiting to relocating employees to designing health care benefits. Here
is a review of the most influential workforce management trends that companies will
need to address in the coming year:
Health care benefits
As companies slowly implement consumer-directed health plans as a way to alleviate
rising medical costs, organizations are now focusing on teaching their employees
how to be better consumers of health care.
"It’s not enough for organizations to put in a plan design by itself," says Tom
Billet, a senior consultant in Watson Wyatt’s Stamford, Connecticut, office. "Companies
really need to invest in tools and education to help employees make better health
care decisions."
Consumer-directed health plans, which include a personal employee spending account
and a high-deductible policy, are designed to persuade employees to become more
prudent about their treatment decisions since they’re spending their own money.
To help employees make smarter decisions, employers are offering online financial
modeling tools. The programs, for example, might ask employees how many doctor visits,
prescription drugs and other medical expenses they expect each year and then offer
guidelines on which plan to choose and how much money to put in their spending accounts.
The trend to better educate employees could help boost enrollment in consumer-directed
health plans, which has proved to be a difficult task for employers. Nationally,
just 1 percent of all covered employees were enrolled in consumer plans in 2005,
according to Mercer Human Resource Consulting’s annual benefits survey of 3,000
employers. Just 14 percent of employees chose a consumer-driven plan when offered
another option, down from 16 percent the previous year. Fear of the unknown likely
contributes to those decisions.
"A paragraph or two in the employee handbook is not enough," Billet says. "You
need to take more of an aggressive approach to educating employees." Consumer-directed
plans are expected to continue to increase among large employers, and small to medium-size
employers should see some growth as well, Billet says.
In 2005, 22 percent of companies with 20,000 or more employees offered a consumer-driven
plan, up from 12 percent in 2004. Only 2 percent of all employers with 10 or more
employees offered consumer plans in 2005, and only 5 percent of employers with at
least 500 employees offered them.
Retirement benefits
The retirement benefits landscape will likely see a resurgence of cash-balance pension
plans in the next few years, now that any legal uncertainty has been put to rest
with the recent passage of the Pension Protection Act. Over the past few years,
many companies froze or terminated their cash-balance plans because of a 2003 U.S.
District Court ruling that said IBM’s cash-balance plan violated age-discrimination
laws.
"The Pension Protection Act clearly defines cash-balance plans and lays down
the rules," says Alan Glickstein, a senior consultant in Watson Wyatt’s Dallas office.
"Employers now have a realistic path to go on." Cash-balance plans are a cross between
defined-benefit and defined-contribution plans. The benefits are expressed in the
form of an account that grows over time with interest and contributions from the
employer.
As employers continue to move away from traditional pension plans, they find
that cash-balance plans are more cost-effective, Glickstein says. For the same level
of employer benefit as a defined-contribution plan, cash-balance plans are significantly
less expensive, in part because of professionally managed investment performance
for the entire group of plan participants, which should outperform what each participant
can do on his or her own in a 401(k) account.
Thirty-three percent of the Fortune 100 companies offered a cash-balance plan
in 2002, up from 1 percent in 1985, according to a Watson Wyatt study. In 2006,
27 percent of Fortune 100 companies offered a cash-balance plan. Many companies
that were considering offering cash-balance plans were waiting for the legal ruling.
The pension legislation has paved the way for another trend: Next year, more
companies are expected to offer automatic enrollment in their 401(k) plans. The
legislation "helps encourage a smarter version of automatic enrollment" because
it allows the contribution rate to increase over time, Glickstein says. In the past,
the same inertia that kept some employees from enrolling in plans without help also
kept them at the default level for many years.
"Using inertia to work for us rather than against us will help achieve a better
outcome" in retirement savings, Glickstein says.
Legal issues
In the wake of Enron and other ethics scandals, employers are getting hit heavily
with retaliation charges.
"It’s the largest protected class in the world because every single worker in
every single workplace is a potential plaintiff," says Garry Mathiason, a San Francisco-based
partner with Littler Mendelson, a national labor and employment law practice. "There
were lots of retaliation charges before, but they didn’t get the attention and focus
they get now. There’s been a sharp acceleration since Enron, and I don’t see this
slowing down."
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has seen a steady increase in retaliation
charges in the past decade. In 2005, retaliation made up 29.5 percent of all charges,
up from 15.3 percent in 1995.
The numerous ethics scandals have shown workers that if they do experience retaliation
and file a complaint, the law will be on their side more than ever before. Also,
the courts and legislatures have increasingly given protections to people who file
retaliation complaints. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, for example, protects employees
of a publicly traded company who report financial misconduct from adverse employment
action related to their reporting activity.
Also, a U.S. Supreme Court decision in June expanded the definition of what constitutes
retaliation. In the past, the employee claiming retaliation had to prove economic
harm. Now, the definition of retaliation is much broader and covers more subtle
acts, such as giving an employee the silent treatment or not considering the employee
for promotion.
To deal with the upswing in retaliation claims and to protect against false claims,
employers should write separate anti-retaliation policies that spell out zero tolerance
of retaliation and provide for an independent investigation of any retaliation claim,
Mathiason says.
Employers also continue to have their hands full with class-action litigation,
which has seen massive growth because of the willingness of state and federal courts
to certify many employment law cases for class-action status and the fact that employers
are increasingly settling these cases. Most cases are over wage and hourly issues,
and there’s growth in claims over race and disparate treatment for age.
"Plaintiffs’ lawyers have discovered class-action litigation as a road to wealth
and now troll for people on the Internet for their cases," Mathiason says. "The
financial rewards are so great that now it’s an epidemic."
Rewards & Recognition
More and more, companies today are using rewards and recognition to tackle strategic
business issues. In the past, recognition has lived in human resources, with the
aim to decrease employee turnover.
While that goal still exists, "we’re seeing recognition raised more to a business
level," says Adrian Gostick, managing director of O.C. Tanner Co.’s Carrot Culture
Group in Salt Lake City. Companies are tying recognition to their business goals,
such as driving innovation and improving customer service, and these directives
are coming from the top of organizations.
"We’re talking much more to CEOs and COOs," Gostick says. "We never did that
five years ago."
Express carrier company DHL has a recognition program designed to reinforce customer
service. The "Finding Their Heroes" program uses performance, service and on-the-spot
awards to recognize extraordinary customer service. A trainer in one of DHL’s hubs
was recognized after he sprinted to an ice cream store for ice when a package containing
a blood sample was getting too warm as it was being delayed in customs.
"They understand that you can’t just put a poster on the wall that says, ‘Customers
Come First.’ The only way they’re going to develop that is by recognizing those
behaviors," Gostick says.
Outsourcing
A hot growth area next year will be in recruitment process outsourcing, with more
companies opting to farm out everything from searching for candidates to hiring
new employees.
"It’s as though [the vendors] were your own internal recruiting department,"
says Lisa Rowan, program manager of HR and talent management services at IDC, a
global market intelligence and advisory firm based in Framingham, Massachusetts.
"Most organizations have done some level of outsourcing by using search firms, but
recruitment process outsourcing goes much deeper and broader than that."
RPO refers to the entire process of identifying, screening, hiring, and applying
and providing metrics so that clients can gauge the success of their recruitment
strategies. In many cases companies are using these vendors to take over the hiring
of lower-level workers, such as call center representatives, so their HR staff can
focus on more strategic issues.
The increasingly tight job market and looming talent shortage are driving the
trend, as well as the fact that RPO can be more cost-efficient because it offers
a fixed-price model, with employers paying on a per-hire basis, Rowan says. Forty-one
percent of large companies with HRO contracts are outsourcing some of their recruiting,
according to a study by Towers Perrin. This percentage is expected to rise dramatically
as the costs associated with hiring increase, analysts say.
HR business process outsourcing also is expected to continue to accelerate over
the next few years. The U.S. HR BPO market is expected to grow 16 percent annually
through 2010, to $19 billion, according to industry researcher IDC. Small and midsize
companies with 10,000 or fewer employees are following the trend, Rowan says. Midmarket
employers now have more options to choose from, with some vendors focusing specifically
on midsize companies.
Training & Development
Companies today are investing more in training and development, but at the same
time corporate executives are demanding more proof that training dollars are tied
to sound business results.
"Companies are getting better at linking learning efforts to strategy and business,"
says Pat Galagan, executive editor at the American Society for Training & Development.
"Before, training was done across the board, without thinking about how it supports
a specific business goal." Now, it’s unlikely that a company will do training unless
it relates to a goal it wants to achieve, Galagan says.
And these are high-level goals, such as promoting the organization’s overall
strategy, enhancing shareholder value or producing a better product. To show business
results, employers are using more sophisticated metrics to assess learning programs.
In the past, training was evaluated based on how many people attended a seminar,
how many seminars were offered and the opinions of those who attended. Now employers
want to know whether sales improved or if employees were up to speed more quickly
on using a new product.
While there’s added scrutiny on training programs, there’s been a consistent
trend among employers the past five years to increase spending, according to ASTD’s
most recent State of the Industry Report, released in December 2005. The average
expenditure per worker on training and development was projected to reach $1,000
in 2005, up from $955 in 2004. In 2000, the total spend was $649.
HR software & technology
The latest trend in human resource technology is a model known as "software as a
service," in which companies access standard business applications over the Internet.
It’s gaining speed in several workforce management areas, including core HRMS, recruitment
and performance management. This "on-demand" software carries lower upfront costs
than licensed software and allows for frequent and quicker upgrades. A major benefit
is that organizations don’t need to make a large upfront capital expenditure, usually
millions of dollars, to buy and install equipment, says Michael Cornetto, technology
strategy consultant in Watson Wyatt’s New York office.
While the cost per employee is higher, the lower fixed costs allow organizations
to better plan for technology expenses, rather than dealing with the unknowns of
maintenance and upgrades of licensed software. "All that pain and mess goes away,"
Cornetto says. "You know what it’s going to cost you from year to year."
About one-third of the $3 billion annual market in human capital management software
is currently delivered over the Web, and that proportion could rise to 50 percent
by 2010, according to the research firm Forrester. But the model has raised concerns.
Some complain of a lack of flexibility in the one-size-fits-all approach to software
that is rented to many clients. Customer service is not always the best, and with
the software being provided entirely over the Internet, the security of sensitive
employee data is another concern. Nevertheless, this is a growth area for HR, Cornetto
says.
"Human resource departments have had a hard time getting organizations to invest
in large capital expenditures," he says. With the software-as-a-service model, as
technology or business needs change, "HR departments can swap out software-as-a-service
solutions at the end of their useful life without the remorse of not being unable
to recover" the high initial cost that comes with traditional implementation.
Recruitment & Staffing
The talent shortage, together with a tightening labor market, is forcing organizations
to be more accountable for their recruiting dollars and more aggressive about finding
top people. As recruiters emphasize "active sourcing," tapping into as many avenues
as possible to find strong candidates, corporate executives are demanding evidence
that their work is paying off, says Mark Mehler, co-founder of CareerXroads, a recruiting
technology consulting firm in Kendall Park, New Jersey.
For HR departments, that means doing a better job of using applicant tracking
systems to identify successful sources of hire.
"Companies are spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on advertisements, career
fairs and recruiters, and they want to know what they’re getting for it," Mehler
says. "Recruiting continues to be more bottom-line-oriented. It’s a good trend."
Employee referral programs are still the best source for hires and will continue
to be so, accounting for almost one-third of hires, according to CareerXroads’ annual
"Source of Hire" report. As employers feel the pinch for talent more in the coming
year, organizations need to beef up their employee referral programs. They need
to promote them better and follow through with a strong rewards program for employees
who make successful referrals, Mehler says. Some companies are starting to hire
call-center-type employees to handle the back-end administration of their referral
reward programs.
The Internet continues to be a hot source of hires, accounting for almost one-quarter
of them in 2005. Temp-to-hire also is becoming increasingly attractive, Mehler says.
"It’s huge, and will continue to be so," he says. "Employers like to try out
people and see if they like them." Some employers will shift toward outsourcing
recruiting functions in 2007, especially for high-volume recruiting and hiring.
Relocation
With baby boomers retiring, employers will need to adapt their relocation policies
to reflect the changing demographics of the workforce. The typical transferee usually
works in middle management, so as more midlevel managers leave the workforce, employers
will need to "sweeten the pot" to encourage more employees to relocate, says Cris
Collie, executive vice president of the Worldwide Employee Relocation Council.
While the real estate market softens, one way organizations will offer more help
is by beefing up their home sales assistance programs. In the past, a transferee
might have been asked to sell his home on his own and be reimbursed for expenses.
Now, more employers are offering to buy the employee’s home. In other cases,
some employers are providing duplicate housing reimbursements when a transferee
is paying mortgages on two homes.
Global relocation policies will start to take a different shape too, Collie says.
More companies will continue to use short-term assignments of a year or less.
That’s not only because of the escalating costs of long-term assignments, but
because members of a younger workforce are more reluctant to move their families
for the traditional three-year stint. Their children’s educational needs are often
the controlling factor. Collie has heard anecdotally from some of his organization’s
members that some companies have started turning to their older workers, who are
in the later stages of their career and more free to move, to fill global assignments.
"The dynamics of the workforce today are so complex, you have to view relocation
differently," Collie says. "You have to think outside the box."
Workforce Management Online, December 2006 -- Register Now!