5 Key Trends Shaping the Future of the Workplace
Future of workplace

5 Key Trends Shaping the Future of the Workplace

In the post-pandemic world, the idea of the workplace and how we work has changed dramatically. Organizations worldwide have been forced to adapt to socioeconomic shifts. Two words, “Remote work”, have taken over workforce solutions. The trend gained traction globally, evolving the employment landscape in 2022, and has continued to grow in popularity.

With workforce trends evolving and signalling the constantly changing needs of organizations, the need to keep up with the industry’s competitiveness and adapt to the new trends has become all the more important.

Key trends shaping workplaces and how they are managed -

1. Managing a distributed workforce

Making remote work normal and engaging in a flexible workforce environment has never been more valued than it is right now. Feeling tethered to their desks at the workplace for more than eight hours a day is not seen as favourable by employees anymore. Modern employees love the newfound freedom and flexibility that comes with remote working. The adoption of robust time management, communication software, and employee productivity software tools points to the growing prominence of remote work.

The successful results of remote work have pushed many organizations to take the hybrid approach, allowing employees the freedom to work remotely and in-office as and when it is deemed necessary or favourable depending on their need to collaborate, have face-to-face discussions or meet their teams at work.

With the wide adoption of hybrid work, employers are having to put in efforts to measure employee productivity when working remotely. From tracking hours to monitoring software, employers are trying to gain insight into how teams spend their time. But at the same time, employers need to work collaboratively and be transparent with their teams to maintain a sense of trust and avoid negative impacts.


2. Greater use of AI and Automation

Advances in artificial intelligence are evolving at an astonishing speed, from language generation to image creation and beyond. Rather than taking away jobs, sentient robots, have started to create and enable evolving careers.

AI and data analytics have come a long way in helping industries with their scalability. By automating tasks and minimizing errors, AI has been a boon, taking away repetitive tasks and allowing employees to focus on problem-solving, creative tasks.

AI has enabled the hiring potential up to 10x times, in the recruitment industry. By choosing the right technologies to facilitate chatbots, candidate screening, video conferencing, and remote screening, recruiters have dominated the workspace. While AI may be speeding up the recruitment process, certain implications have emphasized the need to secure data due to its transparency.


3. Prioritizing employee engagement and mental well-being

Surprisingly, employees feeling “enough is enough”, has sent the labour market into a frenzy, and organizations have been forced to take a hard look at their employees’ well-being quotient. An interesting fact is that a common “perk” or “we'll offer you as much as refreshments you want” does not seem to be the answer anymore.

Initiatives and strategies focused on employees’ mental well-being are being employed across businesses that deliver meaningful and practical help to their employees — from self-care days off.

once a month to increase well-being benefits, mental health first aid training and even adaptations to the workplace.

Employing AI and new human resources technology to provide augmented experiences has become necessary to achieve this. A Forbes article observed that highly engaged teams showed 21% more profitability.


4. Skill focus- Upskilling and reskilling to retain top talent

It is important to remember that managing and working with a distributed workforce requires more complex communication processes and remote work technologies. The adoption of AI and new technologies has created a need for upskilling. But this is good! Training and upskilling nurture top talent and help maintain high-performance teams as well as help retain top talent in fundamental roles.

With the abundance of skill shortages, it seems like a viable option to hire job seekers and employees to develop and learn new skills, as a solution for employers to remain competitive in the market. Interestingly, soft skills are seen as extremely valuable in an organization, to increase the value of the workforce, and rightly so, because you can always teach employees the required skills but you can’t teach them the attitude.


5. A multifaceted workforce with an emphasis on Diversity, Equity & Inclusion

Whether it's different genders, age groups, races or other factors, organizations need to realise the importance of diversity and leverage the multifaceted workforce it represents. This is an era where there’s potential for a wide range of generations to work under the same roof and office environment. This is a big plus to the ones looking for a career change, a potential insecurity has been, thanks to the multigenerational workforce.

According to a Glassdoor report, three-quarters of employees and job seekers say a diverse workforce is a vital element when deciding their workplace as they care greatly about diversity and equity.


Final thoughts

The state of the modern workplace is continually changing, and it’s necessary to keep up and adapt to these changes. Employers that harness these existing and emerging trends in creative ways, will be able to assemble the workforces efficiently in their companies to meet business objectives. HR leaders who listen to employees and respond with empathy and creativity will be able to attract and retain the right talent while reshaping the future of work.

Original Source: https://alp.consulting/5-trends-shaping-future-workplace/

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