The Career Nomads Have Arrived

The Career Nomads Have Arrived

It’s the “math problem” facing every business leader today: how to turn two into four, and four into eight.

The numbers refer to average job tenure: just over 4 years overall, and as low as 1 to 2 years for younger professionals. It’s the era of the career nomad who moves from opportunity to opportunity with increasing frequency. For them it’s all about learn and earn, make an impact, and move on.

This point was brought home humorously in an extreme example told to me over dinner by the CEO of a very large company, which hires hundreds of college interns each year. Three weeks into the internship, the CEO addressed the new class of interns. When it came time for questions, one of the interns stood up: “I just don’t know if this is working out for me. I don’t feel I am making an impact on anyone’s life.”

The CEO replied, “Maybe you should give it a little more time.”

Humor aside, the career nomad phenomenon shouldn’t be associated only with millennials. It’s happening at all levels, even in the most senior positions. In these days of low unemployment and higher turnover, don’t expect it to change any time soon.

While there’s no fighting the career nomad trend, business leaders can look for ways to extend that two-year job tenure to four years—then that four years to eight years, especially for high-potentials, the diamonds in the rough. These are the people who will make the most impact on the company (the 20 percent who accomplish the 80 percent) and whose learning and development ought to be the biggest priority. This group needs to be identified much earlier than in the past—then nurtured, mentored, and developed.

On any P&L, there is an enormous hidden cost: unwanted turnover. The reality is that it takes time for a new employee to “find the bathroom,” let alone navigate the entrenched, informal networks within their new employer. Given the learning curve associated with any job, it can take months before someone makes a real impact.

Career development within the company should no longer be approached like a ladder. It’s like a jungle gym, moving up and branching out. Here are four important considerations:

Screen for Learning Agility. This ability to apply past experiences and lessons learned to new challenges and opportunities is the No. 1 predictor of success. (I call it “knowing what to do when you don’t know what to do.”) Learning agility should be identified and developed as early as possible, particularly among high-potentials whose desire to learn more, stretch, and grow can be accomplished within one company, with the right career development opportunities.

Create a Career Architecture. Give employees a view of a variety of roles throughout the organization. This can show how they can satisfy their career aspirations at one firm and extend their job tenure. The longer talented people stay, the more likely the organization will be to invest in their development.

Focus on the 70/20/10. Development comes from assignments and bosses, not the classroom. That’s the 70/20/10 rule of thumb, respectively, of learning on-the-job, learning from others (especially the boss), and formal training. Putting the 70 and the 20 together, shows the importance of the boss who take an interest in the development of his/her direct reports and giving them opportunities to learn and grow.

Make Development a Leadership Priority. Don’t simply “outsource” development and mentoring to HR. Business leaders should be accountable for career development and mentoring, including to increase employee engagement, reduce turnover, and ensure employees progress in their careers.

As more talent is on the move, companies need to find ways to make the most of employees’ contributions while they’re on the job. Keeping people on the job a little longer, with real opportunities to learn and grow and make an impact, can be the win/win that satisfies career nomads and their employers.

For more career advice, consider Lose the Resume, Land the Job or Korn Ferry Advance.

Bob Korzeniowski

Wild Card - draw me for a winning hand | Creative Problem Solver in Many Roles | Manual Software QA | Project Management | Business Analysis | Auditing | Accounting |

5 å¹´

We have employers who lay off people at the drop of a hat.? ?A small hiccup in revenues?? LAYOFFS TIME!?? And people wonder why people have short job tenures?? ?Even full time employee jobs are turning into temporary contracts - in practice.

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Michael A.

Sr. Systems Engineer - Interim Site Lead @ IntePros Federal | Systems Engineering, SharePoint Administration

5 å¹´

As a person who’s has had quite a few different opportunities in my field (Computer Science), I think being a ‘Career Nomad’ is a very good strategy for the individuals. I think this trend started, especially with millenniums like myself, because their seems to be a sense of complacency when you look at previous the folks who are at one place for 20+ years. A lot of positions can become repetitive; and while that’s good in the sense of knowing exactly what you’re getting into, it can also work against you because there are so many things and methods that different organizations do that staying at one place will pretty much eliminate you from learning the new ways things may be done. So it can be a great thing to spend two years somewhere then move on because new strategic advances in all fields can develop every year. Great post.

Neil Grant

Leadership Strategy Consultant and Senior Executive Coach with expertise in Talent Management | Leadership Assessment | Change Management | Team Building & Leadership | Talent & Leadership Development

5 å¹´

Retain for core roles .... and embrace the gig economy.

Kerry Etheridge

Educator | Problem-solver | Agent of Change

5 å¹´

In a perfect world, every employer would do the things you suggest and people would stay. The problem is not so much identifying promising employees but caring about them. Too many employers (my own, for example) still take the attitude that human capital is a renewable resource and, therefore, not worthy of nurturing. I think the reason so many people change jobs after only a short while is because they pick up on this apathetic attitude and move on. Why should they feel any loyalty to an employer who demonstrates (and feels) no loyalty to them?

Toby Coop

Award-winning publisher of video games for business. Create badass teams using new tech?? & power skills!

5 å¹´

"...Three weeks into the internship, the CEO addressed the new class of interns. When it came time for questions, one of the interns stood up: “I just don’t know if this is working out for me. I don’t feel I am making an impact on anyone’s life.”...excellent point made by the intern and missed I felt in the rest of the article and by the CEO which is the battle for "Meaning!" Like in this link which talks about brands with a purpose... link https://www.dhirubhai.net/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:6529103075553140736?

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