Hays: How flexible career planning can reduce labor market shortages

February 18, 2020
Share this Post: 

The pressure on the labor market is great. Employers search intensively for the most suitable candidate profiles - but they prefer to attract younger talent. Organizations often do this with an eye to the future, but that is not always justified. More experienced professionals have valuable know-how, sharp soft skills and ensure balance in a team. 

Myriam Warson, HR specialist at recruitment expert Hays, suggests flexible career planning as a means to reduce shortages.

A high outflow of professionals and an aging workforce put pressure on the labor market, and companies are eagerly looking for talent. Yet they often look for young people; oftentimes its in the same talent pool, resulting in a war for talent. The recruitment of more experienced candidates seems - wrongly - to be less attractive. 

Warson says:

“Employers must keep in mind that a job for life no longer exists. Professionals are more active in the labor market than in the past. However, talent has no expiry date. Dare to use experience."

The benefits of experienced employees are numerous.

"Older employees have in-depth soft and hard skills, develop an extensive network and found that lifelong learning in the workplace is necessary to be with. Their motivation is often great to undergo additional training and to have the right competencies. In order to be successful, as an employer, you best bet on cross-pollination between young and old. Different generations teach each other the missing hard and soft skills in the workplace."

A Career Pause Doesn't Mean A Career Stop

If organizations want to attract employees who provide added value, they must look at competencies and not at age. Yet the shift to hire older and experienced employees has not yet been completed. 

“When professionals take a career break today, that decision hinders their chances of returning. That must be done differently," says Warson. “Just as employees can put together their remuneration package based on their specific needs, professionals should also have the opportunity to plan their own career. That way they can focus their full attention on work or, for example, on their family for a certain period of time without losing their attractiveness on the labor market."

Whether flexible career planning can relieve pressure on the labor market? Myriam Warson is already convinced:

“The autonomy that comes with flexible career planning motivates people to learn throughout life and to sharpen competencies. People want to be with us. That is only beneficial for companies and eases the search for white ravens on the labor market." 

Read more

February 18, 2020

Subscribe to our mailing list to get the famous, free Friday newsletter!

News and analysis to help build better online marketplace businesses, in your inbox, every Friday

Related News

New Jersey Governor and NJEDA team up to launch job portal

Read More
Shutterstock 2738268051 1
CMP has a plan to answer unemployment numbers due to COVID-19

Recruitment, coaching and outplacement firm, CMP, is providing over a thousand people free access to their career portal to make...

Read More
Searchie 1
According to AI recruiter Searchie, COVID-19 has actually inflated global hiring numbers

COVID-19 has had one major impact on HRtech: artificial intelligence has found its time to truly shine. Sahiqa Bennett, Co-founder...

Read More
Coronavirus Covid Work Employment Jobs Economy 1
Ex-SocialRank founders premiere new job board to combat coronavirus layoffs

Employment numbers have been in near free-fall since the coronavirus pandemic, and hardly any industry can hide from it. But...

Read More

Editor's Pick