Pandemic-improved workforce is short-lived: PwC report
New research from PwC shows that while many companies boosted workforce productivity and performance during the pandemic, cultural and leadership speed bumps have arisen that are inhibiting the creation of strong workforce strategies.
The global survey draws upon the views of almost 4,000 business and human resources leaders across 28 industry sectors and from 26 countries and regions, including Bermuda and the Caribbean.
Remote and hybrid working has provided a short-term productivity boost in most workplaces, the report said, with 46 per cent of respondents (57 per cent globally) saying that their organisation performed better against workforce performance and productivity targets over the past 12 months.
None said that their company performed significantly worse.
However, productivity and performance gains may have come at the expense of longer-term employee trust.
Half of business and human resource leaders surveyed strongly believe that their organisation is building high levels of trust between workers and their direct supervisors.
Burnout may be partially responsible for the number not being higher — nearly 80 per cent (compared with 74 per cent globally) are not fully confident that the workload is manageable enough for employees to make full use of personal time.
The survey reveals that building trust while using data and technology that is human-centred remains fundamental to workforce strategy.
Digitisation and automation, cost pressures, talent shortages, distrust and burnout — a confluence of factors — are having an impact on the workplace today.
It is clear from the findings that lukewarm agreement — or action — will not move the needle in addressing today’s biggest workforce risks. Caribbean organisations must act quickly and decisively to strengthen their organisations and prepare for the future of work.
David Gibbons, human capital leader, PwC in the Caribbean, said: “People are integral to the tech equation. An engaged workforce is critical to focused, sustained action by leadership.
“Leaders need to engage with and listen to their people and be responsive to addressing employee concerns and the desire of people to work for organisations that live up to their purpose, values and culture. This is critical to retaining and motivating employees.”
The research found that effective organisational planning can pay dividends. Companies that undertook both scenario-based planning (where leaders anticipate their needs for multiple possible futures) and dynamic planning (whereby leaders build responsiveness into plans) were 30 per cent more likely to perform at, or above, financial and other targets than those who use neither approach.
Additionally, companies that undertake dynamic planning alone, compared with those who embark on scenario-based planning alone, see about a 10 per cent point advantage.
Bhushan Sethi, joint global people and organisation leader, PwC US, said: “The pandemic has increased the pressure for more integrated business and workforce strategies, informed by robust scenario planning which for some is delivering tangible financial benefits.
“As we anticipate greater, short and long-term uncertainty, the importance of establishing effective planning practices will be critical to address today’s and tomorrow's business and workforce priorities.”
Digitisation will continue to be a top concern for leaders, and there is currently a gap between the heightened role technology will play in the workforce strategy and an understanding of the risks.
Only 7 per cent of Caribbean leaders (21 per cent globally) strongly agreed that they can identify the potential risks caused by decisions to replace human work with technology.
Furthermore, only 12 per cent (25 per cent globally) strongly agreed that they communicate clearly and consistently to employees and other stakeholders about the impact of automation and AI.
A focus on skills needs should also be included as a planning imperative. A third of the human resource and business leaders surveyed say that it is very important to identify the skills the organisation will need in the future because of technological change but only 12 per cent (26 per cent globally) strongly agree that they can currently do this.
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