The Work Operating System for AI-powered work
A live log of every job, task, subtask, and workflow inside the enterprise.
Find wasted potential, unlock hours, and know exactly where agents deliver impact.
Connect all agents, recommend the right one for each task, and capture the context to build new agents.
Measure ROI based on actual work changes, not agent promises.
Replaces static job architecture with a dynamic model for humans and agents that updates as roles shift.
Shows how AI will change jobs and what skills your workforce needs.
Redesigns how work gets done and tracks every change automatically.
Reejig
10 mins
Feb 23, 2023
See the Work Operating System in action and start re-engineering work for AI.
The latest insights on re-engineering work for AI
Turns out, talent mobility as a descriptor has been around for decades. The term talent mobility can be found in peer-reviewed research in the early 2000’s, and was created to respond to the rise of highly-skilled workers with transferable skills. With the onset of widespread internet use in organizations, the increasing talent pipeline in science and technology to help fuel those industries, and the resulting complexity and scale that occurred as a result of both of these occurrences, talent mobility was a way to name an emergence of a type of attribute where an employee could function in multiple roles, and adapt according to the changes an organization may face. Employees with talent mobility may work at the intersection of multiple departments, embrace several skill sets, and have had adaptations and growths in their career (and job titles) over time.
Today, organizations and business leaders often refer to talent mobility as a broader concept than as an adjective for a person, and are referencing an overarching organizational strategy to help place the right people in the right positions, reimagine their roles, and best utilize current and emerging skills. This has become big business and a huge concern for companies during the “the great resignation” with 58% of UK organizations sharing that they are not sure they have the right people in the right positions for growth, and 71% revealing that they do believe that having the right people in the right roles is paramount for growth. Additionally, companies that were confident in their talent mobility strategies showed the strongest business-related markers, with instances of higher profitability, higher employee engagement, and stronger leadership and success pipelines. This could not be more relevant as, post-pandemic, workers are more likely to resign than ever and seek out career changes if they feel their current employer will not let them grow or provide opportunities to grow with them. As a result of higher turnover, a competitive hunt for talent, and a swiftly-changing business landscape, employers have started to hunker down and address talent mobility to keep the talent they have, help their people shape their careers internally, and also respond to market demands in a way that is more nimble than a revolving door of incoming talent.
When thinking in terms of business strategy, thought leaders have contributed much to specific means of implementing talent mobility as a principle and practice within organizations. For example, Forbes has suggested revisiting and reimagining talent pipelines in a changing employment landscape. Talent pipelines of the past were linear and only allowed limited movement, think old-school Super Mario Bros on Super Nintendo, where Mario and Luigi moved from left and right only. Today’s pipelines are like an open-world video game, where your people take different paths, have multiple personal journeys and are able to take an empowered driver’s seat with their career goals and skills they hope to acquire. What this means is that not every accountant wants to finish their career as the head of accounting, and not every customer service associate wants to lead the customer service department. More and more, people are transitioning skills like customer service and product knowledge into product management, and accounting towards data science or analytics. Emerging statistics back up this ideology, with 53% of Americans leaving their last job for a career change, and because they felt that their new aspirations did not fit the mold of their current employer.
In practice, implementing talent mobility is multi-faceted. Consider the following when it comes to the specificities of your own organization and what prioritizing talent mobility would look like at your workplace.
Once you have an idea of the skills and knowledge currently embedded within the organization, you can start to lay out short and long-term plans, as well as put together job descriptions that actually fit your needs and the potential pipeline of your people. Too often job descriptions and roles are created last minute with little thought to the actual needs of the organization today and tomorrow. This is the chance to get up to date, using the information you gained from the audit.
Ultimately, talent mobility and implementing strategic mobility only matters to your organization if it has tangible outcomes, right? Here are a few considerations for you to weigh the pros and cons of talent mobility.
Of course, true talent mobility does not happen overnight. Think of it more as a goal for the future, where your organization makes changes on a monthly, yearly, and long-term basis to help mitigate losing talented people, engaging the talent you have long-term, and hiring even more strategically to fill any remaining gaps. As you do so, you will find that your employees take notice, respect your transparency, and feel a sense of shared commitment to the success of the organization and to succeeding in their new roles as they continue to grow under the support of the organization. Not to mention, talent mobility creates a new lens to understand your leadership pipeline, with employees able to move in different directions, lead in new ways, or establish themselves as future leaders in new areas that the organization might not have originally considered. Research shows that learning new skills and creating a culture of learning are all part of where modern organizations are headed (and what is helping them succeed).
Now that you have had a deep-dive into the benefits of talent mobility and the value of strategizing ways to keep your current employees engaged, it is time to set the plan in motion and embrace the future of multi-faceted and talented employees who can contribute to your organization in new and unexpected ways in the face of a demanding marketplace. Set up a brainstorming meeting with your organization’s decision-makers and put together and outline on getting started, digital solutions and partners that can help you get there, and what success means for you and your people.
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See the Work Operating System in action and start re-engineering work for AI.
The latest insights on re-engineering work for AI