It has been nearly three years since the pandemic started and while the fear of viruses might have eased, other challenges have been growing.
During the social distancing period, people had to work from home extensively. Additional working hours with limited face-to-face support created a wave of exhaustion, causing the “Great Resignation”. A global study by Microsoft in 2021 suggested that more than 40% of the workforce was considering leaving their employer.
This begs the questions: What’s next? What do future jobs look like? Is the office going to be the same as where we used to work?
During the recent RMIT-Deloitte HR Forum 2022, four possible scenarios were introduced by Mr Mark Teoh, Executive Director at Deloitte Consulting:
First, people may work through co-location collaboration. In this model, work is executed through fluid networks of teams that are focused on achieving customer missions. These teams thrive when they are co-located, working together physically, and utilising digital tools and platforms to connect with remote peers when needed. Employees do their best work on-site, have tools at their fingertips, and work together across the same time zone.
Second, people may work with more autonomy and personalisation. These organisations will provide their employees wider choices, independence, and flexibility across all dimensions, creating highly empowered teams. Employees work across fluid networks in virtual-hybrid environments. Teams are in tune with each other and have clear norms around working methods.
Third, some organisations may take a more stable, secure and social approach. They will choose to maintain stability in when, how and where work is completed – a lot like the “old normal”. The workforce is focused on task execution relevant to their functional units, reflecting a traditional hierarchical model. There is a preference for working on-site with access to shared equipment, tools, and face-to-face connection.
Lastly, employers may give options for choosing the time and place for work. Work is executed through traditional, functionally aligned structure with high choice around the location and time when work is completed. These organisations will focus on employee outputs and outcomes, over time on the clock. These workforces are comfortable working in hybrid ways.
Mr Mark Teoh emphasised that "different careers may fit in a different model” and that “tech- and knowledge-driven jobs might be more suitable for the autonomy and personalisation model".