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Story Events - until Feb

One third of organisations reshaping workforces post-COVID-19

33% of organisations globally are reshaping their workforces since the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic began.

In addition, two thirds of organisations have a โ€œfuture of workโ€ taskforce, yet just one third has defined what the future means for them.

Aonโ€™s sixth Global COVID-19 HR Pulse Survey, conducted in December 2020, garnered respondents from over 1,400 organisations around the world, more than 500 of which are based in Europe.

The survey showed that just 10% of global organisations felt they were still in the โ€œReact and Respondโ€ stage since the pandemic began. These organisations are focusing on crisis management and business continuity.

Fifty-seven percent of respondents said that they are in the โ€œRecoverโ€ stage, focusing on updating business goals and adjusting operating plans, while 33% are in the third โ€œReshapeโ€ stage where they are restructuring or pivoting offerings and deploying new talent strategies.

European respondents differed marginally at 8%, 56% and 36%, respectively. These figures represented a slight change from a pulse survey conducted in August 2020, when 27% of organisations said they were in the โ€œReshapeโ€ stage.

The survey showed that organisations that have advanced to reshaping their organisations are focusing on the future:

  • Companies in the third stage report having a better understanding and definition of the future of work. This is the case for 37% of these firms, as opposed to 25% of those in the second, or โ€œRecoverโ€, stage. These firms also have more focus on how their resources are deployed, using data better, maximising agility, bolstering resilience and boosting their Employer Value Proposition.
  • Organisations in both the second and third stages have teams in place to manage the future of work; however, organisations who are in the third stage of โ€œReshapeโ€ are twice as likely to engage external consultants to support them. Respondents in both latter stages have engaged executives, HR, business line managers and technology to manage this initiative internally, while organisations in stage three place a greater emphasis on the role IT plays, possibly believing they are more relevant to implementing the strategy. This also indicates organisations in this latter stage are better equipped to use data and analytics to make informed decisions.
  • Staff communication about the future of work is also more frequent and direct in organisations that are in the โ€œReshapeโ€ stage. This includes more frequent use of surveys (56%) in comparison to stage two (45%). The key focus for firms in both stage two and three are remote/virtual working, flexible schedules, wellbeing and diversity, equity and inclusion. However, organisations in stage three place additional emphasis on agility, future talent and reshaping the workforce.

John McLaughlin, Chief Commercial Officer, Human Capital, EMEA at Aon, said:ย โ€œThe key takeaway from our latest HR Pulse survey is how the pandemic has served as a catalyst for us all to rethink how we work, where we work and how work should be done. Organisations are largely shifting from a critical, reactive stage to planning their future. By dividing organisationsโ€™ response to COVID-19 into a three-stage framework, we can see whether respondents believe they fit into the first category, โ€œReact and Respondโ€, the second category, โ€œRecoverโ€ or the third, โ€œReshapeโ€.

โ€œWhat is clear from the findings is that organisations that say they have reached the third stage – Reshape – are more likely to focus on the future of work.

โ€œHowever, the future of work is a big, multi-faceted issue that is hard to tackle, not least because itโ€™s not clear what the term means. Its definition is often rooted in predicting the future, which is onerous – and clearly impossible. Instead, organisations can tackle the future of work by breaking it down into elements, such as optimising investment in a workforce, reducing people-related risk and ensuring a workforce is flexible and resilient enough to be capable of rising to future challenges.”

To download Aonโ€™s Global COVID-19 HR Pulse Survey, click here.