SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  16
Télécharger pour lire hors ligne
WORKING 
IN THE 
FUTURE 
A curated report by the Economist Intelligence Unit.
2 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
C O N T E N T S 
CONTENTS 
INTRODUCTION: BE PREPARED FOR RADICAL CHANGES AT WORK 
The forces reshaping the way we work are many and varied – and companies must be prepared to 
face them all, writes The Economist Intelligence Unit 
THE POWER OF THE DISTRIBUTED WORKFORCE 
Allowing its staff to work from home all around the world helped technology start-up Automattic 
achieve remarkable success, writes its former CEO, Toni Schneider 
IRRATIONALITY AND GLOBALISATION’S IMPACT ON WORK 
A macroeconomic view alone cannot predict how people will react to the growing globalisation of 
work, writes Professor David De Cremer of the Cambridge Judge Business School 
HOW ATTITUDES TOWARDS WORK ARE CHANGING 
The way people of all ages think about work is changing, and organisations need to adapt 
accordingly, writes researcher and consultant Charles Grantham 
WHY INTRAPRENEURS ARE THE WORKERS OF TOMORROW 
As large companies face fiercer competition from start-ups, they will need to empower their 
workers to act like them, writes Philippe De Ridder, co-founder of Board of Innovation 
SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY AND THE NATURE OF ORGANISATIONS 
The sustainability agenda is expanding to include social concerns. This will force companies to 
change the way in which they interact with the communities around them, writes Professor Dean 
Bartlett, co-director of the Centre for Progressive Leadership at London Metropolitan University 
PRIVACY, DATA AND WORKFORCE ANALYTICS 
Data about employees offer businesses valuable insights, but in Europe their use is carefully 
regulated, writes Bridget Treacy, a partner at the law firm Hunton & Williams 
5 
3 
7 
9 
11 
13 
15
3 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
I N T R O D U C T I O N 
INTRODUCTION 
The forces reshaping the way we work are many and varied – and companies 
must be prepared to face them all, writes The Economist Intelligence Unit 
It used to be the case that staff worked the way they were told to by their employers. It was 
therefore the objectives of the organisation – efficiency, in most cases – that defined the working 
style of the majority. 
In the last century, another major influence on working practices was information technology. 
We need look no further than the modern-day office to see how much of an influence it has been 
– many of us spend our working lives gazing at a computer monitor. 
New technologies are changing work styles again. Most significantly, smart mobile technology 
and home broadband make it easier than ever to work outside the office. The notion that work is 
somewhere you go is now overshadowed by the concept that it is something you do. 
As a result, companies construct the working experience of their employees as much – if not 
more – through their choice of technology as through the location and design of their offices. 
This is something that employers are waking up to. Businesses that support “bring your own 
device” policies, despite the cost and/or risk, do so in recognition of the technological self-determination 
that many employees crave. 
But as they define the working life of their workers through technological, organisational or 
HR policy means, it is not enough for companies to simply chase the latest trends. They need 
some end goal in sight, an ideal experience of work that links the desires of employees with the 
objectives of the organisation. And to do that they must consider the factors that influence the 
future of work holistically. 
The purpose of this report, sponsored by Fujitsu, is to help them do just that. The Economist 
Intelligence Unit invited a range of experts from academia, industry and professional services 
firms to share their views on a trend that is changing the way in which human beings work.
4 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
I N T R O D U C T I O N 
Toni Schneider, the former CEO of the company behind WordPress, a publishing platform, 
explains how being a diffuse organisation allowed it to scale up with a minimum of investment 
(page 5). 
Professor David De Cremer of the Cambridge Judge Business School in the UK explains how 
employees’ irrational reactions will influence the impact of globalisation on work (page 7). 
On a related note, Charles Grantham, a researcher and consultant, writes that it is shifting 
attitudes among workers of all ages, not simply a generational divide, that will really reshape 
working life in future (page 9). And Philippe de Ridder, the co-founder of Board of Innovation, 
a consultancy, explains that the intrapreneurial mindset will become more prevalent as demand 
for innovation grows (page 11). 
Similarly, changing perceptions of what it means to be a ‘sustainable’ business will radically 
redraw the relationship between companies and the communities that surround them, as 
Professor Dean Bartlett at London Metropolitan University writes (page 13). 
On a more practical note, Bridget Treacy, a partner at Hunton & Williams and eminent data 
protection lawyer, explains how the data protection regime in Europe will affect the degree to 
which companies can analyse the behaviour of their employees (page 15). 
Together, these articles reveal the diversity of drivers that are changing the way we work. A 
common thread, though, is the growing importance of a sense of purpose in the workplace. If a 
company has a mission beyond simply shareholder value and employees are bought into it, then 
they can and will find their own best way to work – the company just needs to make it possible.
5 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
T H E P O W E R O F T H E D I S T R I B U T E D W O R K F O RC E 
THE POWER OF THE DISTRIBUTED 
WORKFORCE 
Allowing its staff to work from home all around the world helped technology 
start-up Automattic achieve remarkable success, writes its former CEO, Toni 
Schneider 
When Automattic, the technology start-up I ran for eight years, was founded back in 2005, we 
had a unique advantage: a running start. 
The software we were basing our business on, WordPress, had already been available for two 
years as an open-source project. It had thousands of users, which meant we had customers and 
revenue from day one. It also meant that there were dozens of open-source volunteers working 
to improve the software in their spare time – an ideal talent pool from which to hire our first 
employees. 
But there was one big challenge: this group of volunteers was spread all over the world, with 
Donncha based in Ireland, Andy in Texas and Matt and Ryan in California. Should we be like other 
technology start-ups, open an office in San Francisco and ask everyone to move there? This turned 
out to be an existential question that shaped the core culture of our business and led us to become 
a pioneer in creating a distributed workforce. We decided to let everyone work from home. 
People started joining our company from all over. We connected via chat rooms and blogs, where 
we communicated and collaborated all day long. Soon we realised that we wanted to spend some 
time in person, so we got together for week-long coding retreats two or three times a year. All 
along, this distributed work environment felt right to all of us inside the company, but it caused 
friction on the outside. Partners thought it was weird that we had no offices (we later opened a 
co-working space in San Francisco for meetings and events). 
Lawyers and accountants warned us that we would soon be sued by someone about violating 
some labour or tax rule that we had overlooked. Investors were convinced that our org chart 
would fall apart when we got to 30 or 40 people. 
Before we even got to 20 people, a moment of truth arrived. Our product was doing very well – 
we were rapidly approaching 100m users – and someone offered to buy our business for a huge 
amount of money. We had to decide whether we wanted to sell or keep going. If we kept going, 
would we raise more money and “grow up” by centralising our business in San Francisco? We 
decided to stay independent and raise more money, but remain distributed. Why? Because even 
early on we could tell that working from home was incredibly empowering for our employees and 
a big competitive advantage for our business. 
Our company is now 260 people strong, working from over 30 countries and 190 cities across 
the world. The doomsday predictions from partners, accountants and investors never came 
true. On the contrary, our company is thriving. We are number in our industry (WordPress 
currently powers 22.9% of all websites on the Internet), and employee happiness, retention and 
productivity are all extremely high. 
Based on our experience, I am convinced that distributed workforces will bring change to many 
organisations and industries in the next decade. The change is driven by three core factors: 
flexibility, global talent and visibility.
6 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
T H E P O W E R O F T H E D I S T R I B U T E D W O R K F O RC E 
Increased flexibility 
over work 
environments 
leads to happier, 
more motivated 
employees 
Toni Schneider, 
Auttomatic 
FLEXIBILITY 
Employees on distributed teams get much more flexibility to shape their working lives. They 
control their schedules and work environments, they tend to have far fewer meetings and no 
commute – and of course, they can live wherever they choose to. 
For many people, it comes down to something as simple as being able to take their sick child to 
the doctor without needing permission from a boss or feeling guilty about leaving the office. 
Once an employee has experienced that kind of flexibility, they never want to go back to the old 
ways. The flipside is that distributed employees need to be more self-motivated to get work done 
outside the traditional confines of set working hours and cubicle walls, which is not always easy 
and requires proactive coaching and mentoring from the employer. 
GLOBAL TALENT 
For a company, being distributed means having access to a global talent pool. There is no need 
to compete over local talent. A distributed company attracts people from all over the world 
who raise their hand to say that they want to join this particular organisation even though 
it is thousands of miles away. The Internet and our modern communication tools make those 
distances meaningless. If anything, distributed teams tend to work more efficiently because 
contributions are measured by results, not appearances, and because online tools expose just 
how arcane and inefficient it is to get groups of people into rooms all at the same time to discuss 
project status. Distributed workforces do cause increased HR complexities, but they are getting 
solved and are outweighed by the benefits of a global hiring pool. 
VISIBILITY 
Distributed teams tend to quickly abandon old communication methods, such as meetings and 
email, and transition to new, more real-time tools such as chat rooms and video conferencing. 
These tools are a must-have for teams that work across lots of devices and time zones, and they 
have the added benefit of making information more visible to the entire company. A particular 
team might use a real-time chat channel for the majority of its communications, and that 
channel can also be made accessible to the rest of the company. That way anyone can follow 
developments, contribute and search old archives for information. Paradoxically, this increases 
visibility for the entire organisation, despite people being in different locations. It also helps 
answer the first question many managers have when it comes to distributed teams: How do 
I know whether people are working? Seeing someone’s daily activity in a chat channel is like 
seeing a heartbeat of their contribution to the organisation. 
Taken together, we get increased flexibility over work environments, which leads to happier, 
more motivated employees; a global talent pool that helps businesses be more competitive; and 
higher-visibility communication tools that lead to more productive organisations. 
The changes an organisation needs to go through to adopt distributed teams are not trivial. But 
the benefits are valuable to any organisation of any size. And they are more achievable than ever 
in our connected age, where we can turn on a phone or laptop anytime and connect with our co-workers 
from anywhere in the world.
7 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
I R R AT I O N A L I T Y A N D G L O BA L I S AT I O N ’ S I M P AC T O N W O R K 
IRRATIONALITY AND 
GLOBALISATION’S IMPACT ON 
WORK 
A macroeconomic view alone cannot predict how people will react to the 
growing globalisation of work, writes Professor David De Cremer of the 
Cambridge Judge Business School 
When thinking about the future of work, it is always tempting to take the macroeconomic view. 
In the past, this macroeconomic perspective was influenced significantly by the belief that 
technological developments, such as the use of robots, would lead to declining hours of work, as 
witnessed from 1830 to the 1970s. 
The theory was that how people felt about the shape and design of work would become 
insignificant as these considerations became a less important part of their lives. 
However, despite the considerable technological developments of the last three decades, we 
have not seen a reduction in the significance of work to our lives. In fact, people seem to work 
harder than ever. Political interventions across Europe are focused on activating the unemployed 
and making everyone work longer to ensure the survival of our pensions and social security 
systems. 
It is therefore insufficient to consider the future of work from a macroeconomic perspective 
alone. We must also focus on the experience of the people actually doing the work. 
For example, when assessing the influence of technological innovations on the shape and nature 
of work, there is a gap between what is technically possible thanks to those innovations, and the 
way in which people react to them and use them. 
Many IT developments are created in a rather isolated world, and we always have to wait to see 
how these applications will work out. How will people deal with the physical transformation of 
the workplace and the impact on human relationships? 
Understanding the irrational nature of human beings may help us to anticipate the future of 
work more accurately, and to identify the main challenges that will arise. 
This is especially true when considering the impact of globalisation on the future of work. 
GLOBALISING MINDS 
When we talk about globalisation in the business world, we think about transnational 
organisations going beyond the boundaries of their home nation to find new customers and 
suppliers. 
This clearly has an impact on the way people work. As the distance between co-workers grows, 
organisations will increasingly use virtual teams who collaborate remotely, and employees are 
likely to work more frequently from home. Long-distance business travel will be needed less as a 
result, which is cost-effective as energy prices keep going up. 
Another important aspect of globalisation, though, is the rapid development of technology and 
the growing access to it. It is estimated that in 2025 about 5bn people will be online, out of an 
estimated total world population of 8.2bn.
8 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
I R R AT I O N A L I T Y A N D G L O BA L I S AT I O N ’ S I M P AC T O N W O R K 
To reach out to all these consumers, organisations will create market value by adopting virtual 
platforms that can be developed quickly, but also abandoned very quickly. 
These are all rational responses to globalisation. However, human irrationality is already in 
evidence in the way employees are responding to these trends. 
For example, being able to work online may make a lot of sense, but recent research by the 
London Business School in fact shows that if you want to increase your chances of promotion in 
an organisation, your bosses still want to see your face around the office. 
In an interesting way, this strong tendency to demand a physical presence in the office may 
well go hand-in-hand with the contemporary focus of our institutions and organisations on the 
introduction of more regulation systems and administrative controls, which in essence reflects a 
lack of trust towards employees and citizens. If this is true, then the future of virtual teams and 
working at home may not, in fact, blossom. 
Meanwhile, although consensus exists that sustainability should be on everyone’s agenda, 
the strategy of many low-cost airlines moves in the opposite direction. The Irish budget 
airline Ryanair recently introduced a business-class flight with the explicit aim of ensuring the 
existence of business travel. 
Globalisation is not simply the concern of large organisations. The ability of skilled employees 
to move between countries with relative ease – or to find work remotely – in order to follow 
employment trends and investment opportunities has led to a significant increase in freelance 
workers. 
For these freelancers, the subjective experience of work will be of great significance. Trust 
between freelancers may be challenged when compared with colleagues within an organisation, 
and so it will become a highly prized commodity in the globalised workforce. Cultural differences 
will also have a significant impact on the flow of work. 
Here we see how subjective, sociological issues may grow in importance as globalisation 
continues. 
A major challenge for organisations will be maintaining the ability to do business at the right 
time in the right place while still building trusted relationships with customers and suppliers. 
Being agile will therefore become even more “the” defining feature of entrepreneurship in the 
future. Hence having a strong focus on flexible employees and organisations seems rational and 
cost-effective. 
However, agility may nevertheless present a threat for the long term. 
For businesses to remain sustainable, innovation is key. Globalisation will in my view promote 
more of a focus on an incremental type of innovation aimed at adjusting breakthroughs to local 
ever-changing needs. But this incremental innovation will come at the cost of major innovative 
breakthroughs in basic knowledge, which are less likely to emerge under conditions of flexible 
employment contracts. 
High degrees of uncertainty caused by global competitive market pressures may lead to less 
investment in ideas that take time to develop and only show their true value in the long term. 
All these examples make it clear that the gap between the rational perception of how 
globalisation can transform the future of work and the reality of how people will deal with those 
changes in their own irrational way is still significant. 
It requires a better guidance of the globalisation process of work at both the level of 
organisations and individuals and the development of trustworthy relationships. 
Understanding the 
irrational nature of 
human beings may 
help us to anticipate 
the future of work 
more accurately 
Professor David De Cremer 
Cambridge Judge Business School
9 
HOW ATTITUDES TOWARDS WORK 
ARE CHANGING 
The way people of all ages think about work is changing, and organisations 
need to adapt accordingly, writes researcher and consultant Charles 
Grantham 
A common question in management discussions is: “How do we manage Generation Y?” When 
business leaders look at the employees now entering the workplace, they see people whose 
values and beliefs appear to be very different from their own. 
However, the assumption that this new generation of workers (often termed “millennials”) has 
a new, unique attitude towards work is not supported by research. In fact, members of older 
generations may well hold similar views to these millennials. 
There are certainly significant differences in attitude across groups of workers, but “age” is 
not the only – or most important – variable. Many factors contribute to these differences, 
including advances in communication technology, changes in social status and shifting power 
expectations. 
Traditionally, the commonly held view was that work in general was a source of self-worth and 
identity. You were what you did and for whom. The new, emerging attitude is that work is simply a 
means to a larger end; it is no longer a way to define oneself. 
Old-style management techniques and methods stem from an industrial era where authority 
was assumed to be respected and followed explicitly to enhance efficiency. This is no longer an 
operative assumption for business leaders. Instead, what seems to be emerging is that workers 
ignore formalisms in favour of team decision-making. 
Work style is changing in parallel with authority operating mechanisms. Instead of command 
and control built on military models and “Theory X” – MIT professor Douglas McGregor’s terms 
to describe the assumption that workers are lazy – collaboration is the style. There is a subtlety, 
though: collaboration is not co-operation, nor is it co-ordination. Collaboration is shared 
understanding and agreement with a business’s mission and purpose. 
Reward structures are also shifting from being primarily based on direct monetary compensation 
towards a “total rewards” paradigm, where both intrinsic and extrinsic rewards are balanced. 
Likewise, the work/life balance is now perceived differently, with “work” seen as a secondary 
activity in one’s total life scenario. Work has descended Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, and 
opportunity for growth is seen as a personal responsibility, not a company perk. 
The psychological driver of the workforce of the future will therefore be “making a difference”, 
not just “making a living”, as is currently the case. 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
H OW A T T I T U D E S T OWA R D S W O R K A R E C H A N G I N G
10 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
H OW A T T I T U D E S T OWA R D S W O R K A R E C H A N G I N G 
THE IMPACT OF ATTITUDES 
There are four major implications of this swing in attitudes. First of all, there is a change in 
the very nature of the social contract between “worker” and “employer”. It is no longer best 
described as “management”: it is leadership in a socially responsible manner, with sustainability 
the paramount goal of leaders. 
Next is a move from hierarchical communication, power flows and status differences to a more 
collaborative model. Small, collaborative groups will combine temporarily for projects, break 
apart and form new alliances. Emphasis is on teamwork, and your rewards come from your 
immediate contribution as evaluated by team members. 
These first two implications give rise to a third. Simply put, the need for middle managers will 
decrease significantly, because collaboration does not require a constant reframing of mission, 
goals, direction and responsibility. 
The fourth impact is that we need entirely new concepts of what employees are and do. A new 
vocabulary is needed to lead enterprises towards increased profitability and sustainability. 
There is no job title that describes what it is that today’s talent contributes to the organisation. 
I propose “artisans of thought”; artisans are people who continuously practice creativity and 
invention. 
NEW STRUCTURES 
With all these changes going on, how will this new pool of talent organise themselves? If they no 
longer depend on enterprises to set their compensation, provide education and career pathways, 
how do they self-organise? The answer lies in pre-industrial social structures. 
Before corporations and labour unions we had guilds. This is where you went to get trained for 
an occupation; this is where you went from apprentice to journeyman and finally master; this is 
how you connected with people who needed your unique services. I see a role for new guild-like 
groups in developing local talent in a way that meets the needs of citizens, and commerce and 
communities are made sustainable in both an economic and social sense. 
In summary, the changing attitudes of the workforce are going to require everyone – employees, 
managers and executives – to become more agile and innovative. All of us will have to reboot, 
rebrand and reposition ourselves to meet the challenges of the new reality. 
This is especially true of those whose purpose it is to be a leader. Because of changing 
demographics and the attendant shift in beliefs and attitudes, a different form of leadership will 
be required in the coming decade. These new business leaders will need to understand how to 
align people’s personal purpose with that of the organisation and the market context in which 
they operate. 
Charles Grantham 
Researcher and consultant 
I see a role for new 
guild-like groups 
in developing local 
talent in a way that 
meets the needs of 
citizens
11 
WHY INTRAPRENEURS ARE THE 
WORKERS OF TOMORROW 
As large companies face fiercer competition from start-ups, they will need 
to empower their workers to act like them, writes Philippe De Ridder, co-founder 
of Board of Innovation 
In 10 to 20 years’ time most businesses will be populated by a new kind of employee, people who 
do not just bring their own devices, but their own business ideas, working practices and even 
their own teams of people. These are intrapreneurs: employees who behave like entrepreneurs in 
the context of large organisations. 
Intrapreneurs are already flourishing in pioneering companies such as Google and GE. But 
what is today cutting-edge will in future be mainstream, and any company which values either 
strategic innovation or talent engagement and attraction has a very compelling reason to 
embrace intrapreneurship. 
According to research by Richard Foster, the McKinsey consultant who coined the term “creative 
destruction”, over 75% of companies currently in the Fortune 500 will be replaced by 2027, and 
the rate of replacement is only accelerating. 
In many industries, incumbent enterprises are being challenged by new start-ups, whether this 
is Uber in the transport sector, Spotify in the music industry, AirBnb in the hotel business or 
disruptive newcomers in energy or banking. These start-ups are applying disruptive new business 
models and can launch new offers at lightning speed. 
In order to keep up, large organisations need to innovate at similar speed and, as such, adopt 
the techniques that start-ups use to develop new business. 
Meanwhile, research by Gallup shows that more than 50% of US employees are not engaged 
at work, resulting in an annual productivity loss of about US$300bn. At the same time, 
unpaid volunteer work and community engagement are on the rise. Our 20th-century view of 
organisational structures and human motivation, underpinned by extrinsic motivators such as 
money to perform routine tasks, is an anachronism in today’s world. 
In order to attract talent and keep them engaged, large organisations need to create contexts 
in which individuals can direct themselves, expand their capabilities and make a meaningful 
contribution. If not, talented people will join organisations that do, or worse, they will start new 
competitors. 
THE INTRAPRENEURSHIP MINDSET 
According to research by IBM, the single biggest barrier to innovation at large organisations is 
not budget or process, but culture. Enabling intrapreneurialism is therefore first and foremost a 
mindset and culture shift. 
In this shift, organisations have to move from a compliance and control culture to a culture 
of autonomy. An organisational intrapreneurship mindset is characterised by a great level of 
decentralised agility rather than strong central planning; a long-term purpose rather than 
short-term profit goal; and a greater number of “makers” rather than “managers” within 
the organisation. The future organisation itself can be pictured as a fluid, open network – 
significantly different from the static, siloed structure we still see today. . 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
W H Y I N T R A P R E N E U R S A R E T H E W O R K E R S O F T O M O R ROW
12 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
W H Y I N T R A P R E N E U R S A R E T H E W O R K E R S O F T O M O R ROW 
Think of the army and an open-source network such as Wikipedia as two sides of the extreme 
within this spectrum. The key difference between the two is their idea of what it is that motivates 
people. 
Another critical but hard-to-manage aspect of company culture is the acceptance of failure, 
which is crucial for people to take risks and dare to innovate. That is why big companies such 
as Tata, the Indian conglomerate, are awarding failed innovation projects in order to create a 
culture of failure-acceptance and risk-taking among the company’s 500,000 employees, to name 
but one example. 
Most intrapreneurship programmes at large companies are focused on creating new business. 
Some organisations adopt the tools of technology start-ups, such as hackathons, innovation 
boot camps and internal accelerators, which offer employees the chance to come up with new 
business ideas and develop them into validated prototypes ready for scale-up. New business 
projects that come out of such programmes often follow through as a newly launched corporate 
venture, with a different set of key performance indicators and processes to follow. 
For this kind of intrapreneurialism to work, the organisation must create the right conditions, 
giving projects a high degree of autonomy and just the right amount of funding. In an academic 
context, MIT’s Pierre Azoulay found that funding mechanisms that tolerate early failure, reward 
long-term success and give great freedom to experiment resulted in better and more frequent 
academic papers. The same applies in business: short review cycles, pre-defined deliverables and 
policies unforgiving of failure do not support intrapreneurship. 
INTRAPRENEURS EVERYWHERE 
Individuals do not have to wait for their organisations to create the conditions for 
intrapreneurialism, however. In fact, the mindset can be applied in any role – and not just 
knowledge workers, as is commonly thought. 
The customer service function at online shoe retailer Zappos.com (now a division of Amazon. 
com) is a case in point. In contrast to typical call centres, where everything is scripted (resulting 
in huge employee disengagement and high annual turnover rates), Zappos offers its customer 
service agents a large degree of autonomy in helping customers the best way possible: no 
timing, no scripts, no control. As a result, Zappos consistently outperforms its peers as one of 
the best companies in terms of customer service as well as employee engagement. 
Amy Wrzesniewski and Jane Dutton, two business school professors, have also found 
intrapreneurial behaviour among hospital cleaners, hairdressers and nurses and the positive 
impact it has on their job satisfaction. It is also possible to create formal systems that generate a 
significant amount of autonomy and more intrapreneurial behaviour, such as Netflix’s system of 
unlimited holidays and Google’s 20% time to work on any project of choice. 
Whether organisations wish to innovate as fast as new start-ups entering their industry or to 
attract and engage talented people in their organisation, the chances are that they will benefit 
from an intrapreneurial culture. For leaders who wish to install that culture, the best way to start 
is by working like entrepreneurs themselves. 
The single 
biggest barrier to 
innovation at large 
organisations is not 
budget or process, 
but culture 
Philippe De Ridder 
Board of Innovation
13 
SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY AND THE 
NATURE OF ORGANISATIONS 
The sustainability agenda is expanding to include social concerns. This 
will force companies to change the way in which they interact with the 
communities around them, writes Professor Dean Bartlett, co-director of the 
Centre for Progressive Leadership at London Metropolitan University 
While maximising profits for shareholders will remain a top priority, businesses are increasingly 
expected to take account of their impact on both the environment and the communities in which 
they are located. 
Indeed, the sustainability agenda is expanding beyond “environmental sustainability” (ie, 
reducing the carbon footprint over time, with the eventual aim of becoming carbon-neutral) to 
include also “social sustainability” (ie, minimising the negative impact an organisation has on 
the communities that surround it, while increasing any positive benefits to those communities 
and society in general). 
This broadening of sustainability will force businesses to engage with a much broader set of 
stakeholders than is currently the case. Companies will be obliged to think not just of their own 
shareholders, staff and customers but of anyone who is affected by their actions. 
As a result, the role of the business leader in the future will have at its heart the ability to align a 
more diverse group of people amid large-scale change that occurs far beyond the boundaries of 
their own organisation. 
This will ultimately lead to systemic change in the very means of production and our modes of 
consumption. During the transition, the way in which organisations are structured and managed 
will change. They will become looser, more open and more creative, and the conventional 
corporate hierarchy will be inverted. Customers and the frontline staff with whom they interact 
will become more powerful, while the role of managers will be to serve those on the frontline. 
The scope of their concerns will become much wider still in future, and will be driven by a wider 
range of political and ethical concerns. This will be the impact of sustainability on the future of 
work. 
BEYOND ENERGY 
The low-hanging fruit of sustainability, such as energy-saving technologies and more 
sophisticated approaches to waste reduction, will soon become the norm. They are easy for 
businesses to adopt because they save money, and they will have the most immediate impact on 
the workplace. 
Employees will find themselves having to adapt to technological eco-innovation and to readjust 
to newly emerging green workplace practices. Examples of technological eco-innovations include 
low-energy office hardware and the development of green buildings. Green workplace practices 
include the introduction of sustainability-performance dashboards into the management toolkit, 
for example, or hiring and incentivising staff on the basis of sustainability criteria. 
Coping with the pace and scale of change will require a great deal of resilience. Furthermore, 
the wider context within which individuals find themselves working will be changing. Jobs will 
become less secure as whole industries reinvent themselves. Careers will be punctuated by 
abrupt changes in direction, more intense periods of retraining and much greater connectivity 
with the wider world in a continuation and acceleration of current trends. 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
S O C I A L S U S TA I N A B I L I T Y A N D T H E N A T U R E O F O R G A N I S AT I O N S
14 
However, an even greater impact will be felt as the distinction, such as may currently exist, 
between “environmental” and “social” sustainability breaks down. 
Even if a given business practice or particular consumer product is in itself environmentally 
friendly, it is doomed to failure unless it is also socially sustainable. In the short term, changing 
individual employees’ behaviour as they adjust to new ways of working is a necessary social 
process; the maintenance of such individual behaviour is sustained socially. 
In the longer term, however, as the boundaries break down between those who work in, for or 
with the organisation and those who constitute a legitimate stakeholder in some other sense, 
the inherently social nature of sustainability will come to the fore. 
Everyone will become a stakeholder in the increasingly networked context in which businesses 
operate in the future. This manifests itself most clearly at the present time through social media, 
which will become universal in their reach and whose role will expand. 
Initially, the primary role that social media will play is in helping to cement in the global 
consciousness an acceptance that our ecosystem is unable to withstand a simple replication of 
the path pursued by industrialised Western societies over the previous century or two. 
The role of social media will increase over time, going on to become a more active catalyst as 
businesses increasingly find themselves having to justify their sustainability practices through 
social media in order to avoid reputational damage. 
This will drive businesses to constantly reinvent themselves as they negotiate their changing 
relationship with society. Finally, it will become an essential ingredient in the invention of new 
paradigms for the pursuit of profit and will also act as a powerful regulator of precisely how these 
new ways of doing business become enacted. 
The business leader of the future will become a “social facilitator” and “business model 
innovator”, and we will all be participating in some way as stakeholders of some sort, be it as an 
employee, employer, shareholder, customer or competitor, or simply as a global citizen of the 
future. 
Networks of suppliers, partners, customers and other stakeholders will interact in increasingly 
complex and unpredictable ways. The constant reconfiguration of roles, relationships and 
transactions will mean that a new operating model will emerge. It will see the organisation of the 
future constantly morph as it rides successive waves of “sustainable advantage”, which will come 
to replace “competitive advantage” as its main source of business success over the longer time 
horizon. 
This is because only those businesses that are perceived as environmentally sustainable will 
be socially acceptable (and therefore socially sustainable) as stakeholders demand greener 
products and greater corporate social responsibility. It will become increasingly difficult for 
businesses to hide misdemeanours on either front, given the platform that social media give any 
stakeholder to raise concerns. 
Hence, only the most sustainable organisations will stand any chance of survival, since their 
advantage will stem increasingly, and then predominantly, from sustainability rather than from any 
of the other factors on which businesses have traditionally competed, such as cost, quality, etc. 
Successful businesses will be transient in nature as they strive to author their own destruction 
and reinvention in the dogged pursuit of sustainability, driven by conditions of increasing 
population growth and depleting natural resources. While it is impossible for us to envisage 
precisely how these workplaces of the future may look, they will certainly have sustainability at 
their core. 
Everyone will 
become a 
stakeholder in 
the increasingly 
networked context 
in which businesses 
operate 
Professor Dean Bartlett 
London Metropolitan University 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
S O C I A L S U S TA I N A B I L I T Y A N D T H E N A T U R E O F O R G A N I S AT I O N S
15 
PRIVACY, DATA AND WORKFORCE 
ANALYTICS 
Data about employees offer businesses valuable insights, but in Europe their 
use is carefully regulated, writes Bridget Treacy, a partner at the law firm 
Hunton & Williams 
Data analytics is transforming our understanding of the world. Analytics – the rapid processing 
of large volumes of data using sophisticated algorithms – allows us to make sense of and gain 
insights into seemingly unconnected events. 
Increasingly, it is used within the workplace to understand how people work, to improve 
efficiency and safety or to identify talented staff for further development purposes – a practice 
known as workforce analytics. 
This promises considerable savings. According to consultancy Deloitte, one national bank was 
able to save US$18m by analysing its workforce data to spot opportunities to redeploy staff, 
rather than laying them off. 
A hotel chain analysed the behavioural characteristics of 2,700 team leaders across its organisation 
and compared the data with customer satisfaction and sales information. It found that the 
behaviour of leaders was directly correlated with customer satisfaction and, in turn, revenue, to the 
extent that it was able to predict sales figures based on the performance of leaders. 
As these examples show, businesses can derive much value from analysing data about their 
workers. However, just as company use of customer data is carefully controlled, employee data 
protection rights in the EU restrict how employers can deploy data analytics in the workplace. 
Some data that might be used in workforce analytics are the personal data of employees. 
Processing employees’ personal data is regulated by data protection (and employment) law 
safeguards that can significantly curtail how employers use employee personal data. 
In contrast to the US, where individuals typically do not have any expectation of privacy in the 
workplace, in Europe data protection and privacy rights do apply at work, and companies must 
be aware of their legal position before subjecting their staff to workplace analytics. This need 
will only become more pressing as the amount of data companies collect about their employees 
grows and the techniques to analyse them become more widely available in future. 
EU DATA PROTECTION 
European data protection rights evolved in the era after the second world war when secret 
reporting by the state about citizens was commonplace. Individuals had no right to discover 
whether, and if so what, information was held about them, or to verify or correct it. 
Decisions were based on the content of the state’s files, sometimes with tragic consequences. 
Accordingly, European data protection law, enshrined in the European Data Protection Directive 
EC/95/46 (the “EU DP Directive”) , gives individuals enforceable rights in relation to their data, 
including the right to access their data, to correct them and, in some circumstances, the right to 
object to how their data are processed. 
Clearly there is potential for employees’ exercise of these rights to conflict with their employers’ 
wish to use the data in an analytics context. 
As well as ensuring individual rights, European data protection law imposes a range of 
obligations on organisations that collect and determine how personal data are to be processed. In 
the context of workplace data analytics, the following requirements are particularly challenging. 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
P R I VAC Y, D ATA A N D W O R K F O RC E A N A L Y T I C S
16 
• Employers must satisfy one of a limited number of prescribed legal grounds in order 
to collect or use personal data. A company’s right to process employee personal data for 
analytics purposes will most likely be judged on whether it is in the company’s “legitimate 
interests” and not overridden by the employee’s fundamental rights. This requirement is 
interpreted restrictively by regulators, and employers will need to consider their proposed 
analytics on a case-by-case basis. A privacy impact assessment is the preferred tool for 
conducting this assessment, and often the privacy impact can be limited sufficiently to enable 
the analytics to proceed. 
• Individuals must be told how their data will be used. Currently, employers might state that 
personal data will be used to administer the employment relationship, but few employers tell 
their employees that their data will be used for analytics purposes. Also, it is common in an 
analytics context for data to be obtained from sources other than the individual, for example, 
from a third party, through observation, or by deriving them from other data processing. 
Providing notice to employees, and ensuring fairness and transparency in the workplace, 
requires careful planning. If this key step is missed, employees can easily misconstrue the 
purpose of analytics and assume that their individual performance is being monitored. 
• Data collected for one purpose may not be used for a further purpose that is incompatible 
with the original purpose. This key legal requirement is difficult to satisfy in the context 
of analytics, where employers may wish to use data for a range of purposes not originally 
envisaged or referable to the employment relationship. 
• Data minimisation and retention. These obligations require that data must be relevant and 
not excessive for the purposes for which the data were collected. There are obvious tensions 
between data minimisation and data analytics. It is not permitted to retain personal data 
indefinitely, yet that is exactly what data analytics assumes. 
Individuals tend to object to the processing of their personal data when it is unexpected, or 
intrusive. In the workplace, employees typically are concerned that data analytics might be 
deployed to measure their individual performance, and that decisions will be made about them 
based on analytics, including termination. 
Employers are not allowed to make decisions that significantly affect employees based solely 
on automated processing. Instead, analytics should be used to derive trends and to predict 
behaviour across the workforce. Works councils tend to examine the use of analytics in the 
workplace very carefully, and there have been a number of complaints to European data 
protection authorities on this issue. 
What can employers do to manage and mitigate the risks of analytics in the workplace? The first 
consideration should always be to assess whether personal data are needed at all or whether 
aggregated, anonymised information can be used. Data protection laws only apply to personal 
(ie, identifiable) data. Depending on the context, many types of analytics tools are just as 
effective when they use anonymised or “pseudonymised” data. 
Employers should ensure that they are transparent in their proposed use of analytics in the 
workplace. Telling employees that analytics will be deployed, what data will be used, what the 
purpose of the processing is and what the data will not be used for can give employees comfort 
and pre-empt complaints. 
Looking ahead, a new European data protection law is being negotiated at present, and the 
direction of travel of the proposed General Data Protection Regulation is towards a more 
restrictive, prescriptive regime for Europe in which individuals’ rights are strengthened. 
Penalties for breaches of the data protection law are almost certain to be significant, with fines 
of up to 5% of global turnover being discussed. 
Data analytics can deliver valuable insights, and in many cases can be deployed in the workplace 
with minimal privacy risk. But minimising privacy risk requires planning ahead. . 
Data analytics can 
deliver valuable 
insights but 
minimising privacy 
risk requires 
planning ahead. 
Bridget Treacy 
Hunton & Williams 
WORKING I N THE FUTURE 
P R I VAC Y, D ATA A N D W O R K F O RC E A N A L Y T I C S

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Women in the Workplace 2015
Women in the Workplace 2015Women in the Workplace 2015
Women in the Workplace 2015Lean In
 
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 20188 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018Bitly
 
The real workplace trends to steal from tech
The real workplace trends to steal from tech The real workplace trends to steal from tech
The real workplace trends to steal from tech JLL
 
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key FindingsWorkfront
 
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth Employment
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth EmploymentImpact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth Employment
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth EmploymentThe Rockefeller Foundation
 
HR Technology Influencer eBook
HR Technology Influencer eBook HR Technology Influencer eBook
HR Technology Influencer eBook LBi Software
 
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...ux singapore
 
2015 state of social media
2015 state of social media2015 state of social media
2015 state of social mediarealtop466
 
JLL Flexible Office Space Report
JLL Flexible Office Space ReportJLL Flexible Office Space Report
JLL Flexible Office Space ReportAndrew Batson
 
HR Transformation in digital age
HR Transformation in digital ageHR Transformation in digital age
HR Transformation in digital ageTas Chantree
 
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is Now
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is NowHR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is Now
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is NowManish Mohan Misra
 
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business results
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business resultsHr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business results
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business resultsHRsoft - Talent Management Software
 
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...Centerfor HCI
 
The Future of Work in the Information Age
The Future of Work in the Information AgeThe Future of Work in the Information Age
The Future of Work in the Information AgeTrefor Smith
 
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business Report
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business ReportIntuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business Report
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business ReportIntuit Inc.
 
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century Competencies
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century CompetenciesWhat Counselors Should Know about 21st Century Competencies
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century CompetenciesCEW Georgetown
 
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)Trefor Smith
 
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of Work
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of WorkDigital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of Work
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of WorkJörg Seufert
 
The Real Value of Small Business Apps
The Real Value of Small Business AppsThe Real Value of Small Business Apps
The Real Value of Small Business AppsIntuit Inc.
 

Tendances (20)

Women in the Workplace 2015
Women in the Workplace 2015Women in the Workplace 2015
Women in the Workplace 2015
 
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 20188 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018
8 Biggest HR Trends to Follow in 2018
 
The real workplace trends to steal from tech
The real workplace trends to steal from tech The real workplace trends to steal from tech
The real workplace trends to steal from tech
 
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings
2020 State of Work - Overview & Key Findings
 
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth Employment
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth EmploymentImpact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth Employment
Impact Hiring: How Data Will Transform Youth Employment
 
HR Technology Influencer eBook
HR Technology Influencer eBook HR Technology Influencer eBook
HR Technology Influencer eBook
 
HR Trends 2017
HR Trends 2017HR Trends 2017
HR Trends 2017
 
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...
Lightning Talk #8: Digital Transformation in Asia – The Real Deal by Kanika A...
 
2015 state of social media
2015 state of social media2015 state of social media
2015 state of social media
 
JLL Flexible Office Space Report
JLL Flexible Office Space ReportJLL Flexible Office Space Report
JLL Flexible Office Space Report
 
HR Transformation in digital age
HR Transformation in digital ageHR Transformation in digital age
HR Transformation in digital age
 
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is Now
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is NowHR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is Now
HR Transformation-The Digitization Impact: The Future is Now
 
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business results
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business resultsHr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business results
Hr's strategic shift -how to leverage hr technology to drive business results
 
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...
How Do You Attract the Best Talent? Five Companies Exemplify Recruiting Innov...
 
The Future of Work in the Information Age
The Future of Work in the Information AgeThe Future of Work in the Information Age
The Future of Work in the Information Age
 
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business Report
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business ReportIntuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business Report
Intuit QuickBooks Future of Small Business Report
 
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century Competencies
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century CompetenciesWhat Counselors Should Know about 21st Century Competencies
What Counselors Should Know about 21st Century Competencies
 
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)
FAO: Community Managers (and their brand bosses)
 
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of Work
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of WorkDigital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of Work
Digital HR - Trends in Digital HR and the Future of Work
 
The Real Value of Small Business Apps
The Real Value of Small Business AppsThe Real Value of Small Business Apps
The Real Value of Small Business Apps
 

En vedette

23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong
23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong 23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong
23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong Liz Ryan
 
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a SaleDavid Meerman Scott
 
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014Vũ Văn Hiển
 
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To Know
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To KnowRetail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To Know
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To KnowVend
 
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On Business
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On BusinessCorporate Branding and The Effect It Has On Business
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On BusinessBryan Calabro
 
Corporate Branding That Sticks Slideshare
Corporate Branding That Sticks SlideshareCorporate Branding That Sticks Slideshare
Corporate Branding That Sticks SlideshareBianca Cawthorne
 
Branding Made Easy
Branding Made EasyBranding Made Easy
Branding Made EasyStacy Noland
 
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBook
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBookWe Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBook
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBookWe Are Social Singapore
 
Buying Your First Car
Buying Your First CarBuying Your First Car
Buying Your First CarEason Chan
 

En vedette (10)

23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong
23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong 23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong
23 Things Most Managers Do Wrong
 
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale
8 Ways to Ruin Your Chance of Making a Sale
 
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014
Nielsen | Global ecommerce report -august 2014
 
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To Know
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To KnowRetail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To Know
Retail Dictionary: 40 Retail Terms Every Modern Retailer Needs To Know
 
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On Business
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On BusinessCorporate Branding and The Effect It Has On Business
Corporate Branding and The Effect It Has On Business
 
Corporate Branding That Sticks Slideshare
Corporate Branding That Sticks SlideshareCorporate Branding That Sticks Slideshare
Corporate Branding That Sticks Slideshare
 
The New Rules of Selling
The New Rules of SellingThe New Rules of Selling
The New Rules of Selling
 
Branding Made Easy
Branding Made EasyBranding Made Easy
Branding Made Easy
 
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBook
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBookWe Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBook
We Are Social presents Social Brands: The eBook
 
Buying Your First Car
Buying Your First CarBuying Your First Car
Buying Your First Car
 

Similaire à The Future of Work: How Technology and Changing Attitudes Are Reshaping the Workplace

IT and HR: A Not So Odd Couple
IT and HR: A Not So Odd CoupleIT and HR: A Not So Odd Couple
IT and HR: A Not So Odd CoupleDana Gardner
 
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...Dana Gardner
 
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030Peerasak C.
 
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed Workforce
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed WorkforceConnecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed Workforce
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed WorkforceCitrix Online
 
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in Collaboration
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in CollaborationBT On The Productivity Puzzle in Collaboration
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in CollaborationLeon Benjamin
 
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brandsStanding out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brandsMot Juste
 
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brandsStanding out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brandsMot Juste
 
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not Workers
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not WorkersThe Tru Files - Hire Work Not Workers
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not WorkersKelly Services
 
Spark the changing work environment
Spark   the changing work environmentSpark   the changing work environment
Spark the changing work environmentChris Fyvie
 
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforce
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforceRedesigning work creates a smarter workforce
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforceIBM Software India
 
IWG plc research report: the future of work
IWG plc research report: the future of workIWG plc research report: the future of work
IWG plc research report: the future of workAlyceTyler
 
Latest trends in hr 2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)
Latest trends in hr   2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)Latest trends in hr   2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)
Latest trends in hr 2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)Subhashini S Tripathi
 
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible Workforce
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible WorkforceA Digital Workplace for the Flexible Workforce
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible WorkforceBMC_DSM
 
Reinventing the rules of engagement
Reinventing the rules of engagementReinventing the rules of engagement
Reinventing the rules of engagementIBM Software India
 
My interview at Bryant University
My interview at Bryant UniversityMy interview at Bryant University
My interview at Bryant UniversityAndrew Lenti
 
The innovation Game
The innovation GameThe innovation Game
The innovation GameEXIN Group
 
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4Web
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4WebAccenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4Web
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4WebMichael Biltz
 
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docx
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docxmemoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docx
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docxandreecapon
 

Similaire à The Future of Work: How Technology and Changing Attitudes Are Reshaping the Workplace (20)

IT and HR: A Not So Odd Couple
IT and HR: A Not So Odd CoupleIT and HR: A Not So Odd Couple
IT and HR: A Not So Odd Couple
 
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...
2022: The Year Technology and New Work Models Come Together To Enable Continu...
 
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030
Pwc workforce of the future the competing forces shaping 2030
 
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed Workforce
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed WorkforceConnecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed Workforce
Connecting And Engaging Teams In A Distributed Workforce
 
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in Collaboration
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in CollaborationBT On The Productivity Puzzle in Collaboration
BT On The Productivity Puzzle in Collaboration
 
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brandsStanding out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
 
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brandsStanding out 2017   insights from celebrated employer brands
Standing out 2017 insights from celebrated employer brands
 
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not Workers
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not WorkersThe Tru Files - Hire Work Not Workers
The Tru Files - Hire Work Not Workers
 
Spark the changing work environment
Spark   the changing work environmentSpark   the changing work environment
Spark the changing work environment
 
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforce
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforceRedesigning work creates a smarter workforce
Redesigning work creates a smarter workforce
 
5 minutes with portfolio
5 minutes with portfolio5 minutes with portfolio
5 minutes with portfolio
 
IWG plc research report: the future of work
IWG plc research report: the future of workIWG plc research report: the future of work
IWG plc research report: the future of work
 
Latest trends in hr 2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)
Latest trends in hr   2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)Latest trends in hr   2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)
Latest trends in hr 2020 - pexitics (people excellence indicator analytics)
 
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible Workforce
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible WorkforceA Digital Workplace for the Flexible Workforce
A Digital Workplace for the Flexible Workforce
 
Reinventing the rules of engagement
Reinventing the rules of engagementReinventing the rules of engagement
Reinventing the rules of engagement
 
My interview at Bryant University
My interview at Bryant UniversityMy interview at Bryant University
My interview at Bryant University
 
The innovation Game
The innovation GameThe innovation Game
The innovation Game
 
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4Web
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4WebAccenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4Web
Accenture Technology Vision 2016 Full Report A4Web
 
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docx
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docxmemoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docx
memoExample 3220 memos.docMemo 1Date532011ToVP of.docx
 
Hays Journal 12
Hays Journal 12Hays Journal 12
Hays Journal 12
 

Plus de The Economist Media Businesses

Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEAN
Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEANDigital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEAN
Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEANThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...The Economist Media Businesses
 
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking awayLung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking awayThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and society
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and societyIntelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and society
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and societyThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...The Economist Media Businesses
 
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...The Economist Media Businesses
 
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schools
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schoolsEIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schools
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schoolsThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...The Economist Media Businesses
 
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruptionM&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruptionThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimensionBriefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimensionThe Economist Media Businesses
 
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocations
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocationsIn Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocations
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocationsThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and Responsibility
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and ResponsibilityAsia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and Responsibility
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and ResponsibilityThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For Now
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For NowRisks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For Now
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For NowThe Economist Media Businesses
 
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to Equities
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to EquitiesIn North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to Equities
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to EquitiesThe Economist Media Businesses
 
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEA
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEABalancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEA
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEAThe Economist Media Businesses
 

Plus de The Economist Media Businesses (20)

Food for thought: Eating better
Food for thought: Eating betterFood for thought: Eating better
Food for thought: Eating better
 
Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEAN
Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEANDigital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEAN
Digital platforms and services: A development opportunity for ASEAN
 
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...
Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investi...
 
Next-Generation Connectivity
Next-Generation ConnectivityNext-Generation Connectivity
Next-Generation Connectivity
 
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking awayLung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away
Lung cancer in Latin America: Time to stop looking away
 
How boards can lead the cyber-resilient organisation
How boards can lead the cyber-resilient organisation How boards can lead the cyber-resilient organisation
How boards can lead the cyber-resilient organisation
 
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and society
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and societyIntelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and society
Intelligent Economies: AI's transformation of industries and society
 
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...
Eiu collibra transforming data into action-the business outlook for data gove...
 
Communication barriers in the modern workplace
Communication barriers in the modern workplaceCommunication barriers in the modern workplace
Communication barriers in the modern workplace
 
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...
An entrepreneur’s perspective: Today’s world through the eyes of the young in...
 
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schools
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schoolsEIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schools
EIU - Fostering exploration and excellence in 21st century schools
 
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...
Accountability in Marketing - Linking Tactics to Strategy, Customer Focus and...
 
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruptionM&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
M&A in a changing world: Opportunities amidst disruption
 
Infographic: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Infographic: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimensionInfographic: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Infographic: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
 
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimensionBriefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
Briefing paper: Third-Party Risks: The cyber dimension
 
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocations
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocationsIn Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocations
In Asia-Pacific, low-yields and regulations drive new asset allocations
 
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and Responsibility
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and ResponsibilityAsia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and Responsibility
Asia-pacific Investors Seek Balance Between Risk and Responsibility
 
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For Now
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For NowRisks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For Now
Risks Drive Noth American Investors to Equities, For Now
 
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to Equities
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to EquitiesIn North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to Equities
In North America, Risks Drive Reallocation to Equities
 
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEA
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEABalancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEA
Balancing Long-term Liabilities with Market Opportunities in EMEA
 

Dernier

WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfWSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfJamesConcepcion7
 
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...Operational Excellence Consulting
 
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Career
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and CareerNeha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Career
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Careerr98588472
 
Fundamentals Welcome and Inclusive DEIB
Fundamentals Welcome and  Inclusive DEIBFundamentals Welcome and  Inclusive DEIB
Fundamentals Welcome and Inclusive DEIBGregory DeShields
 
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applications
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applicationsIntroducing the Analogic framework for business planning applications
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applicationsKnowledgeSeed
 
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdfChris Skinner
 
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...Hector Del Castillo, CPM, CPMM
 
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptx
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptxRakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptx
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptxRakhi Bazaar
 
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource Centre
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource CentreJewish Resources in the Family Resource Centre
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource CentreNZSG
 
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesUnveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesDoe Paoro
 
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider context
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider contextEntrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider context
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider contextP&CO
 
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdf
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdfWSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdf
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdfJamesConcepcion7
 
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverseInteroperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverseSiemens
 
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdfChris Skinner
 
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare Newsletter
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare NewsletterHealthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare Newsletter
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare NewsletterJamesConcepcion7
 
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptx
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptxGo for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptx
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptxRakhi Bazaar
 
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management Team
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management TeamTechnical Leaders - Working with the Management Team
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management TeamArik Fletcher
 
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...SOFTTECHHUB
 
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in Life
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in LifePlanetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in Life
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in LifeBhavana Pujan Kendra
 

Dernier (20)

WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfWSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
 
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...
The McKinsey 7S Framework: A Holistic Approach to Harmonizing All Parts of th...
 
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Career
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and CareerNeha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Career
Neha Jhalani Hiranandani: A Guide to Her Life and Career
 
Fundamentals Welcome and Inclusive DEIB
Fundamentals Welcome and  Inclusive DEIBFundamentals Welcome and  Inclusive DEIB
Fundamentals Welcome and Inclusive DEIB
 
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applications
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applicationsIntroducing the Analogic framework for business planning applications
Introducing the Analogic framework for business planning applications
 
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
 
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...
How Generative AI Is Transforming Your Business | Byond Growth Insights | Apr...
 
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptx
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptxRakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptx
Rakhi sets symbolizing the bond of love.pptx
 
Toyota and Seven Parts Storage Techniques
Toyota and Seven Parts Storage TechniquesToyota and Seven Parts Storage Techniques
Toyota and Seven Parts Storage Techniques
 
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource Centre
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource CentreJewish Resources in the Family Resource Centre
Jewish Resources in the Family Resource Centre
 
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesUnveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
 
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider context
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider contextEntrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider context
Entrepreneurial ecosystem- Wider context
 
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdf
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdfWSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdf
WSMM Media and Entertainment Feb_March_Final.pdf
 
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverseInteroperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
 
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf
20200128 Ethical by Design - Whitepaper.pdf
 
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare Newsletter
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare NewsletterHealthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare Newsletter
Healthcare Feb. & Mar. Healthcare Newsletter
 
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptx
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptxGo for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptx
Go for Rakhi Bazaar and Pick the Latest Bhaiya Bhabhi Rakhi.pptx
 
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management Team
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management TeamTechnical Leaders - Working with the Management Team
Technical Leaders - Working with the Management Team
 
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
 
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in Life
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in LifePlanetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in Life
Planetary and Vedic Yagyas Bring Positive Impacts in Life
 

The Future of Work: How Technology and Changing Attitudes Are Reshaping the Workplace

  • 1. WORKING IN THE FUTURE A curated report by the Economist Intelligence Unit.
  • 2. 2 WORKING I N THE FUTURE C O N T E N T S CONTENTS INTRODUCTION: BE PREPARED FOR RADICAL CHANGES AT WORK The forces reshaping the way we work are many and varied – and companies must be prepared to face them all, writes The Economist Intelligence Unit THE POWER OF THE DISTRIBUTED WORKFORCE Allowing its staff to work from home all around the world helped technology start-up Automattic achieve remarkable success, writes its former CEO, Toni Schneider IRRATIONALITY AND GLOBALISATION’S IMPACT ON WORK A macroeconomic view alone cannot predict how people will react to the growing globalisation of work, writes Professor David De Cremer of the Cambridge Judge Business School HOW ATTITUDES TOWARDS WORK ARE CHANGING The way people of all ages think about work is changing, and organisations need to adapt accordingly, writes researcher and consultant Charles Grantham WHY INTRAPRENEURS ARE THE WORKERS OF TOMORROW As large companies face fiercer competition from start-ups, they will need to empower their workers to act like them, writes Philippe De Ridder, co-founder of Board of Innovation SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY AND THE NATURE OF ORGANISATIONS The sustainability agenda is expanding to include social concerns. This will force companies to change the way in which they interact with the communities around them, writes Professor Dean Bartlett, co-director of the Centre for Progressive Leadership at London Metropolitan University PRIVACY, DATA AND WORKFORCE ANALYTICS Data about employees offer businesses valuable insights, but in Europe their use is carefully regulated, writes Bridget Treacy, a partner at the law firm Hunton & Williams 5 3 7 9 11 13 15
  • 3. 3 WORKING I N THE FUTURE I N T R O D U C T I O N INTRODUCTION The forces reshaping the way we work are many and varied – and companies must be prepared to face them all, writes The Economist Intelligence Unit It used to be the case that staff worked the way they were told to by their employers. It was therefore the objectives of the organisation – efficiency, in most cases – that defined the working style of the majority. In the last century, another major influence on working practices was information technology. We need look no further than the modern-day office to see how much of an influence it has been – many of us spend our working lives gazing at a computer monitor. New technologies are changing work styles again. Most significantly, smart mobile technology and home broadband make it easier than ever to work outside the office. The notion that work is somewhere you go is now overshadowed by the concept that it is something you do. As a result, companies construct the working experience of their employees as much – if not more – through their choice of technology as through the location and design of their offices. This is something that employers are waking up to. Businesses that support “bring your own device” policies, despite the cost and/or risk, do so in recognition of the technological self-determination that many employees crave. But as they define the working life of their workers through technological, organisational or HR policy means, it is not enough for companies to simply chase the latest trends. They need some end goal in sight, an ideal experience of work that links the desires of employees with the objectives of the organisation. And to do that they must consider the factors that influence the future of work holistically. The purpose of this report, sponsored by Fujitsu, is to help them do just that. The Economist Intelligence Unit invited a range of experts from academia, industry and professional services firms to share their views on a trend that is changing the way in which human beings work.
  • 4. 4 WORKING I N THE FUTURE I N T R O D U C T I O N Toni Schneider, the former CEO of the company behind WordPress, a publishing platform, explains how being a diffuse organisation allowed it to scale up with a minimum of investment (page 5). Professor David De Cremer of the Cambridge Judge Business School in the UK explains how employees’ irrational reactions will influence the impact of globalisation on work (page 7). On a related note, Charles Grantham, a researcher and consultant, writes that it is shifting attitudes among workers of all ages, not simply a generational divide, that will really reshape working life in future (page 9). And Philippe de Ridder, the co-founder of Board of Innovation, a consultancy, explains that the intrapreneurial mindset will become more prevalent as demand for innovation grows (page 11). Similarly, changing perceptions of what it means to be a ‘sustainable’ business will radically redraw the relationship between companies and the communities that surround them, as Professor Dean Bartlett at London Metropolitan University writes (page 13). On a more practical note, Bridget Treacy, a partner at Hunton & Williams and eminent data protection lawyer, explains how the data protection regime in Europe will affect the degree to which companies can analyse the behaviour of their employees (page 15). Together, these articles reveal the diversity of drivers that are changing the way we work. A common thread, though, is the growing importance of a sense of purpose in the workplace. If a company has a mission beyond simply shareholder value and employees are bought into it, then they can and will find their own best way to work – the company just needs to make it possible.
  • 5. 5 WORKING I N THE FUTURE T H E P O W E R O F T H E D I S T R I B U T E D W O R K F O RC E THE POWER OF THE DISTRIBUTED WORKFORCE Allowing its staff to work from home all around the world helped technology start-up Automattic achieve remarkable success, writes its former CEO, Toni Schneider When Automattic, the technology start-up I ran for eight years, was founded back in 2005, we had a unique advantage: a running start. The software we were basing our business on, WordPress, had already been available for two years as an open-source project. It had thousands of users, which meant we had customers and revenue from day one. It also meant that there were dozens of open-source volunteers working to improve the software in their spare time – an ideal talent pool from which to hire our first employees. But there was one big challenge: this group of volunteers was spread all over the world, with Donncha based in Ireland, Andy in Texas and Matt and Ryan in California. Should we be like other technology start-ups, open an office in San Francisco and ask everyone to move there? This turned out to be an existential question that shaped the core culture of our business and led us to become a pioneer in creating a distributed workforce. We decided to let everyone work from home. People started joining our company from all over. We connected via chat rooms and blogs, where we communicated and collaborated all day long. Soon we realised that we wanted to spend some time in person, so we got together for week-long coding retreats two or three times a year. All along, this distributed work environment felt right to all of us inside the company, but it caused friction on the outside. Partners thought it was weird that we had no offices (we later opened a co-working space in San Francisco for meetings and events). Lawyers and accountants warned us that we would soon be sued by someone about violating some labour or tax rule that we had overlooked. Investors were convinced that our org chart would fall apart when we got to 30 or 40 people. Before we even got to 20 people, a moment of truth arrived. Our product was doing very well – we were rapidly approaching 100m users – and someone offered to buy our business for a huge amount of money. We had to decide whether we wanted to sell or keep going. If we kept going, would we raise more money and “grow up” by centralising our business in San Francisco? We decided to stay independent and raise more money, but remain distributed. Why? Because even early on we could tell that working from home was incredibly empowering for our employees and a big competitive advantage for our business. Our company is now 260 people strong, working from over 30 countries and 190 cities across the world. The doomsday predictions from partners, accountants and investors never came true. On the contrary, our company is thriving. We are number in our industry (WordPress currently powers 22.9% of all websites on the Internet), and employee happiness, retention and productivity are all extremely high. Based on our experience, I am convinced that distributed workforces will bring change to many organisations and industries in the next decade. The change is driven by three core factors: flexibility, global talent and visibility.
  • 6. 6 WORKING I N THE FUTURE T H E P O W E R O F T H E D I S T R I B U T E D W O R K F O RC E Increased flexibility over work environments leads to happier, more motivated employees Toni Schneider, Auttomatic FLEXIBILITY Employees on distributed teams get much more flexibility to shape their working lives. They control their schedules and work environments, they tend to have far fewer meetings and no commute – and of course, they can live wherever they choose to. For many people, it comes down to something as simple as being able to take their sick child to the doctor without needing permission from a boss or feeling guilty about leaving the office. Once an employee has experienced that kind of flexibility, they never want to go back to the old ways. The flipside is that distributed employees need to be more self-motivated to get work done outside the traditional confines of set working hours and cubicle walls, which is not always easy and requires proactive coaching and mentoring from the employer. GLOBAL TALENT For a company, being distributed means having access to a global talent pool. There is no need to compete over local talent. A distributed company attracts people from all over the world who raise their hand to say that they want to join this particular organisation even though it is thousands of miles away. The Internet and our modern communication tools make those distances meaningless. If anything, distributed teams tend to work more efficiently because contributions are measured by results, not appearances, and because online tools expose just how arcane and inefficient it is to get groups of people into rooms all at the same time to discuss project status. Distributed workforces do cause increased HR complexities, but they are getting solved and are outweighed by the benefits of a global hiring pool. VISIBILITY Distributed teams tend to quickly abandon old communication methods, such as meetings and email, and transition to new, more real-time tools such as chat rooms and video conferencing. These tools are a must-have for teams that work across lots of devices and time zones, and they have the added benefit of making information more visible to the entire company. A particular team might use a real-time chat channel for the majority of its communications, and that channel can also be made accessible to the rest of the company. That way anyone can follow developments, contribute and search old archives for information. Paradoxically, this increases visibility for the entire organisation, despite people being in different locations. It also helps answer the first question many managers have when it comes to distributed teams: How do I know whether people are working? Seeing someone’s daily activity in a chat channel is like seeing a heartbeat of their contribution to the organisation. Taken together, we get increased flexibility over work environments, which leads to happier, more motivated employees; a global talent pool that helps businesses be more competitive; and higher-visibility communication tools that lead to more productive organisations. The changes an organisation needs to go through to adopt distributed teams are not trivial. But the benefits are valuable to any organisation of any size. And they are more achievable than ever in our connected age, where we can turn on a phone or laptop anytime and connect with our co-workers from anywhere in the world.
  • 7. 7 WORKING I N THE FUTURE I R R AT I O N A L I T Y A N D G L O BA L I S AT I O N ’ S I M P AC T O N W O R K IRRATIONALITY AND GLOBALISATION’S IMPACT ON WORK A macroeconomic view alone cannot predict how people will react to the growing globalisation of work, writes Professor David De Cremer of the Cambridge Judge Business School When thinking about the future of work, it is always tempting to take the macroeconomic view. In the past, this macroeconomic perspective was influenced significantly by the belief that technological developments, such as the use of robots, would lead to declining hours of work, as witnessed from 1830 to the 1970s. The theory was that how people felt about the shape and design of work would become insignificant as these considerations became a less important part of their lives. However, despite the considerable technological developments of the last three decades, we have not seen a reduction in the significance of work to our lives. In fact, people seem to work harder than ever. Political interventions across Europe are focused on activating the unemployed and making everyone work longer to ensure the survival of our pensions and social security systems. It is therefore insufficient to consider the future of work from a macroeconomic perspective alone. We must also focus on the experience of the people actually doing the work. For example, when assessing the influence of technological innovations on the shape and nature of work, there is a gap between what is technically possible thanks to those innovations, and the way in which people react to them and use them. Many IT developments are created in a rather isolated world, and we always have to wait to see how these applications will work out. How will people deal with the physical transformation of the workplace and the impact on human relationships? Understanding the irrational nature of human beings may help us to anticipate the future of work more accurately, and to identify the main challenges that will arise. This is especially true when considering the impact of globalisation on the future of work. GLOBALISING MINDS When we talk about globalisation in the business world, we think about transnational organisations going beyond the boundaries of their home nation to find new customers and suppliers. This clearly has an impact on the way people work. As the distance between co-workers grows, organisations will increasingly use virtual teams who collaborate remotely, and employees are likely to work more frequently from home. Long-distance business travel will be needed less as a result, which is cost-effective as energy prices keep going up. Another important aspect of globalisation, though, is the rapid development of technology and the growing access to it. It is estimated that in 2025 about 5bn people will be online, out of an estimated total world population of 8.2bn.
  • 8. 8 WORKING I N THE FUTURE I R R AT I O N A L I T Y A N D G L O BA L I S AT I O N ’ S I M P AC T O N W O R K To reach out to all these consumers, organisations will create market value by adopting virtual platforms that can be developed quickly, but also abandoned very quickly. These are all rational responses to globalisation. However, human irrationality is already in evidence in the way employees are responding to these trends. For example, being able to work online may make a lot of sense, but recent research by the London Business School in fact shows that if you want to increase your chances of promotion in an organisation, your bosses still want to see your face around the office. In an interesting way, this strong tendency to demand a physical presence in the office may well go hand-in-hand with the contemporary focus of our institutions and organisations on the introduction of more regulation systems and administrative controls, which in essence reflects a lack of trust towards employees and citizens. If this is true, then the future of virtual teams and working at home may not, in fact, blossom. Meanwhile, although consensus exists that sustainability should be on everyone’s agenda, the strategy of many low-cost airlines moves in the opposite direction. The Irish budget airline Ryanair recently introduced a business-class flight with the explicit aim of ensuring the existence of business travel. Globalisation is not simply the concern of large organisations. The ability of skilled employees to move between countries with relative ease – or to find work remotely – in order to follow employment trends and investment opportunities has led to a significant increase in freelance workers. For these freelancers, the subjective experience of work will be of great significance. Trust between freelancers may be challenged when compared with colleagues within an organisation, and so it will become a highly prized commodity in the globalised workforce. Cultural differences will also have a significant impact on the flow of work. Here we see how subjective, sociological issues may grow in importance as globalisation continues. A major challenge for organisations will be maintaining the ability to do business at the right time in the right place while still building trusted relationships with customers and suppliers. Being agile will therefore become even more “the” defining feature of entrepreneurship in the future. Hence having a strong focus on flexible employees and organisations seems rational and cost-effective. However, agility may nevertheless present a threat for the long term. For businesses to remain sustainable, innovation is key. Globalisation will in my view promote more of a focus on an incremental type of innovation aimed at adjusting breakthroughs to local ever-changing needs. But this incremental innovation will come at the cost of major innovative breakthroughs in basic knowledge, which are less likely to emerge under conditions of flexible employment contracts. High degrees of uncertainty caused by global competitive market pressures may lead to less investment in ideas that take time to develop and only show their true value in the long term. All these examples make it clear that the gap between the rational perception of how globalisation can transform the future of work and the reality of how people will deal with those changes in their own irrational way is still significant. It requires a better guidance of the globalisation process of work at both the level of organisations and individuals and the development of trustworthy relationships. Understanding the irrational nature of human beings may help us to anticipate the future of work more accurately Professor David De Cremer Cambridge Judge Business School
  • 9. 9 HOW ATTITUDES TOWARDS WORK ARE CHANGING The way people of all ages think about work is changing, and organisations need to adapt accordingly, writes researcher and consultant Charles Grantham A common question in management discussions is: “How do we manage Generation Y?” When business leaders look at the employees now entering the workplace, they see people whose values and beliefs appear to be very different from their own. However, the assumption that this new generation of workers (often termed “millennials”) has a new, unique attitude towards work is not supported by research. In fact, members of older generations may well hold similar views to these millennials. There are certainly significant differences in attitude across groups of workers, but “age” is not the only – or most important – variable. Many factors contribute to these differences, including advances in communication technology, changes in social status and shifting power expectations. Traditionally, the commonly held view was that work in general was a source of self-worth and identity. You were what you did and for whom. The new, emerging attitude is that work is simply a means to a larger end; it is no longer a way to define oneself. Old-style management techniques and methods stem from an industrial era where authority was assumed to be respected and followed explicitly to enhance efficiency. This is no longer an operative assumption for business leaders. Instead, what seems to be emerging is that workers ignore formalisms in favour of team decision-making. Work style is changing in parallel with authority operating mechanisms. Instead of command and control built on military models and “Theory X” – MIT professor Douglas McGregor’s terms to describe the assumption that workers are lazy – collaboration is the style. There is a subtlety, though: collaboration is not co-operation, nor is it co-ordination. Collaboration is shared understanding and agreement with a business’s mission and purpose. Reward structures are also shifting from being primarily based on direct monetary compensation towards a “total rewards” paradigm, where both intrinsic and extrinsic rewards are balanced. Likewise, the work/life balance is now perceived differently, with “work” seen as a secondary activity in one’s total life scenario. Work has descended Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, and opportunity for growth is seen as a personal responsibility, not a company perk. The psychological driver of the workforce of the future will therefore be “making a difference”, not just “making a living”, as is currently the case. WORKING I N THE FUTURE H OW A T T I T U D E S T OWA R D S W O R K A R E C H A N G I N G
  • 10. 10 WORKING I N THE FUTURE H OW A T T I T U D E S T OWA R D S W O R K A R E C H A N G I N G THE IMPACT OF ATTITUDES There are four major implications of this swing in attitudes. First of all, there is a change in the very nature of the social contract between “worker” and “employer”. It is no longer best described as “management”: it is leadership in a socially responsible manner, with sustainability the paramount goal of leaders. Next is a move from hierarchical communication, power flows and status differences to a more collaborative model. Small, collaborative groups will combine temporarily for projects, break apart and form new alliances. Emphasis is on teamwork, and your rewards come from your immediate contribution as evaluated by team members. These first two implications give rise to a third. Simply put, the need for middle managers will decrease significantly, because collaboration does not require a constant reframing of mission, goals, direction and responsibility. The fourth impact is that we need entirely new concepts of what employees are and do. A new vocabulary is needed to lead enterprises towards increased profitability and sustainability. There is no job title that describes what it is that today’s talent contributes to the organisation. I propose “artisans of thought”; artisans are people who continuously practice creativity and invention. NEW STRUCTURES With all these changes going on, how will this new pool of talent organise themselves? If they no longer depend on enterprises to set their compensation, provide education and career pathways, how do they self-organise? The answer lies in pre-industrial social structures. Before corporations and labour unions we had guilds. This is where you went to get trained for an occupation; this is where you went from apprentice to journeyman and finally master; this is how you connected with people who needed your unique services. I see a role for new guild-like groups in developing local talent in a way that meets the needs of citizens, and commerce and communities are made sustainable in both an economic and social sense. In summary, the changing attitudes of the workforce are going to require everyone – employees, managers and executives – to become more agile and innovative. All of us will have to reboot, rebrand and reposition ourselves to meet the challenges of the new reality. This is especially true of those whose purpose it is to be a leader. Because of changing demographics and the attendant shift in beliefs and attitudes, a different form of leadership will be required in the coming decade. These new business leaders will need to understand how to align people’s personal purpose with that of the organisation and the market context in which they operate. Charles Grantham Researcher and consultant I see a role for new guild-like groups in developing local talent in a way that meets the needs of citizens
  • 11. 11 WHY INTRAPRENEURS ARE THE WORKERS OF TOMORROW As large companies face fiercer competition from start-ups, they will need to empower their workers to act like them, writes Philippe De Ridder, co-founder of Board of Innovation In 10 to 20 years’ time most businesses will be populated by a new kind of employee, people who do not just bring their own devices, but their own business ideas, working practices and even their own teams of people. These are intrapreneurs: employees who behave like entrepreneurs in the context of large organisations. Intrapreneurs are already flourishing in pioneering companies such as Google and GE. But what is today cutting-edge will in future be mainstream, and any company which values either strategic innovation or talent engagement and attraction has a very compelling reason to embrace intrapreneurship. According to research by Richard Foster, the McKinsey consultant who coined the term “creative destruction”, over 75% of companies currently in the Fortune 500 will be replaced by 2027, and the rate of replacement is only accelerating. In many industries, incumbent enterprises are being challenged by new start-ups, whether this is Uber in the transport sector, Spotify in the music industry, AirBnb in the hotel business or disruptive newcomers in energy or banking. These start-ups are applying disruptive new business models and can launch new offers at lightning speed. In order to keep up, large organisations need to innovate at similar speed and, as such, adopt the techniques that start-ups use to develop new business. Meanwhile, research by Gallup shows that more than 50% of US employees are not engaged at work, resulting in an annual productivity loss of about US$300bn. At the same time, unpaid volunteer work and community engagement are on the rise. Our 20th-century view of organisational structures and human motivation, underpinned by extrinsic motivators such as money to perform routine tasks, is an anachronism in today’s world. In order to attract talent and keep them engaged, large organisations need to create contexts in which individuals can direct themselves, expand their capabilities and make a meaningful contribution. If not, talented people will join organisations that do, or worse, they will start new competitors. THE INTRAPRENEURSHIP MINDSET According to research by IBM, the single biggest barrier to innovation at large organisations is not budget or process, but culture. Enabling intrapreneurialism is therefore first and foremost a mindset and culture shift. In this shift, organisations have to move from a compliance and control culture to a culture of autonomy. An organisational intrapreneurship mindset is characterised by a great level of decentralised agility rather than strong central planning; a long-term purpose rather than short-term profit goal; and a greater number of “makers” rather than “managers” within the organisation. The future organisation itself can be pictured as a fluid, open network – significantly different from the static, siloed structure we still see today. . WORKING I N THE FUTURE W H Y I N T R A P R E N E U R S A R E T H E W O R K E R S O F T O M O R ROW
  • 12. 12 WORKING I N THE FUTURE W H Y I N T R A P R E N E U R S A R E T H E W O R K E R S O F T O M O R ROW Think of the army and an open-source network such as Wikipedia as two sides of the extreme within this spectrum. The key difference between the two is their idea of what it is that motivates people. Another critical but hard-to-manage aspect of company culture is the acceptance of failure, which is crucial for people to take risks and dare to innovate. That is why big companies such as Tata, the Indian conglomerate, are awarding failed innovation projects in order to create a culture of failure-acceptance and risk-taking among the company’s 500,000 employees, to name but one example. Most intrapreneurship programmes at large companies are focused on creating new business. Some organisations adopt the tools of technology start-ups, such as hackathons, innovation boot camps and internal accelerators, which offer employees the chance to come up with new business ideas and develop them into validated prototypes ready for scale-up. New business projects that come out of such programmes often follow through as a newly launched corporate venture, with a different set of key performance indicators and processes to follow. For this kind of intrapreneurialism to work, the organisation must create the right conditions, giving projects a high degree of autonomy and just the right amount of funding. In an academic context, MIT’s Pierre Azoulay found that funding mechanisms that tolerate early failure, reward long-term success and give great freedom to experiment resulted in better and more frequent academic papers. The same applies in business: short review cycles, pre-defined deliverables and policies unforgiving of failure do not support intrapreneurship. INTRAPRENEURS EVERYWHERE Individuals do not have to wait for their organisations to create the conditions for intrapreneurialism, however. In fact, the mindset can be applied in any role – and not just knowledge workers, as is commonly thought. The customer service function at online shoe retailer Zappos.com (now a division of Amazon. com) is a case in point. In contrast to typical call centres, where everything is scripted (resulting in huge employee disengagement and high annual turnover rates), Zappos offers its customer service agents a large degree of autonomy in helping customers the best way possible: no timing, no scripts, no control. As a result, Zappos consistently outperforms its peers as one of the best companies in terms of customer service as well as employee engagement. Amy Wrzesniewski and Jane Dutton, two business school professors, have also found intrapreneurial behaviour among hospital cleaners, hairdressers and nurses and the positive impact it has on their job satisfaction. It is also possible to create formal systems that generate a significant amount of autonomy and more intrapreneurial behaviour, such as Netflix’s system of unlimited holidays and Google’s 20% time to work on any project of choice. Whether organisations wish to innovate as fast as new start-ups entering their industry or to attract and engage talented people in their organisation, the chances are that they will benefit from an intrapreneurial culture. For leaders who wish to install that culture, the best way to start is by working like entrepreneurs themselves. The single biggest barrier to innovation at large organisations is not budget or process, but culture Philippe De Ridder Board of Innovation
  • 13. 13 SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY AND THE NATURE OF ORGANISATIONS The sustainability agenda is expanding to include social concerns. This will force companies to change the way in which they interact with the communities around them, writes Professor Dean Bartlett, co-director of the Centre for Progressive Leadership at London Metropolitan University While maximising profits for shareholders will remain a top priority, businesses are increasingly expected to take account of their impact on both the environment and the communities in which they are located. Indeed, the sustainability agenda is expanding beyond “environmental sustainability” (ie, reducing the carbon footprint over time, with the eventual aim of becoming carbon-neutral) to include also “social sustainability” (ie, minimising the negative impact an organisation has on the communities that surround it, while increasing any positive benefits to those communities and society in general). This broadening of sustainability will force businesses to engage with a much broader set of stakeholders than is currently the case. Companies will be obliged to think not just of their own shareholders, staff and customers but of anyone who is affected by their actions. As a result, the role of the business leader in the future will have at its heart the ability to align a more diverse group of people amid large-scale change that occurs far beyond the boundaries of their own organisation. This will ultimately lead to systemic change in the very means of production and our modes of consumption. During the transition, the way in which organisations are structured and managed will change. They will become looser, more open and more creative, and the conventional corporate hierarchy will be inverted. Customers and the frontline staff with whom they interact will become more powerful, while the role of managers will be to serve those on the frontline. The scope of their concerns will become much wider still in future, and will be driven by a wider range of political and ethical concerns. This will be the impact of sustainability on the future of work. BEYOND ENERGY The low-hanging fruit of sustainability, such as energy-saving technologies and more sophisticated approaches to waste reduction, will soon become the norm. They are easy for businesses to adopt because they save money, and they will have the most immediate impact on the workplace. Employees will find themselves having to adapt to technological eco-innovation and to readjust to newly emerging green workplace practices. Examples of technological eco-innovations include low-energy office hardware and the development of green buildings. Green workplace practices include the introduction of sustainability-performance dashboards into the management toolkit, for example, or hiring and incentivising staff on the basis of sustainability criteria. Coping with the pace and scale of change will require a great deal of resilience. Furthermore, the wider context within which individuals find themselves working will be changing. Jobs will become less secure as whole industries reinvent themselves. Careers will be punctuated by abrupt changes in direction, more intense periods of retraining and much greater connectivity with the wider world in a continuation and acceleration of current trends. WORKING I N THE FUTURE S O C I A L S U S TA I N A B I L I T Y A N D T H E N A T U R E O F O R G A N I S AT I O N S
  • 14. 14 However, an even greater impact will be felt as the distinction, such as may currently exist, between “environmental” and “social” sustainability breaks down. Even if a given business practice or particular consumer product is in itself environmentally friendly, it is doomed to failure unless it is also socially sustainable. In the short term, changing individual employees’ behaviour as they adjust to new ways of working is a necessary social process; the maintenance of such individual behaviour is sustained socially. In the longer term, however, as the boundaries break down between those who work in, for or with the organisation and those who constitute a legitimate stakeholder in some other sense, the inherently social nature of sustainability will come to the fore. Everyone will become a stakeholder in the increasingly networked context in which businesses operate in the future. This manifests itself most clearly at the present time through social media, which will become universal in their reach and whose role will expand. Initially, the primary role that social media will play is in helping to cement in the global consciousness an acceptance that our ecosystem is unable to withstand a simple replication of the path pursued by industrialised Western societies over the previous century or two. The role of social media will increase over time, going on to become a more active catalyst as businesses increasingly find themselves having to justify their sustainability practices through social media in order to avoid reputational damage. This will drive businesses to constantly reinvent themselves as they negotiate their changing relationship with society. Finally, it will become an essential ingredient in the invention of new paradigms for the pursuit of profit and will also act as a powerful regulator of precisely how these new ways of doing business become enacted. The business leader of the future will become a “social facilitator” and “business model innovator”, and we will all be participating in some way as stakeholders of some sort, be it as an employee, employer, shareholder, customer or competitor, or simply as a global citizen of the future. Networks of suppliers, partners, customers and other stakeholders will interact in increasingly complex and unpredictable ways. The constant reconfiguration of roles, relationships and transactions will mean that a new operating model will emerge. It will see the organisation of the future constantly morph as it rides successive waves of “sustainable advantage”, which will come to replace “competitive advantage” as its main source of business success over the longer time horizon. This is because only those businesses that are perceived as environmentally sustainable will be socially acceptable (and therefore socially sustainable) as stakeholders demand greener products and greater corporate social responsibility. It will become increasingly difficult for businesses to hide misdemeanours on either front, given the platform that social media give any stakeholder to raise concerns. Hence, only the most sustainable organisations will stand any chance of survival, since their advantage will stem increasingly, and then predominantly, from sustainability rather than from any of the other factors on which businesses have traditionally competed, such as cost, quality, etc. Successful businesses will be transient in nature as they strive to author their own destruction and reinvention in the dogged pursuit of sustainability, driven by conditions of increasing population growth and depleting natural resources. While it is impossible for us to envisage precisely how these workplaces of the future may look, they will certainly have sustainability at their core. Everyone will become a stakeholder in the increasingly networked context in which businesses operate Professor Dean Bartlett London Metropolitan University WORKING I N THE FUTURE S O C I A L S U S TA I N A B I L I T Y A N D T H E N A T U R E O F O R G A N I S AT I O N S
  • 15. 15 PRIVACY, DATA AND WORKFORCE ANALYTICS Data about employees offer businesses valuable insights, but in Europe their use is carefully regulated, writes Bridget Treacy, a partner at the law firm Hunton & Williams Data analytics is transforming our understanding of the world. Analytics – the rapid processing of large volumes of data using sophisticated algorithms – allows us to make sense of and gain insights into seemingly unconnected events. Increasingly, it is used within the workplace to understand how people work, to improve efficiency and safety or to identify talented staff for further development purposes – a practice known as workforce analytics. This promises considerable savings. According to consultancy Deloitte, one national bank was able to save US$18m by analysing its workforce data to spot opportunities to redeploy staff, rather than laying them off. A hotel chain analysed the behavioural characteristics of 2,700 team leaders across its organisation and compared the data with customer satisfaction and sales information. It found that the behaviour of leaders was directly correlated with customer satisfaction and, in turn, revenue, to the extent that it was able to predict sales figures based on the performance of leaders. As these examples show, businesses can derive much value from analysing data about their workers. However, just as company use of customer data is carefully controlled, employee data protection rights in the EU restrict how employers can deploy data analytics in the workplace. Some data that might be used in workforce analytics are the personal data of employees. Processing employees’ personal data is regulated by data protection (and employment) law safeguards that can significantly curtail how employers use employee personal data. In contrast to the US, where individuals typically do not have any expectation of privacy in the workplace, in Europe data protection and privacy rights do apply at work, and companies must be aware of their legal position before subjecting their staff to workplace analytics. This need will only become more pressing as the amount of data companies collect about their employees grows and the techniques to analyse them become more widely available in future. EU DATA PROTECTION European data protection rights evolved in the era after the second world war when secret reporting by the state about citizens was commonplace. Individuals had no right to discover whether, and if so what, information was held about them, or to verify or correct it. Decisions were based on the content of the state’s files, sometimes with tragic consequences. Accordingly, European data protection law, enshrined in the European Data Protection Directive EC/95/46 (the “EU DP Directive”) , gives individuals enforceable rights in relation to their data, including the right to access their data, to correct them and, in some circumstances, the right to object to how their data are processed. Clearly there is potential for employees’ exercise of these rights to conflict with their employers’ wish to use the data in an analytics context. As well as ensuring individual rights, European data protection law imposes a range of obligations on organisations that collect and determine how personal data are to be processed. In the context of workplace data analytics, the following requirements are particularly challenging. WORKING I N THE FUTURE P R I VAC Y, D ATA A N D W O R K F O RC E A N A L Y T I C S
  • 16. 16 • Employers must satisfy one of a limited number of prescribed legal grounds in order to collect or use personal data. A company’s right to process employee personal data for analytics purposes will most likely be judged on whether it is in the company’s “legitimate interests” and not overridden by the employee’s fundamental rights. This requirement is interpreted restrictively by regulators, and employers will need to consider their proposed analytics on a case-by-case basis. A privacy impact assessment is the preferred tool for conducting this assessment, and often the privacy impact can be limited sufficiently to enable the analytics to proceed. • Individuals must be told how their data will be used. Currently, employers might state that personal data will be used to administer the employment relationship, but few employers tell their employees that their data will be used for analytics purposes. Also, it is common in an analytics context for data to be obtained from sources other than the individual, for example, from a third party, through observation, or by deriving them from other data processing. Providing notice to employees, and ensuring fairness and transparency in the workplace, requires careful planning. If this key step is missed, employees can easily misconstrue the purpose of analytics and assume that their individual performance is being monitored. • Data collected for one purpose may not be used for a further purpose that is incompatible with the original purpose. This key legal requirement is difficult to satisfy in the context of analytics, where employers may wish to use data for a range of purposes not originally envisaged or referable to the employment relationship. • Data minimisation and retention. These obligations require that data must be relevant and not excessive for the purposes for which the data were collected. There are obvious tensions between data minimisation and data analytics. It is not permitted to retain personal data indefinitely, yet that is exactly what data analytics assumes. Individuals tend to object to the processing of their personal data when it is unexpected, or intrusive. In the workplace, employees typically are concerned that data analytics might be deployed to measure their individual performance, and that decisions will be made about them based on analytics, including termination. Employers are not allowed to make decisions that significantly affect employees based solely on automated processing. Instead, analytics should be used to derive trends and to predict behaviour across the workforce. Works councils tend to examine the use of analytics in the workplace very carefully, and there have been a number of complaints to European data protection authorities on this issue. What can employers do to manage and mitigate the risks of analytics in the workplace? The first consideration should always be to assess whether personal data are needed at all or whether aggregated, anonymised information can be used. Data protection laws only apply to personal (ie, identifiable) data. Depending on the context, many types of analytics tools are just as effective when they use anonymised or “pseudonymised” data. Employers should ensure that they are transparent in their proposed use of analytics in the workplace. Telling employees that analytics will be deployed, what data will be used, what the purpose of the processing is and what the data will not be used for can give employees comfort and pre-empt complaints. Looking ahead, a new European data protection law is being negotiated at present, and the direction of travel of the proposed General Data Protection Regulation is towards a more restrictive, prescriptive regime for Europe in which individuals’ rights are strengthened. Penalties for breaches of the data protection law are almost certain to be significant, with fines of up to 5% of global turnover being discussed. Data analytics can deliver valuable insights, and in many cases can be deployed in the workplace with minimal privacy risk. But minimising privacy risk requires planning ahead. . Data analytics can deliver valuable insights but minimising privacy risk requires planning ahead. Bridget Treacy Hunton & Williams WORKING I N THE FUTURE P R I VAC Y, D ATA A N D W O R K F O RC E A N A L Y T I C S