<

!Google ads have two elements of code. This is the 'header' code. There will be another short tag of code that is placed whereever you want the ads to appear. These tags are generated in the Google DFP ad manager. Go to Ad Units = Tags. If you update the code, you need to replace both elements.> <! Prime Home Page Banner (usually shows to right of logo) It's managed in the Extra Theme Options section*> <! 728x90_1_home_hrreview - This can be turned off if needed - it shows at the top of the content, but under the header menu. It's managed in the Extra Theme Options section * > <! 728x90_2_home_hrreview - shows in the main homepage content section. Might be 1st or 2nd ad depending if the one above is turned off. Managed from the home page layout* > <! 728x90_3_home_hrreview - shows in the main homepage content section. Might be 2nd or 3rd ad depending if the one above is turned off. Managed from the home page layout* > <! Footer - 970x250_large_footerboard_hrreview. It's managed in the Extra Theme Options section* > <! MPU1 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! MPU2 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! MPU - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section3* > <! MPU4 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Sidebar_large_1 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Sidebar_large_2 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Sidebar_large_3 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Sidebar_large_4 - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Sidebar_large_5 are not currently being used - It's managed in the Widgets-sidebar section* > <! Bombora simple version of script - not inlcuding Google Analytics code* >

Nick Mabey: Key HR challenges in the age of connection

-

shutterstock_151125227

In 1942, in the midst of World War II, William Beveridge published one of the most influential reports of the 20th century in the UK. Beveridge identified five challenges, Want, Disease, Ignorance, Squalor and Idleness, which together would form the rationale for the most far reaching proposals for the future of Britain. Many commentators think that, like the 1940s, we might be in the middle of another major transformation as we fully enter the age of connection, or what is often described as the post-industrial era. If that is true, what are the new challenges we are facing at a societal level and why should it matter to HR leaders?

Beveridge’s report was aimed at policy makers in local and national government, the powerhouses for social change.  Most would argue that today’s powerhouses are our large corporate organisations, which makes today’s HR executives collectively the key leaders of people strategy for UK plc. If this sounds like a big responsibility, that’s because it is! There are plenty of rational reasons for discounting this responsibility:

We’re accountable only to our shareholders

We’ve got enough on our plate without this

It’s not my role

In the age of connection, however, that argument is going to be increasingly less sustainable.

Let’s explore an example. Over the last few months I have been asking colleagues, clients and families what they believe are the great challenges of our time. One of the most surprising answers has been loneliness. It seems that paradoxically, in an age where we have never been more mobile or connected to each other, we feel increasingly isolated.

I have yet to hear of a strategy for loneliness in any organisation I have worked with and the idea sounds bizarre. It would be easy to lump loneliness into mental health and assume it is covered by a wellbeing strategy but what would that miss?

  • Flexible working policies, including home working, job sharing and hot desking have brought many benefits to businesses and to employees. They have also loosened some of the ties that bind people together – shared space, intimacy and a sense of the collective.
  • Technology and an ‘always on 24/7’ world means the way we are relating has changed. We spend more time on our own with only our gadgets and virtual online hugs for company. Social networks and on line communities are great and are not enough. We are biologically programmed to form groups and be in community – to have a physical connection not just a cerebral one and we know that communication is more non-verbal than verbal, so technology can only picks up a small percentage of what we might be communicating. Emoticons will never quite compensate for the depth of connection we gain from real presence in a real room with real people.
  • The pace of business life has increased markedly. The busier we are, the faster we go and the less relational we become, sacrificing the most precious time of all  – hanging out with no agenda because we can’t afford the time. And yet this is often where the emotional capital is put in the bank in building and deepening relationships – creating a sense of community and forming strong bonds.

I’ve worked with a number of executives who are suffering from acute loneliness. Many organisations reward strong leaders and so the further people progress, the stronger they are expected to be. This means by the time they become senior executives they are often put in a single office and denied any outlet for their vulnerability or insecurity, whilst the people around them become more distant and tentative.

How much time do we spend on hope and ambition in organisations? I don’t mean vision and strategy in the establishment sense. Within the book written by Khurshed Dehnugara and Claire Genkai Breeze entitled ‘The Challenger Spirit – organisations that disturb the status quo’ (2011, Lid Publishing) they talk about hope and ambition being about knowing what you want to cause as an individual and finding others who feel the same. It is about your team, function and organisation being a place you want to be part of.

So what might an organisational, HR led response to loneliness include?  Would you contemplate including a question on loneliness in the engagement survey and using it as a KPI to drive action change in your business? Could Health and Safety reviews for remote workers include loneliness? How about drop-in sessions on connectivity and hope?

This article doesn’t attempt to find the answers or design a blueprint. The intention here is to recognise that the challenges facing us in the age of connection are different to those of the industrial era; to suggest that large business is best placed to respond to these challenges; to propose that HR leaders are, therefore, strongly positioned as a potent force for change and finally to offer some practical suggestions for getting started.

Nick Mabey is a Partner at Relume Ltd www.relume.co.uk

Latest news

James Rowell: The human side of expenses – what employee behaviour reveals about modern work

If you want to understand how your people really work, look at their expenses. Not just the total sums, but the patterns.

Skills overhaul needed as 40% of job capabilities set to change by 2030

Forecasts suggest 40 percent of workplace skills could change by 2030, prompting calls for UK employers to prioritise adaptability.

Noisy and stuffy offices linked to lost productivity and retention concerns

UK employers are losing more than 330 million working hours each year due to office noise, poor air quality and inadequate workplace conditions.

Turning Workforce Data into Real Insight: A practical session for HR leaders

HR teams are being asked to deliver greater impact with fewer resources. This practical session is designed to help you move beyond instinct and start using workforce data to make faster, smarter decisions that drive real business results.
- Advertisement -

Bethany Cann of Specsavers

A working day balancing early talent strategy, university partnerships and family life at the international opticians retailer.

Workplace silence leaving staff afraid to raise mistakes

Almost half of UK workers feel unable to raise concerns or mistakes at work, with new research warning that workplace silence is damaging productivity.

Must read

Zee Hussain: Are you giving away free Bank Holidays?

While most employees are quite happy during April and May thanks to all these magnificent bank holidays, some HR Professionals might be a little less cheerful

Simon Ratcliffe: Changing the language around inclusion in the workplace

"It takes much more than one individual to cultivate a diverse and inclusive business, and so hiring in this way only mirrors our approach of deficit resolution by quotas."
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

Exit mobile version