HRreview Header

Outplacement services are not working for the over 40s

-

shutterstock_115985821

Profound changes in the job market mean that corporate outplacement no longer works for employees, large businesses or recruitment agencies and needs to be rethought, says Maite Barón, CEO of The Corporate Escape.

Though existing outplacement services are meant to find executives and managers similar roles to ones they’ve just left, this makes everyone a loser. Why?

  • Executives and managers, particularly those in their 40s and 50s, who would rather not return to the corporate grind, are directed back into something they’d rather not do – raising the prospect of 15 or even 20 more years in a career they’re tired of.
  • Many corporate organisations who use traditional outplacement services are effectively hiring someone to recruit on behalf of their competitors, so they lose their former staff, their skills and their experience to the opposition. This is a huge talent leakage that organisations can’t afford.
  • Recruitment agencies can find themselves with a growing inventory of people on their books who aren’t generating them any income.

“Until recently people in their 50s were terrified of redundancy,” says Maite Barón, “because potential employers saw them as being in the twilight of their career, which made getting another job very, very hard.”

“Now things have changed dramatically. With people retiring so much later, 50 is just mid-career for many. They also don’t want to spend their whole working life in a large corporate organisation. Not surprisingly, that’s why those with experience and over 50 are in the lead when it comes to setting up new businesses in Britain; which is great news when small firms, freelancers, and the self-employed are a well- established and increasingly important component of the UK’s business landscape.”

“Unfortunately, traditional outplacement services tend to focus on just getting people into another job as quickly as possible, so they fail to look at the individual as a whole and what they could offer in the future. That means valuable talent is being sucked out of the economy and then ignored. That can’t be right!”

“Outplacement shouldn’t be about ‘how can we find someone a job elsewhere’. Instead, it should be about ‘how can we help people fulfil their aspirations so they continue to lead professional lives that are rewarding for them.’ We also need to look at how we can ‘recycle’ such talent to the benefit of all by using it to mentor new generations with little or no work experience.”

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

John O’Reilly: Why wellbeing programmes should address sleep

The fast-changing world of work and its constant demands ion employers and employees means that our grasp of workplace well-being can never stand still and sleep is becoming a big issue. So how can we address this?

Richard Nicolle: What does the Conservative victory mean for UK Employment Law over next 5 years?

A look at what the conservative government is proposing in the next five years regarding employment law and how this will affect workers and their families.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you