HR teams should be using AI to retain employees says report

-

Moving people around jobs within the same company is the future of work, says a study.

A report by Forrester Research found that AI solutions helped companies respond to the shocks that are shaping the future of work and achieving faster time-to-labour.

Using the example of a pharma firm, the report showed that a worker from sales had a biochemistry degree. The AI found this information and suggested her redeployment (with her consent) to the vaccine lab, improving and increasing the skills in the lab.

This, it says, is the first step to creating an agile and adaptable workforce. The study also points out that the better employee experience with workplace variety means they’re more likely to stay.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

AI technology can also take rote, predictable, and repeatable tasks off the plates of employees and automate them instead, leaving employees with strategic capabilities.

The report also calls for a radical idea where businesses remove the notion of job descriptions altogether. It says within large companies, workers could be deployed to different projects according to their skills. This would create a ‘gig workforce’ within the company.  

This allows employees to see more parts of the company than they normally would and also allows the company to have jobs done by people with those exact skills.

The report says: “No organization retains 100% of its talent. As such, companies that adopt this model will need to continuously engage with the external talent marketplace to support growth and to nurture a continuous pipeline of diverse talent.”

According to the report, using the no-more-jobs model – instead of distributing tasks, the firm distributes capabilities among employees. This allows processes to flow from those employees’ competencies. 

This model is already being used by the Chinese firm Haier. It’s nearly 80,000 employees are being organised into 4,000 self-managing microenterprises to respond adaptively to customer demand.

The model means talent will split into two, says the report – those who manage complexity and those who execute defined tasks. 

The report predicts HR teams will be using this model in some form within three years. 

 

Feyaza Khan has been a journalist for more than 20 years in print and broadcast. Her special interests include neurodiversity in the workplace, tech, diversity, trauma and wellbeing.

Latest news

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Expat jobs ‘fail early as costs hit $79,000 per worker’

International assignments are ending early due to family strain, isolation and poor preparation, as rising costs increase pressure on employers.
- Advertisement -

The Great Employer Divide: What the evidence shows about employers that back parents and carers — and those that don’t

Understand the growing divide between organisations that effectively support working parents and carers — and those that don’t. This session shows how to turn employee experience data into a clear business case, linking care-related pressures to performance, retention and workforce stability.

Scott Mills exit puts spotlight on risk of ‘news vacuum’ in high-profile dismissals

Sudden departure of a long-serving BBC presenter raises questions about how employers manage high-profile dismissals and limit speculation.

Must read

Neal Stone: Making the case for litigation free resolution of workplace injury compensation claims

The vast majority of compensation claims made by workers...

Kimberly Silva: Opening doors to neurodiversity

Many leading global organisations have begun to recognise the immense value neurodivergent people bring to the workplace.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you