This is our greatest opportunity. In dealing with the acute hiring pain, employers rolled out the red carpet with higher salaries, training, change in management style and approach, wellbeing initiatives, hybrid, remote, bring your whole self to work (and dog), flexible working, flexible anything. The onus sits firmly with the employer, and this may have been our undoing.
The result, a misalignment of employer and employee expectations and with it, a slow decline in skills acquisition and even a de-skilling of our workforce. The promotion that we could only dream of or the 20 to 30 percent salary increases experienced in 2022 may have inadvertently removed our workforce’s ability for effort, application, learning, curiosity, and appreciation. It is misguided to think we don’t deserve the benefits of the time we are in.
Our lives should be easier compared to older generations, however, it would be wrong to dismiss the possible ripple effect of this condition on our workforce.
There is merit in working deliberately and progressively towards our goals. It feels deserving and good and is the real ‘balance’ we should be seeking at work. It strengthens our human skills, builds character, confidence, and self-esteem, and develops courage. In doing so, we also keep learning, the biggest skill at risk in our skills shortage.
Originally published by www.fmcgbusiness.co.nz