Recently, Stuart Pearman, partner and energy practice lead at ScottMadden, and Courtney Jackson, partner and human capital management practice lead at ScottMadden, reviewed strategic workforce planning at the EEI Strategic Issues Roundtable event. This presentation addressed the top questions on everyone’s mind: Why? Who? What? Where? How? For a quick recap, please see below.
What’s Changing?
Evolving Model: The utility model and our business and public policy ecosystem are changing.
Different People: The labor market in which we compete and the terms of competition are changing.
Different Planning: For many, the tactical workforce planning needs are becoming more acute. And for almost all, strategic workforce planning needs are important, are here, and are now.
The Evolving Model:
- The stakes are high. Our Utility Industry is changing, and the workforce must change with it
- Digital transformation – our world will be more digital; our processes and decisions will be more data and analytics intensive
- Our technology will be more pervasive, artificially intelligent, and sophisticated – to name but a few factors
- Our engagement with stakeholders, customers, and partners will be even more complex, consequential, and collaborative
- Our processes will be more end-to-end, less silo-ed, and more automated
Different People – Demographics, Changing Labor Market Competitors/Terms of Competition
- Millennials – four generations in the workforce
- Anticipated retirements are ramping up
- Loss of tacit knowledge as baby boomers retire is looming
- Challenges in retaining/engaging younger staff while meeting the needs of more tenured workers
- The terms of competition in the labor marketplace are being upended by the likes of Google
Difference Planning
- In our industry, the terms of business competition are being rebalanced as to the relative value of physical capital (i.e., “big iron in the ground”) and human capital (i.e., competencies and intellectual property)
- A different kind of workforce planning will be needed by most
The givens, embedded in how we think and do business, are evolving.
Data and decisions will be more granular, more real time, and more complex.
The commercial and public policy ecosystem is more complex, more interdependent, and more important.
Industries with similar labor forces, such as construction and manufacturing, are mirroring utility industry challenges:
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Facing a shortage of qualified workers
- 22% of skilled manufacturing workers are retiring over the next decade
- Too few graduates are STEM focused
- Increased wages and training have not solved the issue
-
Generational differences pronounced within the workforce
- Underappreciation of these industries by millennials
-
Technology is transforming the industry
- Necessary changes may upset veteran employees
- Technology driving increasingly complex projects
- Automation continues to upend existing job responsibilities and requirements
Other industries are showing signs of struggling with the same issues, despite dissimilar workforces:
- Insurance
- Retail
- Engineering
- Agriculture
- Healthcare
- Defense Contracting
- Food Service and Facility Management
- Sales
- Shipping and Logistics
Myriad industries and companies will face similar challenges to utilities, and many will tap the same labor pools – those that will be successful are addressing the future now.
As utilities struggle to hire skilled labor, the exit of retiring baby boomers is creating a knowledge vacuum:
Concurrently, utilities are dealing with a variety of internal shifts that are expected to grow more acute in coming years:
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Skills gaps for new technologies
- For example, heightened focus on cybersecurity and cyber-physical systems requires technical acumen and robust training
-
Increased impact of automation
- Tacit knowledge may not be enough as the workforce contends with automation changing existing jobs
-
Difficulty hiring a skilled workforce
- Disappearance of historical training programs means potential employees lack necessary skills and experience
Different People: Baby Boomers to Millennials – How Do We Transition?
Preparing to Pass the Torch:
- Mentorships
- Craft-based apprenticeships
- Critical skill development opportunities
- Cross-training
Retention Drivers:
Millennials – this generation is the most educated in history
- Strong desire for robust and consistent development opportunities
- Urge for continual learning
- Need for clear and open feedback mechanisms
All Generations Expect:
- Challenging work projects
- Competitive compensation
- Opportunities for advancement and to grow and develop in roles
- Work-life integration
Different People: Different Competitors for Labor
Utilities will increasingly need specialized technical expertise
- Recent industry studies pinpoint cybersecurity as the biggest challenge facing utilities
- Increased focus on technologies like distributed generation, smart home devices, and new methods of storage require an array of new skills
Competition for technical expertise will become tougher
Different People: So…What Do We Do Now?
Solutions to address the ever-shifting environment include:
- Planning the knowledge transition from the retiring generation to the new workforce
- Applying in tandem two important yet distinct types of workforce planning to move your organization closer to its workforce goals
Knowledge Transfer:
- Determine retention drivers for all employees in workforce
- Establish structured process for documenting and archiving knowledge
- Develop creative mechanisms to pass the torch
Tactical Planning:
Strategic Planning:
Different Planning: Tactical Workforce Planning – Example Process
Tactical workforce planning is a systematic process to identify gaps between the workforce of today and the needs of tomorrow. ScottMadden defines tactical workforce planning as evaluating and addressing the needs in the next one to three years for the “as is/where is” set of jobs and competencies.
Different Planning: Tactical Workforce Planning – Example Framework
Many companies talk about planning for their workforce needs; however, workforce planning is not effective unless it is linked to enterprise goals and integrated into the overarching talent management support cycle.
Different Planning: Strategic Workforce Planning
Strategic workforce planning is your long game, looking at the horizon three, five, or even 10 years out. An example construct that addresses your people, your workplace, and your workforce planning process is shown in the attached report (page 15).
- Determine what competencies (tangible and intangible), at the strategic level, will govern your future success and how they will be/become embodied in your workforce
- Adapt the work environment to facilitate success in attracting, retaining, and growing your employees
- Provide a process to ensure that you think systematically about your workforce and workplace
Different Planning: Strategic Workforce Planning – Keys to Success
- What are the competencies we will be seeking, hard and soft? (e.g., data scientists, emotional intelligence, etc.)
- What will we change across the (expanded) employee life cycle?
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