Insights

Employee Value Proposition – Strategies for shaping employee expectations and engagement in 2024

By Andrew Walker

Don’t look now but the younger generation is arriving. They’re hungry, tech-savvy and they care. They care about their roles, about how their company behaves, about the environment and about how people are treated. They care about their salaries and career progression too, so those things are still very much in the forefront, along with everyone else’s interests and priorities.

Our key HR pillars – recruitment, retention, motivation, performance and productivity – do not really change from one year to the next, but what do they mean and require in 2024 and beyond?

After a tough few years, now is the time to sit down, breathe a little and take stock of the experiences and learnings of Covid, the post-pandemic period and the cost-of-living crisis, to future-proof for the challenges ahead.

Career 2.0 – A Series of Experiences

There is a growing expectation that the way we work should better mirror the way we live. If Amazon and Netflix can give us what we want, when we want it, how can jobs and careers try to do the same to improve retention?

Moving forward, is there an argument for a ‘career’ to be presented not as a mundane linear treadmill of earned progression steps, but as a flexible series of worklife experiences? This may sound radical but for some businesses it may only require a revamp of current PPD programmes and staff movement models.

After all, not every worker immediately lands in the right role anyway. When you join an organisation there are so many things you don’t know, from what the company is like and how the role will pan out to the people you are with and your chances of progression. If all this could be pre-empted by a more modular, circular take on things, people may never feel compelled to leave. Instead of another new start across town they might move down the corridor or across the depot.

Benefits for all

The same logic can be applied to more personalised benefits. Sophisticated benefits platforms and packages may be out of reach for a lot of businesses, but the challenge is still to offer a range of benefits – however big or small – which inevitably means different things to different people.

Going purely on age, for example, the typical employee in their 20s and early 30s may not yet be interested in pensions but may engage with a cycle to work scheme or flexi holidays. From mid-30s to 50, priorities tend to shift towards security and protection as home ownership and children come into the picture. And when people look to retire, pensions, financial planning services and health benefits take on greater importance.

In the same way that Amazon and Netflix curate the user experience for each account holder, our suite of benefits needs to offer everything to everyone all the time, but communicate and present each product differently to each distinct segments of the workforce. This is how we maximise engagement.

Segmentation 2.0

The secret to humanising the workplace and individualising reward lies in a more sophisticated approach to segmentation. Currently we use surveys, reviews, onboarding sessions and exit interviews. We use received wisdom to model by age, career stage, marital or familial status, income, aspiration or a combination of these factors. But how can we go further? With so much access to our employees, how can it be that Amazon and Netflix still know our people better than we do?

We need to ask the right questions with a view to improving retention. Which areas have you worked in and enjoyed the most? Why are you currently put off by x and y? Where do you aspire to be and what needs to improve to get there? In the same way that retailers collect information to tailor and curate the consumer experience, we can be smarter.

The same logic applies to benefits. By building more granular profiles of workers’ personalities, attitudes to risk and professional ambition, it should be possible to bracket a 59-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman together in terms of their attitudes to pay and benefits, rather than assuming they could never want the same thing. The danger of pigeon-holing people will never fully go away but if we can demonstrate choice and offer products that are relevant, engagement and retention can only improve.

5 Key Focal Points for 2024

1. Strategic imperatives – Take the time to consider the make-up of your workforce, your pay structures and your benefits packages. Are they fit for purpose? Do not be afraid to ask tough questions.

2. Think Gen Z – Consider whether it is possible to redefine what ‘career’ means within your business.

3. Define Hybrid – Build a clear picture of your hybrid and remote working models – current and desired – and communicate with transparency.

4. Know your workers – Do all you can to segment your workforce in a way that works for you and them both now and in the future.

5. Embrace Tech – Whether for business analysis, pay benchmarking or benefits engagement, consider how investment in tech might help you. AI is well on the way and we all need to keep an open mind.

HR is about people – attracting them, motivating them and keeping them. Like chapters in a book, let’s make the workplace a page-turner our people find hard to put down.