global_talent_trends_2022pdf
global_talent_trends_2022pdf
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  1. The Reinvention of Company Culture 2022 Global Talent Trends
  2. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20222What’s in this report0312274257Why company culture is being reinventedThanks to the contributors FlexibilityWell-beingThe Great Reshuffle
  3. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20223A watershed moment for company cultureThe management guru Peter Drucker famously preached: “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”Except he probably didn’t, given no one has found a supporting citation. Perhaps the visionary Drucker saw where business was headed: to a place where culture and strategy are inseparable, twin pistons driving the same engine.Company culture is having a watershed moment. It is being reshaped in a crucible fired by the pandemic, the acceleration of automation, the rise of millennials and Gen Z in the workforce, and the Great Reshuffle. Employees are demanding — and quite often getting — more freedom to work where and when they want and more attention to their well-being.Introduction
  4. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20224For companies to attract, retain, and grow the talent that will bring them sustained success, they need to fine-tune — or overhaul — their culture to meet the expectations of professionals to be seen as human beings first.We talked to two dozen leading talent professionals around the world and reviewed proprietary LinkedIn data taken from millions of employee engagement surveys and billions of actions on our platform to understand how a caring culture has become the pivotal asset for companies worldwide.Read on to find out what happens when culture and strategy find alignment.The human-centered company culture being forged has some recurring characteristics: flexibility, asynchrony, trust, belonging, and a holistic focus on well-being. “We’re seeing people wanting much more flexibility so that they can fit work into their personal lives,” says Mary Alice Vuicic, the CHRO of Thomson Reuters, “as opposed to fitting their personal lives into work.”Adds Claude Silver, the chief heart officer at VaynerMedia: “We have been all about work-life balance. We are waking up to a collective aha moment. This is backward. It should be life-work balance.”A 2021 survey by LinkedIn of what matters most to job seekers around the world found that the No. 1 employee value proposition is good work-life (all right, life-work) balance, followed by excellent compensation and benefits.Gone are the days when companies could lead with perks — think ping-pong tables and endless snacks — designed to make the office a home away from home. Today, forward-thinking organizations are working with employees to make home an office away from office.Introduction
  5. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20225Culture is very important because people know that they have choices and their choices are beyond the name of the company or the salary that they make. Their choices are around enrichment, their choices are around who am I learning from. How is my soul being fed? And they are willing to exchange money and location for feeling fulfilled.Judy JacksonGlobal Head of Culture and Engagement, WPP
  6. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20226Work-life balance trumps evenbank balance for job seekersPercentage of professionals selecting these as top priorities when picking a new job:63%6040%%Work-life balanceCompensation and benefitsColleagues and culture
  7. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20227Improving company culture starts with professional developmentPercentage of respondents selecting these as top areas to invest in to improve company culture:0%25%50%75%35%48%26%42%59%Training managers to lead remote and hybrid teamsFlexible work supportDiversity and inclusionMental health and wellnessProfessional development opportunities
  8. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20228United nations: Everyone is looking for stronger company cultureCanada42%Netherlands50%U.S.41%Southeast Asia43%Australia and New Zealand47%France46%U.K.45%Spain45%Italy32%Mexico29%Germany35%Brazil40%India39%Global Average40%Top 3MidrangeBottom 3Percentage of candidates who consider company culture a top priority when picking a job:
  9. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 20229The evolution of company cultureRigid hierarchies and smoking in the officeThe post-WWII decade saw companies organized into strict hierarchies reflected in workplace design. Workers huddled in bullpen-style open floor plans as businesses sought to increase productivity and decrease privacy. Elusive corner offices with big windows were reserved only for bosses. Women — displaced from jobs filled during WWII — were largely absent or served in low-level positions. Ever present, though, were the steady stream of cigarette smoke in the office and three-martini lunch breaks. Women rise in the workplace; dress codes loosen upThe passage of anti-discrimination laws, access to birth control, and societal changes drove women into the workforce. Women started to occupy jobs that had typically been filled by men — from blue-collar work to managerial roles. Hippie culture left its mark, with men adopting longer hairstyles. Women, in turn, traded in their skirts for pants. 1950s1940s1960s1970s
  10. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 202210The evolution of company cultureRelationships between workers and bosses frayAs companies looked to cut costs, workers found themselves vulnerable to downsizings and layoffs. Employees no longer felt a sense of job security or company loyalty. Office workers sat in claustrophobic cubicles, only adding to their low morale. The suffocating office experience inspired the cult classic movie Office Space, a sarcastic testament to the era. Tech startup culture revolutionizes the workplaceSilicon Valley tech startup Google and others redefined company culture, creating a blueprint that would influence companies across industries for years to come. As competition for talent — and the desire to keep employees onsite — heated up, employers offered a multitude of generous perks, from free food to massages to nap pods. Cubicles gave way to open floor plans, reflecting flat organizations that encouraged collaboration. But while some employers aimed to make the office fun, many employees reported working longer hours. 1990s1980s2010s2000s
  11. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 202211The evolution of company cultureThe era of human-focused company culture beginsWorkers are now reevaluating what matters most to them in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, prompting employers to focus on the well-being and personal satisfaction of their employees. Companies are adjusting their policies to ensure that employees feel cared about as human beings, not just as workers, making flexible work arrangements permanent, investing in wellness programs, and boosting their diversity and inclusion efforts. Employers and employees are building a new, more dynamic relationship based on trust and empathy.2020s2030s2040s2050s
  12. LinkedIn Global Talent Trends 202212FlexibilityChapter 1Rethinking when and where we work is building more equitable cultures
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