domingo, abril 16, 2023

Para reflexão

"In 2021 companies convinced themselves that the labor shortages they were experiencing were a passing phenomenon, and in response they trotted out the standard short-term fixes: raising wages by a few dollars an hour, awarding signing and referral bonuses, and even offering more flexibility in working shifts. But none of those measures were particularly effective. So in 2022, with the labor situation worsening, some companies resorted to tactics that ran counter to their core strategies. CVS and Walgreens began closing stores earlier or shutting down on Sundays. Domino's, unable to find drivers, reversed its focus on deliveries and instead offered customers a $3 "tip" if they picked up their own orders. Others took extraordinary measures to fill frontline jobs. When it didn't have enough baggage handlers,
Qantas begged senior executives to volunteer to sort, scan, and transport baggage for three months.
Companies blamed everyone but themselves for the labor shortages:
The pandemic was a once-in-a-lifetime shock to the system that had provoked the scarcity. The government had exacerbated the problem by issuing stimulus checks. High rates of churn were a fact of life in the world of low-wage work. But that thinking was misguided.
After studying this topic for several years we have concluded that the real problem lies in the way that organizations mismanage their hourly workers: They are underinvesting in those employees and harming their own strategic interests.
How are companies going astray? By not recognizing the contribution that low-wage workers make to executing their strategies. By not measuring all the hidden costs of constant churn. By not implementing management practices that could improve the productivity of low-wage workers and encourage them to stay and prosper at the company. By devoting vastly more attention-when it comes to such basics as hiring, skill building, on-the-job feedback, career development, and mentorship-to salaried workers than to hourly workers, even though the latter constitute more than 40% of the U.S. labor force.
This pattern of denial and neglect hurts workers in ways that have profound societal costs. No matter how hard or how long they work, many low-wage workers cannot climb out of poverty. We studied the fortunes of 181,891 workers who started low-wage jobs in 2012, and we found that five years later 60% of them remained stuck in such positions. People who had managed to escape those jobs had most often done so by quitting industries such as hospitality, food services, and retail, which are classic low-wage traps. Across industries, women were overrepresented in low-wage jobs and most likely to stay impoverished.
The pattern also inflicts all sorts of direct and indirect costs on companies, including lower retention and higher absenteeism, more overtime, a reliance on staffing agencies to provide temporary workers, constant recruitment and training of new employees, a lowering of morale, a loss of institutional and process knowledge, a decline in customer goodwill, a damaged reputation among job seekers, stagnant or lower rates of productivity-and less revenue."

Trecho retirado de "The High Costof Neglecting Low-Wage Workers" na HBR de Abril-Maio.

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