I had the cover story in the August 2014 issue of BeInkandescent.com with my former colleague Chris Carbone. We explore questions about the types of jobs your kids might have and even the basics of what futurists do. I also share my dozen surprises about the future of work, which I include here as well.
A Dozen Surprises About the Future of Work
- Hey, that’s cheating. Augmented or enhanced human characteristics will present challenges for organizations and individual talent.
- Emerging markets rewrite the rules of work and work culture. As emerging markets improve their positions, they will influence the culture of work.
- Intelligence shows up in unusual places. Information technology (IT) will create new forms of intelligence that will migrate into infrastructure, devicesor persons (wearables or implants), or all of the above.
- Work now, get paid later … maybe. Do the work and get paid according to what the customer thinks it is worth (e.g., the Radiohead model, named after the English alternative rock band that released a digital form of one of its albums for free and asked customers to pay what they thought it was worth).
- Time- or project-based employment contracts begin to mainstream. While currently in the domain of the elite athletes and actors, this will become a mainstream practice.
- Fairness becomes impossible. The need to customize and personalize to attract talent will make across-the-board, same-for-everyone types of policies increasingly untenable.
- Workers prefer working to live instead of living to work. Work will be a shrinking portion of timeand even incomesin affluent nations.
- Work increasingly becomes a thing you do instead of a place you go. Work will be increasingly thought of as a process that happens wherever and whenever.
- Employer-provided training disappears. As organizations become increasingly reluctant to invest in training, new ways will be devised for organizations to acquire the talent and skills they need.
- “Nearsourcing” will become preferable to outsourcing. Growing shipping costs and the complexity of global supply chains will lead to a preference for local and in-house talent.
- Work in the happiness society changes metrics. Work as a source of fulfillment will influence a shift in measures from GDP (gross domestic product) to GDH (gross domestic happiness).
- Meet the new boss. As Boomers approach retirement, GenX and GenYdigital natives with different expectations, goals, and work styleswill reshape leadership and work.
Leave a Reply