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The Weil Perspective
Lessons From Kilimanjaro
By James Weil, Managing Director – Successful Aging
I recently returned from a trip to Africa to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, the
continent’s tallest freestanding mountain. And even though I had read a lot about climbing,
spoken to others who had made the climb, and trained hard, I knew my actual experience would
be unique to me and quite personal. I was right. Kilimanjaro tested me in every possible
wayphysically, mentally, and emotionally. Upon “summiting” the mountain, exhausted
and exhilarated, I looked down at its base, nearly 20,000 feet away, and was struck by a
realization that is at once absurdly simple and deeply profound:
You climb big mountains in one way and one way only. By making slow, steady
progress.
I believe the same could be said about the business challenges posed by
America’s aging workforce. The best way to summit these challenges is to take a measured
approach consisting of slow, steady steps. After all, the aging of the workforce is arguably
the Kilimanjaro of Human Resources issues, as it will increasingly impact every aspect of
HR in the coming years: recruiting and retention, benefits and compensation, diversity training,
work/life, etc.
Here are a few of the measured steps that all employers should consider
when approaching their own aging workforce challenges:
Step 1. Commit to dealing with the aging
of your workforce as a strategic workforce management issue.
As employees age, their values, work goals, personal needs, hopes and fears
all shift in important ways. As a result, they present an entirely different set of workforce
management issues than younger employees do. They won’t be motivated by the same incentives,
for example. Older employees might become more “reliable” over time (e.g., absent less often
than younger workers), yet they might seem more resistant to change. They’ll likely become
increasingly dependent on your HR staff for information (e.g., pension and long-term medical
information). None of these issues are insurmountable. But they do require that you think
about your aging workforce strategically. “Baby Boomers” account for over a third of the
nation’s current workforce, and roughly 76 million of them are now entering mid-life. That
makes the aging of the workforce a strategic issue for everybody.
Step 2. Develop a plan that involves all
of the appropriate departments and functions in your organization.
Keep in mind that conquering your organization’s aging workforce issues
must be a team undertaking. While the responsibility for
dealing with these issues might ultimately rest with Human Resources, it’s the organization
as a whole that is affected by and must make progress on
these issues. Unless you coordinate your efforts as a team, you’ll never reach your goals.
A useful way to begin sketching out your plan is to ask yourself some key
questions. Is there a clear, shared understanding of the aging workforce management issues
your organization faces? To successfully scale these issues, what changes in benefits, compensation
or other HR practices might be appropriate? Who should be involved in creating these changes
… from which departments and divisions … at what point should they be involved? How should
your efforts be communicated with employees? The list goes on.
The point is a detailed plan of attack will be essential to successfully
summit your particular workforce challenges. Your plan should anticipate how best to retain
valued employees who might be considering early retirement, just as it will need to address
how to make early retirement an attractive option to less effective employees. Toyota recently
offered early retirement to several hundred employees, positioning “retirement” as a time
for people to take charge of their lives more fully than ever before and freely explore
their options. The company also gave employees the tools and information necessary to do
so, along with the usual financial and benefit information offered in a retirement program.
Toyota’s strategic planning and well-thought-out approach paid off: by appealing directly
to the sensibilities of their older employees (50 and above), the company achieved 175 percent
of its target for the offering.
Step 3: Keep your options open where retirees
are concerned.
According to a host of experts, including U.S. Secretary of Labor, Elaine
Chao, a severe labor shortage will hit American business within the next 10 years. In fact,
some sectors are already feeling its effects. In a recent survey of 2,700 Human Resources
professionals, conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management and the American Association
of Retired Persons (AARP), 62 percent of those surveyed said their companies had already
rehired retirees as consultants.
Retirees are an experienced corps of workers that can be tapped if and when
necessary. And they can be used in a variety of capacitiesas full-time, part-time
or seasonal workers, for example, or as mentors for younger workers and new hires. They
can also be used as lobbyists, grass-roots campaigners and advocates in their local communities.
Older employees possess in-depth company knowledge and are often extremely dedicated to
their work since their responsibilities as parents are behind them. Maintaining a relationship
with these seasoned resources is a low-cost, high-return proposition.
The aging of your workforce will create important strategic challenges for
your organization but they don’t have to be insurmountable. Take it from someone who has
been to the mountaintop … slow, steady progress is the only way to go.
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