Organizations of all sizes and across all industries are increasingly choosing to engage contingent labor. This segment of the workforce is expected to reach 40% (or more) of the total US workforce within the next decade, and is being driven by monumental supply and demand forces in the talent marketplace. As this segment of the total workforce grows, and technology continues to remove friction from finding and engaging them, corporate Human Resources professionals have a vital role to play. With this in mind, let’s examine a few ways HR can remain relevant in this new world of work.

Independent Workforce Benefits

Leveraging the independent workforce offers the enterprise many advantages. Over the years, many Human Resources professionals have learned to enjoy benefits such as:

As more of the workforce is choosing to work independently, and finding it to be a stable and desirable career path, many HR professionals are also realizing that a flexible workforce strategy also provides access to scarce talent.

Most enterprise HR or Talent Acquisition professionals recognize that their current worker population includes a mix of full-time, part-time and independent workers of all stripes (freelancers, independent contractors, consultants, temps, etc.) In fact, there are currently an estimated 53 million independent US workers, which represents approximately 34 percent of the total workforce. By 2020 that number is widely expected to approach 50 percent.

Think about that last data point for a second: Within the next 10 years, potentially one out of every two workers will not be an employee of your company, but rather a free agent, with the freedom to choose when and where to work, and for whom.

That statement is staggering, and worth putting up on a large poster in the company boardroom.

Is the Independent Workforce a Threat to HR?

Human Resources have always served traditional employees (both full-time and part-time). The rapid and significant growth of the independent workforce has dramatically expanded the scope.

Some HR professionals might view the growth of the independent workforce as only a threat and significant legal vulnerability, whereas others will see the opportunity and embrace it. There are always three options to take when confronted by seismic market forces like this:

  1. Bury your head in the sand and hope it will go away. Not likely. The independent workforce is here to stay.
  2. Fight it in hopes of keeping the status quo for as long as possible. Not advised. It is a losing battle to fight the macro demographic, psychographic, and firmographic forces that are changing the world of work.
  3. Embrace it and figure out how to harness its power for your organization. Ride the wave! Forward-thinking HR leaders will recognize this is the right approach, embrace it, and get out in front of it. I doing this, HR will remain relevant, and lead their company into the future.

Considerations for Progressive HR Leaders

As the workforce become more independent and work becomes more on-demand in nature, here are some ideas for HR leaders to consider:

Moving forward

HR leaders need to recognize that their role must evolve, just as the workplace is evolving. As the independent workforce continues to grow, Human Resources and Talent Acquisition professionals must take a broader, more holistic, view of talent. Effectively embracing the independent workforce is a key strategic imperative, and a significant challenge. TalentWave is uniquely qualified to help your organization safely and effectively engage the independent workforce.