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The face of talent acquisition in 2020

• By Rhucha KulkarniSmriti
The face of talent acquisition in 2020

Economic turbulence and workforce shifts prevailed through 2019. 2020 shall see a slight upswing in the predicted GDP growth. Despite this widespread uncertainty, the global hiring market was quite active in 2019. 

The talent landscape of 2019 and 2020: Region outlook

Euro Area: Europe saw good hiring activity across France, Belgium, and Germany on accord of economic growth, digitization and expansion of local companies. Spain saw buoyancy in the first half, but slowed down in the latter half due to the US-China trade war. Not much can be stated about 2020 due to the uncertain outcome of Brexit, but France, Belgium (HR, marketing, administration and supply chain), Netherlands, Spain (technology sector)will continue to have demand for specialist skills. 

On an average, 2019 saw some decent hiring activity, with increasing demand for specialist technology, risk, regulatory and compliance skillsets in many markets over the world. 

Challenges for Organizations and Employees in 2020 

A talent paradox persists amidst stubbornly high unemployment, and employers are facing challenges filling technical and skilled jobs. 

While a whopping 80% of survey respondents indicated they planned to stay with their current employers in the next year, nearly a-third (31%) expressed dissatisfaction with their jobs. 

These contrasting numbers put forth the question- Are employees truly satisfied? Or are they simply accepting their fate by “making do” with their current employers because of a difficult job market? Which brings us to the employee-end of the talent acquisition spectrum. 

How can organizations hire better talent in 2020? 

Organizations must innovate and incorporate the latest technologies to attract the right talent: 

Employees who are planning to switch companies cited the lack of career progress (37%) and lack of challenge in the jobs (27%) as the two top factors in influencing their career decisions. 

Addressing the talent conundrum is no longer just a recruiter’s job, it requires a holistic talent strategy involving all HR and business functions. The way ahead is to complement technology-skills with softer skills such as leadership and cognitive skills, culture-fit, and hiring for potential. For this, HR needs to relook at the recruitment process and make it more comprehensive at every stage i.e. through sourcing-screening-assessment-selection-onboarding. HR leaders must drive this change by actively seeking CXO buy-in. Revamping talent processes in line with the labour realities is no longer a good-to-have, it is a must-have for organizations that want to leverage their talent and build a competitive advantage.