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Nine Questions
about Baby Boomer Retirement that your Company Must Answer
As
published on http://www.threestarleadership.com
Copyright © 2007 Wally
Bock
Used with
permission of the author:
Author: Wally
Bock
Three Star Leadership Enterprises
http://www.threestarleadership.com
20 November 2007
The Baby Boomers are the members of
the generation born between 1946 and 1964. At 79 million people,
they're the largest US generation in history. The oldest Boomers
will turn 65 in 2011 and many of them may choose to head for the
exits.
Can you answer these questions
about Baby Boomer retirements at your company? The first five are
about raw numbers
- How many people at your company
are eligible to retire in each of the next ten years?
The odds are good that not everyone
who is eligible to retire will do so. But it's a good idea to
consider how many people could leave at a moment's notice and when
they're eligible to do so.
- How many of your senior managers
are in that group?
Senior managers have mission
critical knowledge and experience. When they leave, they take it
all with them, unless you've created alternatives for them to stay
on, or work as a consultant.
Review your succession planning.
Identify the less experienced managers that are best qualified to
move up. Help them with personal and career development,
especially growth assignments, so they're ready when their time
comes.
- How many of your key technicians
and craft workers are in that group?
We're talking here about the kind
of hands-on technical work that it's hard to outsource or
offshore. Many of the pipelines for technicians and craft workers
have been slowly drying up over the last couple of decades. Union
apprentice programs have been hit especially hard.
- How many of your first line
supervisors are in that group?
Your front line bosses have more
impact on morale and productivity than any other group of people
in your company. Make sure you're ready to replace retiring
supervisors with qualified new supervisors who'll get the benefit
of solid supervisory skills training.
- How many of your knowledge
connectors are in that group?
Knowledge connectors are vital to
your operations, but they don't have that title on any
organizational chart. Knowledge connectors are the people other
people call for help because they're experts or because they know
how to find people or knowledge to help solve problems. You can do
a social network analysis to find out who they are, or just ask
around.
I call the problem the "Boomer
Brain Drain" because of the loss of knowledge and experience
when Boomers retire. If you've answered the questions above, you
have an idea how big a threat this is to your company and you can
start to work on responses. The next four questions deal with
different kinds of responses to the potential Boomer Brain Drain.
- What human resources measures
are you or will you use to meet the challenges of Boomer Brain
Drain?
Human Resources (HR) responses to
the challenges of the Boomer Brain Drain include everything you do
to modify your recruiting, training, retention and succession
planning. They also include changes to policies and procedures and
may include union negotiations.
Since Boomers may be starting to
flow out the back door, it's logical to plan on increasing the
flow of recruits in the front door. It's logical, but it's
dangerous.
Generation X is the generation next
in line behind the Baby Boom. It's only about half the size of the
Baby Boom generation, so you've got a smaller pool to draw from.
You can't count on simply increasing recruiting to fill the spots
left by retiring Boomers.
Several companies are investigating
tactics such as having people return to work after retirement or
stay at work past their official retirement date. There's some
evidence that this will work since studies by financial services
companies tell us that Baby Boomers don't have a lot put back for
retirement.
Older workers are great hires in
lots of ways. Their turnover rate is lower than that of younger
workers. When CVS compared their older workers to younger workers,
they found that older workers are far less likely to call in sick.
If you choose some set of retire
late/come back after retirement solutions, there are issues to
consider. Start with your current pension and retirement policies.
Can Boomers continue to work without losing benefits? This may be
something you need to have a dialogue with your unions about.
You may also need to modify your
policies and procedures for part-time work. Retired Boomers may
want a different kind of flextime than younger workers. They might
prefer the ability to take more time off, to accommodate medical
appointments and visits to children.
Analyze your corporate culture. Do
you see older workers as contributing members of the workforce, or
do you see them as workers with their eyes on retirement and one
foot out the door? Do you provide training to older workers the
same as you do to younger one?
You should also think about how
you'll need to change your work processes to make them friendlier
to older workers at the same time as you find ways to get more
productivity out of fewer workers.
- How will you change or adjust
your business processes to meet the challenges of Boomer Brain
Drain?
Older workers may be great workers,
but they tend to have more physical limitations than younger
workers. You may have to modify either processes or equipment so
they're older-worker-friendly. You'll be in good company. Toyota
has been doing this for some time.
Make sure, for example, that the
gauges on equipment are easy to read. If instructions are conveyed
orally in a workplace, make sure they're loud enough for older
workers to hear.
You can also make changes to
business processes that make Boomer retirement irrelevant. If you
eliminate some specialized equipment or standardize on fewer kinds
of equipment, you may be able to increase your scheduling
flexibility and handle more equipment with fewer workers. You can
also use technology to capture the knowledge of experienced
workers so that it's available to younger workers.
- How will you use technology to
meet the challenges of Boomer Brain Drain?
Knowledge management technology is
often touted as the way to capture Boomer knowledge and put it to
use. In reality, most of the knowledge that Boomers, like other
workers, have is in their heads and will go out the door with
them. But you can still do some things to capture important
knowledge if you start now.
Consider job-shadowing as a
knowledge transfer tool. Think about investing in people to chart
and document processes that do not currently have formal
documentation.
Use simple technological tools,
such as electronic discussion groups to capture
"shoptalk" and the knowledge that only comes with time
on the job. Use social network analysis to identify which people
get contacted to solve specific problems.
There are three rules to follow in
using technology to capture knowledge. The first is that a tool
that no one will use, because it's too complex or time-consuming,
is a useless tool. The second is that culture always trumps
technology. Rule number three is that technology that adapts to
human habits works better than technology that demands that humans
change the way they work.
- Have you conducted a
"Threat Assessment" to give you an idea of where you
need to concentrate your efforts?
Before you move on to planning for
Boomer retirements, take the time to do an accurate Threat
Assessment. It will make your efforts more productive in the long
run.
Assess every position in your
organization. Determine when the person in that job can retire.
Evaluate how important the position is to accomplishing the
mission. And assess how prepared you are to replace the incumbent.
These questions are just the start.
Your next step will be to develop a strategy for dealing with a
potential Boomer Brain Drain. But the sooner you get started, the
sooner you'll see results.
Wally
Bock helps organizations improve productivity and morale, as
well as deal with the challenges of massive Boomer retirements. He
is the author of Performance Talk (http://www.performancetalk.com/).
He writes the Three Star Leadership blog (http://blog.threestarleadership.com/),
coaches individual managers, and is a popular speaker at meetings
and conferences in the United States and elsewhere. Read
more about him in his own words: http://www.threestarleadership.com/learnwally.htm
and contact
him at email: wally@threestarleadership.com
and website: http://www.threestarleadership.com
.
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here for more resources to help you deal with the challenges of
the Boomer Brain Drain.
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Short summary
The Baby Boomer generation of employees are standing on the verge
of retirement with fewer employees from the next generation
available to fill their places. Employers need to evaluate the
impact of their retirement and take the necessary steps to prevent
excessive loss of knowledge and experience. Keywords
and relevant phrases
Apprenticeship, baby boomers, benefits, brain drain, career
development., commitment, connections, consultants, consultation,
contribution, corporate culture, crafts, development, experience,
expertise, family responsibility, flexi-time, frontline managers,
HR policies, HR practices, industrial labour, job shadowing,
knowledge connectors, knowledge management, knowledge retention,
knowledge transfer, medical aid, morale, negotiation, networking,
offshore, outsource, part-time, pension, problem solving,
productivity, reasonable accommodation, recruitment, remuneration
package, retention, retirement, sick leave, skills shortage,
social network analysis, supervisors, succession planning,
suitably qualified, supervisors, talent pool, technicians,
technology, tools, trade unions, training, turnover rate, wage
negotiation.
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