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Trust in a Modern Workforce

Written by: Kirsten Hemingway

Article Overview: Trusting people to work from hom and trusting employers not to cut you out the loop when you work from home still seems to be an issue in the modern workforce - crazy?

Free Download - Flexible Working - Brave companies By Kirsten Hemingway
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Trust in a Modern Workforce

If companies can be educated in the benefits of allowing people to manage their careers and families themselves, then much of the stress is removed and more women would be encouraged to continue and thrive in their current roles. Britain is failing to get talented women into top positions of power and losing out on what they can contribute. Girls now out-perform boys at many levels of secondary education and nearly three out of five recent first degree graduates are women. In 2008, 14.3 million women are in the workforce, alongside 16.9 million men. We are approaching the position where women may soon make up half the workforce. Before the arrival of children, 85% of working women are full-time. This falls dramatically to just 34% of working mothers with pre-school children. For women at every level of work, this leads to a staggering squander of talent. For many, moving to part-time work, or leaving the labour market altogether, is the result of limited choices. A draining combination of outdated working practices and long hours cultures, alongside the absence of appropriate high-quality affordable child-care or social-care are the main culprits. Flexible recruitment addresses these issues by making it cost-effective for companies who are willing to work flexibly to recruit individuals that will provide them with a business benefit. It will enable such businesses to access experience, knowledge and expertise from women who might otherwise be lost to the workforce. By taking away the risk of recruiting from this ‘passive sector', putting companies in contact with the skills and knowledge they seek, companies will be able to see the benefits whilst removing their fear of trusting a flexible workforce. Empowering people to be in control of their work and lives will mean that companies will clearly see the capabilities of each member of their team. A happy and contented workforce is an extremely motivated, focussed and productive workforce. Absences through sickness are vastly reduced.

Smarter working practices will assist groups that have traditionally found work difficult, such as single parents and those with disabilities. When BT introduced smarter working practices, the number of working mothers returning to work after maternity leave increased to 99 per cent. There are over one million disabled people who want to work but don't have a job. (Office for National Statistics Labour Force Survey, summer 2003). Often, this is due to the difficulties of commuting to work. The Congestion Charge in London makes it difficult for the disabled to commute into the centre on London by car. Public Transport also has many problems in dealing with disabled commuters (not least overcrowding on trains and accessibility). The London Underground network has few stations in Central London with disabled access. This makes it extremely difficult for disabled people to work in the traditional office environment.

Kirsten Hemingway Arnold says ‘There are still a considerable number of highly talented, skilled and knowledgeable women and disabled people who are excluded from the traditional workplace due to difficulties commuting to and from the workplace. Flexible working is positioned to enable these people to become an active and productive part of the UK workforce by enabling them to work from remote locations. I am sure that, given the right opportunities such as these, we will see a larger number of disabled people rising to positions of prominence'.

A report by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) suggests that 46 per cent of UK businesses now offer some form of tele-working option to their staff, a figure that has more than trebled in the last two years. If home-working figures continue to climb at the pace the CBI suggests, remote access technology will have laid the foundation for the most significant alteration in global working practices since the beginning of the industrial age.Most discussions about the risks of flexible working tend to focus on cultural issues (how do you make it work for the team), on technology issues (how can you facilitate the process) or on trust issues

Kirsten Hemingway Arnold says ‘The potential of being able to tap into such a hidden market of skilled people is huge. My company is positioned in such a way as to enable companies to reach out to this hidden market of talent, thus enabling enormous benefits to both parties'.

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Home > Work-Life > Kirsten Hemingway > Trust in a Modern Workforce
Article Tags: absences, affordable child care, business benefit, culprits, cultures, degree graduates, experience knowledge, first degree, flexible workforce, labour market, part time work, pre school, productive workforce, recruitment, secondary education, squander, talented women, working mothers, working practices, working women

About the Author: Kirsten Hemingway
RSS for Kirsten's articles - Visit Kirsten's website

Kirsten started her career in the theatre, on the stage as an actress at first then, after drama school, back stage as a stage manager. She worked most of the time in a role known as Deputy Stage Manager. This job involves telling the lights when to light, the sound and curtains when to go and the actors when to come on to the stage. It is like conducting an orchestra. Kirsten began to teach stage management for the University of London and then moved in to Directing shows. In her business career she has been a high level executive at ExecuTrain, ran her own sucessful training company and now is the founder and MD of LifeWorklife.co.uk which is a recruitment site for flexible workers. Kirsten says 'Because I run my own company I was able to plan my work around my children and bring them up to school age myself. I noticed that other parents were not so lucky and I noticed that companies needed flexible resources but there was no where to connect the two. Put the two together and mix in an ability to stay in touch and get to know one another and you have a mixture powerful enough to create a revolution.'

Click here to visit Kirsten's website
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More from Kirsten Hemingway
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The People Advantage of Being High Tech
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Trust in a Modern Workforce


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