Business Daily Media

Times Advertising

.

Top Ten Countries Spending the Most on Employee Talent

  • Written by MediaVision

Here’s How Much These Countries are Investing in their Talent

While the COVID-19 pandemic felt like it was slowing down progress in the business world in many ways, it has accelerated several key developments in the workplace, which would have taken much longer without the unexpected disruption.

As the new world of work takes shape, one of the top talent trends that emerged for 2021 has been a drive to reskill and upskill employees. Comparing upskilling spend per employee and year-on-year increase, Global Workspace Specialists Instant Offices reveal the top ten countries who are focused on investing in their talent the most.

Upskilling Spend: APAC Countries Leads the Way

The following countries have seen a significant projected year-on-year increase in upskilling and reskilling spend per employee:

Investing-in-employees---Instant-Offices.jpg


Which Skills are Companies Prioritising? This list is dominated by countries in the APAC region, which China, Australia and Hong Kong are all in the top 5.

The skills currently taking top priority when it comes to reskilling employees (i.e. those which have seen the biggest year-on-year increase) are:

  • Interpersonal skills and empathy
  • Project management
  • Leadership and managing others
  • Basic digital skills
  • Adaptability and continuous learning
  • Quantitative and statistical skills
  • Critical thinking and decision-making

Various countries adopted temporary policies to help protect the jobs and incomes of the population by incentivising employers to retain their workers despite the financial challenges of 2020.

Wage subsidies:

The UK offered a maximum payment of £580 per employee per week via wage subsidies. Ireland provided £360 per week, while Australia paid the equivalent of £410 and Canada £500 per week.

Unemployment benefits:
For those with an initial offering in place, the UK provided claimants with an extra £20 per week, Australia paid £150 extra per week, and the US paid an extra $600 per week.

Work from home allowance:
With the sharp rise in remote working during the pandemic, more workplaces are also being encouraged to cover employees for expenses incurred while working at home (such as electricity or laptop repairs).

According to a McKinsey survey, 69% of respondents say they have seen an increase in skill-building during the pandemic, and 58% say that closing skill gaps has become a higher priority for their companies since it started. However, skill-building as a strategy is outstripping other key methods of closing skill gaps, such as hiring, contracting, redeploying and releasing.

Investment in Mental and Emotional Health

With the growing need for empathy in mind, more companies say they plan to promote long-term health goals for their employees in the future. The most popular strategies are:

  • Add benefits to address mental or emotional health issues: 47%
  • Enable remote and digital health-check services: 36%
  • Include a mental or emotional wellbeing strategy: 33%
  • Add services to address physical health issues: 29%
  • Train managers to notice signs of mental health issues: 29%

As some employees try to cope with the anxiety of returning to work and others continue to navigate the emotional challenges of working remotely, more companies must start seriously investing in the wellbeing of their people.

For the full research click here: https://www.instantoffices.com/blog/business-growth/companies-investing-talent/

 

The Instant Group: Flexible Workspace Specialists

Founded in 1999, The Instant Group is a workspace innovation company that rethinks workspace on behalf of its clients injecting flexibility, reducing cost and driving enterprise performance. Instant places more than 7,000 companies a year in flexible workspace such as serviced, managed or co-working offices including Sky, Network Rail, Capita, Serco, Teleperformance, Worldpay making it the market leader in flexible workspace.

Its listings’ platform Instant Offices hosts more than 12,000 flexible workspace centres across the world and is the only site of its kind to represent the global market, providing a service to FTSE 100, Fortune 500, and SME clients.  With offices in London, Newcastle, Berlin, Haifa, Dallas, New York, Miami, San Francisco, Hong Kong, Sydney, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur, The Instant Group employs 230 experts and has clients in more than 150 countries. It has recently been included in the 2018 Sunday Times’ HSBC International Track 200. For more information, visit www.theinstantgroup.com.


g

BizCover Brings Australia’s First AI-Based Insurance Quotes to ChatGPT

Australian small business owners can now receive and compare business insurance quotes directly inside ChatGPT, in a move that signals a major shi...

VistaPrint Research Reveals Australian Small Businesses Face a Succession Cliff

With only 16% of retiring small businesses having a succession plan, tens of thousands risk closure as one in three owners nears retirement.  Ne...

Corporate volunteering grows up: how companies are shifting to meaningful, community-led impact

As workplaces settle into the new year and look for ways to strengthen culture, capability and connection, experts say corporate volunteering is e...

The Rise of Mobile-First Venues

Global Hospitality Platform, Tabit, Reveals Five Ways to Maximise Benefits of Mobile-First Systems  As Australian hospitality venues grapple with...

Why the SME is now the primary engine of global cybercrime

For over a decade, the most practical and effective advice we could offer an employee was to spot the typo. It was practical, it was free, and it wo...

Work-life Balance Key to Solving Construction Talent Shortage

New data from leading talent company Randstad Australia shows flexible working and work-life balance could be critical to addressing ongoing talen...