The future is scary when you have no idea what’s coming — but that doesn’t mean companies and their human resources teams are powerless in preparing themselves. It’s time for HR departments to play a key role in not only predicting the future, but also actively moving their business in the direction it needs to go.
According to workplace and learning futurist Rick Von Feldt, HR pros have to become futurists and predict the future of their company for themselves.
“Certainly those of us that are futurists have our perspective, but it’s more important that every individual, including those in HR, understand the skill of strategic foresight,” he says. “Everyone needs to understand how to track signals and patterns to create visions and views of what that future looks like.”
With this approach, HR leaders won’t just know more about the future — they’ll also be able to make more deliberate decisions and institute the right changes for the company’s future.
Here, we talk to Von Feldt about how HR leaders can discover not only what drives change at their company, but how certain trends (i.e. growing automation) may impact their businesses and what it means for them. Only then can they evolve how they work to better suit the needs of the organization.
Before HR pros start to change the way they work, they have to take a step back and look at the big picture: What is the role of HR in the future at your company?
By 2027, the average company’s time on the S&P 500 will be 12 years, according to Innosight’s 2018 Corporate Longevity Forecast — compare that to 24 years in 2016. This statistic shows that today, companies have to fight harder for dominance. As Von Feldt put it, “You have to have a product that adds more value than your competitors.”
For HR departments — which Von Feldt says will undoubtedly get smaller as certain tasks become automated — that means identifying which functions give their companies a competitive advantage, and where a human touch will be critical. How can HR teams add competitive value? Von Feldt says it comes down to some key areas:
As HR teams become more focused on business-driven functions rather than administrative tasks, their roles will add new value to the companies they work for — roles that can’t be automated as easily. Says Von Feldt, “To be a meaningful asset to the business, all HR teams will need to ask themselves: ‘What is our specific strategy?'”
This article originally appeared on ReWork, a publication exploring the future of work.