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Reflections and Projections: What Our HR Consultants Want You to Know as 2023 Nears End, 2024 Approaches

By James McDonough posted 12-08-2023 09:18 AM

  

Editor’s note: This article is the first in a two-part series sharing insight from Employers Council professionals on the past year and the year ahead. Look for part two next week. 

As a human resources professional at an Employers Council member organization, your interactions with our HR consultants make an impact. Your requests for help challenge our HR consultants to provide useful guidance. In a mutually beneficial, virtuous cycle, we learn from you as you learn from us. This unique relationship provides our team with a broad array of insights across industries and employer types as to what is impacting HR professionals in the communities we serve. 

Recently, we convened a roundtable of our HR consultants in hopes of gleaning helpful insights to share with you. We asked them to offer reflections on supporting HR professionals in 2023 and their projections for 2024. 

As advocates for the HR profession, we hope to help build a deeper sense of community among HR professionals as we move toward a new year.  

Reflections on 2023 

The roundtable agreed that 2023 was an exhausting year for HR professionals 

The adrenaline rush that helped HR professionals through the pandemic had worn off and was replaced with an unrelenting grind of change and challenges: labor shortages, vacant positions, and new expectations from employees for flexibility and compensation, to name a few. A deluge of new legislation for Colorado employers was overwhelming. Leaders and employees alike looked to HR for answers to macroeconomic forces and new socio-demographic trends that far exceeded the control of any one person or one profession.  

Takeaway: Many HR professionals feel pressure to know it all. The sheer volume of new demands on HR makes this impossible. Be vulnerable and admit to not knowing all the answers. Asking for help and seeking expertise and diverse perspectives are strengths in times of disruption.  

Compounding this, some HR professionals feel undervalued, unsupported, and even ignored by leaders who are uninterested in compliance. Facing demands from all directions, many HR professionals are burned out.  

Takeaway: You cannot help others or your organization if your energies are spent. Make time for self-care to be the most effective HR professional possible – consider it an investment in professional effectiveness. 

Self-reflection was also a part of our roundtable. Our HR consultants shared what gaps they struggled with and what skills served them well in 2023 to serve our members. You may find their thoughts helpful. 

  • Staying on top of new compliance issues was difficult. Evolving legislation and subsequent rulemaking by administrative agencies required vigilance for actions made at the federal and state levels. 

  • Empathizing with others and carefully listening to them deepens understanding of needs. A sense of humor helps mitigate stress and lifts energies when exhaustion threatens. 

  • Flexibility and quick responses were needed to effectively manage labor market changes, such as compensation adjustments to address employee demands due to inflation. 

  • Networking and relationship-building supported learning, connection, and emotional balance. Loneliness and isolation, especially in remote work arrangements, are dangers that require acknowledgment and concerted action. 

Member needs evolved rapidly in 2023. To stay on top of issues and support members, here is how our HR consultants took action in 2023:  

  • Increased reading from a variety of sources. Multiple resources are valued to validate and verify accuracy and ensure a diverse array of perspectives are considered when it comes to identifying options to address emergent and ongoing challenges. Our staff are provided access to top-notch news sources to stay on top of evolving issues that impact employers. We leverage our resources to generate the guidance provided to you when you call, read our Weekly Digest articles, and access our resources. 

  • Pursued continuous learning and new skill development for primary HR topics as well as adjacent skill needs, such as technology. As a learning organization, all employees are encouraged to attend our in-house classes and ongoing learning opportunities outside of Employers Council, such as professional conferences, agency briefings, and classes. 

  • Asked more questions and sought input from informed and trusted peers and colleagues. Our HR consultants regularly connect with each other and discuss members’ concerns. As our unique organization model allows, our HR professionals also regularly consult with the team of employment law attorneys and organizational development professionals. Information sharing across the Employers Council team is embedded in our workplace culture; it is encouraged and provides a holistic approach to your questions. 

  • Stayed curious with a “wandering mind” – insights and inspiration are more likely to emerge from surprising sources. The diverse array of challenges in 2023 called for staff to be curious and seek new ideas and sources of information. Volunteering and engaging with community groups and HR professional organizations are encouraged to connect with new people and ideas. 

Projections for 2024 

Looking ahead to 2024, our HR consultants agreed on many issues that HR professionals will face and suggested strategies to support their ability to continually adapt and grow their skill sets. 

  • Challenges will continue, and the pace of change will not slow. Accept this as reality and embrace adaptation and resiliency as a strategy to remain an effective HR professional; wishing it would stop is a waste of emotional energy. Be a role model for your organization and champion change. (Our Organizational Development services may help you grow as an HR professional to influence your organization.) 

  • Technological change is accelerating. Artificial intelligence (AI) is here to stay and will dramatically impact the HR profession. Accept technology and AI as essential workplace tools. Pursue training to understand at a deeper level, rather than as simply a superficial user. (Use our AI Guide to start.) 

  • Complexity of workplace challenges will build due to intersecting demographic and socio-political trends. Awareness of societal trends, creativity/innovation, and flexibility are essential skill sets for HR professionals. (Access our news sources to stay updated and use our Lending Library for reading materials to stimulate your curious mind.) 

  • Relationship building and intentional networking are important actions to build resiliency. We admire the resilience of the HR professionals we support – they do not run from challenges; instead, they remain focused on creating exceptional workplaces for employees to drive business results. (Connect with other HR professionals in your community to build your network.) 

  • Beneath the urgent and visible challenges facing you are quieter yet important forces that will impact you. One example is the continuing struggle over remote work, where employees demand it, and many leaders want a return to the office. Balancing the two views, HR professionals must successfully navigate their organizations forward. (Our Guide to Managing Remote Workers may help.)  

  • Practice vulnerability and self-care. Asking for help, saying “I don’t know,” or taking time off for self-care are not signs of weakness or incompetence. They reveal self-awareness, wisdom, and trust; this allows others to do the same. When we can be vulnerable, offer help, and ask for patience, we are stronger. You are a better HR professional for knowing yourself, caring for yourself, and inviting others to step in and contribute. 

Employers Council is looking forward to continuing to serve members in 2024. As always, if you have any questions, please contact us. 


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