Friday,
December 27, 2013
Non-profit organizations (NPO’s), including religious, educational, philanthropic, health care,
labor unions, and professional associations are facing a critical talent drain
as Baby Boomers retire over the next five years. A recent study [highlights] by the Plan Sponsor Council of America and sponsored by the Principal Financial Group
reports that almost 70% of NPO’s will be forced to replace most retirees and
over a third will report difficulties finding replacements. Over 50% of NPO’s project they will lose 10%
to 20% of their workforce to retirement.
While the study focused on 403(b) plan design, eligibility,
participation, and administration, the study points to a serious pending loss
of talent. The survey is available for
purchase at: 2013 403(b) Plan Survey.
Faced
with such a significant loss of talent, NPO’s will have to go head-to-head with
for-profit organizations to acquire the required talent to meet their missions. While there has always been a tug-of-war
between private for-profit and non-profit organizations, however with both
sectors feeling the burn of Baby Boomers’ forthcoming retirements, talent
acquisition and retention will take on an increased sense of urgency. Candidates with advanced degrees in the
sciences have typically leaned towards schools of higher learning for teaching
and research opportunities, those same skills are increasingly sought by the
private sector. Organizations such as Bain& Company actively seek masters and PHD level applicants for consulting and
internship positions, the same candidates often sought out at many NPO’s.
Organizations
cannot compete for talent solely on the merits of their benefits and retirement
plans. Even the most altruistic
candidate can be swayed by cash and non-cash opportunities, as well as work culture. Both for-profit and non-profit
employers will be faced with the challenge to present applicants with a total
package. This challenge will demand a
new level of flexibility in the design and administration of the
employer-employee relationship. Organizations
will be faced with situations which necessitate the retention of their current
talent while acquiring their replacements.
Phased retirement could be one tool smooth the transition from an
employee with decades of service to their replacement. Many of us entered the workplace in a
“phased” manner, working part-time, summer jobs, internships, and finally
full-time employment.
While
the loss of organizational talent is not a pleasant prospect, it does bring
with it the opportunity to re-design and re-invent how work is done for many employers,
including NPO’s. Concepts such as Creative Destruction can be applied to job level tasks in an effort to bring about
workplace change from “we have always done it that way”. A self-managed and cross-functional team culture
could appeal to the mind-set of many Generation X and Y cohorts as potential
Baby Boomer replacements. Finally,
leveraging of technology for non-profits is just as vital as it is for their
for-profit counterparts if they are to focus on their mission.
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