Labour market disruptors are converging. Economies are rapidly digitalizing, our workforces are aging, new skills are in demand, and the support needs of jobseekers and employers are more complex than ever.
Many public sector agencies are working hard to identify what needs to change within their employment services and recalibrate accordingly. How can they better serve jobseekers, workers, and employers while expanding employment opportunities for all?
As businesses and labour markets experience unprecedented pressures, there’s no better time to reinvent public employment services (PES). Download our latest report to kick-start your transformation journey.
New approaches to employment support are being launched amid technology shifts, economic disruptions, and social change. Coming alongside the need to cultivate and deliver the skill sets that are most in demand, these factors are having profound consequences on work and access to employment services.
Our report outlines the key converging pressures and trends in PES today:
Technological
Economic
Social
Learn more about how these factors impact employment and public employment services in our report.
Supporting jobseekers and employers requires a new action plan for PES. To meet evolving demands, many organizations are either planning or undertaking large-scale transformations. We’ve outlined seven trends in the common practices and initiatives adopted by leading employment services organizations.
We recognize that each model is context specific. While many of these models have not been implemented long enough to assess their efficacy, these trends can inspire some choices for your own transformational journey.
1. Digital philosophies
PES organizations are expanding service delivery across hybrid, in-person, and digital models to upskill potential workers with low digital literacy. Some jurisdictions are prioritizing digital-first approaches, while others are offering in-person and digital options with a broader range of employment supports. This is not an either-or proposition, as digital-first and digital by desire both exist on the continuum of digital strategies.
What does success look like?
2. Technology enablers for service delivery
PES organizations are investing in digital platforms, tools, and software to improve client experiences, accelerate outcomes, and reduce administrative work. In turn, this leads to more efficient resource allocation and more effective service delivery.
What does success look like?
3. Occupational interventions and long-term employability
There's a difference between a job and the right job. PES organizations are increasingly focusing on programming that supports meaningful and lasting employment.
What does success look like?
4. Whole-person approaches for those with complex employment barriers
Addressing the root conditions that exclude people from the workforce starts with creating holistic support services. PES organizations are deliberately channelling additional resources to better serve the jobseekers who are furthest from the labour market.
What does success look like?
5. Employer-specific support and engagement
With the current shortage of workers in the labour market, PES organizations are expanding engagement with employers to help them find the right talent.
What does success look like?
6. Holistic assessment approach to address employment barriers
Every PES client has unique needs, and many require bespoke services. By introducing standardized and increasingly sophisticated needs-based assessments, PES organizations can identify the type and level of support required for each client more effectively.
What does success look like?
7. Performance management to monitor client experience and outcomes
With the right data, information, and policies, PES organizations can benchmark performance at the system level and reward contracted providers when sustained job outcomes or other goals are achieved. Introducing these measures not only improves funding, but also helps make innovation a reality.
What does success look like?
Seven strategic choice sets
As employment programs and services are urged to evolve, PES organizations must act to stay ahead of the curve. We’ve identified seven pathways to guide your modernization efforts. These choice sets are interdependent, with impacts across all layers of the employment services delivery model and value chain:
Defining the future of employment services
The economic landscape is rapidly evolving, with demographic shifts and changing skill requirements that are increasingly challenging to navigate. As governments around the world redesign programs and services for jobseekers, workers, and employers, there are important lessons to take and operationalize.
The recalibration of how employment services are delivered is already under way—and opportunities abound for those that are ready to transform.