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Liquid workforce: Flexibility reaches the office 

Blog: AuraQuantic Blog

A liquid workforce is one of the labor-market trends that is attracting the most interest from companies and workers worldwide. Flexible hours, remote work, the reduction of costs associated with hiring permanent staff, the rapid adaptation capacity of this type of employee and their interest in continuous learning, constitute some of the distinctive features associated with this new employability formula. However, there are still many companies that despite being in the 21st century and the rise of industry 4.0 or intelligent industry, continue to show a certain disaffection about the new working methods that break away from traditional structures. In this article, we give a detailed explanation of a liquid workforce and the technological tools you need to implement it in your company in an effective and agile way. 

 

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What is a liquid workforce? 

A liquid workforce refers to a fluid workforce, i.e., self-employed, or occasional workers as opposed to full- or part-time permanent staff.  This type of worker helps companies to adapt to the dynamism of market demands and to be much more resilient in the face of any unforeseen event, thanks to their multitasking profile. 

 

To understand the nature of this concept a little more closely, we must go back to the beginning of the current decade and focus on a much broader phenomenon known as liquid society, coined by Zygmunt Bauman in his book Liquid Modernity. The Polish-born sociologist establishes a metaphor between today’s society and its volatile and fluid state. A society marked by the absence of values ​​and constant uncertainty. Bauman’s work is divided into five sections: emancipation, individuality, time/space, work, and community. The concept that concerns us here, is that of work. On this point, the author reflects, assuring that “work has acquired - alongside other life activities - a mainly aesthetic significance”. He justifies this idea by asserting that currently, “Hardly ever is work expected to ‘ennoble’ its performers, to make them ‘better human beings’, and rarely is it admired and praised for that reason. It is instead measured and evaluated by its capacity to be entertaining and amusing, satisfying not so much the ethical, Promethean vocation of the producer and creator as the aesthetical needs and desires of the consumer, the seeker of sensations and collector of experiences.” “’Flexibility’ is the slogan of the day”, an idea that Bauman justifies by pointing out that “The place of employment feels like a camping site which one visits for just a few days and may leave at any moment if the comforts on offer are not delivered”. 

 

All these reflections made by Bauman back in the year 2000 have progressively permeated into today’s society. However, the pandemic and technological and digital evolution have been determining factors in the implosion of the liquid work phenomenon. 

 

In the current era of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and automation, organizations increasingly demand independent, collaborative, and autonomous profiles of a multidisciplinary nature, and with the ability to increase their agility and adaptability capabilities, in the face of constant change. This situation has been analyzed by Capgemini, A global leader in consulting and technology services, in its report “The Revolution of the Fluid Workforce”. During the research phase, the consultancy firm interviewed executives from different organizations that were committed to a mixed employment model, of which 4,000 belonged to a fluid workforce and about 1,000 to a permanent workforce. The conclusions drawn from this study include: 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital Workplace: A virtual workspace that brings together the liquid and permanent staff 

 

Organizations are currently filling gaps in critical knowledge and experience in certain areas or departments by hiring fluid workers. These types of workers make it possible to compensate for the increased demand for specialized skills by companies, as a result of the division of labor between humans, machines, and computer algorithms. In this scenario, a digital workplace facilitates permanent and fluid teams, by enabling the creation of a single and centralized work environment based on digital tools, such as: 

 

 

 

 

 

 

digital-workplace-tools

 

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