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Posted on April 9, 2020June 29, 2023

Consumerization of benefits appeals to the on-demand workforce

on-demand workforce, benefits, freelancers, collaboration, communication

There is a growing inequality in today’s labor market that is creating a two-tier workforce between a company’s employees and its contingent workforce when it comes to employee benefits.

Some would add contingent workers are being treated akin to second-class workers without access to benefits in contrast to the extensive, high-quality benefits afforded to full-time employees, although they perform the same tasks, according to John H. Chuang, CEO of Boston-based staffing company Aquent.

“That doesn’t mean an HR director wants to eliminate variable pay or a contingent worker,” he said. “There are obviously jobs where you’re going to hire someone for only a year. It’s OK to have a contractor and an employee work together. A flexible workforce is necessary to help American companies maintain their competitive edge.”

on-demand workforce, benefits, freelancers, collaboration, communicationFor Chuang’s company, that means offering benefits to contingent workers.

Also read: 5 ways to inspire employee engagement today

It’s part of the changing consumerization of the workforce, which is leading employers to consider transitioning from a one size fits all approach to wages and benefits toward a model that aligns with employees’ diverse needs.

A Shifting Workforce

Driving this change of dynamics in the American workplace is a generational shift, an increasing interest in gig and remote work and new legislation establishing different employee classification metrics.

Consumerization refers to those in the workforce — more than half of whom are now millennials — who seek an employment experience that empowers them to make at least some of their own choices about tasks and goals, thus bringing a customer-like mentality to the workplace.

“They shop around almost like they’re buying a cell phone,” said Cowden Associates President and CEO Elliot Dinkin, whose company provides actuarial, compensation and employee benefits.

“As individuals and consumers, we’re used to setting our own goals and managing our own tasks, rapidly adopting the apps and tools that enable us to achieve what’s important to us, with ease,” said John T. Anderson, CEO of Smartway2, which provides workplace scheduling solutions for enterprises.

“Rather than putting up barriers that hamper autonomy and rapid adoption of new technology, organizations are now firmly focused on offering a seamless, consumerized employee experience so they can reap the benefits of increased productivity, collaboration and innovation.

“The 2020s will be the decade of autonomy at work and the mainstream adoption of tools that enable us to craft our own unique workplace experience,” he said. “These tools will rival consumer applications in ease of use and ability to sculpt human behavior.”

People Are People, Not “Resources”

Joseph Quan, co-founder and CEO of Twine Labs, which helps integrate HR data to deliver analytics and visualizations for CEOs and HR leaders, labeled consumerization as a fancy way of saying that every company will take a much more humanistic approach with every individual it interacts with.

on-demand workforce and benefits“That applies to customers, partners, investors, candidates, and employees,” Quan said.

Also read: Give your on-demand workforce an arm’s-length embrace

“Forward-thinking companies are shedding the notion that people are just ‘resources’ or ‘capital’ — implicit in the terms HR/human capital — and that attitudinal shift is reflected downstream in the recent mania around candidate experience.” 

Companies can position themselves by building a unique brand based on its distinctive cultural values and over-invest in candidate care and experience, said Quan.

“For us, that means sharing an incredible amount of internal data and communications with candidates before they even join the company,” he said.

Rather than imposing innovation from above, studies show employers should use surveys and group discussions to explore employees’ feelings about new technologies and elicit their help and suggestions through managerial collaboration for successful implementation, said Dinkin.

Dinkin, whose own workforce has mostly full-time and some part-time employees ranging in age from 20s to 60s, said each generation has different priorities regarding pay, benefits, time off, retirement, tuition reimbursement and other factors.

As the employee moves through the company, they can migrate to other packages based on their needs, Dinkin said.

Also read: Here are 4 must-know trends in gig hiring

For example, a 24-year-old college graduate may not be thinking about retirement and may prefer to remain on a parent’s health insurance plan until they are 26 years old rather than obtain insurance through work, Dinkin said.

Some employees may want the option to pass on benefits and make as much money as they can, he said. Another employee may prefer more paid time off because they want to attend their child’s school or sports events or must care for an aging parent.

The Value of Benefits for On-demand Workers

In order for employers to set themselves up as employers of choice in a consumerization environment, Dinkin urges employers to be aware of these developments and consider enabling employees to design a package that fits company operations, is cost-effective and offers choices more aligned with individual career goals, life stages and ranking within the company.

Dinkin cites a recent Deloitte study of millennials in which 49 percent said they would leave their current job inside of two years while about 25 percent actually have done so.

“They’re a product of their education where they’re told the best way to get ahead is to change jobs,” said Dinkin. “They lack information as to what are actually their opportunities.”

It’s best to sit down with an employee and show them how their career ladders can intersect with a wage structure and show them the requirements necessary to move from an entry level position into a higher level and what they will make, he said.

Consumerization extends beyond a full-time employee to contingent and gig employees.

In hiring gig workers, an employer may be trying to save payroll taxes and some benefit costs, said Dinkin.

“Why wouldn’t I create benefit plans for those individuals?” he said. “Don’t I want to make them stick to my company?”

For example, they could be offered a health reimbursement account. “Let this class of employees go out and get medical coverage and reimburse them for a certain amount,” said Dinkin.

Aquent is a talent services company providing marketing and creative talent, managed services, extended workforce benefits, project management and professional development. In 1993 Aquent became the first staffing company to offer full comprehensive benefits to its temporary employees.

Its newly launched service, Square Deal, enables companies to offer equal benefits to their contingent workforce efficiently and at scale.

Aquent’s Square Deal offering includes benefits, policies and eligibility designed for variable work: full- and part-time and long- and short-term assignments that are on par with internal employee coverage.

Its benefits package combines health and dental insurance with accident, critical illness and hospital indemnity insurance; a wellness program; 401(k) or Roth IRA plans; flexible spending accounts for health care, dependent care, parking and transit; an identity protection plan; an employee discount program, and career development and online skills training.

The best and most productive talent has many options and seeks a reason to work for a company through consumerization, said Chuang.

Benefits provide that reason, he said.

“If you have a yearlong project where someone leaves at the six-month point, you don’t have time to hire,” he said. “It’s devastating. If there is no commitment to the employee, there’s no commitment for the employee back to the company.

“By giving benefits — especially since it’s so unique and different among contractors — they really value it. We found that offering a strong benefits package typically increases retention by more than 20 percent.”

Nick Patel is founder and CEO of Wellable, which offers customizable wellness solutions enabling employers to run an engagement program through wellness apps and wearable devices that includes gamification, rewards and incentives. Additionally, it provides education and consulting services on how to set up an office environment to promote wellness.

Such programs may be subject to failure, however, if employees are not keen on their employer being closely affiliated with their health, said Patel.

“It’s creating a culture about educating and letting employees know why the company is doing it,” he said.

The primary benefit to the employer in embracing consumerization is that it cuts down on the high cost of turnover with respect to recruiting, hiring and training, said Dinkin.

“If you’re in a client service business, people are leaving your accounts or if you’re an experienced person on an operating line and you’re leaving, it costs the company so much. Some of it can be measured and some of it can’t,” he said.

Another factor in becoming an employer of choice is that it affords a company to be more diligent in the way it supervises, manages and rates employees, said Dinkin.

“All of this attention to training, development, giving people multiple chances, and looking the other way because it’s so hard to find good people … what does that do to my culture? Is that the best way to run my business?

“You’ll just have a bunch of mediocre people slow down your company because the good people leave anyway. They don’t like that culture if they know you’re keeping around somebody who’s mediocre.”

When it comes to how consumerization benefits companies, Patel said that while return on investment was “strictly defined by the fact that if I invest this many dollars to try a wellness program, I should expect first to make dollars in health care savings,” said Patel.

Also read: Why companies should rethink their approach to freelancers

“We see the industry transition to this trend called value on investment, which is what we ascribe to,” he added.

Value on investment can be difficult to measure and will vary with each company, he added.

“It’s taken to other considerations beyond health care expenses,” said Patel. “Employees may be more productive, for example. Studies have identified millennials as buyers of more wellness benefits. It’s bringing those kinds of broader benefits to help their well-being in terms of determining the value on investment.”

That may help attract and retain talent, he said.

The consumer-in-the-workplace mentality can help raise employee engagement and smooth a path to ROI, but is a double-edged sword, said Dinkin.

The same dynamic found in retail — in which the customer experience is important in gaining an advantage and poor customer service leads to people not returning to the store — also is found in the workplace, said Dinkin.

Dinkin said the economic constraints such as a projected 6 percent increase in employer-based health care costs in 2020 makes it difficult for most employers to offer a significantly competitive advantage in terms of salary and benefits.

The differentiating factor is being a valued supplier to consumerized employees, making them feel they have a stake in the company’s success. 

That will pay off in loyalty, retention, corporate agility and profit, he said.

Posted on September 5, 2016June 29, 2023

Welcome to Staffing the Human Cloud

Forget software as a service; human capital as a service is the hottest trend in staffing today, with a vast segment of the workforce choosing work-on-demand options over full-time employment.

“It is the economy of the human cloud,” said Barry Asin, president of Staffing Industry Analysts, a global advisory service in Mountain View, California.

Asin isn’t just talking about Uber and Lyft drivers, though they are a part of this trend. The human cloud is also full of contractors, consultants, freelancers and subject matter experts who are seeking new models of employment for a variety of reasons. Some do it to bolster their traditional income with after-hours gigs, while others do it full time because they can earn more money or achieve greater control over their work life. Still, many contractors find themselves in these roles because it’s the best option they have, especially as companies begin to see the value of bolstering their full-time workforce with contract staff.

Regardless of the reason, their ranks are growing. Contingent workers make up 53 million people, or 34 percent of the American workforce according to a survey commissioned by Freelancers Union and Elance-oDesk. And as more professionals flock to contract positions, staffing industry companies are expanding their offerings to better meet the needs of clients.

Online Platforms Fill the Gap

Responding to this shift, many traditional staffing agencies are building or partnering with online platforms that specifically link companies with contractors to manage and complete contingent work arrangements. This area of the staffing industry has grown rapidly in recently years, with dozens of sites now available, including upwork.com, freelancer.com, and Proworkers, as well as many industry-specific and specialty sites, such as UpCounsel for lawyers, Toptal for software developers and ShiftPixy for hospitality industry shift workers.

“The migration of this niche part of the industry to the internet has made it much easier for contingent workers to participate in the gig economy,” said Teresa Carroll, senior vice president of talent solutions for KellyOCG, the outsourcing and consulting group of Kelly Services in Troy, Michigan. It has also enabled more workers to make the transition from full-time to freelance.

These online matching sites are still a small trend in the broader staffing economy, but the trend is growing. According to Staffing Industry Analysts data, 4 percent of Fortune 1000 companies used online platformsHotList to hire contingent labor in 2014, but that rose to 11 percent in 2015 with another 5 percent considering the tools within the next two years.

The most innovative staffing firms see this growing trend as an opportunity to find new ways to bring talent to their clients. For KellyOCG, that means partnering with a dozen online communities, including Upwork, Work Market, and most recently Elevate Direct in the U.K. Other staffing companies are acquiring innovative online start-ups to fill their contract labor gaps. Earlier this year Monster acquired the San Francisco based start-up Jobr, which offers a job-finding app that the company described as “Tinder for jobs”; ManpowerGroup acquired Ciber Inc., the Dutch IT solutions and staffing provider, to improve its global IT staffing capabilities; and Randstad acquired twago, a European freelance marketplace where companies can create client-branded freelance recruitment platforms that can be integrated with their vendor management system.

Legal Concerns Drive Caution

Staffing firms are also working more closely with clients in an advisory role to help them figure out how to best take advantage of contingent labor trends, and to make sure their choices align with business and legal goals. “Companies have all sorts of questions and concerns about compliance risk when using these platforms,” Asin said, noting that larger companies are especially cautious about working with contractors, and are turning to staffing firms for guidance.

It’s a smart move, especially as policymakers begin to explore what the gig economy means from a legal and economic standpoint, and how they may adapt statutes to create a social safety net for these workers, said Richard Wahlquist, CEO of the American Staffing Association. In a recent ASA survey, one of the leading issues keeping executives up at night is their concern about labor employment law and where their liability begins and ends when working with staffing firms. “People have a lot of questions about their legal obligations to temp workers,” he said. And as they introduce more temporary and project labor into their workplace, they increase the risk of introducing non-compliant practices into the organization.

It isn’t always easy to decipher obligation, he said. For example, with the Affordable Care Act, the staffing firm is responsible for handling all employee insurance issues, but for laws related to Occupational Safety and Health Administration requirements and equal opportunity hiring, the client is responsible for providing a safe work environment that is free from discrimination.

“These rules all extend to a flexible labor force and you have to be aware of your obligation to these workers,” Wahlquist said. The Department of Labor is paying closer attention to compliance issues related to temp workers and recently released a series of guidance documents as part of its Temporary Worker Initiative, specifically focused on compliance with safety and health requirements when temporary workers are employed under the joint (or dual) employment of a staffing agency and a host employer.

“I think the majority of noncompliance that we see is people just not getting what the law is, and what their responsibilities are under it,” Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division Administrator David Weil said in an interview with The Washington Post. “We also find cases of people who are clearly playing games and clearly trying to shift out responsibility, and often have structured things in a way that lead toward more noncompliance.”

WF_0916_DatabankWhen companies fail to meet the needs of these contract workers it can backfire. In May of this year, for example, OSHA cited Cooper University Hospital in Camden, New Jersey, for failing to fit temporary workers with proper respirators or provide training on protocols related to exposures to blood and other potentially infectious materials. The hospital faces $55,000 in penalties.

Concerns about legal issues link to a broader shift in the staffing industry where larger companies are looking to their vendors for more than just workers. “They want advice and analytics that will help them better manage their overall talent equation,” said Carroll. This demand for consulting services is being driven by a number of trends, including interest in using more contingent labor, internal pressures to reduce the time and cost of hiring, and the inability of big companies to keep up with technology innovations used to find and track talent. “They realize they can’t be the best at everything, so they are turning to service providers to fill the gaps,” she said.

In response, staffing firms are working with clients much earlier in their decision-making process. In some cases, they are working with clients months in advance of a project to determine what types of talent they need, whether those hires should be full time or temporary, and how to manage the compliance issues related to these decisions, said Paul McDonald, senior executive director for Robert Half International in Los Angeles. “They want us involved in these conversations from the planning stage to advise them on what choices will help them execute their plan.”

Many firms are also expanding their data mining and workforce analytics offerings to give companies greater insight into which types of talent deliver the greatest benefits for different types of projects or positions, and how to attract this talent to their brand. Some staffing companies are building out these services from within, while others are acquiring analytics expertise. For example, Protiviti Inc., Robert Half International’s consulting division, recently acquired the assets of Decision First Technologies, a business intelligence and SAP solutions provider.

Supply Still the Biggest Challenge

For all the hoopla around gig workers, most staffing agencies continue to say their biggest challenge is finding qualified talent to fill their pipeline. “The impact of the skill gap and declining labor force is a constant burden for recruiters trying to fill talent needs, whether they are in-house recruiters or outside firms,” Wahlquist said.

McDonald agrees. He noted that while overall unemployment is at a comfortable 4.7 percent rate, specific professional sectors, including finance, tech, legal and accounting are much lower. “For certain IT roles the unemployment rates are less than 1 percent,” he said. “Demand is dramatically outstripping supply.” Even though enrollment in engineering and related fields is rising, McDonald doesn’t expect to see much relief in the years to come. “The pace of technology and demand for talent is moving faster than these programs can deliver graduates.”

In response, companies like Robert Half are trying to ramp up the recruiting side of their services, and developing mobile applications that enable swift — but vetted — matches between candidates and clients. “Speed is critical in this field, though you can’t skip the thoroughness of the review process. That’s where misfires happen.”

The need for speed won’t go away any time soon, and staffing firms will continue to face pressures to expand their reach and make it easier for talented laborers to find work through their recruiting services and online platforms. That means offering transparent and efficient tools, like mobile sign up and interviews via Skype to make the process speedy and efficient, McDonald said. “It has to be quick and easy for candidates and clients, or they will go elsewhere.”

Sarah Fister Gale is a writer based in the Chicago area. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on March 26, 2014November 14, 2019

SAP Acquires Contingent Staffing Tech Firm Fieldglass

employee communication co-worker

German tech firm SAP announced plans to acquire contingent staffing software maker Fieldglass. Terms of the deal, which is scheduled to close in the second quarter, were not disclosed.

Fieldglass’ cloud-based vendor management system meets the growing demand among employers to manage flexible workforces that can be quickly engaged and on-boarded to support rapidly changing business and customer needs, according to an SAP release announcing the March 26 deal.

Combined with the collaborative, network-based procurement capabilities of Ariba and the human resources expertise of SuccessFactors, the acquisition uniquely positions SAP to deliver a platform for businesses to manage their entire workforce — both temporary and permanent staff — from initial recruiting and on-boarding to ongoing development, performance management, retention and retirement, SAP said.

The combination of Fieldglass’ market-leading VMS solution with SAP promises to transform workforce management. It will enable a flexible and comprehensive approach to managing the entire workforce and life cycle, beyond the traditional focus on the employee record that characterizes many systems today, SAP said.

Contingent labor and statement-of-work services is a $3.3 trillion, high-growth market according to industry analyst estimates.

Fieldglass will continue to build out its global team and operations and retain its identity and continue to operate independently as an SAP company in its cloud line, according to a press release.

Posted on August 3, 2012June 29, 2023

Contingent Workers: Why Companies Must Make Them Feel Valued and Engaged

Sharron Wood felt left out.

A freelance writer and editor based in San Francisco, Wood had worked hard for roughly two months for a client on a book. But she didn’t get invited to a launch party for the book last September—she only learned about the bash by reading a blog post about the event. The exclusion stung both personally and professionally.

“I wrote a quarter of it,” she recalls. “It just makes you feel like they don’t value your contributions.”

In years past, companies might have shrugged off this sort of complaint from a contractor as a minor matter or annoying whining. These days, they would do so at their peril.

armslengthembraceOrganizations face a growing need to engage workers such as Wood just as they do their full-time employees to attract the best of contingents, get the best out of them, and preserve a long-term relationship with them. Why? A confluence of reasons. Companies rely more and more on contract and outsourced workers to deliver both their customer experience and strategic initiatives. Increasing amounts of work are going to higher-skilled contingent workers—to professionals such as engineers, graphic artists and nurses—whose talents can be pivotal for organizations. And many of today’s temps and contractors are millennials, an age cohort famous for needing more attention than older generations.

For the past few decades, the corporate agenda regarding temporary workers, contractors and independent consultants has been largely about cost-cutting and legal compliance. But amid greater interest in labor flexibility and a tight market for specialized skills, companies are starting to see contingent quality as key. This concern surfaced in a recent Workforce Management survey of almost 1,200 readers. Asked for their biggest concerns about using contingents, nearly 43 percent of respondents cited “quality of work”—making it the top response.

If companies are going to connect with the best of today’s contingents and elicit their best efforts, a new deal or relationship is in order. That relationship might be called the “arm’s-length embrace.” In it, companies respect contingents’ independence yet nonetheless show them more love—in the form of invitations to social gatherings, improved communication, greater recognition and the like. It also means a partnership approach to pay that includes a fair wage rate rather than a nickel-and-diming approach to free agents.

To be sure, there are categories of contractors and temps where a transactional, cost-conscious, impersonal exchange makes more sense. And attention to contingents cannot eclipse efforts to maximize the engagement and output of the regular workforce. But experts say the smartest companies are paying greater attention to contingent labor as they set overall workforce strategy, and that tighter ties with contingents are increasingly crucial.

So far, companies are giving scant attention to their bonds with contingents. The Workforce survey found that fewer than 30 percent of companies either have a plan to become a client of choice for contingents or are working on one. But wise firms will take relationships with contingent workers more seriously if they want to improve organizational agility, customer service and productivity, argues Brian Kropp, analyst with research firm the Corporate Executive Board.

“Organizations need to rethink their approach,” he says. “If you treat them as ‘hired help,’ then they will behave as ‘hired help.’ ”

Definitions of contingent work vary. But most observers agree the term at the very least encompasses temporary agency workers and independent contractors. The contingent workforce also can include individuals pitching themselves as business consultants. And some analysts argue companies should add in the employees of larger professional services firms who are engaged in project work.

About a decade ago, pundits including author Daniel Pink proclaimed the United States was morphing rapidly into a “free agent nation.” The transformation has proven to be slower than expected. But today free agency and other forms of contingent work are coming to fruition in dramatic fashion. Research firm Aberdeen Group estimates that nearly 26 percent of the average organization’s total workforce is contingent or contract-based. And the irregular workforce is growing quickly. Aberdeen says use of contingent labor has jumped over the past year alone by more than 12 percent.

Fueling the era of impermanent labor are factors including companies’ desire for greater flexibility amid economic uncertainty, the need to access scarce skills and the fact that some high-end professionals are choosing to work independently. That last trend could intensify thanks to the recently upheld federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which aims to make it easier for individuals to get coverage on their own.

To the extent that they have focused on contingents, companies have concentrated largely on labor costs and legal compliance. Organizations are keen to avoid calling people “temporary workers” or “independent contractors” when they actually qualify as employees. Microsoft Corp.’s landmark $97 million settlement with its “permatemps” in 2000 put the “co-employment” issue on employers’ agendas, and recently the Obama administration has made worker misclassification enforcement a priority.

Saving on labor costs has long been a rationale for using contingent workers, who typically don’t get health or retirement benefits and allow firms to avoid paying employment taxes. Still, a concern for many organizations is that departments and managers hire temps on their own, avoiding oversight and missing opportunities to save money through preferred vendor arrangements.

In part to save costs, industrial-packaging-maker Greif is working to standardize its use of contingent workers. But higher quality also is on the radar screen for Greif, which is based in Delaware, Ohio, and employs some 16,000 people worldwide. Steve Youll, human resources strategic planning analyst for Greif, foresees a future when individuals and small bands of highly skilled people will engage with companies on projects in information technology and other areas. Attracting them, vetting the effectiveness of their work and wooing the good ones back time and again will be crucial, Youll says.

“The HR trend is to look at contingent workers in the same way you look at your regular employees,” Youll says.

As it stands, though, companies tend to look at the two sets of workers quite differently. A key case in point is performance assessment. While most firms track their staffers’ performance in a formal process, contingent quality control is much less consistent, according to the recent Workforce survey. Not surprisingly, the quality of contingents often isn’t great, as indicated by the Workforce survey.

Mediocre or low quality poses a threat to organizations as they turn more and more work over to contingents. And much of that work touches customers directly or indirectly. The Workforce survey found that contingents affect customers’ experience to a moderate or significant extent at 31 percent of organizations. Nonregular employees shaping customer service levels is a growing concern, says the Corporate Executive Board’s Kropp. That is, companies increasingly are relying on their extended workforce to deliver a great experience—whether that’s a security guard, a call center worker or a nurse. “From a customer’s viewpoint, all these people are actually your people,” Kropp says.

Organizations ought to make contingent labor more central to their strategic workforce planning, says Barry Asin, president of Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister organization to Workforce Management. As Asin sees it, firms should “stop setting the contingent part of their workforce to the side.”

To help get their contingent houses in order, companies have purchased software tools called vendor management systems—though these have tended to focus on efficient use of temporary workers rather than quality (see “Tech Talk” below). Organizations also have turned to third-party managed-service providers, or MSPs, which promise to oversee contingent labor operations.

Among such MSP vendors is Kelly Services Inc. John Healy, vice president and talent-supply-chain strategist at Kelly, says MSPs have a responsibility to help clients figure out when to focus on efficiency with contingents and when to be more flexible for the sake of better talent. For example, he says, it may make sense to treat contingent assembly-line workers in a transactional way, because supply of this labor may exceed demand. But workers in more creative or critical roles may require a responsive, high-touch relationship, Healy says. “You have different models,” he adds.

The high-touch model may be especially effective with the legions of young people now in the workforce. Millennials—the roughly 80 million people born from the early 1980s to 2000—tend to want a great deal of guidance on the job. Call it the product of coddling parents or a healthy desire for self-improvement, this hunger for feedback makes it all the more vital for companies to connect with their contingents.

Mary Ann Davids has seen the payoff of a little TLC to young temps. Davids is a performance support specialist at a call center run by a large insurance company. A 16-year veteran at the company with a background in training, Davids took her current job about two years ago when the firm saw quality and attrition problems with its stable of temporary workers—who help handle calls and serve as a pool of candidates for permanent positions.

Before Davids came into the picture, temp-population attrition at the center was running about 95 percent annually. And the service quality of calls handled by temp workers was judged by officials to fall short of the company’s standard. The temps, from a major national staffing firm, have an on-site manager from the agency. But the insurance company put in Davids to beef up the coaching given to the temps. This comes in the form of weekly evaluations and live monitoring of calls.

So far the extra strokes to the youthful temps are paying off. Davids says temp call-service quality now exceeds the company standard, and attrition has plunged to about 25 percent. Davids says her young charges can’t get enough of her comments. “They’re so used to getting some sort of acknowledgement. They crave feedback,” she says. “Some of them will ask me every day, ‘How am I doing?’ ”

Another reason to reach out to temps and free agents is that many of them aren’t there voluntarily. The ranks of contingent workers are made up in part by people who would prefer the steadier work of regular employment. As game as they may be to do a good job, these folks may suffer from an inherent engagement deficit. Offering feedback and appropriate kudos can help fire up their performance.

Even voluntary independents are thirsty for signs that clients recognize their worth and potential. Take Jan Grose. Since 1999, Grose has had a consulting business helping companies with organizational development and HR projects, and she prefers life as an independent contractor.

Still, Grose chafes at the way clients penny pinch rather than value the insight she can bring from many years of experience in the field. For example, she once persuaded a client to consolidate its payroll systems worldwide through regional providers. The suggestion was outside the scope of her work, but she estimates her advice easily saved the client the equivalent of her fee.

“Companies should not be focused on just the rate,” Grose says. But “that’s the first thing they think about.”

Travis Coleman, a technology contractor based in the Seattle area, notes another problem that hurts both companies and contingents: a failure to give contract workers the “big picture” surrounding their assignments. When firms spell out a discrete set of tasks without a sense of the larger purposes of the work or the project’s timeframe, it makes it more likely that contractors will do the bare minimum for the client, Coleman says.

Coleman, who has been working for about a decade as a contractor on computer-support projects for companies including Bank of America Corp., Brio Realty and Microsoft Corp., says he does his best to combat the image of the disengaged contractor by going above and beyond client expectations.

But even he finds it frustrating when organizations do not share information about how a project is proceeding. For example, Coleman hates when, at the end of a week he thought was going well, the client supervisor suddenly reports the project is way behind schedule.

“There’s nothing worse,” he says.

Besides passing key information to contractors, there’s also gathering information from them. If companies want to optimize use of their contingents, they will want to learn about the skills, experience and passions of those impermanent workers. Organizations have begun to develop sophisticated databases about their in-house talent in order to best match assignments with employees. They aren’t as far along with that sort of talent tracking with their armies of contingents.

Consider Wood, the freelance writer. She says her publishing house clients typically don’t know her areas of expertise.

“They don’t do a very good job of finding out what my particular strengths and interests are,” Wood says. That disconnect not only has frustrated her over the years, but also, she believes, has kept clients from getting the most from her talents. Wood says she would never provide less-than-professional services. Still, projects on musicology and food in particular get her juices flowing, which leads to even better results. “I’m going to get much more excited about something that’s up my alley,” Wood says.

Overall, though, Wood says she has it good as a free agent. She treasures the flexibility, the lack of office politics and the diversity of assignments that come with working independently.

And sometimes clients do include her in fun, professionally helpful events. The same client that didn’t invite her to the party last year made up for it more recently. The organization flew her and other freelancers to New York, put them up in a hotel, talked about future strategy and took them out to a fancy dinner. “This client generally does the right things,” Wood says. The “right things” like involving key free agents in occasional strategy discussions and taking them out to dinner once in a while are likely to pay off for companies too—in the form of fresh ideas, increased loyalty and extra effort.

What Wood and many other contingent workers want is to remain independent yet grow closer to clients. To feel a sense of inclusion, even if at a distance. The arms-length embrace. It promises to warm the hearts of contingents and business executives alike.

Workforce Management, August 2012, pgs. 34-39 — Subscribe Now!


 

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