Search
Close this search box.

Concerns over international secondment in volatile times

International Political and economic uncertainty is causing people to think harder about re-locating to new jobs abroad. How can the life sciences sector meet the challenge? By Alex Bennett, CEO, The RSA Group.
heathrow

International Political and economic uncertainty is causing people to think harder about re-locating to new jobs abroad. How can the life sciences sector meet the challenge? By Alex Bennett, CEO, The RSA Group.

Our current climate is one of significant political and economic uncertainty, affecting the life sciences sector as much as any other, and likely to persist for the foreseeable future. Shortages in talent have pushed mobility up the boardroom agenda, requiring HR departments to search further afield for skilled individuals in high demand. 77 percent of CEO’s say that they have to move talent to where they need it. However, in the face of such unpredictability there is a growing reluctance of talented senior personnel to relocate to other countries in search of new roles, considering the inevitable consequences for both their professional and personal lives.

Think forward
The difficulties, both for company and employee, are clear. Uprooting your family, cutting ties with friends, adjusting to new cultures and possibly a new language, to name but a few. However, we should remember that the best defence is a good offence. Companies need to be more forward thinking, and make accommodations to ease the transition for employees – accepting the situation rather than responding and adapting is not an option if growth and success are the goal.

The question must be, how can we overcome these challenges? There are benefits for those willing to make changes, and enable the movement of talent. “[Encouraging location transfers] will help a company build loyalty. It will help you retain your people and it will grow them into better leaders tomorrow,” says Eliza Scherrer, US Global Mobility Strategy Leader at PricewaterhouseCoopers. “All of that brings value to an organization.”

Strategies to succeed
Moving people is expensive. One route will be to set up both local and remote offices to mitigate risk and to accommodate the needs of the workforce. However, this won’t work for all. Technology will play a key role in maintaining the best talent by enabling employees to work or live remotely:  international and daily commuters, as well as remote working, are increasing. However, technology won’t diminish the need to have people deployed ‘on the ground’. Increasingly, pressure will be placed on HR to provide evidence and insight to support mobility decisions and manage costs, and this means embracing the analytical techniques that support it – due diligence is critical.

Key Risks and Value
The key will be to identify where the human intellectual capital lies – who possesses the necessary skills to drive your business forward – and how do you protect this talent. Soft skills of creativity and innovation, leadership, emotional intelligence, adaptability and problem solving are reported as the hardest to recruit, and therefore crucial to protect. Executives must recognise the very real risks for the company by not acquiring the right talent in the right role, and do their utmost to support those all employees – both this willing to make the journey and those unable to do so.

Life sciences companies, regardless of locale, need to continue to move talent around the world. Highly-skilled people are in short supply – due diligence at the point of hiring is key for what is a vital transaction. Now, more than ever, companies need specialist knowledge to advise with authority on the complexity of the issue for the candidate and the company.

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Strategies for reducing work-related stress

13 April 2024

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

University of Reading – Human ResourcesSalary: £27,979 to £32,982 per annum

Trust Head of Human Resources. Grade 11 SCP 31-34 £45,416 – £48,706. Full Time, 36 hours per week, Full Year. The main purpose of the

Come and join the NCA Family. This is the place where we support colleagues to be their professional best so they can provide excellent patient

Salary Scale £44,000 – £50,000. Responsible to Director of Finance and Workforce. Closing Date 28th April 2024. Interviews Planning for w/c 13th May 2024. £44,000

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE