Henley Management College Essay, Research Paper
By Professor Ray Wilde in London = Ask anyone under 50 in any reasonably successful organisation and they will tell you that business life is dramatically different from two or three years ago. Work is longer, harder and unending. A Management Today Ceridian survey reports that more than 76 per cent of UK managers said they wanted to spend more time doing other things; 50 per cent of men and 65 per cent of women claim that work leaves them drained of energy. This situation is not likely to improve. The underlying reasons for the changes – the increasing speed of communication and internationalisation of business – are here to stay. Add to this the personal and financial aspirations of people in a globalised boom economy and we have the recipe for a potent acquisitive culture that sets the pace for everything else. Nor can we count on an influx of new interns. There is a critical and long-term talent deficit. Studies of the “war for talent” suggest that three-quarters of organisations now have “insufficient” or a “chronic” shortage of talent – and that the demand for talented executives will increase by a third in the years ahead, when the number of candidates in their mid 20s to mid 30s will actually decline. However, the future of business depends on these new people supported by the current generation of managers grappling with corporate change. But, what qualities will budding managers bring to the party? Many more people are now engaged in building innovative businesses. These are hungry and acquisitive people, keen to make their mark and their fortune. But unlike their forerunners they are secure enough to bear the risk of failure and confident enough to learn from their mistakes and move on. They are not necessarily wealthy, but they know that they are valuable. They thrive on uncertainty and value fun and excitement rather than social and domestic stability. They are often the “backpack” generation, who figure that gambling two or three years of their early career is like travelling the world in the pre-university “gap” year – unpredictable, risky, inspiring and character building. Business in the 21st century needs such people. Britain is not blessed with a glut of such risk-takers. Research for Eastern Energy suggests that we are still a country of “risk avoiders”, so we should
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