We have covered why maximizing human capita is an essential element of achieving corporate transformation. However, the personnel challenges that HR needs to address are growing more varied and complicated (see figure 2). We have enumerated some of the chief examples of these personnel challenges below. Many companies are faced with the need, to a greater or lesser extent, to find solutions to them. But with limited resources, addressing all of these challenges is difficult. Spreading themselves too thin trying to address everything at once can be a major factor getting in the way of a company ultimately failing to achieve its goals.
Examples of personnel challenges
Procuring necessary personnel, securing labor capacity, improving productivity, DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion), fostering engagement/culture, diversity in decision making, fostering the next generation and generating innovation
This is precisely why the aim of HR strategy formulation is to pick and choose “which personnel challenges to solve to raise their corporate value,” then clarify targets and processes for arriving at solutions.
Companies thus need to come up with HR strategies having performed “selection and focus,” after considering what the HR materialities are from both short to medium-term and long-term perspectives.