"2 million engineering and manufacturing jobs will go unfilled as baby boomers retire"
- Prediction from Deloitte and The Manufacturing Institute
The baby boomers, the 78 million people born between 1946 and 1964, have spent their lives defining one societal change after another. Now they are leaving the workforce at a rate of about 1.2 million a year, and taking decades of institutional knowledge with them.
Who will replace them? The Millennial generation, born from the early 1980s to the mid-1990s, is big enough, but will those people walk in the door with enough skills and talent to replace the retirees who just left?
And in the San Francisco Bay area, with an exceptionally low unemployment rate, will you be able to find the ones with the right skills?
When a retiree leaves a company, four kinds of experience-based knowledge disappear, according to the authors of the book "Critical Knowledge Transfer." The four areas are: relationships, reputation, re-work and regeneration. The authors brand these four areas collectively as Deep Smarts.
The loss of relationships is easy to comprehend. A new replacement often will be a stranger to all the people who were used to talking to the person who just retired. Handing the new person a list of contacts can help, but it doesn't say which people are best to call under which circumstances, and which ones are the most reliable.
Loss of reputation is also easy to understand. It will take time for the new hands to prove what they know. And if they can't draw on that deep well of expertise that their predecessor had, your company's reputation will suffer.
Re-work takes a little more explaining. "When the incoming successor has to spend time understanding product lines or critical processes, learning informal norms and ways to get things done, figuring out how organizational units interact — that’s all time-consuming, wasteful re-work," the authors write.
Then there's regeneration, the capability to bring out the next new product. "Innovation springs from fresh thinking, true. But it is also often built on years of experience and expertise with designing and producing a particular kind of product," the authors say.
If your company can easily hire someone new with the same know-how and skills (or even better skills), great. If you have been grooming a successor to take the reins, also great.
But during research interviews with executives and HR managers, the authors of "Critical Knowledge Transfer" discovered that managers often don’t know what they have lost until after the expert leaves — and by then, it may be difficult to recover. Writing in the Harvard Business Review, the authors said that the price tag associated with such losses can be as much as 20 times the more visible, tangible costs of recruitment and training.
The skills gap is nothing new. The earliest boomers started retiring about 10 years ago, and demographers saw it coming long before that. But American industry has not made any progress in closing the gap. In fact, it is getting wider. In a report titled "The Skills Gap in US Manufacturing: 2015 and Beyond," consulting firm Deloitte and The Manufacturing Institute predicted that 3.4 million manufacturing jobs will likely be needed by 2025, but 60 percent of these positions are likely to be unfilled due to the talent shortage. Put another way, U.S. manufacturing sector is likely to suffer a shortfall of 2 million workers over that decade.
The same report noted that three-fourth of manufacturing executives expect to have trouble maintaining or increasing production to meet customer demand. Companies can try to make for a skills shortage by having their existing employees work overtime, but that's only a stopgap measure. It's expensive, and over time it wears people out and actually hurts productivity.
Any company operating in the San Francisco Bay Area faces an additional challenge. The local unemployment rate near the end of 2017 was 3.1 percent. For comparison, the Federal Reserve has said that when the unemployment rate falls to 4.6 percent, just about everyone who wants a job has one.
That means nearly every skilled prospect in the Bay Area already likely has a job, and competition among employers is fierce.
A company can take several steps to close its own skills gap. Solutions include:
Swagelok Northern California can help you respond to the growing skills gap in important ways. We offer a wide variety of customer education and training programs to bring new industrial associates up to speed faster, or to keep seasoned employees sharp. This includes our quarterly training in tube fitting safety and installation and the basics of tube bending.
We also have an Assembly Services department that can assist you in solving fluid system design challenges, and assemble subsystems so that all you have to do is hook them up and get right to work. You can see our design optimization service in action in this video on our Check My Design page, and read about how other businesses benefited from our assembly services in these case studies.
Is the skills gap a concern for your team? We can help. Call us at 510-933-6200 or contact us through our website at https://northerncal.swagelok.com/ask
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