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Career Patterns: A 21st Century Approach to Attracting Talent
Contributor(s): Management, United States Office of Pers (Author)
ISBN: 1478140976     ISBN-13: 9781478140979
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $14.24  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: June 2012
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Human Resources & Personnel Management
Physical Information: 0.14" H x 8.5" W x 11.02" (0.39 lbs) 66 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
Federal human capital managers are facing increasing competition in attracting and retaining talented men and women to work in the civilian workforce. To meet this challenge, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has developed the Career Patterns initiative - a new approach for bringing the next generation of employees into Federal Government positions. This guide introduces the Career Patterns way of viewing recruiting and presents techniques for identifying opportunities and crafting action plans to ensure employment efforts are successful. The "new normal" for the 21st century workforce will bear little resemblance e to that of the late 20th century in which many current Federal managers spent the majority of their careers. This is being exacerbated by several compelling trends that are converging to make immediate planning and action imperative, including: A significant retirement wave among current Federal employees is coming - we should expect 40 percent of our workforce to retire between 2006 and 2015; Competition for scarce talent among employers throughout the national economy is increasing; and the applicants we must attract hold differing expectations; their needs and interests have shifted from past generations, which means we must offer a wider variety of employer-employee relationships. Consider the traditional view of a Federal career - an entry-level employee joins an agency and spends the next 30-plus years coming to work five days a week, in an agency office, on a traditional schedule to provide valuable public service and meet that agency's mission. That view will continue to describe many positions. However, more and more of the needed and available talent will be interested in something other than this traditional arrangement. To compete successfully for those potential employees, we must adapt to their expectations and create an environment that will support their success. The Federal Government must cultivate, accommodate and advertise the broad range of opportunities and arrangements that will characterize Federal careers in the future. In short, we must develop a new mindset. We are dealing with a 21st century challenge that requires a 21st century approach. Building the environments to attract a wider range of potential employees will require planning and investment in equipment and training. Among other things, we must make sure our managers and leaders have the specific competencies to supervise and manage in nontraditional work settings. That is where the Career Patterns initiative comes in. Using this new approach, Federal human capital managers will be able to shape their workforce planning efforts to build and operate in a broad range of employer-employee arrangements where, for example - Retired accountants from private sector firms bring their skills to a Federal agency as a commitment to public service; Recent graduates in a specialized environmental management field form a cadre of mobile talent that deploys to wherever the need is greatest; Mid-Career technology experts spend a few years on a groundbreaking Federal project before rotating back out to work in the private or non-profit sector; Benefits adjudicators review cases and work from home at any hour of the day or night. Many of the alternative work arrangements that will attract and retain talent are already permissible and in use in many agencies. With a Career Patterns mindset, we will come to think about those different arrangements - telework, flexible work schedules, and varied appointment types - as natural and regular ways of getting work done and not as aberrations. This guide is your introduction to the Career Patterns initiative and how it can be incorporated into your human capital planning work.