Study: Employee well-being is A major priority for many global CEOs

A focus on talent, technology and partnerships can be key to thrive post-Covid-19 pandemic, according to insights from 3,000 CEOs.

An IBM Institute for Business Value (IBV) study has found that a top challenge for many surveyed CEOs over the next few years is managing an “anywhere” workforce. CEOs of outperforming organisations – those who were in the top 20 percent for revenue growth of those surveyed – are prioritising talent, technology and partnerships to position their companies for success post the pandemic.

A statement from IBM says its annual study found the majority of CEOs surveyed reported empowering a remote workforce was their top priority during 2020.

Half of outperforming company CEOs surveyed said managing a remote “anywhere” workforce is a top leadership challenge over the next few years, compared to 25 percent of underperformers, companies in the bottom 20 percent for revenue growth, of those surveyed.

“The Covid-19 pandemic challenged many leaders to focus on what’s essential, like their people,” says Mark Foster, senior vice president, IBM Services.

“Many employees’ expectations of their employers have significantly changed. The ‘anywhere’ workforce can require leaders to provide agile technology, to adopt more empathetic leadership models that prioritise employee well-being and to champion flexible and inclusive cultures.”

In addition, 77 percent of outperforming company CEOs surveyed report they plan to prioritise employee well-being even if it affects near-term profitability, compared to 39 percent of underperformers, reflecting that the surveyed leaders of top organisations are heavily focused on their people in this moment.

IBM recommends that leaders consider carefully the longer-term challenge of a hybrid work environment, which can include things like providing employees with digital, cloud-enabled tools for collaboration, preventing employee burnout or sustaining company culture with focus on diversity and inclusion.

The company says that in a related IBV survey of more than 14,000 global consumers, one in four employees surveyed reported they are planning to change employers in 2021, citing the need for a more flexible work schedule or location as a top reason why.

It says too that only 17 percent of CEOs surveyed ranked diversity and inclusion among the most important organisational attributes for engaging employees.

The IBV study also found that the majority of CEOs surveyed see technological factors among the most important external forces that will affect their business in the next few years, following the massive disruptions of 2020.

Across the board, surveyed CEOs said Cloud, AI and IoT were the top technologies that they believe can deliver benefits for their business. However, outperforming company CEOs surveyed said technology foundations were the top challenge at double the rate of underperformers.

Importance of partnerships

Outperforming company CEOs are also more focused on partnerships, according to the IBV study. Some 63 percent of outperforming CEOs surveyed said partnerships have become more important for driving business performance while only about half as many underperformers said the same.

The company says that based on the results of this study its thesis is that outperforming company CEOs are narrowing their focus to what they do best and relying on partners and ecosystems for access to broader ideas and innovation opportunities.

In addition, IBM notes that as many leaders increasingly see how their organisations can help address interconnected global issues like climate change, ecosystems may be able to play a pivotal role in driving lasting change.

The IBV study includes recommendations from IBM for how leaders can seize this moment to reset and focus on what may be essential for success: choosing flexible and scalable technology platforms like an open hybrid cloud, investing in the holistic
well-being of their people, and partnering to win with an open innovation approach.

The study polled 3,000 CEOs across 26 industries and nearly 50 countries. It was conducted in cooperation with Oxford Economics and benchmarked against more than 20 years of IBM’s annual CEO surveys. See https://ibm.co/c-suite-study-ceo

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