Generational forces
are challenging effective ownership/leadership transitions.
Over the next
decade or so, we can expect a 15 percent decline in 35 to 44-year-olds, while
at the same time, the population of firm principals is rapidly shrinking.
True too, the
psychological contract is changing. Today’s employees (called Generation X and
Millennials) haven’t the loyalty that their veteran grandparents had. They
value opportunity, and seek it elsewhere if that’s where it is.
Finally, our
industry is facing a shortage of new recruits. A 2009 survey conducted by
Harris Interactive on behalf of the American Society for Quality (ASQ) found
that 85 percent of young people between 8 and 17 weren’t interested in
engineering as a career, and their parents weren’t encouraging it. On top of
that, a 2009 Georgetown/Rutgers study found that the “top quintile SAT/ACT and
GPA performers appear to have been dropping out of the [science/engineering]
pipeline … [a decline that] seems to have come on quite suddenly in the
mid-to-late 1990s.”
The solution is in
careful recruitment, starting at the college level, and careful cultivation of
in-house employees.
Where to find those
recruits? Here are some resources you
can tap for new people:
n Referrals from existing employees
n Former employees
n College placement offices
n Online job boards (e.g., LinkedIn)
n Advertising in national and local publications
n Co‑op programs
n Referrals from past employees
n Contingency fee employment agencies
n Retainer-type executive search firms
n Outplacement companies
n Referrals from suppliers
n Referrals from friends and relatives
n Promotion from within your firm
3 comments:
What are the statistics for architects? Principals don't retire and the workforce is aging, no different than previous generations. Where are the young architects going now after they flooded the schools in the 2000's?
Hi Melissa. Thanks for the comment. Great question regarding where architects have gone. Some of this is driven by basic supply and demand. As demand shrunk considerably with the recession, some architects just fled to other opportunities (e.g. working for developers or just leaving the A/E industry completely).
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