LASA Fusion Summer 2021

Page 70

INSIGHTS FROM INDUSTRY

THE EMPLOYER OF CHOICE DILEMMA AN ASPIRATIONAL GOAL OR A KEY WORKFORCE STRATEGY?

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s Australia emerges from its self-imposed COVID bunker, it is clear there will be an ongoing hangover from the pandemic far beyond vaccination levels and infection rates. Securing the right employees is a burning issue and will continue until at least 2024. Approximately 10 per cent of the population is likely to remain unvaccinated and therefore unable to work in sectors like aged care. This talent shortage is further complicated by the reduced migration and availability of workers. Organisations should remind themselves the best employee they have is often the one they have today. There is little value in hiring new employees if current employees are going out the back door as quickly as they are recruiting them. So how can organisations retain employees? Is it about becoming an ‘employer of choice’? The reality is Australia has an ageing population and the future of employment has become more complicated. Aged care organisations need to acknowledge generational diversity and strategically respond. Here are the top four things organisations can do to attract and retain workforce talent. 1. Understand what is driving employee absence in your organisation. The impact of unplanned absence on an organisation can be profound, particularly when replacement staff are required to ensure staff ratios are maintained. Lockton data

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reveals that the cost of workers’ compensation insurance can be less than 10 per cent of the total cost of employee absence. This begs the question: why do organisations have a plan to manage workers’ compensation liabilities but not general absence? Performing a deep dive on the cost of absence can help identify trends that organisations can use to increase workforce participation rates and drive employee engagement. 2. Gain a more in-depth understanding of the reasons for employee turnover. Some level of employee turnover can be a positive thing. However when an organisation loses key staff it needs to keep, it’s important to understand why this is happening. Lockton recently provided a service to an aged care provider which identified their employee exit interviews failed to identify it was specifically staff under the age of 40 who were leaving. This is a cohort of staff they needed to keep. The outcome led to the need for a

Continued on page 71


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Fresh Ideas

8min
pages 94-97

Going green in Brisbane

3min
pages 89-91

Christmas hampers bring joy

3min
pages 92-93

Modernising aged care environments through strategic investment

3min
pages 86-88

Global technologies at new ECH care hotel support independence

3min
pages 83-84

Self-funded care in action

3min
page 85

Safeguarding poor hygiene in aged care homes

2min
page 79

The dysphagia dilemma

4min
pages 80-82

The way we see it

3min
pages 77-78

Managing workplace conflict

4min
pages 73-74

Are you drowning in admission paperwork?

3min
pages 75-76

The employer of choice dilemma

4min
pages 70-72

Caring for the carers

4min
pages 68-69

Are you just reporting incidents?

4min
pages 66-67

The future of food in aged care catering

3min
page 65

Digital care technology for good nutrition

5min
pages 63-64

What’s in a word?

4min
pages 52-54

In-house pharmacist supports better health outcomes

2min
page 59

How ‘Annie ’ can lead to improved

3min
page 55

Key considerations for meaningful personalised content at scale

5min
pages 56-58

Collaboration creates workforce diversity

2min
page 51

Workforce transformation

4min
pages 49-50

Hospital avoidance to preserve quality of life

4min
pages 46-48

Aged care tele-examination pilot

3min
page 45

Towards a culturally inclusive aged care system

3min
pages 41-42

Launch of world’s first global

3min
pages 32-35

PHNs set to expand their role in supporting healthy ageing

3min
pages 36-37

Age services innovators recognised in the innovAGEING National Awards

7min
pages 27-30

Consumer consultation should be standard practice

3min
pages 38-40

Insignificance is career bliss: step

3min
page 31

Change or more of the same: can the circle be unbroken?

4min
pages 25-26

Commissioner’s Column

4min
pages 13-14

LASA Leadership Program gets results

3min
pages 23-24

CEO’s Column

4min
pages 9-10

LASA Excellence in Age Services Award winners shine brightly in 2021

6min
pages 15-18

LASA leads on standards

3min
pages 21-22

Mental health, fun and positivity

4min
pages 19-20

Minister’s Column

5min
pages 11-12

Chairman’s Column

4min
pages 7-8
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