THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING
HR Tech Outlook | Monday, May 15, 2023
There are many new trends in South Africa’s HR sector. Many of them were driven by the pandemic and continue to be present to this day.
FREMONT, CA: South Africa is undoubtedly one of the most economically and technologically advanced countries in Africa. It provides great opportunities owing to its human capital, cultural diversity, natural resources, education, and financial system. These prominent characteristics are pushing the country full steam ahead, which has resulted in it becoming a strong manufacturing base, a powerful financial sector, and a nascent hi-tech industry that pulls in diverse talents across cultural boundaries.
The pandemic has brought about new trends in the country’s HR sector, which has transformed how businesses operate.
Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.
Integrating Tech with HCM: New-age industries have embraced cloud software to track and measure human capital to grow fast. One of the most significant top HR trends in South Africa is to make the adoption of cloud more broad-based and data-driven for better outcomes and take advantage of opportunities, not just locally, but also globally, and South African companies are becoming more international.
The Focus on Outcome: For decades, companies have been focusing on the inputs into processes, and rules and governance have been set around a company’s objectives such that it can drive profits. However, they are changing this concept and creating more purpose-based objectives which will be driven by outcomes, as it provides a more flexible and workable structure for the future.
Recruitment of Top-tier Talent: The search for good talent in hi-tech industries will continue to exist alongside running technology mindsets at non-tech firms. A global workplace for customized skills, especially in software development, product design, analytics, and AI will be boosted by outsourcing and most working models.
Skills Development: The human resources and management sector in South Africa has been through a change in skills. Factors that drove the adoption of mechanization in the manufacturing sector will also become relevant and influential in the service-based sector. Automation that uses conventional intelligence technologies and platforms will provide a more efficient way for customer life-cycle support and management.
The Emphasis on Employee Experience: In a couple of years, millennials will comprise the majority of the African workforce, and to accommodate them, workforces will require reorientation to drive engagement and experience perspectives with the millennial employee at the center. Companies that emphasize experience will draw better talent and will consequently succeed more in the marketplace. In addition, systems and platforms will shift from a process-centric approach to a people-and-experience-centric outlook.
Remote Work and Multiculturalism: Africa’s human capital trends will take center stage as work drives the globalization of the workplace and the workforce across multiple other industries in various geographical locations. As companies have access to talented individuals anywhere in the world for certain specializations, moving them to project-based companies will create multicultural teams and objectives. The South African economy will benefit from the open, extended, multicultural format of future workspaces with digital communications and collaborations driving the shift.
More in News