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Building in-house talent, revamping employer brand, & more: HR priorities for 2023

• By Rhucha KulkarniSmriti
Building in-house talent, revamping employer brand, & more: HR priorities for 2023

2022 posed numerous challenges as internal talent systems and processes went through transformation. In 2023, shifting skills, scarce talent, high turnover and the changed power dynamic between the employee-employer dynamic will continue to influence the talent decisions of business and HR leaders. Thus, HR leaders must explore innovative ways to respond to the shifting needs of talent, and identify strategies to proactively respond to talent scarcity crisis amidst the disruptive business landscape market. 

In a recent webcast, Sheetal Bhanot Shetty, Chief Human Resource Officer, Infra.Market; Santhosh Reddy, Co-founder and CTO, ShakeDeal and Jayati Pardhy, HR Head, Keka HR came together to discuss the top priorities for HR leaders in fast-growing organisations, startups and SMEs. Here are some insights from the discussion: 

 

A look back into 2022

The first half of 2022 evoked euphoria and excitement as businesses explored new growth verticals and demanded top talent, leading to talent scarcity. New challenges for HR emerged. Getting people back to office required sensitive change management, and emotional intelligence demands were pushed. As the year went by, economic uncertainty prevailed and organisations shifted focus to hiring cautiously and attracting better quality talent. This trend is expected to continue through 2023. 

Top Talent Priorities For 2023 

The ever-changing scenario has pushed boundaries for all organizations leading to the following top HR agendas: 

Hiring right: Hiring for 2023 shall be about cautious and conscious hiring i.e. quality over quantity, suggests Jayati Pardhy, HR Head, Keka HR. “Most start-ups are looking at efficiency rather than long working hours”, says she. Sheetal resonates this thought by mentioning that the hiring strategy needs to be very well defined for a diversified and multi-skilled workforce. HR must develop a mind-shift from merely ‘hiring for the role’ to ‘actual functionality and intrinsic involvement of individual’ and ‘building a career for the person’. The hiring strategy has to be around making the candidate aware of the culture. “When hiring for senior roles at Keka, we encourage people to come into the office and spend a day so that they get the overall experience including benefits, culture, people, CEO etc.”, shares Jayati. 

Sheetal emphasises that this is a continuous journey and HR is the catalyst to move business ahead, helping shape careers, design the leadership, get the adaptability into the organisation. 

HR policies and processes offer guidelines. But interpretation of these must be with care, empathy, concern, and respect. People stay back when they feel wanted and recognized. HR needs to think of how to prepare a policy while keeping the passion alive, because people-connect cannot have a design, it is a matter of connecting with heart, soul and genuine thought.  

Digital transformation is cog in the wheel to drive this. Santosh highlights how feedback loops are made possible by the right tech solutions in place. “Whenever an employee is going through a phase of underappreciation or not getting opportunity, these feedback loops can help us get analytics in place”. HR plays a critical role, showcasing talent analytics to top management, making them aware and driving them to engage with right talent. The right blend talent connect and people process will help organisations maintain an edge in the talent space.