When Jeffrey Joerres first joined Manpower, in 1993, the labor market was relatively stable and the company was still largely focused on traditional office, clerical, and industrial staffing. But since then, the employment landscape has been dramatically reshaped by globalization and rapid advances in technology. Joerres, who led ManpowerGroup for 15 years before stepping down in 2015, responded to the shifts in kind, expanding the company’s international operations and moving into the increasingly competitive market for IT, finance, and engineering professionals. Joerres, now 56 and a private investor based in Milwaukee, talked with HBR’s editor, Amy Bernstein, about the transformation of work and how to manage it.
Globalization, Robots, and the Future of Work: An Interview with Jeffrey Joerres
When Jeffrey Joerres first joined Manpower, in 1993, the labor market was relatively stable and the company still focused largely on traditional office, clerical, and industrial staffing. But since then globalization and rapid advances in technology have dramatically reshaped the employment landscape. During his 15 years as CEO, Joerres expanded the company’s international operations and moved into the increasingly competitive market for IT, finance, and engineering professionals.
In this interview with HBR’s editor, he describes how micromarket analysis reveals “geolocated pools of skills” that businesses can tap—until competitors muscle in, deplete the skills pool, and drive up wages. So companies must acquire a “nomadic mentality” that will allow them to establish more-temporary, smaller operations as well as large ones. He acknowledges that “when full-scale robotics and artificial intelligence arrive in a broad-based, affordable, easily justifiable way,” hordes of workers will be displaced, with little or no preparation for very different jobs. Joerres advises companies that want to develop a workforce strategy to put multiple work models in place—crowdsourcing, distant manufacturing, temporary contractors moving to full-time—and truly practice them. “When are we done with this efficiency thing?” he says. “The answer is never.”