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The Future of Work Closing Keynote: ODAM 2005 November 6, 2006

The Future of Work Closing Keynote: ODAM 2005 November 6, 2006. Colin G. Drury University at Buffalo: SUNY. CGD/IE496/06. Human Factors and the Future. The idea: If we know where the world is going, we know where work is going.

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The Future of Work Closing Keynote: ODAM 2005 November 6, 2006

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  1. The Future of WorkClosing Keynote: ODAM 2005November 6, 2006 Colin G. Drury University at Buffalo: SUNY CGD/IE496/06

  2. Human Factors and the Future • The idea: • If we know where the world is going, we know where work is going. • If we know where the work is going, we know where human factors is going. • Where World is going: Globalization, etc. as the driving force on work • Global forces shaping business and society • Impact on Work and workforce CGD/IE491/06

  3. Factors Affecting Work • Demographics: Who we are • Enterprise: from agriculture through manufacturing to service • Globalization: Think globally, act locally • Work Intensity: Overwork and Underwork • Technology: Pervasive computing CGD/IE491/06

  4. Demographics • USA population is rising, by 25% from 1990-2010, therefore workforce increasing: labor force participation rate is 66% • Participation rates are 60% for women, 76% for men, only 30% for people with disabilities • All participation rates are rising • Age group 55-64 is the fastest growing • Two-thirds of the expected increase by 2050 comes from immigration • Workforce demographics trend is towards increased diversity CGD/IE491/06

  5. Manufacturing Service Agriculture CGD/IE491/06

  6. Enterprise • Since 19th Century, less people in agriculture but higher production • Same trend in manufacturing in 20th Century • Total workforce in manufacturing has remained relatively constant but fraction has been decreasing • Service is main growth area. Note that service embedded in other sectors, e.g. IT workers CGD/IE491/06

  7. CGD/IE491/06

  8. Nature of Service • Typically, service is joint production of offering by customer and worker • Customers demand high quality, custom offerings, low price • Workforce more exposed to customers: e.g. outsourcing aircraft maintenance • Increases skill and knowledge requirements of workforce • Manufacturing looks more like service • Customers strongly influenced by recovery from problems CGD/IE491/06

  9. CGD/IE491/06

  10. Globalization • The Globalization of Production • The Globalization of Customers • The Globalization of Shareholder Value • The Globalization of Human Concerns CGD/IE491/06

  11. CGD/IEA02/00

  12. CGD/IEA02/00

  13. CGD/IEA02/00

  14. Business Changes • General heading of “Globalization” • Globalization a combination of market and political forces shaping business and life • Industry becomes spread across world regions as IT becomes ubiquitous • Global capital markets force “creative destruction” of businesses with low shareholder value • Means business must act and react rapidly to changing customer demands CGD/IE491/06

  15. Beyond Business • Business changing from managerial capitalismto shareholder capitalism • Instant information, large shareholders force change • National governments having to reduce costs and become more transparent to attract investment: The Golden Straightjacket (Friedman, 1999) • Must adjust to decentralization, greater mobility, simultaneity, more alternatives CGD/IE491/06

  16. Outsourcing • Globalization allows some work to be performed far from its origin: • USPS address coding can be “offshore” • Who answers your airline query? (see also automation!) • Airline maintenance done in countries where it is cheaper • Business challenge in “over-developed” world: > 80% have foreign competition • What are error implications? e.g. language errors in aviation maintenance project CGD/IE491/06

  17. Work Intensity CGD/IE491/06

  18. Work Intensity • Evidence (Schor, 1991) that hours of work per year are increasing in the USA • Increase in the hours worked per year • From 1805 to 1905 hours for men • From 1293 to 1526 for women • Increase in people working very long weeks • Increase in people working less than full time • But people want about 40 hours: The Goldilocks Hypothesis CGD/IE491/06

  19. (…..but they are all on incentive system…..)

  20. Work Intensity: Examples • Toronto Transit Strike April 2005: • April 2005 Strike averted. One issue was fines for drivers early or late at bus stops. • Osaka Train Crash April 2005: • Drivers face financial penalties for lateness as well as being forced into harsh and humiliating "training" programs; a few have been terminated without pay altogether. The union alleges at least one other driver committed suicide recently following management harassment and threats of job termination when he made an unscheduled stop for safety check. CGD/IE491/06

  21. Work Intensity = SATO ?? NASA data Baseline Missions CGD/IE491/06

  22. F/B/C Missions Success/Failure CGD/IE491/06

  23. Technology • Work is moving from the physical to the cognitive (see Crossman etc, 1950s!) • Malone (2004) predicts that computer and communication technologies have profoundly altered the nature of work • Large but decentralized enterprises can remain agile, e.g. success of Linux • Ubiquitous computing has changed most jobs profoundly • But Old Jobs still around! CGD/IE491/06

  24. Implications for Work: 1 • Demographics: Increased workforce diversity: gender, age, immigration, working hours. Must accommodate non-traditional workers into the mainstream rather than as special cases requiring accommodation CGD/IE491/06

  25. Implications for Work: 2 • Service Enterprise: Employees have exposure to customers. Also important in Manufacturing with mass customization. Need to recognize the social skills inherent in the “mutual production of an offering” by employee and customer • Globalization: Employees are expected to be available around the clock (email, cell phones), with shift work of white collar professions, as well manufacturing and distribution. Also potential for global standards rather than national standards CGD/IE491/06

  26. Implications for Work: 3 • Work Intensity: Longer hours of work for some and part time work for others implies issues of workload and skill maintenance. As Quality and productivity demands increase, demands on the workforce will change the incidence of job stress. Unemployment, as jobs shift to other countries and regions, will require retraining in new skills and knowledge CGD/IE491/06

  27. Implications for Work: 4 • Technology: the socio-technical system is changing dramatically. Implies fresh options for function allocation, and also a macro-ergonomic approach of integrating allocation of function into socio-technical systems design. Also technology is aiding seepage of work into leisure time via worldwide cellular telephones and email CGD/IE491/06

  28. HF Implications • Greater diversity of workforce AND jobs • HF is matching Task Demands to Human Capabilities: C > D for low error rates • Whatever the distributions of C and D, the mean of C – D and its standard deviation: • c-d = c - d • 2c-d = 2c + 2d • If c = 100, d = 90, and 2c= 2d = 10, then p(C-D<0) = 24% • If 2c= 15, then p(C-D<0) = 32% CGD/IE491/06

  29. Need for HF • If Diversity of jobs and people increases, then p(mismatch) increases, so that HF and IE generally are more important • We need to be part of the solution, not part of the “squeeze more out of less” problem • Two levels of response: • Professional Level: Where should the profession be moving to stay ahead of the worldwide demand changes? • Enterprise Level: What should my company do? CGD/IE491/06

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