Women in Business Is the Tip of the Iceberg for Work in the Future
Updated: Jul 5, 2020

Our series #SuperWomen is coming very soon, stay tuned !!! In the meanwhile, we want to empower you with inspiring articles.
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A discussion about gender and employment for the next generation of workers
In many rich countries, the dominant model is now a two-tier family income, with both parents working full-time.
For the first time in American history, the balance of the workforce tipped towards equality in 2009. Women now occupy half of the nation’s jobs.
In fact, the UK and several other nations reached the same tipping point a year later, by 2010.
Worldwide, women dominate colleges and professional schools on every continent with the exception of Africa.
In the US, for every two men who received a BA degree in 2010, three women did likewise.
Of the 15 job categories projected to grow over the next decade, 12 are primarily occupied by women.
In the last decade, a quarter of women in the UK are now the main breadwinners in the family unit. This figure was just 4% in 1969.
Gender aside, in the future we will see a more flexible economy, with collaborative-freelance workers outnumbering permanent employees.A secure job will be a thing of the past. Economies will be guided by new values, a generational shift, with more women increasingly at the top table.
A new framework
Management expert, Gary Hamel, said: “in The Future of Management, I introduced a simple framework — my version of Maslow’s hierarchy except that in this case, it’s not a hierarchy of human needs, but of human capabilities at work.”
Hamel highlighted human capabilities like:
Passion
Creativity
Initiative
Intellect or personal competence
Diligence
Obedience
In reverse order, the capabilities that Hamel refers to are:
At the bottom of the rung, there's obedience — employees who show up each day and follow all the rules and procedures.
Above that is diligence — employees who work hard, who stay until the job is done, and take personal responsibility for delivering great results. Again, this is critical. You can’t build a winning organization with slackers.
After diligence comes intellect, personal competence — every business wants employees with world-class skills, well trained, and eager to learn.
Beyond that is initiative — employees who spring into action whenever they see a problem or opportunity. They don’t need to be instructed, bound by a job description. No. They're instinctively proactive.
At the next level lies creativity — employees eager to challenge conventional wisdom; hunters of innovative ideas, from random sources.
At the pinnacle is passion — employees who see work as a calling, to have an impact on the world. They’re totally engaged. They have a purpose.
A job for life will not exist by 2050. By 2050 work and employment will look like this:
Most things will be gig or project work
Hierarchies will be decimated
Career ladders will be dismantled
The value of work will be redefined
“We still think in terms of planning and ordering change — there is little time for that.” — Gary Hamel
Management with detailed planning, control, and compliance with policies will be obsolete. Future pop-up leaders and managers will seek:
Bold experimentation
Seek and reward failure
Reward excellent failures
Innovation will be critical in the future to ensure that continuous improvement flourishes, at a time when discontinuous change is rampant. Incremental innovation will no longer be good enough. Radical and revolutionary innovation will be in demand.
Final Thoughts
Workers in the future will learn something new every day, in their spare time. They’ll be those who exhibit:
Radical and profound artists of creation
Exercise their creative talent
Bold, brash and diverse
Be free-agents i.e. not cubicle slaves
Value life experience above reward and tenure
Innovative risk-takers
Independent, self-reliant and brimming with confidence
Their core competencies will include:
Personal reinvention through self-learning
Accept work as a series of gigs or projects
Follow a distinct or extinct ethos
Trust their Intuition through self-empowerment
Be happy and self-sufficient
Our children will break all the rules. Male and Female workers will be equally represented in all sectors and rewarded on merit and ability, not gender.
Wait — Will workers of the future break rules or simply remove the human-made bureaucratic preferences that previous generations created?
Written by Paul Myers. MBA
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