Conference Board issues guide for managers on speaking
with mature workers about retirement
Newswise —
As baby boomers move closer to the traditional
retirement
age, corporations are being challenged to keep mature workers engaged,
retain their knowledge within the organization, and harness the benefits of
an intergenerational workforce.
The
Conference Board has issued Putting Experience to Work – A Guide to
Navigating Legal and Management Issues Relating to a Mature Workforce to
fill the gap in knowledge – legal, managerial, and cultural – on how to
engage mature workers and get the most from their knowledge and abilities.
“Ultimately the Guide shows how to manage mature workers in such a way as to
motivate and retain them and to keep them performing at peak capacity,” says
Diane Piktialis, Mature Workforce Program Leader at The Conference Board.
Effective
best practices discussed include honest performance reviews, individual
development plans, continuous and universal training, and succession
planning and knowledge transfer.
Written by
Deborah Weinstein, Esq., founder and president of The Weinstein Firm, and
David Micah Kaufman, senior consultant, The Weinstein Firm, the Guide is an
all-in-one manual for managers who recognize the talents of experienced
workers and want to do their best to keep them on the job and performing
optimally or to effectively handle a transition away from the company.
Questions
answered by the Guide include how to assess a mature workers’ performance,
and how to identify retirement intentions and/or intentions to remain with
the company in some capacity.
“There are
legal pitfalls to managing the mature workforce – but this Guide helps
managers and their companies navigate around these issues and succeed,” says
Weinstein. “The lesson from the Guide is that ignoring the growing mature
workforce is not a solution. Companies can smartly manage the legal risks by
understanding the law and legal best practices.”
The book
shows how companies can successfully manage their mature workers and remain
compliant with the laws that protect them. Weinstein says that by following
the advice in the Guide, managers need not be intimidated by the rules and
regulations that protect the mature workforce.
COMPANIES
BENEFIT FROM AGE DIVERSITY
“Today’s workplace features representatives of every generation working
side-by-side,” says Lorrie Foster, Executive Director, Councils and Research
Working Groups, The Conference Board. “For organizations to be successful,
they need to make use of this generational diversity, drawing on the unique
experiences, insights, work styles, and perspectives of all these
generations.”
As the
baby boom generation ages, the number of workers who are near and beyond
what many think as being “retirement” age is increasing. The Bureau of Labor
Statistics estimates that from 2000 to 2010, the number of workers over the
age of 65 will increase by 30 percent, while the number of workers between
ages 35 and 44 will decline by 10 percent.
Apart from
contributing to business success, supporting mature workers is a legal
requirement. Among other state and federal laws that protect older workers,
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) prohibits employment
discrimination against persons 40 years of age or older.
“By
weaving in the legal background throughout, the Guide dispels much of a
manager’s discomfort of beginning some of the delicate discussions
surrounding mature worker management, including retirement options and
succession planning,” says Kaufman.
According
to the Guide, certain words and phrases, such as “taking it easy” and
“cutting back” should be avoided when speaking with mature workers about
their future. For older workers to feel involved in the continuing success
of the organization and to comply with the law, managers cannot be seen as
making assumptions about, or actually pressuring, older workers to plan for
their retirements.
Concludes
Jeri Sedlar, Senior Advisor to The Conference Board on mature workforce
issues: “It’s important to remember that when work usually meant hard
physical labor, both men and women were worn out by the time they reached
their 50s and 60s, so most didn’t make it to retirement. But in today’s
digital age, more people use computers and phones and sit at desks in
air-conditioned offices. Since sophisticated machines essentially do the
‘heavy lifting,’ the idea of needing to rest at the end of your career
because your body is physically worn out from long days of backbreaking work
just isn’t true any longer for many people.”
About The
Conference Board
Non-partisan and not-for-profit, The Conference Board is one of the world’s
leading business membership and research organizations. The Conference Board
produces The Consumer Confidence Index and the Leading Economic Indicators
for the U.S. and other major nations. These barometers can have a major
impact on the financial markets. The Conference Board also produces a wide
range of authoritative reports on corporate governance and ethics, human
resources and diversity, executive compensation, outsourcing, profiting from
a mature workforce, and corporate citizenship. Our conference and council
programs bring together more than 12,000 senior executives each year to
share insights and learn from each other. Visit The Conference Board’s
award-winning website at
http://www.conference-board.org