Mercer's 2016 Global Talent Trends study found that leveraging an increasingly diverse labour pool is the third most important workforce trend impacting business, following the rising competition for talent from emerging economies and a talent shortage.
Some 9 out of 10 organisations took the line that the competition for talent will increase in 2016, and over one-third expect this increase to be significant.
Surprisingly, 85 per cent of organisations reported that their talent management programmes and policies need an overhaul.
The survey revealed that despite 70 per cent of organisations confident of filling critical roles with internal candidates, 28 per cent of employees said they plan to leave in the next 12 months even though they are satisfied with their current role.
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While 66 per cent of companies in Asia feel confident about filling roles internally, 29 per cent of employees plan to leave this year, even if they are satisfied, primarily due to lack of career progression opportunities, it added.
"However, creating the right infrastructure to identify the right workforce numbers and capabilities required to support a dynamic business environment, and then to invest in building the talent pool is a 2-4 year process," Naresh added.
In today's global environment, the report pointed out that
successful talent strategies depend on an organisation's ability to engage, inspire and retain employees of different genders, ages, races and backgrounds.
While 73 per cent of companies are working towards diverse leadership teams, only 54 per cent of employees say their organisation has effective programmes in place to do so, the survey found out.