1. Enhancing Worker Productivity
in Canada’s Tourism Sector
Dr. Michael Bloom
Vice-President, Organizational Effectiveness and Learning
The Conference Board of Canada
9th Annual Tourism HR Forum, Edmonton, AB
November 16, 2010
www.conferenceboard.ca
2. Human Capital
• Improving human capital is essential to
productivity, competitiveness, and
performance of our organizations and
communities.
• Human Capital is one of three key drivers of
productivity and organizational
performance.
• Other two are financial capital and physical
capital – machinery and equipment.
www.conferenceboard.ca
3. Human Capital and Productivity
• Canada’s productivity performance is
falling relative to nations, partly due to
our labour and skills shortages.
• Skills shortages include gaps,
mismatches and obsolescence.
• Skills shortages often (not always) result
from labour shortages in workplaces.
www.conferenceboard.ca
4. Unemployment Rate vs. Natural
Rate (percent), 1981-2015
13.0
12.0
11.0
Unemployment Rate
10.0
9.0
8.0
7.0
Natural rate
6.0
5.0
Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada.
www.conferenceboard.ca
5. Productivity Drivers
Firm-Specific
Factors
Human capital
al
n
apit
tio
ova
lc
sica
n In
Phy
Business & Policy
Environment
Degree of competition
ation
de
nership
x
ture
e Mi
Openness to tra
s
and investment
f ir m
ker
b a n iz
truc
rvi c
or
Foreign ow
f
of w
Size o
al s
rs/Ur
e
ct/S
ri
ss
ust
u s te
u
Cla
Prod
Ind
Global Forces
Cl
Trade liberalization World commodity Political events Other global events
price changes
Source: The Conference Board of Canada.
www.conferenceboard.ca
7. Report Card on Canada:
2010
• Canada ranks 14th among the 17
peer countries on innovation.
• Despite pockets of achievement,
Canada has been a consistent “D”
performer on its capacity to
innovate since the 1980s.
www.conferenceboard.ca
8. Organizations will need to fill positions for
which only a limited applicant pool exists
www.conferenceboard.ca
9. Demography adds Long-Term
Pressure:
• 20 per cent of Canada’s working
population reaches retirement age
by 2025.
www.conferenceboard.ca
10. 10 Trends in the World of Work,
2020
• Navigating through the Storm: Leaders and
the World of Work in 2020 (2010)
• Trends that will affect human capital and
reflect changes in the makeup of the
workforce.
www.conferenceboard.ca
11. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
1. Boomers won’t leave. Generations will mix.
• “Generational mixing” will be the norm: aging
boomers work longer to earn more so they can
afford to retire; changes in gov’t. regs. make it
less attractive to retire early.
• Successive generations, including the Gen-Xers
(born 1966-79) and the Gen-Yers (born 1980-
2000)- the young, middle-aged and old will be
sharing space, ideas, incomes, job titles.
www.conferenceboard.ca
12. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
2.The visible minority will be white.
• Falling birth rate, rising immigration will
create a truly unique society: majority of
urban workforce is not white—already close
to reality in Toronto.
• Opens enormous opportunities for new
products and services, improved access to
global markets: big competitive advantage.
• The challenge? How to integrate visible
minorities into every part of working life –
especially at the top.
www.conferenceboard.ca
13. Historical and Projected Immigration
to Canada, 1964-2020
Source: The Conference Board of Canada
www.conferenceboard.ca
14. Proportion Immigrants Born Europe &
Asia (by Period of Immigration)
Source: Census 2001, Statistics Canada
%
www.conferenceboard.ca
16. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
3. We’ll all be linked to work 24/7, whether we
want to be or not.
• A decade ago, Blackberry’s were just
starting to tie us to work. iPods, iPhones and
iPads didn’t exist—trend continues!
• Technology will connect us even more
completely a decade from now.
• Need to create boundaries to keep work from
storming through our privacy and leisure
time—both in for major redefinition.
www.conferenceboard.ca
17. 17
Interconnectivity Now
• Canadians are among the highest Internet
users in the world (16.8 million adults
use Internet for personal activities).
• Internet is vital to teens and adults:
students and profs (Facebook, Second
Life, LinkedIn, etc.).
• Internet and digital technologies are
embedded across all sectors of economy.
www.conferenceboard.ca
18. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
4. We’ll make more of what we consume,
where we consume it.
• Consumers today are creating their own
books, software games and music. This
trend, of producing the products you
consume, is called ‘prosumerism’, and
will spread quickly.
• This will spur producers to make their
products consumer friendly like never
before.
www.conferenceboard.ca
19. 19
Consumer Dynamics - Prosumerism
• Coined by Toffler and Tapscott: hybrid
of words ‘producer’ and ‘consumer’.
• Refers to consumers’ desire to
participate directly in generating value
from products and services and their
preference for interactive experiences.
• Prosumers like to customize and control
their consumption experiences.
www.conferenceboard.ca
20. 20
Shifting Consumption Dynamics
• Aided by technology, consumers are
ubiquitous participants in imagining,
collaborating, locating, selling, exploring,
purchasing, investing and more in
products and services.
• Demanding consumers inspire products:
Apple’s iPod and video-on-demand are
“supply responses” to those seeking to
personalize their experience consuming
and contributing to creative content.
www.conferenceboard.ca
21. 21
Shifting Consumption Dynamics
• Culture sector is shifting from producer-
centric to collaboration.
• Much more connection and interaction,
as producers and consumers co-drive the
creative economy.
• Producers and consumers spark off each
other in a creative, responsive cycle of
demand/supply of goods and services.
www.conferenceboard.ca
22. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
5. The office will be where we say it is.
• Work will be more and more delinked
from place (traditional workplace).
• The same technologies that keep us on
constant call also let us work
productively at a distance—in living
rooms, at a Starbucks, on a beach in
Florida.
• This can yield productivity gains!
www.conferenceboard.ca
23. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
6. Social media will be the community halls
of the future.
• They will provide the factory floor and
the office meeting room where groups
of workers can collaborate on projects
the way they now do socially on
Facebook and Twitter.
• Allows distant collaboration and
frequent regrouping of teams.
www.conferenceboard.ca
24. 24
Impact of Social Networking
• Millions of Canadians have accounts
on social networking sites (such as
Facebook, MySpace, Friendster, etc).
• Community sites provide tools that
allow consumers to modify their own
web pages and form communities.
• Has created huge potential among
employees for application to work.
www.conferenceboard.ca
25. Impact on Tourism Sector
• Consumers are increasingly going online
to research trips/vacations, read reviews
and self-book directly with suppliers.
• Talent is increasing challenging to attract
and retain – competition from other
sectors.
• Companies can use informative websites,
social media and mobile technology to
provide a better customer experience and
engage employees.
www.conferenceboard.ca
26. Hilton – iPhone Application
• iPhone application enables guests to
manage their hotel bookings –downloaded
over 340,000 times in less than a year.
• Expects customers to book over 100,000
room nights in 2010 via mobile app.
• Also provides a touch screen computer
service that acts as a concierge –nearby
restaurants, maps, check flight times, etc.
• Meeting customer needs = more loyalty!
www.conferenceboard.ca
27. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
7. Real companies will have virtual
locations.
• Some corporations have an online existence
as robust, lively and profitable as their
presence in the real world.
• By 2020, virtual locations may outnumber
bricks and mortar ones, with marketing
almost all online—and driving consumers
there. Also much more recruiting and
training at virtual sites.
www.conferenceboard.ca
28. Ireland’s Tourism Sector
& Social Media
• Travelshake.com - free for Irish tourism
businesses to use.
• Provides consumers with a simple platform
to plan a holiday in Ireland.
• Browse videos, images, social media feeds,
and the latest offers in one location.
• Gives businesses an opportunity to reach a
worldwide audience.
www.conferenceboard.ca
29. Travelshake.com
• Customized URL’s are used for profile
(www.Travelshake.com/Businessname).
• Owners can provide recommendations or
peer reviews on other local businesses.
• Over 100 businesses use the website.
• Has 7,000 tourism-related Twitter
followers.
• Future enhancements: user itineraries and
new iPhone applications.
www.conferenceboard.ca
30. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
8. Management will be pushed down & out.
• Top-down, centralized leadership models
will wither as flexible work formations and
management systems create highly
decentralized workforces – and decisions.
• When workers are out of the office, or
sharing jobs or exist only on-line, they are
hard to command and control in traditional
manner.
www.conferenceboard.ca
31. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
9. Contingent workers will become
unconditionally important.
• More part-time, seasonal and contract
workers will help companies adjust in
advance to quick changes in the type and
amount of work that needs to be done.
• But employees will be less loyal and make
it harder to enforce a single corporate
culture.
www.conferenceboard.ca
32. 10 Ways Your Workplace Will Change
10. Teamwork will be a learned skill, not
just a nice attitude.
• More outsiders, faster technology, wider
networks, more complex problems –
these are all arguments for more
teamwork.
• In the age of mass collaboration, the
ability to work on a team, and especially
to lead it, will be one of the most
important skills in any workplace.
www.conferenceboard.ca
33. What does this mean for the
Canadian Tourism Sector?
www.conferenceboard.ca
34. Tourism – Economic Outlook
• Demand for tourism
goods and services
forecast to rise from
$152 billion in
2006, to $237
billion in 2025.
• Labour market
demand will grow
from 1.71 million
jobs in 2006 to 2.21
millions jobs in
2025.
www.conferenceboard.ca
35. The Contribution of Learning and Skills
to Business Performance
Institute for Employment Studies, University of Sussex
www.conferenceboard.ca
36. Expand the Skilled Talent Pool:
Focus on Under-represented Populations
1. Women 15-64 – 12 million +
2. Immigrants – 6 million +
3. Mature (workers) 65+ – 4 million +
4. People with disabilities – 4 million +
5. Aboriginal Peoples – 1.3 million
6. Disengaged youth 16-25 – 1 million
www.conferenceboard.ca
37. Immigrants are Good for Business
• Immigrants and internationally educated
talent boost our economy by:
– Adding skilled workers to labour force;
– Bringing a desire to succeed;
– Stimulating innovation and creativity;
– Enriching our global economic
perspective; and
– Providing connections to foreign
markets.
www.conferenceboard.ca
38. Do Immigrants Make
Canadian Businesses More
Innovative?
www.conferenceboard.ca
39. Immigrants and Innovators
Immigrants tend to
be:
• Risk takers;
• Entrepreneurial;
• Innovative thinkers;
• They bring new
skills, knowledge
and contacts.
www.conferenceboard.ca
40. Research Objectives
1. Determine how much immigrants are
recognized as “individual” innovators.
2. Demonstrate the value of immigrant
talent to Canadian businesses.
3. Understand the relationship between
immigration and innovation at a national
level.
4. Test whether the relationship is universal
(i.e. across countries).
www.conferenceboard.ca
41. Findings from Previous Research
Positive Effects: Negative Effects:
• Increased cooperation • Decreased commitment to
among workgroups the organization
• Increased creativity • Increased absenteeism and
• Increased innovation turnover
• Decreased employee
satisfaction
Conclusion: Diverse teams that use their variety of
perspectives outperform non-diverse teams; those that do
not perform worse than non-diverse groups.
www.conferenceboard.ca
42. Immigrants: Innovation Outcomes
• Immigrants are associated with
innovation, specifically:.
− High Individual Achievements
− Increasing Canada’s trade levels
− Increasing Canada’s FDI
− More Global innovation
− Increasing Global FDI
www.conferenceboard.ca
43. Immigrants and Innovation
1. Create new businesses and employment
opportunities in a region.
2. Adapt or market existing sales and services
to a wider, diverse audience.
3. Market products in the tourism sector
internationally-linking to cultural interests
etc.
4. Create new product packages for key
markets, niche customer groups.
www.conferenceboard.ca
44. Key Finding: The Pathway to
Increasing Innovation
www.conferenceboard.ca
45. How Managers Can Be Empowering
1. Provide employees with avenues to ask
questions and raise ideas.
2. Offer employees choices.
3. Provide a rationale when issuing
directives.
www.conferenceboard.ca
46. Engaging Employees
• “High employee engagement correlates to
high levels of customer satisfaction,
customer retention, corporate performance
and brand consistency.” –Deloitte: Hospitality
2015
• Engaged and committed employees can
contribute their innovative thinking to
enhance productivity results.
• Businesses should rethink talent strategies
and talent management plans.
www.conferenceboard.ca
47. Fairmont – Ideas Count Program
• Encourages everyone to consider the
possibilities by constantly asking "what if..."
and then turns the ideas into reality.
• Empowers employees to share ideas and
fosters an environment of innovation and
creativity to enhance business results.
• Implemented ideas are posted on internal
website, to recognize employees whose ideas
have made a positive impact.
www.conferenceboard.ca
48. Enhancing Competitiveness with ITWs
• “Tool Kit for
Employers” builds
upon the CIC/TASC
publication, The
Employer’s Roadmap
at:
www.credentials.gc.ca/e
mployers/roadmap/roadm
ap.pdf
www.conferenceboard.ca
49. Toolkit For Employers
Objectives:
• Increase awareness of benefits and value
of hiring and retaining internationally
trained workers (ITWs)
• Assist Canadian businesses in hiring and
retention process by sharing knowledge
of tools and resources available – via
community, regional, provincial and
national programs and initiatives.
www.conferenceboard.ca
50. Toolkit for Employers
• Introduce you to an Employer’s Toolkit:
– Where to find internationally trained
workers (ITWs);
– How to select, integrate and retain
international talent;
– Practical tools and resources; and
– Success stories: e.g., SMEs with
international talent.
www.conferenceboard.ca
51. Conclusion
• Innovation is a key to productivity
gains—so hire for it, develop people for
it, and reward it—create a corporate
culture to promote it.
• New products and services can add value
to increase revenues and profit per hour
worked by employees.
• Process, incremental innovations that
improve customer experience also
improve productivity and the bottom line.
www.conferenceboard.ca
52. Conclusion
• Empowering can be profitable! – all
employees have capacity to innovate if
they are encouraged and recognized for
their efforts.
• Goal: match workplace change, customer
expectations, employee capacity with
changing patterns of diversity to create an
HR strategy that can build productivity
gain through innovation.
www.conferenceboard.ca