Andrew Karpie | March 15 2022
In an environment of ongoing change and heightened uncertainty, organizations are looking to better manage their entire non-employee, external workforces as a path to higher levels of agility, efficiency, competitive advantage and financial performance. To accomplish this, organizations will have to leverage “data at scale” and “advanced analytics” in a vast number of ways.
But as noted in Part 1 of this series, accomplishing this is hardly a trivial undertaking, and it requires resources and capabilities well beyond the capacity of most organizations. Consequently, new approaches and solutions are needed. (Related reading: “Leveraging Five-Star Data.”)
Organizations now need to and can leverage, consume and derive value from data like never before. But the decades of well-established, standardized practices and technology for contingent workforce sourcing and management have not set the stage for this to happen.
In particular, contingent workforce management (CWM) programs in the past have tended to rely almost entirely on VMS technology for their data and business intelligence. But this has meant mostly operational program data presented ex-post in the form of VMS-based reports, filtered views, near-real-time dashboards, and BI outputs. Only the truly advanced programs were ingesting global market data, evaluating behavioral analytics, or considering how data could help them analyze the implications of pay parity for full-time employees versus contingent workers.
VMS providers have begun to introduce context-based, decision-support information into some workflows, but even that is typically at an early stage. At the same time, some VMS providers have branded themselves as platforms for managing extended workforces. But pure-play technology VMS providers largely remain niche, process-centric software point solutions.
These VMS solutions still emphasize operational data, with other types of data looked at as an add-on. And operational data, even if it is extracted from multiple VMSs, does not solve the whole problem (which is structural). The real problem for organizations today is finding a way to integrate multiple sources of operational program and market data and advanced analytics capabilities (i.e. AI, ML, etc.) to deliver use-case-targeted solutions for client organizations, suppliers and others.
The solution requires a different approach.
After many years of gradual evolution and lots of incremental changes in how organizations manage their narrowly defined contingent workforce or broadly defined extended workforce, a more transformational change seems to be occurring. The force behind this is the maturation and growing business applications of data-at-scale and advanced data analytics in many industries; and the CWM space is primed to follow.
An increasing number of organizations and CWM industry intermediaries now appear to be aligned to embrace a different future. That is a transition from siloed, process-centric, single-system contingent workforce management to data-centric, integration-platform-based enablement of externally sourced work/services.
This emerging approach:
Organizations must now come to grips with how they will move beyond CWM into this data-driven future.
Today, to make the leap to the data-centric, organizations have three options:
These options are compared and evaluated as follows:
A platform-based approach offers organizations many of the benefits of a traditional single-vendor solution approach (e.g. in terms of solution implementation, training, support). But it offers much more. Engaging a provider of a holistic, data-centric integration platform is the best option for organizations to arrive at the data-centric capabilities needed to optimize the performance of their external work/services. What to Look for in a Data-Centric Integration Platform Provider
The industry shift from siloed, process-centric, single-system contingent workforce management to integrated, data-centric, platform-based enablement of external work/services is underway. Organizations must find and engage the best partner with the best approach that can support them through their own transformations to the data-driven, post-CWM world of external, contracted work and services.
Such a provider must be materially committed to a data-centric integration platform strategy that is currently being executed by:
In this time of transformation and transition, the stakes are high. If an organization cannot check all these boxes, it will know it should continue looking for the platform provider that fits the bill.
For more on the benefits of a holistic platform approach, download “8 Advantages of an Integrated Workforce Management Platform.”
If you’re interested in learning more about how Magnit is helping organizations implement winning contingent workforce programs globally, please contact a Magnit representative at info@magnitglobal.com.
Disclaimer: The content in this blog post is for informational purposes only and cannot be construed as specific legal advice or as a substitute for legal advice. The blog post reflects the opinion of Magnit and is not to be construed as legal solutions and positions. Contact an attorney for specific advice and guidance for specific issues or questions.