Raise your hand if you have too many resources.
Anyone?
Exactly.
The problem of plenty is a rare on these days. Instead, the “do more with less” challenge is an everyday reality for business leaders. Today, every successful manager must also be an effective resource management and change management professional.
A fluid balance: Resource and change management
Two problems, then: Having enough resources and knowing how to manage them effectively! Even if you have enough resources, it’s not about just leaving the faucet on. Instead, it’s about optimizing resources to drive change most seamlessly and profitably.
In a change-fraught business environment, a fluid approach to effective change management for managers is required. Busy leaders everywhere throw up their hands and ask: How can the company expect this of me while I have already my hands full?
As it turns out, fluid resource management is not an extra ask. In many cases, it’s the only way to meet expectations. Consider today’s agile customer experience (CX) goals. The traditional approach, which allowed managers to set clear processes and resources around organizational priorities, is no longer adequate for maximizing resource efficiency in business. Instead, leaders must manage resources at the speed of emerging data insights from every customer lifecycle.
Here are the top four agile resource management strategies topping leaders’ lists today.
Strategy 1: Embrace the uncertainty
Successful managers accept the shifting nature of resource relevance. They see the fluid environment as an opportunity to maximize high-relevance resources. This includes both talent and technology. The big advantage? It unlocks faster growth for everyone.
For instance, a project member could be reassigned based on the evaluation of current and in-progress skills, project status, and career path alignment. This makes the shift beneficial for the company and the employee. This also reduces investments in energizing and training employees on new skills and projects.
Strategy 2: Spot emerging needs
If you aren’t proactive, you’re already failing. Rather than a threat, this saying should resonate as an ongoing challenge. Resource management can’t be just an occasional exercise for high-performing managers. Strong leaders have their ears to the ground and intervene without losing time. This means tuning in with the intent to understand employee experience (EX) in terms of:
- How effective are team members feeling in their current role?
- To what opportunities within the team or the organization do they feel most aligned?
- What are the top tools that value? Are those tools being provided by the company yet?
- What do team members perceive as their biggest productivity and performance obstacles?
By gaining intelligent insights into employee journeys, managers can drive well-informed decisions.
Strategy 3: Nurture agile models
While some resource requirements may be static, successful managers know that some percentage of their resource ecosystem should be absolutely agile. They look for opportunities to partner with gig workers and low-commitment vendor partners. They do not limit this approach to project-related hiring. This strategy extends to highly specialized tasks. Similarly, in the case of working capital loans or other financial resources, they might look for repayment agility. Some agile resourcing techniques include:
Employee referral program for gig workers
Agile sourcing often fails due to the time it takes to find the right short-term talent. Some managers develop smart sourcing ecosystems to get past this challenge. They ensure the company always has access to relevant, well-acquainted gig workers. This translates into speed-to-hire and high-trust relationships.
AI-led onboarding and contract management
Creating and closing manual contracts with short-term talent can be a real challenge. Top managers acknowledge this operational reality. They invest in automation and AI-led contract management platforms. This enables swift, seamless onboarding without any delays and bottlenecks.
Best-in-industry payment processing cycles
Despite limited commitment, some of the best vendors in the industry are willing to work with these managers owing to one key reason – promptly processed payments. At a time when B2B sales cycles are getting longer and contract tenures shorter, vendors see the value in partnering with managers who keep their cash flow going.
Leverage Vendor Management Platforms
In line with the need for agility, investing in software for vendor management can greatly enhance a manager’s ability to handle multiple vendor relationships efficiently. Such software provides streamlined workflows, better visibility into vendor performance, and automated processes that save time and reduce errors.
Strategy 4: Encourage an output-first mindset
Top leaders are intent on building a culture that equates resources with output. Every resource discussion is centered around the impact on business rather than operations. This ensures that every team member presents a clear, data-led case. Managers can make fair comparisons to determine resource priorities.
Leaders who embrace fluid resource management are equally invested in corroborating cases with authentic, real-time employee sentiment. This helps them a) accelerate on resource allocation basis emerging trends without losing time and b) do away with processes that drain resources.
The smartest managers don’t just use EX tools to implement resource strategies. They also use them to monitor impact analytics. They regularly track new, evolving output in alignment with EX trends. This allows them to optimize resource management for maximum value.
Ready to implement a fluid resource management ecosystem? Discover how you can leverage SogoEX for insights around resource allocation and improving employee experience. Connect with our team today to learn more!