Remote work. Signing bonuses. Lowered education requirements. On-the-job training. According to a new report from The Conference Board and Emsi Burning Glass, employers are turning to an array of new tactics to compete for applicants in a historically tight US labor market.
How Employers Combat Labor Shortages: Insights from Online Job Ads Datadraws on real-time analysis of openings posted on nearly 40,000 separate sources, including job portals, corporate websites, and anywhere else on the web where jobs are advertised. This unique dataset—which has tracked over 320 million unique job posts since 2007—reveals the new lengths employers are going to attract scarce talent.
“When US unemployment reached 14.8% in April 2020, few could have predicted the widespread difficulties in hiring less than 18 months later,” said Gad Levanon, PhD, Vice President, Labor Markets at The Conference Board. “Yet the demographic factors that drove labor shortages before the pandemic have returned with a vengeance—especially in blue-collar and lower-paid work. Coupled with reopening pains and reordered expectations around wages and the workplace, employers are facing a historic mismatch between their demand for labor and the available supply.”
“Our data has tracked the clear shift in bargaining power from employers to workers over the past year,” said Bledi Taska, PhD, Chief Economist at Emsi Burning Glass. “To compete in this environment, companies are taking proactive steps that have become increasingly visible in their job ads—from signaling the enhanced pay and benefits on offer to casting a wider net for prospective hires, whether in terms of credentials, experience, or geography.”
Among the report’s key insights:
More companies are offering bonuses to new hires and including salary transparency in their job ads
Employers are “downcredentialling”—lowering education requirements (and offering on-the-job training) to reach more candidates
To help fill the education gap, more job postings now advertise on-the-job training—a trend that started in 2019 and accelerated in 2021.
The heightened competition for labor is forcing employers to rethink how to attract and retain workers—while acute shortages remain, and over the long term
About The Conference Board
The Conference Board is the member-driven think tank that delivers trusted insights for what’s ahead. Founded in 1916, we are a non-partisan, not-for-profit entity holding 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt status in the United States. www.conference-board.org.
About Emsi Burning Glass
Emsi Burning Glass is the world’s leading authority on job skills, workforce talent, and labor market dynamics, providing expertise that empowers businesses, education providers, and governments to find the skills and talent they need and enables workers to unlock new career opportunities.
Headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, and Moscow, Idaho, Emsi Burning Glass is active in more than 30 countries and has offices in the United Kingdom, Italy, New Zealand, and India. The company is backed by global private equity leader KKR. www.burning-glass.com
For further information contact:
Jonathan Liu
732.991.1754
JLiu@tcb.org
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Charts
Measure which job titles in corporate America become more or less popular over time.
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how employers are reacting to shifts in the labor market and the ways in which they are working to combat the labor shortage
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There has been a large increase in the share of office job ads that mention remote work since before the pandemic.
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certain skills and groups of skills have grown more rapidly in demand, identifies individual skills mentioned in online job ads and groups them into clusters
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