Evolving Nature of Retirement Calls for Evolving Workplace-Based Career Services
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2023), nearly 25% of the labor force is aged 55 or older and therefore eligible for or approaching retirement. Some of these workers will experience retirement that does not involve an immediate cessation of work. According to the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies, over 33% of workers age 50+ expect to work in retirement (Collinson & Cho, 2023a) and over 50% of Millennial and Generation Z workers plan to do the same (Collinson & Cho, 2023b).
In spite of this increase in continuing work after retirement, services offered by employers to help workers prepare for continued employment are limited. About one in six workers have access to retirement-oriented lifestyle and transition planning resources, information about encore careers, and seminars and education about retirement transitions from their employers (Collinson & Cho, 2023b).
Practitioners can offer workers retirement-focused support and services they can build upon, such as one-on-one career development discussions, assistance with internal assignments, resumes and interviewing support, and workshops on career development topics. In fact, the goal is to take a more holistic approach to such services and to do so in a timeframe that is most advantageous to employees, i.e., several years prior to their retirement.
Primavera (cited in Morkides, 2022), believes approximately 40% of individuals who are one to two years into their retirement still have not fully adapted to their new situation. Practitioners can help individuals better manage the transitions from their current work roles to those in retirement, avoiding a lengthy transition and increasing the likelihood of success
The Best Time to Offer Career Transition Programs
Timing is the key to the process; instead of waiting until employees are about to retire, employees can start the conversation much sooner. While career transition programs may begin 30 to 90 days prior to an employee’s retirement date, some employers offer financial retirement courses much earlier, e.g. three to five years in advance of a planned retirement date. Retirement-focused career development support could be offered simultaneously or immediately following a financial course, so a holistic plan can be developed.
There are several reasons why an early start is critical. All require time. These include:
Integrating Career Development Theories, Concepts and Practices
Workplace career service providers can leverage several career development theories, concepts and practices for retirement services, including:
Program Components of Workplace-based Career Services
According to Lytle et al.(2015a), workplace-based retirement career services should include the following.
Lytle and others (2015a) had several recommendations for career development practitioners. One is helping clients identify the full range of retirement influences such as personal, health, financial, familial, and culture. Others include determining whether measures are normed with the target population and taking into account intersectionality, particularly relative to post-retirement employment discrimination.
Phased retirement programs allow workers to reduce the number of hours and work demands with their current employer in preparation for retirement. These can be formal programs offered by the employer. Alternately, they could be informal arrangements such as transitioning from management to individual contributor roles or the ability to work on a contingent basis, according to the Society for Human Resource Management (Miller, 2019). Knowledge transfer to colleagues is often a component.
Summary
Retirement is changing. Workplace-based career services can help employees prepare. Employers may have foundational pieces. Practitioners inside and out of the organization may overlay additional components based on career development theory and recommended practices to fill in the gaps. Offering these services several years prior to retirement can create a win-win situation for both the employee and the organization.
References
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Collinson, C., & Cho, H. (2023a). Life in retirement: Pre-retiree expectations and retiree realities. Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies. https://transamericainstitute.org/docs/default-source/research/life-in-retirement-preretirees-expectations-retiree-realities-report-september-2023.pdf
Collinson, C., & Cho, H. (2023b). Post-pandemic realities: The retirement outlook of the multigenerational workforce. Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies. https://transamericainstitute.org/docs/default-source/research/post-pandemic-retirement-realities-multigenerational-workforce-report-july-2023.pdf
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Andrea Updegrove has been with the Department of Defense since 2011 in a variety of roles, primarily human resources and training and development. Her most recent position involved providing career development guidance and strategic human capital analysis for procurement professionals. Since 2019, she also served as an internal coach across the DoD and federal government. She holds a BA in Sociology from Cornell University and an MEd in Human Resource Development from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and is currently pursuing an MA in Psychology with a concentration in Industrial/Organizational Psychology from George Mason University. She can be reached at andreaupdegrove@gmail.com
Denise Edmondson on Sunday 06/16/2024 at 04:29 PM
I am recent Graduate with a Bsc. In Career Development but the country where I live do not have jobs for Career Development specialist. As a result, it is a task to find a job that suits the training skills. Thinking of many ways to utilize these skills , retirees came to my thoughts. Therefore, this is a very useful article.