Posted: April 24th, 2025

Wk 3 discussion:Talent management trends

In the article, “

The Shifting Boundaries of Talent Management

”, you will read about emerging trends in your area of talent management. While you read the article identify three trends you would want to learn more about due to strong relevance for your specific company.

Imagine you are an HR professional at a company you are familiar with, management has asked you to identify, track, and prioritize important emerging trends within your area of talent management. 

Post a Response 

Based on the three trends you selected from the reading, respond to the following: 

  1. Explain why each of those three trends may be important to your organization.
  2. Recommend a priority list, from your three selected trends, and discuss the logic for your prioritiz

See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/349967658

  • The shifting boundaries of talent management
  • Article  in  Human Resource Management · March 2021

    DOI: 10.

    1002/hrm.22050

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    Vlad Vaiman

    California Lutheran University

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    Wayne F Cascio

    University of Colorado

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    David G. Collings

    Trinity College Dublin

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    S P E C I A L I S S U E A R T I C L E

    The shifting boundaries of talent management

    The effective management of talent is one of the great challenges of

    our time, particularly in light of the COVID-19 pandemic that has

    resulted in significant changes in how and where we work and that

    are likely to endure over time across the globe (Caligiuri, De Cieri,

    Minbaeva, Verbeke, & Zimmermann, 2020; Collings, Nyberg,

    McMackin, & Wright, in press). In the global context, Collings, Mellahi,

    and Cascio (2019) defined talent management as the (a) systematic

    identification of pivotal positions that differentially contribute to an

    organization’s sustainable competitive advantage on a global scale,

    (b) development of a talent pool of high-potential and high-performing

    incumbents who reflect the global scope of the MNE to fill these

    roles, and (c) establishment of a differentiated HR architecture to fill

    these roles with the best available incumbents to ensure their contin-

    ued commitment to the MNE.

    It has been over two decades since a group of McKinsey consul-

    tants (see Michaels, Handfield-Jones, & Axelrod, 2001) heralded the

    War for Talent, which marked the emergence of talent management as

    a distinct area of focus for organizational leaders and human resource

    professionals alike. However, the earliest roots of talent management

    can be traced to the 1960s and 1970s, when the need for a deeper,

    more comprehensive understanding of cross-cultural issues, expatriate

    management, and the effectiveness of differentiated management prac-

    tices were first mentioned in the academic literature (Cascio &

    Boudreau, 2016). The majority of academic interest in the topic, how-

    ever, has been more recent, particularly over the past decade (Al Ariss,

    Cascio, & Paauwe, 2014; Collings, Mellahi, & Cascio, 2017; Collings,

    Scullion, & Vaiman, 2015; Gallardo-Gallardo, Nijs, Dries, & Gallo, 2015;

    McDonnell, Collings, Mellahi, & Schuler, 2017). To a large extent, this

    interest may be explained by the widening gap between job demands

    and the skills available in the labor market. The phenomenon of talent

    management also remains a key area of interest for practitioners, with

    many struggling to deliver on the talent agenda in their own firms

    (Charan, Barton, & Carey, 2018; PWC, 2019).

    To be sure, the landscape has shifted significantly since the late

    1990s, when McKinsey consultants began their research that led to

    their conclusion of an ongoing “War for Talent.” However, many of

    the same challenges they identified have reemerged after the

    2007–2009 recession, including tight labor markets, more complex

    talent demands in terms of global business acumen, more complex

    technology and organizational structures, and increasing job mobility.

    According to a recent survey conducted for the Society for Human

    Resource Management’s Global Mobility and Immigration Sympo-

    sium (2020), 85% of respondents believe that global talent is needed

    to meet business needs, 40% of HR professionals struggle to find can-

    didates to staff their global teams, and 75% say foreign-born workers

    drive growth and innovation. However, additional complexity comes

    from four key factors that will fundamentally change the dynamics of

    contemporary talent management.

    It is difficult to begin any discussion on the future of talent man-

    agement without considering the impact of COVID-19.1 Although at

    the time of writing (October 2020) it has been only 7 months since

    the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic, the impact

    of the pandemic on work and employment in general has been

    unprecedented in modern times (Caligiuri et al., 2020; Collings &

    McMackin, 2020; Kniffin et al., 2020). There is little doubt that many

    of these changes, such as reshaping world trade (Schlesinger, 2020),

    will endure. The impact on talent management will be significant as

    well. While a thorough review of all current and potential impacts is

    beyond the scope of the current article, we highlight some examples

    of how the pandemic will likely affect the context of talent manage-

    ment. A first key impact is a shift in where work is done, with a signifi-

    cant increase in the extent of working from home (WFH), initially as a

    means of protecting employee wellbeing—physical, emotional, and

    financial. For example, Bank of America’s, 2020 workplace benefits

    report (Bank of America, 2020) reveals that 62% of employers feel

    extreme responsibility for their employees’ financial wellness, up from

    13% in 2013. Fully 83% of employers believe that financial wellness

    tools lead to greater productivity. It looks highly likely that many

    employers will reevaluate their polices on WFH long-term, resulting in

    a larger percentage of employees spending at least some of their time

    WFH. As a senior executive at KPMG recently noted: “Companies

    worldwide enabled remote workforces nearly overnight, and what

    started as an extraordinary pilot is now considered permanent in

    many organizations’ operating models” (Huffman, 2020).

    From a talent perspective, this creates opportunities in terms of

    more flexible working arrangements and the potential to access more

    geographically diverse talent pools. Staffing firm Robert Half, for

    instance, reported that 53% of senior managers hired new full-time or

    temporary staff remotely during the pandemic. Of those, 75% con-

    ducted remote interviews and onboarding sessions, 61% advertised

    fully remote jobs, and 60% expanded their search geographically to

    access a wider pool of potential talent (Robert Half, 2020). A key chal-

    lenge will be creating opportunities for collaboration and connection

    in spatially distributed workforces (Caligiuri et al., 2020; Kniffin

    et al., 2020). Ensuring that employees who are located remotely are

    not disadvantaged in selection for talent programs is another issue

    organizations will need to resolve in the future. For example, Bloom,

    Liang, Roberts, and Ying’s (2015) research on Chinese call centers indi-

    cates that those who work remotely are less likely to be selected for

    promotion compared to colleagues who are based in the office.

    DOI: 10.1002/hrm.22050

    Hum Resour Manage. 2021;60:253–257. wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/hrm © 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC. 253

    http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/hrm

    http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1002%2Fhrm.22050&domain=pdf&date_stamp=2021-03-10

    The pandemic has also challenged organizations to reorient their

    key talent-development programs (Collings & McMackin, 2020). For

    example, these programs have typically emphasized face-to-face net-

    working as a core element of the curriculum. This has been shelved in

    the short-term as delivery shifted to a virtual format. That shift, how-

    ever, has resulted in more cohorts, as programs that were traditionally

    delivered regionally are now delivered on a more global basis. Other

    organizations have embraced the crisis as an opportunity to use key

    projects emerging from the crisis as learning opportunities for top tal-

    ent (Collings & McMackin, 2020). Yet another challenge, given the

    lethal threat that COVID-19 presents, is succession planning

    (Cascio, 2020). If leaders get sick or become incapacitated, successors

    need to be found across all aspects of operations on what is likely

    short notice. This suggests that succession planning must go much

    broader and deeper than the C-Suite in order to respond to possible

    disruptions. So also must cross-training, particularly in manufacturing

    operations (Wayland, 2020).

    Current limitations on international travel also raise challenges for

    talent-development programs that link international experience to

    career progress for top talent (Caligiuri et al., 2020). The impact of

    COVID-19 on talent management extends far beyond these few

    examples and is likely to reveal itself over the coming years in ways

    we cannot yet imagine.

    Second, consider the current challenging political climate. In addi-

    tion to tighter border controls wrought by COVID-19, which have sig-

    nificantly restricted global talent flows, governments in major

    economies are reevaluating their approaches towards incoming talent.

    For example, a central issue in the Brexit negotiations in the UK cen-

    ters on the right of EU citizens, who had enjoyed the freedom to

    move and work anywhere in the EU, to continue to work in Britain.

    Similarly, in the United States, the government’s approach to immi-

    grant workers is making it more difficult even for skilled talent to

    secure the H-1B visas or green cards to work there legally

    (Hackman, 2020). Such trends affect talent availability in these key

    economies. One striking example of the implications of this disruption

    to traditional talent management strategies is Microsoft’s decision to

    set up a new facility in Vancouver, Canada, to circumvent the risk and

    challenges arising from relocating talent to the United States (Horak,

    Farndale, Brannen, & Collings, 2017). However, such challenges also

    potentially affect the willingness of foreign workers to remain in coun-

    tries that make work-eligibility difficult, resulting in a potential push of

    this talent out of those locations. Talent competitors from other

    nations, particularly emerging economies, see demanding immigration

    policies in developed nations as an opportunity to actively promote

    policies to attract the talent diaspora back to their native lands. That

    is a pull factor on talent mobility, with the potential to ease tight labor

    markets that firms in those locations face for certain skills (Vaiman,

    Sparrow, Schuler, & Collings, 2018a, 2018b). How these macro-level

    trends affect talent management at the firm level will continue to

    merit further study.

    A third key trend is the emergence of the platform economy2 and

    the increasing attraction to employers and individuals of the gig econ-

    omy. Indeed, a growing number of workers are operating outside the

    traditional confines of regular, full-time employment. They may be

    “free agents” or “e-lancers” (i.e., freelancers in the digital world) who

    work for themselves, or they may be employees of an organization a

    firm is allied with (e.g., in a joint venture), employees of an outsourcing

    or temporary-help firm, or even volunteers (Cascio &

    Boudreau, 2017). Freelancers are a growing segment of the

    U.S. workforce, and by some estimates now make up 35% of it

    (Maurer, 2018; Pofeldt, 2016). In some industries, that percentage is

    even larger. For example, 90% of the hands-on crew in an offshore

    oil-exploration project work as contractors rather than employees of

    the oil company (Barrett & Elgin, 2015).

    This has led some to argue that we are moving “beyond employ-

    ment” (Boudreau, Jesuthasan, & Creelman, 2015), reflecting a view

    that in the future leadership will be increasingly premised on how best

    to complete work rather than on how best to manage employees’

    careers (Cascio & Boudreau, 2016). While this may not happen imme-

    diately, the changes may not be as dramatic as suggested, and some

    industries may be relatively unaffected, Boudreau and his colleagues

    make a compelling case for this vision. More broadly, we are certainly

    witnessing an increasing percentage of workers who are choosing to

    spend at least some of their working time in the gig

    economy.

    Although many of these individuals are operating at the lower end of

    it, where precarious work is the norm and their power and choice are

    limited, it is evident that there is a significant cohort of workers who

    perform much higher-end gig work in areas such as engineering, infor-

    mation technology, creative activities, finance, accounting, medicine,

    and law. These individuals are often exceptionally skilled and offer the

    potential to bring much value to employers from a talent perceptive.

    Thus, there is no doubt they represent a growing segment of the

    workforce that requires careful attention to talent management. How-

    ever, almost all present legislation, HR systems, and talent programs

    are designed based on a traditional employment model (Cascio &

    Boudreau, 2016). It will also be interesting to see how the COVID-19

    pandemic contributes to the growth and evolution of the platform

    economy.

    A final trend we point to is the continual advance in technology

    and its impact on work, jobs, and careers. There is little reservation

    that technology in general, and automation in particular, will have pro-

    found impacts on how work gets done. Although it will make some

    roles obsolete, new jobs requiring higher-level skills will continue to

    emerge, especially those created by automation (Cascio &

    Montealegre, 2016; World Economic Forum, 2018). According to the

    McKinsey Global Institute, 30 to 40% of workers in developed coun-

    tries may need to move into new occupations or upgrade their skill

    sets significantly by 2030 as their job roles become automated

    (Hancock, Lazaroff-Puck, & Rutherford, 2020). There is no doubt that

    the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated these trends. By one esti-

    mate, U.S. e-commerce penetration has achieved 10 years of growth

    in just 90 days in the first quarter of 2020 (McKinsey, 2020). In a simi-

    larly significant trend, the UK healthcare system held as few as 7% of

    all appointment in person during the pandemic, compared to 99% in

    2019 (Agrawal, Lacroix, & Reich, 2020). At the same time, however,

    telemedicine is growing rapidly (Fouquet, 2020). Skilled workers in

    254 VAIMAN ET AL.

    short supply will become even scarcer. This is a precarious situation,

    because companies that fail to address their current talent needs may

    not be able to achieve their future digital aspirations. At the same

    time, senior managers have a great opportunity to collaborate with

    employees to create a prosperous, fulfilling future, as they work

    through employee transi

    tions.

    From a talent perspective, the pandemic and wider automation

    trends are likely to create questions around the relative balance

    between technology and human capital in generating value. It is also

    likely to add increased importance to identifying pivotal roles that add

    the greatest value by increasing the number or quality of people per-

    forming them. Indeed, roles that have been critical in the past may be

    overtaken by technology, forcing organizations to reevaluate their tal-

    ent strategies. To illustrate, the foreign affiliates of the world’s multi-

    national companies account for only about 9% of the global output of

    manufactured goods, with a great deal of economic activity happening

    within national borders or regional zones (Rees, 2020). In the newest

    era of evolving global systems, however, Levinson (2020) argues that

    factory production and foreign investment are less important than the

    transmission of services—banking, engineering, information technol-

    ogy, auditing, and idea production (creative activities). Companies dis-

    tribute their freshest knowledge and ideas across technical centers

    positioned throughout the world, and rely on licensing arrangements

    and contracts with global suppliers. In this emerging global system,

    information and ideas are keys because every country, company, and

    individual rely more heavily on borderless knowledge. Artificial intelli-

    gence and robotics have increasingly taken over such tasks as book-

    keeping, clerical work, and repetitive production jobs in manufactur-

    ing. In the creative economy, the most important asset is intangible. It

    is the intellectual capital that resides in people (Montealegre &

    Cascio, in press). When assets were physical things like coal mines,

    shareholders truly owned them. But when the most vital assets are

    people, there can be no true ownership. Today, therefore, the wise

    management of talent is just as important as the shrewd ownership of

    assets. The best that corporations can do is to create an environment

    that makes the best people want to stay (Dougherty & Wilson, 2018).

    It is likely that technology will disrupt entire professions significantly

    (see Susskind & Susskind, 2015), and therein lies the challenge of

    managing talent—domestic or global—effectively.

    There are, of course, other pressing contextual issues that are

    likely to force us to significantly reframe our understanding of talent

    management in the future. The papers in this special issue address

    several of them.

    The aim of the first paper by Elaine Farndale, Mohan Thite,

    Pawan Budhwar, and Bora Kwon3 is to explore the impact macro-level

    trends in national government policy and political climates has on the

    pursuit of top talent. The authors argue that firms that normally rely

    on global talent pools—especially for STEM-related skills—are cur-

    rently suffering, as corporate globalization is impeded due to changes

    in macro (or country)-level environments. By developing propositions

    that connect the macro environment with corporate strategizing and

    designing a multi-respondent, qualitative research agenda, the authors

    identify evolving adaptations to the talent-sourcing efforts of firms

    that help them to deal with talent shortages precipitated by de-

    globalization trends. The authors also offer valuable implications both

    for further research and the practice of talent management.

    The next paper in this special issue, by Thomas Garavan, Michael

    Morley, Christine Cross, Ron Carbery, and Colette Darcy, explores the

    implementation of high-potential talent development programs in

    multinational corporations through the lens of paradox theory and

    adopting a micro-practice perspective. The aim of their study is to

    investigate tensions that arise at the level of practice in multinational

    corporations, as well as to isolate reasons for practice implementation

    variations over time. Employing an inductive, mixed method study,

    the authors find that over time, talent actors realize three sets of per-

    formance paradoxes that relate to differences in their goals, beliefs,

    and roles in high-potential development programs. Another finding is

    that these actors respond to various tensions using a set of both

    defensive and proactive actions. The third and final finding of this

    study confirms that both the tensions and responses vary with the

    implementation stage of the high-potential program.

    The issue’s third paper by Deirdre Snyder, Virginia Stewart, and

    Catherine Shea is an empirical study of the impact the talent manage-

    ment strategy aimed at “boomerang” employees—those who return to

    their companies after an absence—can have on these employees them-

    selves and their rehiring organizations. The authors draw on the main-

    stream literature on talent management and psychological contracts

    and use a sample from a professional services firm in the United States.

    Snyder and colleagues find that re-entry into original organizations ben-

    efits boomerangs in terms of their compensation, job satisfaction, and

    overall organizational commitment, but at the same time, does not lead

    to improved performance compared to employees who never left. The

    authors offer important implications for a boomerang talent-

    management strategy and psychological contract renegotiations.

    The final paper in this special issue, authored by Tui McKeown

    and Francois Pichault, challenges the assumption that independent

    professionals (IPros) do not fall within the realm of conventional

    talent management. The authors argue that much of the talent

    management literature is focused on both traditional employees

    and adopts an organizational perspective. The external workforce,

    such as IPros, has been largely ignored. To rectify this omission

    and advance the notion of institutional factors in the macro envi-

    ronment, the article draws on interviews with IPros in two differ-

    ent institutional contexts to reveal the significant role that

    volition, emotional stability, internal locus of control, and self-

    efficacy play in the personal talent management strategies of

    IPros. The authors suggest that irrespective of institutional con-

    texts, embracing a “Total Talent Management” strategy that con-

    siders each individual’s personal characteristics will be a win-win

    situation for all involved.

    We sincerely hope that you will enjoy reading this special issue.

    Vlad Vaiman1

    Wayne F. Cascio2

    David G. Collings3

    Brian W. Swider4

    VAIMAN ET AL. 255

    https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8104-3683

    https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1252-7080

    1The School of Management, California Lutheran University, Thousand

    Oaks, CA
    2The Business School, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO

    3The School of Business, Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland
    4Warrington College of Business, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

    Keywords

    environmental uncertainty, human capital, international HRM

    Correspondence

    Vlad Vaiman, The school of management, California Lutheran

    University School of Management, Thousand Oaks, CA, USA.

    Email: vvaiman@callutheran.edu

    ORCID

    Vlad Vaiman https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8104-3683

    David G. Collings https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1252-7080

    ENDNOTES
    1 The global pandemic unfolded after the closing date for submissions for

    the special issue. Thus, we did not receive any submissions directly

    related to the impact of the COVID-19.
    2 Economic and social activity facilitated by online platforms, such as Ama-

    zon, Uber, Airbnb, and so forth.
    3 The paper overviews are based, in part, on abstracts provided by the

    contributors.

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    AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES

    Vlad Vaiman is a Professor and the Associate Dean at the School

    of Management of California Lutheran University and a visiting

    Professor at several premier universities around the globe. He has

    published five books on managing talent in organizations and at a

    country level, as well as a number of academic and practitioner-

    oriented articles and book chapters on talent management and

    International HRM. His work appeared in Academy of Management

    Learning and Education, Human Resource Management, Interna-

    tional Journal of Human Resource Management, Human Resource

    Management Review, Journal of Business Ethics, and many others.

    He is also a Founding Editor and the Chief Editorial Consultant of

    the European Journal of International Management, and an editorial

    board member of several prestigious academic journals, such as

    European Management Review, Human Resource Management

    Review, and Journal of Global Mobility, among others. He is a Foun-

    der, an Organizer, and a Leading Chair of the EIASM Workshop

    on Talent Management.

    Wayne F. Cascio is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the

    Business School at the University of Colorado Denver. He has

    published 33 books, and more than 200 articles and book chap-

    ters. He is a former president of the Society for Industrial and

    Organizational Psychology, the Chair of the Society for Human

    Resource Management Foundation, and a member of the Acad-

    emy of Management’s Board of Governors; he currently serves as

    a consulting Editor for International HR at the Journal of Interna-

    tional Business Studies (JIBS) and he Chairs the SHRM Certification

    Commission. He received SHRM’s Losey Award for Human

    Resources Research in 2010, the Distinguished Scientific Contri-

    butions Award from the Society for I/O Psychology in 2013, a

    Lifetime Achievement award from the World Federation of Peo-

    ple Management Associations in 2016, and the Ulrich Impact

    Award from the HR Division of the Academy of Management in

    2020 for a career of research that ties theory to practical applica-

    tions.

    David G. Collings is a Professor of Human Resource Management

    at Dublin City University Business School. His research interests

    are in talent management, global mobility, and the future of work.

    His work has been published in outlets such as the Academy of

    Management Journal, Harvard Business Review, Human Relations,

    Human Resource Management, and Journal of Management. A for-

    mer Editor-in-Chief of Human Resource Management Journal and

    Journal of World Business; he currently sits on the editorial boards

    of a number of journals such as Academy of Management Review,

    Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of Management,

    and Journal of Management Studies.

    Brian W. Swider is an Associate Professor of Management and

    the Beth Ayers MaCague Faculty Fellow at the Warrington Col-

    lege of Business at the University of Florida. He received his PhD

    from the Mays Business School at Texas A&M University. His

    research interests include selection interviews, employee with-

    drawal and turnover, recruitment, personality, well-being, and

    temporal effects in the workplace.

    How to cite this article: Vaiman V, Cascio WF, Collings DG,

    Swider BW. The shifting boundaries of talent management.

    Hum Resour Manage. 2021;60:253–257. https://doi.org/10.

    1002/hrm.22050

    VAIMAN ET AL. 257

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    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orgdyn.2019.100733

    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orgdyn.2019.100733

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    http://www.roberthalf.com/blog/management-tips/hiring-trends-amid-covid-19

    http://www.roberthalf.com/blog/management-tips/hiring-trends-amid-covid-19

    mailto:gmis2020@e.shrm.org

    http://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/23/coronavirus-threatens-auto-industry-recovery-as-cases-rise-and-more-employees-miss-work.html

    http://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/23/coronavirus-threatens-auto-industry-recovery-as-cases-rise-and-more-employees-miss-work.html

    http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Future_of_Jobs_2018

    https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.22050

    https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.22050

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/349967658

      The shifting boundaries of talent management

      Endnotes

      REFERENCES

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