CATALYST Issue 4 | Page 38

D Dexterity | Catalyst Like the companies that employ them, contingent workers often prefer to work with a small number of clients with whom they can establish positive and longer-term relationships. According to Jones, “it’s in both parties’ interests to work on this, managing, for example, the necessary breaks in service to avoid falling foul of any law, and contributing to cultures where partnership and collaboration become the norm.” The development and engagement of freelancers needs to be an integral part of any company’s talent strategy. “Low-income households are more likely to participate in independent work out of necessity” alexandermannsolutions.com 38 Implications for public policy In 2016, the McKinsey Global Institute published the results of a large-scale survey in Independent Work: Choice, Necessity, and the Gig Economy. The report categorised what it calls “independent” workers into four segments: free agents and casual earners, independent workers by choice, compared with reluctants and the financially strapped, who are driven to contingent working by economic necessity. The data show that while two-thirds of independent workers – the free agents and casual earners – do so through choice and report high levels of satisfaction, the experience of the reluctants and financially strapped presents a less optimistic picture. Most would prefer the stability of permanent employment, and, worryingly, low-income households are more likely to participate in independent work out of necessity. For example, the McKinsey data picks up an atypical spike in independent working among younger people in Spain, undoubtedly a function of long-term youth unemployment there.