Strategic Workforce Planning
Strategic Workforce Planning
Strategic Workforce Planning
Workforce
Planning
Santander
Summary
Customer expectations have continued to rise in recent years as a result of the highly personalized digital
experiences offered by new players and the implementation of new technologies. New entrants in the
financial system, such as tech companies and start-ups, are not only disrupting the banking business, they
are also setting the ‘gold standard’ for recruiting and nurturing digital talent.
In other words, digitalization is creating a new breed of talent whom companies need to find new ways to
attract and retain. Santander is taking steps to become an employer of choice, which people choose for its
purpose, culture and the responsible way Santander achieves great results.This is supported by a clear
strategic roadmap to manage talent carefully through strategic workforce planning, while completing a
digital and cultural transformation.
Company background
Founded in 1857, Banco Santander is a leading retail and commercial bank, the largest in the Eurozone and
one of the thirteen leading banks in the world in terms of market capitalization. With a business model that
focuses on retail banking products and services for private customers, SMEs, and companies, Santander
currently serves more than 144 million customers. It has more than 4.1 million shareholders and over
200,000 employees. Santander has a meaningful presence in ten countries on two continents, Europe and
America. It is currently the leading financial group in Spain and in Latin America (Brazil, Mexico, Chile, and
Argentina), and holds a significant position in the UK, Germany, Portugal, Poland, and the north-east of the
United States.
Business case
People are the main asset of an organization like Santander aiming to achieve its goal of being ‘the best open
financial services platform, by acting responsibly and earning the lasting loyalty of people, customers,
shareholders and communities’. In this context, embedding a common culture which brings people together
around shared goals and transform the bank’s operations is a key success factor.
In 2018, Santander was listed as one of the top three banks to work for in seven countries, and the bank’s
employees consistently reported their pride in working at a bank where doing everything in a way that is
simple, personal and fair is part of the company’s DNA. Santander’s latest engagement survey results show
employees have a high degree of commitment to the Group, well above the financial industry average. The
bank’s goal is to keep improving in order to become an employer of choice, chosen for its purpose, culture
and the responsible way in which it achieves its results.
Today, Santander’s main priorities are to:
• Continue embedding a common culture and have employees who are as engaged as possible;
• Attract and recruit the most talented people;
• Retain and develop the talent already in the bank’s workforce; and
• Promote diversity and inclusion.
Alongside its commercial goals and long-term strategy, Santander aims to achieve these through a careful
talent management based on a strategic workforce planning approach.
Santander’s solution
Planning Santander’s specific needs to achieve its vision implies a more efficient way of shaping Santander’s
future workforce. Firstly this involves the evolution of the existing workforce through retraining and skills
development. Secondly, it requires a thorough assessment of gaps in the skills needed to deliver the strategy
in order to target recruitment efforts.
Strategic workforce planning is a key exercise to ensure the required capabilities are in place to deliver the
Group´s strategy which provides:
• reflection on the resources and skills needed to deliver the business strategy;
• a dynamic tool to help Human Resources (HR) in particular, and the organization more broadly, to
create action plans;
• a proven methodical approach already tried and tested in several areas of the Group.
In summary, strategic workforce planning is a tool that assists HR in creating a plan to ensure the workforce
suits the needs of the company.
Methodology
1) Job family design and clustering: The current workforce is grouped into skill clusters within job families.
Depending on the business unit, different numbers and types of clusters are analyzed.
2) Workforce demand modelling: Business growth drivers and productivity are used to project demand at
cluster level until 2025.
3) Workforce supply modeling: Attrition, retirements and internal mobility are the variables considered to
project workforce supply by 2025.
4) Gap analysis, upskilling and reskilling: Here, the focus is on i) Expected workforce gaps, ii) clusters that
will require significant upskilling and reskilling by 2025, and iii) Shortage in FTEs for digital clusters/roles.
Key stakeholders
To ensure the success of the strategic workforce planning exercise, several stakeholders and units within the
organization are involved in the process:
o Business and Strategy: Responsible for reviewing demand drivers and for
obtaining the evolution of each driver up to 2025 based on the Business Plan.
Results
Strategic workforce planning has already been carried out across different units of the Group covering
approximately 30% of the Group’s total workforce. The remaining units are expected to be covered during
the course of 2019.
Results reflect that the highest workforce gap is expected in digital positions, mainly for Data and Tech
specialist profiles.
In addition, a high degree of reskilling is required across areas to match capability demands of the future
digital environment.
Challenges
The key challenges identified after the first wave of strategic workforce planning were the digital workforce
gap and the reskilling of current employees.
• Plug the digital workforce gap: This implies acquiring external hard-to-recruit talent to cover the
capacity gap, at a time of increasing competition for limited digital talent.
• Focus on workforce upskilling and reskilling: Employees need to reskill to adapt to the new digital
business environment and the introduction of new technologies such as AI, robotization, etc.
In addition to these challenges which are currently being addressed by strategic HR initiatives, there is
another important aspect to keep in mind going forward: the integration of new profiles with the existing
workforce – often characterised by younger, more tech-savvy employees on the one side, and veteran, more
traditional banking experts on the other. It is critical to achieve a healthy coexistence of these two profiles,
allowing both to thrive and ensure their active participation in the Bank’s evolution. The capacity to enhance
the work experience of these different profiles from the moment they join the company and capitalise on
their input is critical for present and future business success.
This process of evolution brings with it a more complex challenge, namely, how to integrate different
generations through this transformation. Having a multi-generational workforce is an asset rather than a
liability, but it means dealing with different ways of working and different expectations from employees.
What can a company do to integrate workers from different generations so that they will work, learn and
communicate easily and effectively with one another?
How can the complementary factors of a multi-generational workforce make for a more happy and
productive culture?
And how can employees be encouraged to embrace change?