Tony Buffum, Vice President of HR Client Strategy at Upwork, CHRO, Senior Human Resources Executive
Leaders, Tony is a former CHRO and freelance economy champion that will teach us how HR is embracing the freelance economy.
His portal couldn’t be more perfectly timed with how HR leaders to navigate layoffs, hiring freezes, and inflation.
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Some of our favorite quotes:
What are the key challenges Tony’s solving for?
This challenge of converting our kind of archaic talent acquisition mindset, to a talent access mindset.
And the challenge there is, a lot of HR professionals are just completely overwhelmed right now. They're struggling with trying to figure out how to get people back in the office or not to getting back the office how to rewrite policies on an almost daily basis, addressing that, how to juggle social political unrest, geopolitical, conflict, all of these things that organizations and talent are really looking at their leadership to provide some guidance and direction and leadership on and companies aren't used to that.
So one of the things I said when I had a chance to talk to the whole crowd was, HR has that seat at the table. And everybody at that table is looking directly at HR to help solve all the problems right now.
And so, to me, this is such a great opportunity for HR leaders to embrace the moment and make this change. But it's not easy. And so they're, you know, they're they're struggling with how to prioritize how to address those challenges. And I really believe just like Abby said, we can have a huge impact on the organization on their talent strategy on their employee morale, their everything, if they can just get started.
Where does Tony see the freelance economy in 5 years?
There's no reason to expect anything other than continued rapid growth.
Technologies continuing to rapidly accelerate how transparent it is to work for companies to get freelance or independent contractor experiences.
And as technology continues this rapid evolution, so skills also rapidly evolve.
So we're gonna continue to see more people realize that they can learn a skill very flexibly, probably online, and then leverage that to get work. And that's the cool thing.
I think one of the great things about this, this whole market in general, is that it's incredibly democratizing, right, you know, opportunity exists everywhere to anybody with an internet connection and a computer. So this brings a lot more work to people all around the world. And there's no reason to think that's not going to continue at this really rapid pace.
I think if you also look at the demographic makeup of freelancers. 50% of Gen Z is already freelancing in some way, shape, or form 44% of millennials.
How can the freelance economy create opportunity for everyone?
I think, all of these opportunities, whether it's people, you know, in rural America, or whether it's people in India, like Abby story, or, or anywhere in the world, the biggest impact we can have is just by educating people on what they have access, once they have the skills that they can find work really easily, really fast.
And it's valuable work, it's work that can be proud of, and they can work for small companies, they can work for private companies, or they can work for the world's largest companies.
You know, I think there's a ton of opportunity out there, it's just a matter of going back to where Abby started the whole conversation around educating not just employers, but talent. And I think we're gonna find a lot more talent is going to be embracing this as a way to build their lives and their careers.
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