Posted Monday, March 10, 2008 by
SIRVA University
Avrom Goldberg
Managing Director, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East
SIRVA Relocation
Lorraine Jennings
Manager, Consulting Services, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East
SIRVA Relocation
As Avrom Goldberg and Lorraine Jennings explained, it is important for relocation professionals to stay up-to-date on relocation trends in China because of the country’s power as regional and global economic engine. For each of the past 30 years, China has demonstrated eight to 12 percent economic growth, and it is showing no signs of slowing down. In order to provide attendees with valuable insights and analysis of the current relocation trends in this rising economic power, Avrom and Lorraine described the findings of the SIRVA’s China Mobility Report. While Avrom and Lorraine could not summarize the entire 95-page report during the presentation, they shared highlights of their findings.
Increased demand for deployment to China, one trend discussed during the presentation, is expected to continue. However, the sources of assignees selected for deployment are changing. Traditionally, assignees to China came from Australia, Europe, the United Kingdom and the United States. Recently, hiring has been more concentrated in Asia, with most assignees coming in the form of returning Chinese workers or locally hired foreigners.
Companies who continue to send assignees to China are using a variety of selection and planning processes that do not follow a pattern. For example, pre-assignment visits ranged from a brief three days to a full week; some companies offer extensive cross-cultural training for assignees while others do not; certain companies assign mentors, some extend mentoring programs to leadership programs, and others offer no structured mentoring to assignees in China. In these areas of their relocation programs, companies are not following a uniform trend, but rather they are doing what is in the best interest of their individual organizations.
On the other hand, companies are moving in the same direction in other areas of their programs. For example, many companies are changing their philosophies of hardship allowances. While 51% of companies offer hardship allowances across all assignments, many are developing new ideas of what places they consider “difficult.” Avrom and Lorraine mentioned Shanghai and Beijing as places that recently necessitated hardship allowances, but may no longer justify as high of a level of compensation. Furthermore, many companies are shifting from a host-based to a home-based approach for hardship allowance policies, which illustrates that companies are finding a home-based method more effective in China’s current economic framework.
Regardless of which specific policies and programs companies decide are most useful when sending their employees on assignments to China, the companies within SIRVA’s study agreed on the obstacles that they must overcome. They identified the following as the top-five human resources and mobility challenges they face when filling assignments in China:
- Creating effective policy frameworks for separate groups, such as locally hired foreigners or international new hires who are not full assignee
- Understanding, capturing and reporting the total cost of assignments to the company, including measuring the return on investment of the assignments
- Locating quality service providers in China with a strategic vision
- Developing a young workforce with global cultural competency
- Finding credible benchmarks for hardship allowances and housing data for assignments in China