‘Two skills for the price of one’

Recruiting qualified staff remains a challenge for employers, particularly in positions of responsibility. Job sharing can encourage qualified people to stay in the labour market, at a lower rate of employment.

From mobile working to the four-day week, modern solutions for reconciling work and private life are in vogue. One of these is job sharing, which brings two or more people together to work to a common set of specifications. The idea makes perfect sense at a time when the shortage of qualified staff is putting a spanner in the works for many industries. The PTO (Part Time Optimization) association has gained international recognition for promoting this model to companies.

Along with Holland, the Swiss labour market has one of the highest rates of part-time employment in the world,’ explains Irenka Krone-Germann, co-founder and director of PTO. The idea of creating an association to promote job sharing came to me after I did my doctoral thesis on part-time work. To date, 28% of Swiss companies have already adopted this model.

This new form of work will primarily convince young parents, senior citizens opting for gradual retirement or the younger generation fed up with a hectic pace of life.

 

Women: a priority target audience

By 2022, the Swiss Federal Statistical Office predicts that 70% of female employees will reduce their workload or withdraw from working life as soon as they have their first child. These figures show that it is still difficult to reconcile work and career harmoniously. Even less encouraging: in the same year, the proportion of women in senior management positions in Swiss companies was less than 30%*. Highly qualified women are therefore PTO's priority target group.

Some female-dominated professions had already adopted this way of working before the term became commonplace. One example is teaching: many schoolchildren have two reference teachers, who divide the lessons between them but are also responsible for classroom management. PTO is now promoting the model in the medical sector too: the majority of young medical school graduates in Switzerland are women, and the profession, which requires a high level of personal commitment, has everything to gain from part-time work.

 

A challenge for employers

“When I left my team management post, the only internal candidates to succeed me said they would do it on a job-sharing basis, says a Fribourg-based executive working in public administration. However, the employer preferred to have just one person at the helm and chose an external candidate. The recruitment process turned out to be very tedious.”

Employers are sometimes skeptical about this new form of work. In some professional circles, part-time employability is still seen in a pejorative light, as laziness or a lack of commitment. What's more, for human resources, hiring two people means higher management costs and more complexity in managing performance. This can hold SMEs back.

However, demand from companies for coaching in job sharing and especially in top sharing, a form of job sharing specific to executive positions, has increased significantly since PTO was set up ten years ago,’ explains Irenka Krone. For example, we have coached a number of federal departments in the use of this model’. The digitalization of society is having a positive influence on the phenomenon: these days, a wide range of tools is available for efficient coordination between colleagues. However, if the employer refuses outright, PTO advises against insisting: the project needs the support of both parties to get off to a good start.

Despite these organizational adjustments, positive testimonials about job-sharing abound, provided of course that there is good understanding within the pair. In addition to the advantages mentioned above, sharing responsibility for a job enriches the exchanges between two distinct visions. Each person brings his or her own experience and perspective, and problems are discussed jointly. What's more, it doubles the opportunities for expanding your network when the candidates each arrive with their own address books.

‘For employers, the benefits include talent retention, greater productivity, knowledge transfer, skills diversity and reduced absenteeism.’ 

Irenka Krone-Germann Co-fondatrice et directrice de PTO (Part-time organization)

Are you convinced? Here are a few tips if you're interested in the job and top sharing adventure:

1/ Knowing the industry jargon

Job sharing refers to positions where tasks are divided between different employees, and job splitting refers to positions where the workload is divided between the employees concerned beforehand. Each employee then takes on a share of the work independently. Top sharing, on the other hand, is a specific form of job sharing for positions involving supervision and/or team management.

2/ Finding the right partner

Partnerships are often decided internally by companies, but a Swiss platform exists to put candidates in touch with each other: wejobshare.ch. Register, fill in your profile, and you'll find potential partners based on your wishes and skills. In addition, the teilzeitcarriere.ch/jobsharing website lists job and top sharing vacancies on the market (mainly in German-speaking Switzerland).

3/ Pre-defining the rules

The question of how tasks are to be divided up, how replacements are to be made in the event of absence, and how the parties' salaries are to be calculated, all need to be set out in the contract in advance. The PTO association provides resources for employers and employees involved in job sharing, detailing the points of tension in the event of a contract. A practical guide is available on their website www.go4sharing.ch; the team is also on hand to answer individual questions from those involved, whether employees or human resources.

‘Two expertises for the price of one’: this is the catchy slogan proposed by the PTO association to promote job and top sharing. And beyond the ‘job’ benefits, the model is a new building block in the construction of a more inclusive, intergenerational and supportive society that goes beyond the idea that you are never better served than by yourself.

*CIRF study, 2022.

Author

Laure Fasel

Laure Fasel

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