Defining staff-to-flex ratios: We have identified that the talent paradox poses a significant risk to corporations going forward. To prepare, talent must be added to a company's integrated risk portfolio and managed with the same rigor and methods that apply to other key risk categories, as part of talent risk mitigation and workforce planning.
Treat talent as a core enterprise risk by setting clear risk thresholds that guide staffing versus flex/outsourcing choices aligned to business strategy. Define and manage staff-to-flex ratios, weighing four flex options—contingent staffing, consultants, offshore/nearshore outsourcing, and domestic outsourcing—against cost, quality, and risk. As technology evolves rapidly and labor markets tighten, organizations are rebalancing toward more direct hiring to build domain knowledge and ROI on training, while using flex channels for surges, skills gaps, and discrete, non-customer-facing initiatives. Managers should continually restructure work and adjust ratios over time as part of holistic talent risk management.
Business strategy dictates a set of service and work delivery requirements, which in turn determine the talent risk-management strategy and staffing vs. outsourcing decisions. As with all risk management approaches, an important first step is to establish a risk threshold against which all talent management decision making can be consistently tuned.
To address talent management, companies can either hire staff directly or pursue one of four flex and outsourcing options:
Each alternative offers distinct capabilities, service qualities, costs, and risks, which must be assessed, monitored, and balanced consistently and holistically over time from an enterprise-level perspective, aligning with effective contingent workforce management and a thoughtful outsourcing strategy. The first challenge with talent risk management is defining a model for setting staff-to-flex ratios that is consistent with business objectives, market realities, and the established risk threshold.
Economic conditions ebb and flow, making it critical for every company, including each function and department, to have a defined staff-to-flex ratio. To understand why this is so important, we simply need to review our history and the extraordinary pain and costs associated with shedding seven million jobs during the Great Recession. The first three years of economic recovery were marked by strong (often double-digit) growth in corporate profitability yet extreme reluctance among corporations to create replacement jobs. Now that is shifting. "We are starting to see the pendulum swing in the direction of more direct hiring," observes Remster Bingham, VP of Recruiting at Genesis10.
What's motivating the swing, Bingham says, is a shift away from the defensive, cost-cutting, and risk-averse corporate behaviors that were motivated by global economic slowdown to more long-term growth and investment-oriented postures. "Companies are beginning to think they've gone too far to the flex side. They're worried about having insufficient domain knowledge internally and the impact that could have on their abilities to be competitive and grow over the longer term. They are also watching unemployment rates decline -- especially in areas such as IT, where unemployment is already dramatically lower than the national average. Corporate leaders are thinking it's time to hedge the risk of being overexposed on the flex sides of their ratios."
Corporate leaders are, likewise, witnessing the extreme rapid rate of technology evolution and worrying the market will be unable to deliver the specific types of talent they require going forward. "Already, we are seeing companies who would like to hire a person with 2-3 years of experience having to settle for someone with just one year or less because the technology is simply too new and changing so rapidly," Bingham says. "Companies are realizing they need to invest more in training and development; if they're going to do that, they want employees to be theirs so they will have greater chances of earning loyalty and returns on their training and development investments."
Decisions to create permanent staff positions are also influenced by factors such as:
While companies may be shifting back toward more direct hiring, they are also more experienced—and therefore smarter—about what they can and should continue to outsource to achieve the desired balance between staff-to-flex ratios and managing financial targets. Work considered essential but not directly influencing customer experience or satisfaction—for example, upgrading, changing, or consolidating IT infrastructure—will continue to fall increasingly to the flex side. The same is true for work that may be long-term in nature, spanning many months or even several years, but which ultimately has a discrete lifespan, such as executing a merger or acquisition or ramping up a new product or service offering.
In managing staff-to-flex ratios, functional managers are likely to find themselves taking hard looks at the ways in which both existing and new jobs are structured, breaking off certain movable portions and pushing chunks of work to the flex side in order to free up time and brain power on the staff sides of their ratios. As markets for specific types of talent continue to tighten, companies may find themselves going to flex options for very different reasons than in the recent past. Rather than being motivated by fixed cost reduction and pure labor-cost arbitrage, they may find themselves outsourcing to:
Once desired ratios of staff to flex are established, the four flex alternatives can be evaluated and balanced on bases of costs, quality, and risks associated with each. In our next blog, we will touch on key differentiators of traditional staffing, consulting, and outsourcing providers and share important factors to consider when determining which talent channels to employ.
Answer: It means adding talent to the company’s integrated risk portfolio and managing it with the same rigor as other key risk categories. Leaders set a clear risk threshold tied to business strategy and use it to guide decisions on when to hire employees versus when to use flexible talent channels. This enterprise-level approach balances cost, quality, and risk, and helps companies mitigate the “talent paradox” as technology evolves rapidly and labor markets tighten.
Answer: A staff-to-flex ratio defines the proportion of work done by permanent employees versus flexible/outsourced talent. It’s important because economic conditions and talent markets shift, and the ratio helps organizations calibrate capacity, domain knowledge, and cost exposure against their risk threshold. After the Great Recession’s job losses and a period of heavy reliance on flex, many companies are rebalancing toward more direct hiring to reduce overexposure to flex risk, strengthen internal expertise, and improve returns on training and development.
Answer: Start with business strategy and service/work delivery requirements, then apply the risk threshold. Keep in-house the work that aligns to core competencies, touches customers, protects IP and sensitive information, supports leadership succession, and drives long-term performance (revenue, market share, innovation, brand). Push to flex the essential but non-customer-facing work (e.g., IT infrastructure upgrades or consolidations) and long-term yet finite initiatives (like M&A or product/service ramps). Flex is also appropriate for demand surges, skills gaps, longer recruiting/onboarding lead times, real-estate constraints, diversifying talent mixes (e.g., veteran augmentation), and accessing remote talent.
Answer: The four flex channels are: (1) contingent/flex staffing, (2) consultants, (3) offshore/nearshore outsourcing, and (4) domestic outsourcing. Evaluate and balance them at the enterprise level based on cost, quality, and risk, ensuring choices align with the established risk threshold and financial targets. Some providers also allow clients to hire their consultants, which can support a short-term flex-to-staff strategy while building internal domain knowledge.
Answer: Treat ratios as dynamic. Continuously monitor market conditions, technology shifts, and talent availability; restructure roles to peel off movable tasks to flex and free core staff for higher-value work; and revisit the mix as business priorities evolve. This ongoing rebalancing—grounded in the company’s risk threshold and strategy—helps ensure the right blend of cost control, quality, and institutional knowledge.