5 Massive Workforce Risks Shaping Finance Planning Now
Workforce Risk
';Finance leaders monitor workforce conditions because managing workforce risk is essential for controlling labor costs and maintaining productivity. And there is a growing gap between employer expectations and worker sentiment, according to The Workmonitor 2026 study from Randstad Enterprise, which surveyed over 26,000 workers and 1,200 employers across 35 different markets. Differences in technology adoption and career outlook suggest that workforce pressure is becoming a central consideration for finance teams.
Employer Expectations and Worker Confidence
Employers generally expect growth in 2026. Many predict higher demand and increased hiring, but employees are less optimistic. Lower confidence among workers can affect engagement and retention. Unmanaged labor volatility acts as a direct tax on operating margins, eroding the gains made from AI efficiencies. Planning for these risks supports more accurate staffing budgets and operational forecasts.
AI and Technology Adoption
AI adoption is increasing across many industries. Employers aim to use AI to improve efficiency, but many employees are uncertain about how AI will affect their roles. Some expect changes to daily responsibilities, while others believe their work will remain largely the same.
Demand for AI skills is on the rise. Finance teams should consider how hiring for specialized roles may affect salaries, and training programs may be required to help employees adapt. Incorporating these factors into headcount planning helps mitigate the workforce risk associated with the widening AI skills gap and prevents significant budget variance caused by the rising costs of specialized AI talent and adaptive training programs.
Changing Career Expectations
Many workers want to explore new experiences and take on different responsibilities rather than follow a straight career path. Employers are noticing this and adjusting how they recruit and retain staff to meet these expectations. This affects budgets for training, internal moves, and retention programs.
Finance teams need to plan for these changes to mitigate workforce risk, ensuring they avoid unexpected costs while keeping staffing levels stable. Employees who see opportunities to grow in different ways are more likely to stay, while those who don’t may look elsewhere.
Manager Relationships and Workforce Stability
Trust in senior leadership varies, but relationships with direct managers tend to stay strong. Daily interaction with managers influences how employees feel about their work and productivity — making manager quality a primary lever in controlling workforce risk and preventing mid-year budget leakage. Employees who have managers they can depend on tend to stay longer and perform more consistently.
Companies that invest in manager development see measurable improvements in retention and output. Finance teams should consider these programs essential because better-managed teams reduce turnover costs and help maintain smooth operations.
The People Side of Priority Dilution
When a finance suite suffers from priority dilution, manager development is often the first casualty. We call it “soft skills,” but the Randstad data proves it’s a hard financial shield. A manager spread too thin by competing initiatives cannot maintain the stability required to prevent turnover. In this context, cutting the bottom 20% of your projects isn’t just a strategy — it’s a retention play.
Implications for Finance Planning
Worker confidence and the introduction of AI both represent significant workforce risk that directly influences labor costs. Changes in career expectations can affect retention and training needs, so finance teams need to take these factors into account when planning headcount and salaries. If employees feel uncertain about their roles, turnover can increase, which adds hiring and training costs. New technology can slow productivity if workers are not prepared.
Scenario planning focused on workforce risk can also make forecasts more reliable and resilient to market shifts. If AI is implemented faster than employees can adapt, productivity may drop, and then training may be needed to help employees adjust. If employees take on new responsibilities, retention programs may require additional support. Aligning financial assumptions with workforce realities helps limit unexpected costs and keeps operations on track.
Caveats and Considerations
The Workmonitor study showcases perceptions at a single point in time. Outlooks may change as economic conditions evolve. On top of that, technology adoption can also affect how employees see their work.
Finance teams should combine these insights with internal workforce data and historical trends to understand how they apply. Because workforce risk levels differ by region and sector, budgets should be adapted to reflect specific local market conditions. This careful approach improves the accuracy of planning and forecasting.
Planning for Workforce Risk
Finance leaders who include key factors in budgets and forecasts can make more informed decisions. Daily interaction with managers influences how employees feel about their work and productivity — making manager quality a primary lever in controlling workforce risk and preventing mid-year budget leakage.
Strategic Takeaways for the Finance Suite
- Scenario Planning: Run a “Worst-Case Retention” model for future periods of time.
- Manager Development as De-risking: View “soft skills” training for managers not as a perk, but as a risk mitigation strategy to protect operational stability.
- AI Productivity Lag: Adjust productivity forecasts downward for the first 6 months of new AI implementations to account for the “uncertainty” and training curve mentioned.
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