This report gives a snapshot of the current HR landscape in Canada. We explore people professionals’ perceptions of the trends impacting their work, the challenges and opportunities these bring, and how they feel about their careers and working lives amidst these changes.

Against a backdrop of economic instability, advancing technology and new models of working, we explore how Canadian people professionals are responding and adapting, and give recommendations on how practitioners can navigate the challenges they are facing.

This report summarises research conducted by the Chartered Professionals in Human Resources Canada (CPHR Canada), and is not part of the CIPD People Profession 2023 survey data. However, it provides a useful comparison of the main trends impacting people professionals in Canada and can be read in conjunction with the accompanying CIPD People Profession 2023 survey reports below. These reports explore how global issues are affecting nine countries across the UK and Ireland, Asia-Pacific, the Middle East and North Africa.

By taking the pulse of the profession internationally, and building on our previous reports, the findings of these reports reflect the CIPD’s ongoing commitment to provide an informed view on how we can collaborate globally, develop professional capital within the industry and build HR functions that are future-fit across different regions and markets.

People Profession 2023: A Canadian perspective

Download the report
PDF document 653.8 KB

Key findings in Canada

  • Six out of ten Canadian people professionals considered recruitment a very or extremely difficult issue in the last year, with the main challenges being a lack of applicants and candidates not having the hard skills or experience required for positions. In the same vein, 33% said they found retention very or extremely difficult.
  • Over half of respondents (55%) said their organisation has a formal EDI strategy in place, with popular initiatives including EDI training, inclusive job postings, unconscious bias training and establishing an EDI committee. However, only 22% said their employer measures EDI in their organisation.
  • Ninety-five per cent of respondents said they are proud of the work that they do as HR professionals and 80% feel that the profession fulfils a strategic role in their organisation.

Recommendations

  • It’s important for organisations to take a holistic approach to their retention strategy and adapt their offer to changing employee preferences. Diverse working environments are increasingly important for staff retention, particularly for younger employees, and prioritising EDI in the workplace is key to ensuring employees feel a sense of belonging.
  • Organisations need to prioritise and measure EDI initiatives to ensure accountability to commitments, assess the effectiveness of existing policies and practices, and to make informed decisions about how to design and target activity.

People Profession 2023: A Canadian perspective

Download the report
PDF document 653.8 KB

Read our international and other region-specific reports

Reports

People Profession 2023: International report

Insight into how global issues are impacting people professionals in the UK, Ireland, Asia-Pacific, MENA and Canada

Reports

People Profession 2023: UK and Ireland report

Insight into how global issues are impacting people professionals in the UK and Ireland

Reports

People Profession 2023: Asia-Pacific report

Insight into how global issues are impacting people professionals in Australia, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore

Reports

People Profession 2023: Middle East and North Africa report

Insight into how global issues are impacting people professionals in Egypt, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates

More on this topic

Reports
Pay, performance and transparency 2024

Insight from the CIPD’s survey into factors driving pay decisions in UK workplaces and recommendations for practice

Thought leadership
Could mismatch in desired and actual hours worked prompt early labour market exit?

We examine people’s desired hours and how this compares to the hours they actually work

Thought leadership
Pay awards set to fall in 2024 as employers set sights on the year ahead

The CIPD’s Labour Market Outlook – Winter 2023-24 reveals falling pay increase expectations for the first time since the pandemic

Thought leadership
Changes to UK immigration policy: What employers need to know

James Cockett outlines the newly announced changes to the UK’s immigration policy and explains what employers will now need to consider

More reports

Reports
Pay, performance and transparency 2024

Insight from the CIPD’s survey into factors driving pay decisions in UK workplaces and recommendations for practice

Reports
Neuroinclusion at work report 2024

Find out about the importance of neuroinclusive workplaces, what employers are doing and the working experiences of neurodivergent and neurotypical employees

Reports
Devolution and evolution in UK skills policy

A report seeking common ground in skills policy across the UK’s four nations

Reports
People Profession 2023: International report

Insight into how global issues are impacting people professionals in the UK, Ireland, Asia-Pacific, MENA and Canada

See all reports