
Whether covering periods of leave, supporting organisational change or providing development opportunities for emerging leaders, acting appointments offer flexibility and can play an important role in building capability from within.
For employees, they provide exposure to new challenges, leadership responsibilities and broader organisational experience. For employers, they help maintain continuity and keep critical functions moving while longer-term decisions are made.
When used strategically, acting opportunities can be a powerful part of succession planning. However, as workforce pressures continue to impact many public sector organisations, there is an important question worth considering:
At what point does an acting arrangement move from being a development opportunity to becoming a long-term workforce strategy?
There is no doubt that acting appointments create value. They allow organisations to identify future leaders, test capability and provide employees with opportunities to develop skills that may not otherwise be accessible.
Acting roles can also strengthen retention by demonstrating a commitment to career progression and internal mobility. For many professionals, an acting appointment becomes the stepping stone that prepares them for future leadership positions.
While acting arrangements can support workforce agility, they are often most effective when accompanied by a broader workforce plan.
When critical positions remain unfilled for extended periods, organisations can face challenges around certainty, continuity and long-term capability.
Questions begin to emerge around:
• Is there a clear succession pipeline in place?
• Are key skills and capabilities being developed across the organisation?
• Is the workforce structured to support future service delivery?
• Are temporary arrangements masking ongoing talent shortages?
These questions are becoming increasingly important as public sector organisations navigate workforce shortages, changing service demands and growing competition for skilled professionals.
The reality is that workforce agility and workforce certainty are not competing priorities. The strongest organisations recognise the value of both. They create opportunities for employees to step into acting positions, gain experience and build capability, while also ensuring there is a long-term strategy for securing the talent and expertise needed to support organisational goals.
This approach allows organisations to develop future leaders from within while maintaining the stability required to deliver services, manage projects and support their communities.
Acting arrangements will continue to play an important role across the public sector.
The opportunity for organisations is not simply to fill vacancies when they arise, but to use acting appointments as part of a broader workforce strategy that supports leadership development, succession planning and long-term capability building.
Because while acting opportunities help prepare people for the future, sustainable workforce planning helps ensure organisations are ready for it too.








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