The retirement of the baby boomer generation from the workforce also poses significant challenges for companies in the real estate industry. Solutions to these challenges must be found at many levels. One possible solution is to voluntarily employ skilled workers over the age of 67. New personnel strategies are closely linked to this, including the creation of a new management role in the C‑suite: the Chief Longevity Officer (CLO). In this Valdivia LeadershipImpulse feature, we explore the various aspects of this position, which serves as a prime example of polymathic leadership with extensive cross-functional expertise.
As the working population continues to extend its average lifespan in the workforce, it becomes imperative for employers to comprehend the opportunities and requisites that this phenomenon entails. This is where the Chief Longevity Officer comes in. His or her core task is to adapt all areas of the company to demographic change and longer working lives. This is not just about older employees. As working lives become longer, the career paths of younger professionals are increasingly deviating from a straight line. Therefore, it is becoming increasingly important to design the corporate structure, including job profiles and employer branding, to accommodate flexible and changeable career paths.
An emerging trend with great potential
There are currently no systematic studies on CLOs yet. However, the press and blogs are increasingly reporting on the creation of such positions, particularly within companies in the health and wellbeing industry, or those with ambitious corporate health programmes. The potential of this new leadership role is already evident:
- With baby boomers reaching retirement age, the German labour market will lose around seven million workers by 2035. Younger generations and immigration alone will not be able to compensate for this decline. The employment of older skilled workers therefore provides important relief and is now even promoted through tax incentives thanks to the newly created active pension in Germany.
- Those affected are also showing interest: according to an IW survey2 more than one in three employees can imagine working after retirement. The job platform Xing found even higher figures: 53 percent want to and are able to continue working in old age, while a further 9 percent are at least open to the idea.
The comprehensive remit of the CLO
In principle, the CLO is responsible for leading the company’s response to demographic changes relating to longer lifespans. ‘A CLO combines responsibility for the workforce, health, equal opportunities and market potential in a single leadership role, and transforms longevity from a “soft” concept into a measurable business strategy,’ says reference book author Bradley Schurman.
In practice, a CLO could redesign career paths, benefits and corporate culture to make them compatible with working lives lasting over 60 years. This includes flexible working models that protect younger employees from burnout and help older employees maximise their productivity.
New goals and unfamiliar concepts
A study by the Biometrics Research Institute, MainAnalytics5, describes what a Chief Learning Officer (CLO) should achieve in concrete terms. First and foremost, it is important to develop strategies that encourage understanding and dialogue between different age groups. These include:
- age-diverse teams,
- programs for mutual training and mentoring,
- more informal formats such as team events and after-work get-togethers.
Above all, the goal is to see generational diversity as an opportunity rather than an obstacle.
In its Human Capital Trends Report from 2024, Deloitte points out an aspect that is becoming increasingly important, particularly with the conscious hiring or continued employment of older workers: company cultures must not and should not form a rigid, uniform grid into which everyone has to fit. Age-diverse teams may need their own approaches and freedom, which may differ, for example, from the general start-up mentality of a young company. Enabling this would be a typical task for a CLO, as such concepts not only require appropriate measures, but also the backing of top management.
The crucial link between idea and success
An earlier Deloitte study7 pointed out a challenge for CLOs back in 2023. This is because, especially in companies with a strong focus on diversity and a corresponding employer value proposition, there is a risk that implementation is often only documented quantitatively—for example, in terms of the number of measures taken and those involved. What is often missing are KPIs that measure the success of diversity programs in terms of relevant results, such as increased productivity or customer satisfaction.
The study cites another hurdle: the lack of or insufficient connection between diversity promotion and the company’s processes and structures. One example is support programs that come to nothing because the participants – e.g., older professionals who have been specifically recruited – are then unable to find tasks within the company that match the content of the support program.
It is clear that the lack of anchoring at the management level poses a significant risk and is often the cause of program failure: successes are not achieved or are not seen if responsibility remains at the purely operational or project level. A responsible person at the C‑level is far better suited to avoid this than a mere representative.
The CLO and the real estate product
Certainly, the CLO’s main tasks lie in the HR area. But when we spoke of cross-functional skills at the beginning, this suggests another area of responsibility specifically for the real estate industry: the aging of society and other developments, such as the trend toward communal living, certainly fall within the remit of a manager who is tasked with adapting a company to demographic change.
This means that the strategies and programs developed by a CLO are no longer aimed solely at employees, but also at buyers and tenants of residential real estate. In this area, there is almost no element of the value chain in which a CLO could not make an important contribution – from project planning and development to architecture and furnishings to marketing and new service offerings.
Conclusion
Demographic change is forcing many companies today to take action to secure their ability to work, indeed their very existence. Increased employment of older skilled workers – in some cases beyond retirement age – is only one aspect of this. Life paths and future prospects are changing against the backdrop of growing longevity across all generations.
In order to take all this into account and translate it into meaningful measures, it is certainly not necessary for every company to have its own C‑level management position. However, a new beginning, a departure into the future, requires not only new skills but also a strong signal both internally and externally. A dedicated Chief Longevity Officer or at least a Vice President of Longevity with clear powers would be such a signal.
Sources
- “Labor market to lose seven million people by 2035,” Die Zeit / Institute for Employment Research (IAB), November 2022
- “Who wants to work in retirement?”, IW Short Report No. 74/2024, German Economic Institute, October 2024
- “XING Diversity Study 2024,” Xing / Appinio, August 2024
- Bradley Schurmann is the author of the book “The Super Age” and founder of Human Change, a demographic strategy and inclusive design company; quoted in “Get ready for a new addition to the C‑suite,” Quartz Online Business Magazine, October 2025
- “From Boomers to Gen Z: Bridging Gaps Between the Generations,” mainanalytics, October 2025
- 2024 Global Human Capital Trends, Deloitte Insights, 2024
- “New fundamentals for a boundaryless world,” Global Human Capital Trends Report 2023, Deloitte Insights, 2023
(Image source: istockphotos.com)