Articles
Stand Up – Stand Out
for change for tomorrow
By Richard W. Cronen & Angela C. Gonzalez
The workplace is a complex web of interdependent relationships, and
a constantly changing, organizational system that must be flexible, encourage
learning through information sharing, and generate the full and authentic
participation of its workforce.
Are your strategic initiatives creating a stable
and sustainable environment that
both attracts new talent and retains the valuable human assets you have
already developed?
This can be accomplished with an integrated Talent Management
Strategy that incorporates Succession Planning,
Strategic Recruitment, and Employee Engagement.
Succession Planning:
Succession
Planning is more than training and more than a personnel
evaluation system. It is an ongoing strategy designed
to supply well-trained, broadly experienced, and highly
motivated people who are ready and able to step into key
positions. To do it effectively, ensures that your
organization has a continuous flow of qualified people
to move up and take over when the current generation of
managers and key people retire or leave your organization. You
can evaluate your readiness for sustained success by answering
the following questions:
- Can you readily fill key positions with well-trained and experienced
people from within your organization if the need arises, or are you
forced to conduct extensive external searches?
- Have you identified well-defined career paths for key positions?
- Have succession strategies been integrated into the corporate strategic
plan?
- Is there an alignment of future needs and the competencies needed
to achieve it?
- Does your plan include backfilling for positions being vacated due
to promotion?
Strategic Recruitment:
Are you able to attract the talent you will need to compete
effectively in the future? Current data indicates that an effective
talent management strategy focused on the future will be more important
than ever before as Baby Boomers currently represent 47% of today’s
workforce, and all of them will retire between 2011 and 2029, taking
with them an accumulation of skills and experience.
Not being prepared to attract and quickly integrate the
next generation of employees can put your organization at
a significant strategic disadvantage.
- Is your Human Resource function strategically engaged?
- Do you maintain significant bench strength?
- Are you able to move beyond the job description to identify
the skills and abilities you will need to be effective
in the more collaborative workplace of tomorrow?
- Are your employees actively engaged in recruitment?
In the 2006 CEO Briefing prepared by The Economist,
an amazing 68% of the CEO respondents rated their HR department
as fair to poor, in terms of performance and contribution
to the strategic direction of the company. This can
change, make your HR function a strategic asset. You
can evaluate your readiness for being a strategic partner
by answering the following questions:
- Is there an HR strategy in place to continuously scan
the external environment for potential talent that aligns
with the strategic objectives of the organization?
- Does your HR role extend beyond skill development, comp
packages and compliance, to include building the competencies
that will be needed in an increasingly collaborative work
environment?
- Have surveys been executed to determine employee satisfaction,
and do you have a plan to help partner in developing strategies
to improve it?
- What strategies do you have in place to engage and shape
organizational culture?
Employee Engagement:
As
organizations become flatter, faster and more open, you
must have the strategic involvement and dedication
of every person. More than ever before, your
business results are a reflection of the collective capability
of individuals and their interdependent relationships with
each other. The ability to build and sustain effective
relationships with others is founded upon their ability
to manage themselves and their relationships in ways that
are situationally appropriate. The soft stuff has
become the hard stuff.
Even though numbers still drive the business, it is increasingly
apparent that it is the people who drive the numbers, and
to behave "strategically" organizations must now
focus internally and learn how to create business environments
in which your people are engaged and have the opportunity
to succeed.
"If each individual does not make a personal decision
to be
accountable for the success of the organization,
no amount of automation, appraisal, or pay will produce what
we require."
Peter Block, forward to The Age of Participation
When people are fully engaged, they enthusiastically participate
in the business of their organization, they are more productive,
have higher levels of job satisfaction, and take personal
responsibility for the reputation of their organization. This
establishes a distinct competitive advantage.
In order to leverage the soft stuff, your organization
and its leaders must consciously develop their ability to
fully engage the heads, the hearts and the hands of your
workforce.
- Intellectual Level: Develop strategies
and plans that build the intellectual muscles. In
order to make good decisions, people need to know what
is going on.
- Are they involved in making decisions about the things
that impact their daily routines?
- Does your organization promote continuous learning?
- To what extent does your organization challenge old assumptions
about how to organize and manage work?
- Emotional Level: Help people build
the emotional muscles that enable them to establish and
sustain effective collaborative relationships.
- Do your employees have a sense of pride about their organization
and their contribution to it?
- Do your leaders promote a sense of shared ownership that
favors membership over mere employment?
- Do your people care about one another and are they actively
involved in building the skills to enable them to manage
themselves in ways that are situationally appropriate,
manage their relationships with others effectively, and
resolve differences?
- Action Level: Give employees the
opportunity to make a difference, enabling them to create
and add value for your customers.
- Are the activities of your employees focused on creating
value for your customers or meeting the procedural requirements
of your system?
- Do your employees take pride in where they work and what
they do?
- Does your organization create policies and procedures
to facilitate involvement or do your policies and procedures
seek to manage risk?
Business
is a uniquely human endeavor; it exists for people, is conducted
by people, and it occurs between people. Your organization’s
success depends on the constructive interactions and interdependence
of individuals AND your people depend on your organizational
systems to facilitate their efforts. When these two
critical variables are synchronized, you create commitment,
accountability and a sense of shared ownership among your
people—this is the essence of Employee Engagement.
In order to stand out – it is time to stand up. Stand
up and challenge old assumptions about how work should be
organized and managed. It is time to focus your strategic
energies internally and build strategic advantage today,
for a more successful tomorrow.
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