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Author: Mike Prokopeak

Posted on August 26, 2019June 29, 2023

Job Review Site Glassdoor Names New CEO

Employer review and jobs site Glassdoor named Christian Sutherland-Wong as its new chief executive officer on Monday, Aug. 26. Current Glassdoor CEO and co-founder Robert Hohman will step down but remain with the company as chairman. Both appointments will be effective on Jan. 6, 2020.

Christian Sutherland-Wong, incoming CEO, Glassdoor.

Sutherland-Wong was named Glassdoor president in early 2019 and appointed as the company’s COO in February 2018, overseeing day-to-day operations, strategy and business for Glassdoor. He joined the company in 2015 as vice president and general manager of monetization. Prior to Glassdoor, Sutherland-Wong was LinkedIn’s director of product, managing its premium subscription business, payment platform and API program. He also worked at Bain & Company.

“I am honored and thrilled to lead Glassdoor into our next chapter as we remain focused on achieving our mission of helping people everywhere find a job and company they love,” Sutherland-Wong said in a press release announcing his promotion. “My vision is to build on Glassdoor’s excellence, as a business and as an employer, that Robert has established over the past 12 years.”

Hohman co-founded Glassdoor in 2007 and launched it online in 2008. Employees and job candidates use the site to anonymously post reviews of employers, rate their CEO, share salary information and disclose interview questions. As of 2018, the company reported 59 million unique users per month and 7,000 corporate customers that pay to post job openings and use the company’s employer branding products.

Also read: Recruit Holdings to Acquire Glassdoor

In 2018, Glassdoor was purchased by Japan-based Recruit Holdings for $1.2 billion. Recruit Holdings is also the owner of jobs aggregator Indeed, which it acquired in 2012, as well as job search engine Simply Hired, bought in 2016.

 

Posted on July 3, 2019June 29, 2023

New Head of HR Takes Over at Mitsubishi Motors North America

Mitsubishi Motors North America, Inc. announced the promotion of Angie O’Leary to the newly created position of vice president and chief human resources officer.

Angie O’Leary (Photo courtesy Mitsubishi Motors North America)

O’Leary joined Mitsubishi in 1988 and has held positions in all functions of human resources at the Cypress, California-based automaker, including management roles in HR systems, compensation, benefits, organizational development and training. Prior to her promotion, she was director of human resources and corporate services.

“Since I joined Mitsubishi Motors North America in April of 2018, one of my highest priorities was to build a world-class executive leadership team that would drive the rapid reinvention of Mitsubishi Motors in the U.S.,” said Fred Diaz, president and CEO of Mitsubishi Motors North America, in a press statement.

O’Leary was promoted along with a new general counsel for the company, a move that Diaz said was done with customers in mind. “These promotions add to an enviable group of leaders who are not afraid to challenge perceptions, question everything, and fight to make Mitsubishi Motors a great place to work,” he said in the same press release.

Mitsubishi Motors North America, a part of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance of automakers, is responsible for sales, research and development, marketing and customer services for all Mitsubishi vehicles in the United States. The company will be relocating its headquarters from its Orange County home of 31 years to Franklin, Tennessee in 2019 to lower operating costs and be closer to the U.S. headquarters of alliance partners Nissan and Renault, according to a report in the Orange County Register.

Posted on June 26, 2019June 27, 2019

Brené Brown at SHRM Conference: ‘Leaders Are Never Quiet About Hard Things’

There’s a leadership crisis at work and many leaders simply aren’t equipped to handle it.

The problem? Courage, or rather the lack of it. The good news is they can learn.

That was the message delivered by Brené Brown to kick off the second day of the 2019 Society for Human Resource Management Annual Conference and Exposition in Las Vegas.

“We need braver leaders,” said Brown, a best-selling author and professor at the University of Houston. “We need people who will build courageous cultures. Brave leaders will rehumanize work.”

The SHRM Conference brought together 20,000 HR professionals from June 23-26 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Brown joined entrepreneur Martha Stewart, business executive Vineet Nayar and TOMS Shoes founder Blake Mycoskie at the top of the speaker lineup for the HR industry’s largest annual conference.

A researcher by vocation, Brown has built a following through five best-selling books including her latest “Dare to Lead,” a TED Talk that’s been viewed more than 41 million times and her own Netflix special, “Call to Courage,” which premiered in April 2019.

At the SHRM conference, Brown highlighted the challenges facing organizations and spelled out broad steps HR organizations can take to help. At the heart of the leadership problem, Brown said, is that people need to have tough conversations. But many don’t know how and instead default to politeness and being nice to get along.

“We literally tap out because we don’t have the skillset,” Brown said.

The end result is organizations fail to improve productivity, drive innovation and boost individual and organizational success.

Barriers to Courage
There are several factors that hold leaders back, Brown told the audience. First and foremost, tough conversations are hard. But avoiding them only makes matters worse. For HR, that means equipping managers with skills to have challenging, productive conversations with their team members.

Many unproductive behaviors come from fears and insecurities that are often unspoken, Brown said. Leaders need to be able to probe the underlying reasons behind unproductive behaviors or else they end up “playing whack-a-mole,” dealing with one incident only to see it pop up again somewhere else.

Brown also said organizations need to embrace failure and help people avoid getting stuck in setbacks. That starts with teaching people how to bounce back, starting as early as onboarding.

One of the biggest barriers for leaders is action bias. Facing a challenge, many leaders go straight into problem-solving mode when they should instead step back and think, Brown said. The goal is to spend the time and energy to accurately identify problems. That means leaders need to embrace ambiguity and be comfortable not having the answer.

Tackling Bias and Discrimination
Leaders also need to embrace the mission of creating a more diverse and inclusive workplace. Bias, prejudice and the consequences of privilege at work are not going away. “Is it scary? Yes,” Brown said. Many leaders use their position as a shield, only dealing with issues when it affects them personally.

That’s short-sighted management. “If you can’t have those conversations, you will not be leading in the next five years,” Brown said.

Leaders and others in positions of power must recognize it’s their job, not that of people targeted by discrimination, to spark conversation about hot-button issues like bias. A leader’s role is “excavating the unsaid,” Brown said. “Brave leaders are never quiet about hard things.”

The good news is there are things leaders – and HR departments – can do to get better. “Courage is teachable, observable and measurable,” Brown said.

Embrace Vulnerability and Live Values
Vulnerability is the prerequisite of every meaningful experience in our lives, Brown said, and good leaders embrace the uncertainty, risk and emotional exposure that comes along with it. Vulnerability is a source of strength, creating the psychological safety and trust that are key to high performing work teams.

One important caveat: Vulnerability is not oversharing. It merely means showing up to listen in tough situations without judgment.

It’s also imperative leaders live the values they talk about. That means turning abstract ideas like vulnerability and trust into specific work behaviors. “It’s better to not have values than to have values that are not operationalized into behaviors,” Brown said.

For example, trust can be broken down into seven observable and measurable behaviors:

  • Respecting boundaries and actively checking to see where they lie.
  • Being reliable and doing what you say you’ll do.
  • Practicing accountability by owning mistakes.
  • Holding information in confidence and not sharing what is not yours to share.
  • Acting with integrity by choosing what is right over what is easy or fast.
  • Being nonjudgmental in talking about how others feel.
  • Being generous in interpreting the intentions and actions of others.

Developing the kind of leaders who can thrive in today’s work environment is no easy task but the end results are worth it, Brown said.

More 2019 SHRM Conference Coverage:

Exclusive Video Interviews from the 2019 SHRM Conference

The State of #SHRM19 Speech: Wait Until Monday

Day 2 at #SHRM19: It’s All About the Underutilized Talent Pool

SHRM Releases Annual Benefits Survey

Posted on June 19, 2017June 29, 2023

SHRM 2017 Conference Kicks Off in New Orleans

The world’s largest HR association kicked off its annual membership conference and exposition in New Orleans on Sun, June 18 with a focus on innovation.

“A new era in business, a new era in HR requires us to be all in,” said SHRM Board Chair Coretha Rushing from the main stage, highlighting the conference’s designated theme, “All In,” intended to show the role of HR plays in engagement, innovation and inclusion.

Rushing stepped onstage following New Orleans jazz musician Irvin Mayfield Jr. who opened the conference with a ringing trumpet solo, followed by his recommendations for navigating the Crescent City like a local. Remember to smile, avoid counting calories while in the city and above all, relax and have a drink, he said.

The 2017 conference, SHRM’s annual gathering for its 290,000 members, brought an estimated 15,000 attendees at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans for the three-day conference and exposition.

The conference also marked the final opportunity for outgoing SHRM President and CEO Hank Jackson to address the membership in person before retiring at the end of the year to make way for incoming CEO Johnny C. Taylor. Jackson took the stage and laid out the challenges facing HR.

SHRM President and CEO Hank Jackson greets members at the society’s 2017 annual conference. Photo courtesy of SHRM.

“The biggest challenge is the tremendous pace of change barreling at us,” he said. “Real winners don’t scramble to adapt to change, they get ahead of it and shape it. They lead it.”

“HR must be the force that shapes the new world of work,” Jackson told the assembled audience, launching into the case for his legacy as SHRM’s leader. That 7-year tenure included continued membership growth, the creation of the SHRM Competency Model and the controversial decision in May 2014 to sever ties with the HR Certification Institute, SHRM’s longstanding certification partner, in order to establish SHRM’s own certification, the SHRM-CP and SHRM-SCP.

That decision sparked unrest among some members, many of whom held PHR and SPHR accreditations from HRCI and professed confusion about the difference between the two. In the three years since, SHRM has certified 101,000 applicants and aims to increase that number to 300,000, said Alex Alonso, SHRM senior vice president of knowledge development and the architect of the competency model, in a subsequent press conference.

At that same press conference, Jackson said he envisions the SHRM Competency Model and the accompanying SHRM certifications “as a vehicle for a new level for HR expertise and leadership.”

In comments during the press conference as well as his welcome address, Jackson pointed to his experience as a business leader, a sore spot among some former board members who believe the SHRM leader should have an HR background, as a primary driver for his decisions as SHRM’s leader.

The work of HR is more than administration and regulation, Jackson said, and the competency model and SHRM certification are aimed at moving HR certification beyond what Jackson called a “knowledge test” to a competency-based certification.

Incoming SHRM President Johnny C. Taylor attended the 2017 SHRM conference. Photo courtesy of SHRM.

“You’ll always need those basics [but] I’m a CPA – when I came to SHRM I knew that much of my success was because of the people around me,” Jackson continued. “Why wasn’t there a higher standard of certification? It took several years to convince the board to do it.”

During his tenure, Jackson also said SHRM has raised its profile among lawmakers and policymakers in Washington on a number of issues related to employers and the workplace, highlighting the association’s ongoing work on workplace flexibility and immigration.

Jackson said the focus of his time at the helm has been to lead HR beyond a partnership model to focus on playing a more active role in the workplace.

“It was all about leading change,” he told the audience. “I am proud of where the HR profession is today. We have laid the groundwork for the future. We have changed the conversation about what HR leadership looks like.”

 

Posted on July 26, 2016July 25, 2018

5MM: Robots and Jobs

Posted on September 20, 2015August 3, 2023

YourForce: It’s Benefits Season

It’s open season!

On benefits, that is. Every fall, HR departments look forward to open enrollment season with excitement — and trepidation.

This crucial period is not just an opportunity for employees to review benefit options, but also a golden opportunity for HR to renew relationships.

Managing such a crucial initiative can be daunting, but that’s why Workforceis here to help. Beyond our ongoing magazine coverage, we’ve launched a new event that will explore the future of benefit management.

Coming to Boston on Nov. 9, Workforce Focus puts you in direct conversation with fellow HR professionals for a one-day, in-depth examination of the technology transformation reshaping how we communicate and manage employee benefits.

For more information, visit WorkforceFocus.com.

I hope you’ll join us there!


Reader Feedback

Responding to “Work in Progress” columnist Kris Dunn’s story in the July issue titled “Meet the Aggregator Killer,” reader Jonathan Duarte wrote:

So is your intent to send automated ‘cease and desist’ and copyright infringement emails with links to all the ‘old’ jobs? I haven’t aggregated and distributed much for job ad content in the last five years, but from what I can tell, the ‘old’ jobs probably isn’t the biggest issue. The bigger issue is probably the ‘lesser’ aggregators that mandate job seeker registration under the guise of ‘apply for this job’ and then never redirect or submit an application for the position, but instead put job seekers on automated job alerts and marketing automation email campaigns that they never opted into.

Workforce.com/Aggregator 

Regarding the Workforce August story “Rub Some Dirt on It: Why Workers Are Forgoing Treatments,” reader Dan983 said:

Prior to HDHPs, employer population health plan member expense distribution ratios under PPO plans indicated the sickest 5 percent of members annually spend 60 percent of plan dollars and the top 10 percent account for 70 percent. This top 10 percent are not impacted by any deductible as ACA makes plans reimburse 100 percent after members have $6,600 in out-of-pocket cost. What about the other 90 percent? The bottom 50 percent only account for 2 percent of plan expenses. High-deductible plans cause members to forgo physician visits, screenings and prescription therapy. These plans have been dishonestly sold to employer plan sponsors. Now, by plan design, members are being lured into worsening states of chronic disease. Remember, the max employers can shift is $10,000 on the HSA option. What’s the max employers are liable for to pay the impact of chronic disease? Unlimited!

Workforce.com/Forgoing

Our August Dear Workforce newsletter posed the question: “How Do We Make a Supervisor Deal With a Problem Employee?” to which reader Michael Toebe responded:

The supervisor obviously dislikes conflict engagement and might be intimidated by the offending person. Yet avoidance is not an effective conflict strategy. It allows the status quo to continue to great work culture, process and legal detriment. What could prove helpful is suspending judgment and asking the supervisor what concerns they might have in investigating the emotional drivers about the employee’s unsavory behavior. Learn the “whys” behind the resistance, question the limiting beliefs, ask if they feel they need additional resources to problem-solve and express confidence in their ability and ask for a commitment to be assertive (not aggressive) in addressing a critical problem and why it is critical. Set a date to talk again later that day or the next morning to review what happened. What the supervisor might need is understanding, support and encouragement. Or they might also need skill set development in conflict strategies, as in how to talk with, not at, the employee.

Workforce.com/ProblemEmployee

Workforce blogger James Tehrani asked: Is it OK to compliment people at work to which reader Denise Gamble replied:

I compliment people all the time. I’ve been told I have a gift for recognizing the good in others and for providing positive feedback. I am female and agree it’s considered more acceptable for women to compliment either gender in the workplace.

I’ve lost about 90 pounds this year and receive regular compliments. I’m fine with them. My appearance is so changed that often someone will blurt out, ‘Wow! You look great!’ It’s heartfelt and not creepy. Creepy is the guy that followed up with, ‘I’ll bet you look great in a swimming suit!’ (Fortunately, that wasn’t from a co-worker.)

Some thoughts based on my own experience: I believe it is OK to compliment people you work with on a regular basis if a) the compliment is authentic, brief and not related to gender, race, religion, etc. b) is not contrived or based on any underlying, self-serving motivation and c) part of your character.

Workforce.com/Compliments

We welcome your comments on these stories and others on our website. Be sure to follow us and give us a shout on Twitter at @Workforcenews, too. 
Hope to hear from you!

Posted on July 3, 2015June 29, 2023

SHRM-HRCI Split One Year Later: Less Testy, More Testing

One year after a messy breakup, the HR industry’s largest membership association and its largest provider of professional credentials appear to be getting on, if not quite getting along just yet.

The 275,000-member Society for Human Resource Management and the HR Certification Institute, with 145,000 certificate holders, ended their relationship under disputed circumstances in May 2014.

That breakup, spurred by SHRM’s decision to launch its own SHRM-Certified Professional (SHRM-CP) and SHRM-Senior Certified Professional (SHRM-SCP) credentials to compete with HRCI’s Professional in Human Resources (PHR), Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR) and Global Professional in Human Resources (GPHR) certificates, dissolved a nearly four-decadelong partnership that dated back to 1976. Since that time both organizations have been busy charting an independent path forward.

Speaking at a press briefing June 28 during the SHRM 2015 annual conference in Las Vegas, Alexander Alonso, SHRM’s vice president of research and certification exams, called the process so far a “resounding success.”

Since SHRM began accepting applications in January, more than 46,000 people have signed up for the society’s pathway to certification, while several thousand have completed the certification exam, he said. SHRM is in the process of applying for accreditation of its new certificates through the National Commission for Certifying Agencies, a review process that can take up to a year.

As evidence of acceptance from the business community, Alonso said employers such as AutoZone Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. are using the competency model underlying the SHRM certifications in their own HR development practices.

SHRM also formed the 11-member SHRM Certification Commission chaired by HR heavyweight Wayne Cascio, management professor at the University of Colorado Denver and former chair of the SHRM Foundation, to oversee development of the certification exam, eligibility requirements and recertification.

The certification exam costs $300 for SHRM members and $400 for nonmembers.

Cascio compared becoming SHRM-certified to getting a driver’s license while speaking at the same media briefing. Applicants must know the rules of the road but also have to pass a driving test. For SHRM-CP, the entry-level certification, the exam consists of approximately 35 percent application and situational judgment, i.e., the driving test, with the remainder knowledge-based. At the higher level, the SHRM-SCP, is about half application-based and half knowledge-based.

“The certification process is hardly static,” he said. “It’s dynamic. … It’s going to change over time.”

HRCI Holding Steady

Unlike 2014 when SHRM prohibited HRCI from attending the conference and exposition, the institute had a small booth and several staff members on hand on the exhibit hall floor including Kerry Morgan, HRCI’s new chief marketing officer.

Morgan, a veteran of Booz Allen Hamilton, United Way of the National Capital Area and several telecommunication firms, was hired in January to spearhead the institute’s marketing and communications. HRCI also hired a chief business development officer, Heather Combs, to develop corporate and institutional partnerships. Pre-split, the institute depended largely on SHRM for those operations as well as certification preparation.

“Our task is to clear up the confusion in HR and the business community, in particular that HRCI certifications are based on both knowledge and competency and have always been,” she said, calling the PHR and SPHR the “gold standard” for HR credentials.

HRCI, which until last year shared an office and administrative systems with SHRM, has been forced to build from scratch in the past year, setting up telephones and computers on the one hand and building entirely new corporate functions such as marketing and business development on the other.

The institute employs just over 50 people now and has set up its own call center and a team of recruiting specialists.

“We weren’t going to let anything get disrupted,” Morgan said. “We have to keep moving and keep serving our certificants. We’re getting better than ever and not going away.”

Although she didn’t provide specific numbers, Morgan said the number of people recertifying through HRCI has dipped slightly this year but not to a degree that has them concerned.

“We expected that based on the confusion that SHRM has put into the HR market by abandoning the HRCI certifications after promoting them for nearly 40 years,” she said.

The institute recently launched a Build Your Own Bundle service with the opening of the May application window, which allows people to select from three of HRCI’s 114 certification preparation providers for a discount. It has also created a $100 “second chance insurance” option for test takers should the person not pass the test the first time.

Morgan said there are more than 7,000 courses, conferences and organizations that are now part of the approved provider program and the institute has focused on making it easier to submit courses and conferences for approval and speed up turnaround time.

By all accounts, the two organizations have no relationship or plans to work together in the near future. HRCI is moving ahead with plans to further grow the organization and for its part SHRM, which according to Alonso has spent “several millions” to develop its certification program, shows no sign of slowing down.

“We hope at some point to be able to agree to work together,” Alonso said of HRCI, but like Morgan, he admitted there is no plan to do that in the near future.

Posted on April 23, 2015June 19, 2018

Salesforce Bets (Again) on the HR Market

Marc Benioff is chairman and CEO of Salesforce.com. File photo.

This is a guest blog from Workforce Editor-in-Chief Mike Prokopeak.

After an extended quiet period, Salesforce.com has raised the stakes on its participation in the HR market.

The San Francisco-based technology company widely known for its namesake customer relationship management, or CRM, system is putting its chips on the table alongside workplace tech giants such as Oracle, SAP and Workday with the goal of becoming the enterprise software tool of choice. And the company is placing one of its bets on HR technology.

At the Chicago stop of the company’s Salesforce World Tour on April 23, CEO Marc Benioff announced the launch of Salesforce for HR, a suite of applications and tools aimed at making the employee experience more consumerlike.

The overall goal, he said, is to use cloud technology to help customers be as successful with HR as they’ve been with sales and marketing. It’s hard to argue with Salesforce’s CRM record. Since its founding in 1999, the company has grown to 16,000 employees, 150,000 customer companies and projected revenue of $6.5 billion.

The rise of mobile devices and the app economy puts Salesforce, with its relative youth, into an enviable position. For many workers, steeped in Facebook and Twitter and used to zippy mobile apps, using older technology at the office is like “going back in time,” said Jim Sinai, Salesforce senior director, app exchange and platform marketing.

Social networking apps like Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter have created the expectation for a continuous stream of updates and news delivered directly to the end user wherever they are, not locked away behind the login screen of an enterprise system or buried deep in an email inbox.

Consumers also expect that they’ll have opportunities to jump into that stream, posting comments and asking questions. With Salesforce for HR, the company aims to give employees a similarly engaging app and software experience to the one that they have outside of work.

The product suite includes five basic components:

  • Employee Journeys: a personalized feed that guides employees through onboarding and development.
  • Employee Communities: a networking and collaboration application that connects employees with colleagues and subject-matter experts across the organization.
  • HR Help Desk: access to a self-help HR service portal that also gives managers a view into employee and team milestones and progress. Plug-ins to HCM and HRMS systems are available.
  • Salesforce HR Analytics: access to performance and productivity data.
  • Engagement Apps: the ability to build and integrate custom mobile apps using Salesforce1, the company’s app development platform, and access pre-built apps from talent management software providers such as Cornerstone OnDemand, Lumesse and Fairsail.

While HR tech is small potatoes compared with Salesforce’s core sales and marketing market, the move is part of a broader play to become the technology of choice across the enterprise. Faced with rapid innovation and competition, workplace tech companies are looking to build a fortresslike integrated suite of workplace applications and data similar to the one Apple built in the consumer world with iTunes and its App Store.

As a tech company that was born native to the cloud, Sinai said Salesforce has a leg up on older workplace tech companies that are more recent — and in some cases — reluctant immigrants. After a slow start, two of those tech companies — Oracle and SAP — have gone in big on cloud technology in the past few years and invested heavily in making human capital management and broader business applications cloud-friendly. Here’s some analysis from Workforce sister publication, Talent Management, of past moves.

This move is not Salesforce’s first foray into the HR market. The company bought Rypple, a social performance management application, in 2011 and the following year used that platform to launch Work.com, an app for goal setting, performance reviews and employee feedback.

Salesforce has been a dark horse in the human capital management race, making spot acquisitions over the past few years and using Chatter, the company’s enterprise networking application, to broaden its corporate user base and use case in companies. But with Salesforce for HR, the company aims to take advantage of its prominent cloud and app position to help employers be “mobile out of the box,” Sinai said. “Legacy products just can’t do that.”

While Sinai declined to share how many companies are currently using the application, he said the company works with Salesforce customers like St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center, a Phoenix-based network of 16 hospitals with 24,000 employees to develop and deploy it. Like other Salesforce products, the HR product will be offered as a subscription for the enterprise or individual.

Posted on September 28, 2014August 3, 2023

YourForce: An Apple a Day …

The Apple Watch’s debut last month was a boon for technophiles, but it also might be one for employee wellness programs, too.

Less than 10 years ago, a mobile phone was just that — a portable device with a numeric keypad you’d use to dial up friends. But when Apple came along with the iPhone, it was a sea change.

What the iPhone did for communication and entertainment, wearable devices may do for health and wellness programs, which are often held back by low participation and uncertain return on investment.

Wearables like the Apple Watch might just change that. They effortlessly monitor your heart rate, alert others to a sudden change in activity and even make sure you’re getting enough shut-eye.

If it takes off, an Apple a day may just keep the doctor away, and employers might take a bite out of their health care costs.


Giving in Guatemala
AMN Healthcare President and CEO Susan Salka (left) recently led a volunteer company mission to villages in the highlands of Guatemala. There, teams operated an acute-care hospital and clinic and conducted community development projects. AMN, a San Diego-based health care staffing company, partnered with Helps International to sponsor 10 clinicians for the weeklong medical mission and 10 nonclinical company staffers to participate in a related community development project.


Reader Feedback

Reader Dick Grote reacted to the August issue’s Last Word, “SHRM’s Game of Chance”:
I don’t have a dog in this SHRM/HRCI fight. But I sure do appreciate clever writing when I run across it.
Rick Bell’s article on the current certification mess is one of the most insightful, astute and amusing pieces I’ve run across in our HR field in quite a long time.

And reader GoShox stated:
I agree that many employers don’t give a second thought about what specifically the certification is, if they care at all. For those that do, they look for the letters at the end of the name and wouldn’t give much credence as to which governing body issued them.
Workforce.com/SHRMchance


Reader Ronald reacted to the August story “Does Paid Time Off Pay Off?”
There are a few points that I disagree with both in this article and in the prevailing wisdom on the “all inclusive” plans: They do not decrease unscheduled absence. If people are sick, they do not plan those absences under any system. These plans erase the line between illness and any other day off, which creates a sense of entitlement. I think we HR professionals need to sharpen our business focus and make sure we are providing solutions that better meet business needs.
Workforce.com/PTOpayoff

Posted on July 21, 2014August 3, 2023

Norm Kamikow, Workforce’s Editor-in-Chief, Dies at Age 70

Norm Kamikow, 1943-2014

The human capital management industry has lost one of its leading voices. Norm Kamikow, president and editor-in-chief of MediaTec Publishing, died on July 14, after a sudden illness. He was 70.

For more than four decades, Mr. Kamikow was a leading figure in the publishing industry and in later years built MediaTec Publishing’s Human Capital Media Group, which includes this magazine, into one of the largest media companies in the human capital industry.

But for many, he will be remembered not for the scope of what he achieved or the impact it had on the professions he covered but for being a dedicated friend and colleague.

“In our journey through this industry we meet people that not only have a profound impact on our business but also on our lives. They become family,” said Bob Mosher, a consultant, former Microsoft executive and current editorial advisory board member of Workforce sister publication Chief Learning Officer. “Norm was that guy for so many. Yes, we have him to thank for lifting an industry … but he also helped many of us on a personal level.”

Born on Dec. 25, 1943 in Chicago, Mr. Kamikow moved as a young boy with his family to Los Angeles where according to friends he made an appearance on “Kids Say the Darndest Things” with TV host Art Linkletter. That turn as a TV celebrity was just one early example from a life filled with many more colorful and entertaining stories of which Mr. Kamikow was a master teller.

After graduating from Drake University with a degree in journalism, Mr. Kamikow moved back to Chicago and began a career in advertising sales at the Chicago Tribune. He went on to work at Seventeen magazine, Internet World and Web Week magazines and played a critical role in the launch of Omni and Spin magazines in the 1970s and 80s.

In 1999, Mr. Kamikow, along with his business partner John Taggart, executive vice president and group publisher, started MediaTec with the launch of Certification Magazine, which was aimed at career development for IT professionals. On a shoestring budget financed out of their own pockets, Kamikow and Taggart, along with Gwen Connelly, Mr. Kamikow's wife and MediaTec senior vice president, grew MediaTec from a single magazine into one of the largest media companies in the human resources and human capital industry, including four magazines, a series of national and regional conferences and events, dozens of webinars and virtual events as well as industry research and benchmarking programs.

The company’s Human Capital Media Group includes Chief Learning Officer magazine (launched in 2003), Talent Management (2005), Diversity Executive (2008) and in 2013 acquired Workforce magazine, a 92-year-old HR trade publication, from Crain Communications, Inc. Diversity Executive was recognized by American Business Media as one of the top three new magazines of 2008 and Chief Learning Officer was named “Best New Publication” by the American Society of Business Publication Editors in 2003.

Allison Rossett, recently retired as professor of educational technology at San Diego State University, recalled early conversations with Mr. Kamikow about what would eventually become Chief Learning Officer magazine.

“Norm was chewing on this idea about workforce learning and the executives who lead it. What did I think about a magazine that would be devoted to them and to their enterprises?” she recalled. “We talked. Soon he pulled together a meeting. More talk. The amazing thing is what happened afterwards.”

“Norm and John created something, many things, special things,” she said. “Responsive to that original audience, growing to include conferences and special events, growing more to include other publications, growing to use technology to extend key messages.”

For Cedric Coco, Chief Learning Officer magazine editorial advisory board member and senior vice president, learning and organizational effectiveness at Lowe’s Cos., Mr. Kamikow’s vision shaped how many define human capital management and his ongoing work pointed the way forward for the industry.

“I believe he was on the verge of redefining the holistic role that talent plays across an organization,” he said.

Mr. Kamikow received the 2005 Innovation Award from Media Business Magazine which honored him as its publisher of the year. He was nominated in 2008 by President George W. Bush to serve on the Board of Visitors for Defense Acquisition University, the federal government agency responsible for training and development of the 160,000 members of the U.S. Department of Defense’s acquisition workforce.

An avid golfer and Chicago sports fan, Mr. Kamikow split his time between his home in Chicago and Boca Raton, Fla., where he was a member of the Broken Sound Country Club.

He is survived by his wife, Gwen Connelly; sons Jeffrey Kamikow and David Kamikow; stepdaughter Kendra Chaplin, MediaTec vice president of development and technology; stepson Wesley Chaplin, and four grandchildren.

Editor's note: Have a memory or story to share about Norm's life? Include your comment below or send an email to editors@workforce.com and we'll post a link.
    •    "Remembering Norm Kamikow": Tony Bingham, President, Association for Talent Development (formerly American Society for Training and Development)
    •    "Norm Kamikow Was an Icon of Learning and Development": Mike Hammer, blendedworkforce.com
    •    "Norm Kamikow, CLO Publisher": Elliott Masie, Elliott Masie's Learning Trends

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