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Tag: HR leaders

Posted on July 27, 2020June 29, 2023

The role of the chief people officer is changing in 2020

In the past, when a business encountered a crisis, the CFO was beside the CEO to help handle it. The current state of the world — from the global pandemic to the nationwide protests about systemic racism — has given the chief people officer a similar opportunity. 

While the chief people officer may handle return-to-office basics like providing masks and stocking an ample supply of hand sanitizer, they also face the more daunting specter of easing the stress of employees as they reintegrate into the workplace. 

“A lot of questions that might have been seen as questions of etiquette or personal choice are now questions of safety,” said Arianna Huffington, co-founder of The Huffington Post and founder and CEO of Thrive Global, a behavior change tech company that has been working with many HR leaders during the pandemic. 

Also read: Give managers the time they need to sharpen up their all-around skills

Chief people officers are dealing with the fundamental questions of putting people first, and now that is no longer abstract but very real for companies. “The health and well-being of employees for many companies was seen as a nice-to-have. Now more than ever, it is essential for the success of an organization, and that’s why HR leaders have such a critical role to play,” Huffington said. 

Addressing the well-being of essential workers

Employees are looking at their workplace and employer as a source of trusted information and to help them with mental health solutions, Huffington said.At Walmart, Thrive Global is making its behavior change platform available for Walmart associates — including frontline teams at stores and distribution centers — and their families across the US.

If a company doesn’t address the stress of employees — whether that stress is caused by health concerns, financial worries or something else — the bottom line and the survival of the company itself may be impacted, she said. Like Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex Gorsky memorably said, she added, “Every CEO is a health CEO now.”   

“HR leaders no longer have to convince the C-suite that employee well-being and mental health matters,” Huffington said. “But now comes the challenge of moving from awareness to action, as they must help their companies go from knowing what they need to address to actually doing it.”

We need to normalize talking about our mental health in the workplace, according to Ellyn Shook, chief leadership and human resources officer at Accenture, one of the companies Thrive has worked with. Having senior leaders set the tone for the rest of the organization is key to this goal.

“The most senior leaders in the company [can share] their challenges and how they are recharging and practicing self-care, because those are the things that actually pay off around mental wellness,” she said. 

Also read: Unify those far away workplaces with global mobility tools

Relationships and conversations with other executives

The global leadership team at Bank of America has had to be incredibly nimble, creative and innovative in response to the challenges that 2020 has presented, according to Sheri Bronstein, chief human resources officer at Bank of America, another company Thrive has partnered with.

Also read: Human capital management: Enriching your human resources

“From the imperative to keep our 210,000 employees safe and healthy to recognizing the need for even more focus on diversity and inclusion, events of the past six months have led to more collaboration, learning and sharing between myself and my C-suite teammates than ever before,” she said. 

Bronstein also highlighted the importance of CEO support as the company moves forward to support a healthy workforce. Support from Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan has allowed Bronstein and her human resources team to take bold, swift actions as it responds to the pandemic and the health and safety concerns that employees may have. 

These actions include “no layoffs through 2020 due to the pandemic, free, virtual access 24/7 to doctors, $100 a day to cover child- and elder-care expenses and a variety of resources to support the mental health of our employees and their families,” Bronstein said.

Shook also stressed the importance of building trust with other key stakeholders in the company. Executives working together to lead responsibly can help a company and its workforce come out of a crisis stronger and more resilient. 

“As we discuss physical safety and psychological resiliency, returning to the workplace and actions to fight racism in our organizations, an underlying theme of many of my conversations with other [C-suite executives] is humanity and the opportunity and obligation that leaders have to elevate their most important source of competitive differentiation – their people – especially during times of crisis,” Shook said. 

The opportunity to create lasting change 

The lessons organizations have learned from dealing with these crises will have a lasting impact on how they approach HR matters moving forward, Bronstein said. 

At Bank of America, she added, members of the C-suite will continue to collaborate with each other, “[maintaining] our focus on cultivating a diverse and inclusive culture, and offer programs, initiatives and partnerships that drive change.”

Shook compared the current state of possibilities for HR leadership to that of finance executives during the 2008 financial crisis. The chief people officer, much like the CFO of 2008, is a key leader in an organization right now, “guiding their organizations and people through these trying times where health, livelihoods, and equality are at stake, while also keeping a foot in tomorrow.”

“CHROs have always sat at an interesting crossroads to help their organizations elevate their people, or not – whether it be AI, a pandemic or inequity,” she said, adding the HR leaders who focus on people over process can navigate disruption better in the present and also help contribute to a better future.

At Accenture, for example, Shook said she and her colleagues have learned a lot over the past few months about how people work and how they can still collaborate and be innovative while physically distancing from each other. 

Due to this newfound knowledge, she said, “we are [not] taking this as an opportunity to think about how we go back to what normal was.” and

“This is an opportunity for lasting change,” Shook added. “For modern HR leaders, this has been an accelerant to create a blueprint for the future of work, rethink the social contract and drive even greater value for our people, businesses and communities. And, for those HR leaders who are less progressive, it’s an important catalyst to begin to create a resilient organization that is prepared for whatever the future holds.“ 

 

Posted on February 5, 2020June 29, 2023

HR 101 for new human resources managers

The role of HR is vast. You’re in the weeds, and the amount of duties you’re expected to perform is significant. It can include onboarding, benefits, recruiting, culture building, harassment complaints and more. 

While new HR managers have previous experience in the field, becoming a manager brings about many new challenges — whether they’re an HR team of one or leading a team of many individuals. 

These challenges aren’t insurmountable, though —  especially with some HR 101 lessons from seasoned HR professionals. These people have learned through their years rising the HR ladder what skills and relationships are especially valuable to develop in the first months on the job. 

Building relationships

The most successful HR managers focus on developing strong working relationships with their peers and business partners, said Judy Whitcomb, senior vice president of HR and learning & organizational development at retirement community developer Vi. A strong relationship with their peers helps them learn about existing HR practices, processes and available tools. 

Judy Whitcomb, senior vice president of HR, Vi
Judy Whitcomb, Vi

Meanwhile, “listening and understanding business challenges and opportunities not only helps HR professionals develop his or her business acumen, it helps an HR manager develop a common understanding with business partners on how HR professionals can help develop strategies to contribute to successful business outcomes,” Whitcomb said. 

The relationship between the new HR manager and their new business partner won’t develop overnight, she said. “They  should expect that trust is earned over time and that the best partnerships are those you realize success together.”

One issue that may exist between HR managers and business leaders in other departments is that sometimes they don’t understand each other, said Bradford Charles Wilkins, chief human resources officer at real estate company Altisource and 2015 Workforce Game Changer.

Many people in business hold the stereotype that all HR does is “hire, fire, give a raise, promote or throw a party,” he said. They don’t necessarily think of the strategic duties HR managers can have. 

Recruiting is a good example, Wilkins said. A manager may instruct a recruiter in the HR function to look for a candidate for a position. They may ask for someone like a person with a degree from an exclusive Ivy League school or with many years of experience. In short, they may think they know what they want, but the qualifications they’re looking for aren’t realistic, Wilkins said. 

In general, “They assume the business knows what they’re asking for,” he said. But they have the opportunity to do more. 

They can ask questions like, what are you trying to solve with this hire? Why is the degree important? Couldn’t someone without a traditional four-year degree also have the necessary experience? And, what would the residual effect of this business decision be on the company and that individual’s team? 

Building relationships with employees on the front line is also important,  said Lisa Murfield, human resources manager at Florida-based law firm Hill Ward Henderson. She suggests that new HR managers get out of their office, go around and meet all the employees the organization. 

“You’re going to learn a lot from the people on the front lines and how they feel about the organization. They’re probably always going to have recommendations,” Murfield said. “It’s’ a good thing for the HR manager to get to know people because then [they] get that relationship where people are going to be comfortable coming to [them.]” 

The most vital skills to develop as a new manager

Both the role of HR and the technology HR has access to has changed a lot in the past couple decades, Wilkins said.  

“The best practice 10 years ago is not a best practice today,” Wilkins, who has been in HR for 15 years, said. The change of pace is quick in the field, people who do well in leadership roles are willing to try new things and learn from mistakes. “Now it’s not as much about learning as it is about experimenting,” he said. 

One major change is the onslaught of technology like artificial intelligence and automation, he said. People who do well at their organizations know how to think abstractly in ways that machines can’t and tend to be more creative. 

Business school is one place to pick up these skills, of course, but not necessarily through an HR degree, he said. “HR people going to business school is becoming more popular,” he said. “It’s easier to teach core HR — a lot of classic HR is black and white [like] rules, laws and policies — but the amorphous piece of HR and the business side of it are much more challenging.” 

Bradford Charles Wilkins chief human resources officer Altisource
Bradford Charles Wilkins, Altisource

Murfield is an example of an HR manager who received an MBA in management, giving her a holistic education in finance, marketing and operations. 

She stressed the importance of having some understanding of all aspects of the business. “I’ve seen HR professionals, unfortunately, who get siloed into doing HR and they don’t always understand the business of where they work.” 

Finance is a key area of the business to understand, at least at a basic level, she said. Skills like knowing how to read a financial statement can be valuable. “Get to know the CFO or head of accounting,” she said. “They will be able to help you get access to numbers and analytics that may be helpful to you, if you don’t already access to that within an HRIS system.”

Further, legal knowledge is important for an HR manager, Murfield said. Keeping up with changes in employment law may be challenging, considering the complexity of the legal environment and how laws are constantly changing. Still, the legal environment can greatly impact HR duties and organizational policies. 

As the HR manager as a law firm, she’s able to speak to experts within her own company, but not every manager has that luxury. “If you don’t have legal counsel, maybe that’s something you can recommend that you do have that available to you,” she said. 

What to expect the first few months

First-time managers should try to set realistic goals for themselves, especially since they may experience a large volume of requests, VI’s Whitcomb said. Getting all of it done just wouldn’t be realistic.

Whitcomb suggests that managers work with their business partners to set these goals and prioritize different projects. 

Also read: A planning primer for your first week as a first-time manager

The learning curve is very real at first, but people new to this position can have a positive attitude when making tough, managerial  decisions for the first time. At her first managerial job, Murfield learned the importance of not being hard on yourself. One of her first tasks was to handle an indecent exposure complaint. 

“I remember being calm and collective on the outside as we did this investigation but inside I’m going, ‘What am I doing? Am I doing the right thing?’ ” she said. “You have to go in, exude confidence — even if you are shaking on the inside — and, if nothing else, look like you know what you’re doing even if you’re doubting yourself inside.”     

HR managers can show compassion and patience toward themselves and make the best decision they can make with the information they have, Murfield said. Equally important, though, is showing the same kindness toward others in your organization. 

“You just never know what they’re going through,” she said. 

Posted on November 25, 2019June 29, 2023

How to Hire Your First HR Leader

So, business is good, growth is strong and you’re ready to hire your first HR leader. That’s great news. Congrats!

Now comes the hard part.

This column is not meant to help those looking for their first HR hire, which is generally an individual added by small to medium-sized business when transactional items like payroll and compliance overwhelm an office manager or similar administrative employee with another job to do.

That was your first HR hire. You’ve likely made that hire at least a year or so ago. You thought that person was going to shore up your recruiting issues and get to needed projects in performance, training and other areas. You were wrong.

So here we are. You just posted an opening for an HR manager/director — your first HR leader. If you’re going to invest the money, you need the person to innovate and deliver the return in all your areas of need related to talent.

Finding the right hire in this situation is hard, and misses occur often. Here are ideas to assist in your search:

Experience matters, so prepare to dig. If you’re looking for someone to come in and build your next-level HR platform, you’re going to need to make sure they’ve done it before. The biggest lie the devil ever told the world about HR is that titles equate to ability. That’s not only false in the world of HR, it’s dangerous.

There’s a high degree of variability across HR manager/director candidates. To ensure you end up with what you need, pick your top three HR areas of need, then prepare to interview candidates purposefully on how they have built strong programs in those areas.

Ask candidates to bring a portfolio of examples of their work in each domain. Make sure the experience is real, not hypothetical or you’re going to be less than satisfied in under a year.

Company size of current and past employers is important. As a growing company, you’re going to be naturally attracted to HR leaders in small companies. While that’s one path to success, you shouldn’t discount HR pros who want to downshift from a mega-company existence to the SMB life.

There’s a high degree of variability across HR Manager/director candidates. Pick your Top Three areas of need, then interview purposefully.

Big company HR pros have the benefit of growing up with great tools and resources in the areas important to you. The best ones (who are a motivational fit for life in a smaller company) can use that experience to build your HR platform in a meaningful, progressive way.

Consider recruiting backgrounds as an alternative. Most growing businesses seek to add their first HR leader at around the 100-employee mark. You’re likely adding this leadership team member due to growth, which means recruiting is almost always a pain point. For best results, look to add candidates to your hiring process that have been pure recruiters in their past in addition to holding pure HR positions. Interview to understand their success and satisfaction in the former recruiting role. If your first HR leader has past success as a recruiter and enjoyed that life, you’ll be set up for success.

Of course, all of those tips are related to candidate backgrounds and what you’ll see on résumés. To truly win with your first HR leader hire, you’re also going to have to be brutally honest with yourself related to your company environment and the behavioral DNA you need in a candidate that provides the best match.

My new book, “The 9 Faces of HR,” digs deep into the behavioral DNA of HR pros. Here’s the must-haves I’d recommend for anyone seeking to hire their first HR leader:

Quick on the draw. Taking in large amounts of data/feedback and making quick, accurate decisions is key. Things move pretty fast at a high-growth company, and the right candidate for you will need to match the speed.

Fearless. Your new HR leader needs to be naturally inclined to deal with challenges head on. The right candidate for you will have a bias toward action.

Loves chaos. Let’s face it, you have a cool company but it’s a freak show, as all high-growth organizations are. The right candidate is going to view chaos as a ladder, not a barrier.

Successfully hiring your first HR leader is about finding a candidate in the sweet spot — the intersection of hustle, hard work, innovation and the ability to create product and services others will use to move your company forward.

The right one is out there, but only if you go into the search with a clear plan of what you are looking for. Don’t settle!

Posted on September 20, 2019June 29, 2023

Balancing the 3 Types of Work-Life Balance

I did a candidate interview for an open position recently — during vacation on the beach.

Go ahead and fire up the comments about how my priorities are out of whack. About how I need to take care of myself.

I provide this nugget as a visual to the following reality. There are three types of work-life balance in the world. Two you can choose, one you must earn. All come with a cost. As an HR/talent leader, you should have a point of view on each because odds are they all exist to some extent in your company, but one probably defines your culture.

Let’s break down the types of work-life balance you must choose from:

  1. You have zero work-life balance and zero flexibility. Not only are you working long hours but you’re also expected to be present in the office on the organization’s terms, not your own. You have zero flexibility about when you can leave and you have your smartphone next to your pillow at night.

This situation is relatively easy to find. Just change jobs a couple of times, don’t have boundaries about what you’ll accept and you’ll find the company and boss combination that can provide this quickly. NOTE TO THE KIDS: Sometimes you have to put in time in this situation to pick up the deep experience that can get you to a better place.

  1. You have maximum work-life balance.Congrats! You have found a company and boss that respects your need for time away and even has an unwritten policy that they won’t reach out to you in the evening or on weekends. You come in at 8 a.m. and leave at 5 p.m. It feels good not to have to worry about the chaos after hours. Your time is your time. You found someone who respects that, so if it’s important to you hold on with all your might.

There’s just one little problem: If you hear a ticking sound, it might be the clock counting down on how comfortable you are. You see, progress on earth has rarely been moved forward by respecting labor’s need for an 8-to-5 schedule with a 90-minute lunch, so the tradeoff is that your manager may be mailing it in and putting you and your team at risk long term. Also, just know that by wanting the perfect 40-hour work-life balance, you’re opting out of the corporate version of “Game of Thrones.”

Of the three types of work-life balance in the world, two can be chosen, and one must be earned.

You get more done than the others, or you don’t get promoted or become unemployed. I know it’s harsh. But the ticking clock is real for many who feel great about their work-life balance. It’s all fun and games until you’re on the market as a candidate whose biggest accomplishment was achieving balance.

  1. You have no flexibility and maximum flexibility all at the same time. Most of us would agree that a feature of great work-life balance is being able to leave work when you need to — a late lunch with a friend or an event at your kid’s school. If you have this ability, you agree this is tremendous, and for many of us, it’s the best part of any work-life balance conversation.

For the most part, it’s earned. You can’t put up walls and say you want a 40-hour week to get this flexibility. You have to earn it. The tradeoff for being able to leave any time you want is being indispensable, which in corporate America means your boss — who is likely a complete Type A — can ping you at 9:30 p.m. and get a quick answer.

It’s that access and iteration pace that alpha leaders want out of their people. If you’re looking for work-life balance, that’s the bad news. But if you’re looking for max flexibility about when and where you work and if you can go to the Thursday afternoon soccer game, it might be the type of work-life balance you seek.

As an HR leader, you’re in a tough spot. Odds are that you have jobs at your company with work-life balance flexibility in all three of these categories. But at the end of the day, you’re a performance coach as an HR leader.

You don’t define work-life balance alone at your company as an HR pro. That’s a team sport. But only you — the gifted HR leader who understands potential and life expectations — can customize career coaching for the individual employee in a way that matches their ambition.

That’s it, gotta go. Have another candidate interview coming up. Going to do it in the sun, by the pool. Then I’ll probably hit the beach.

Posted on January 25, 2019June 29, 2023

SHRM Names New Internal Head of HR

The Society for Human Resource Management has named Sean Sullivan as its new chief human resource officer.

Sullivan, who will begin his new job in February 2019, takes over HR operations for the Alexandria, Va.-based organization, the world’s largest association of HR professionals with nearly 300,000 members.

SHRM Sean Sullivan
Sean Sullivan, SHRM’s New Chief Human Resource Officer

“I am pleased to welcome Sean, a longtime SHRM member, to our executive team,” said SHRM President and Chief Executive Officer Johnny C. Taylor, Jr., in a press release announcing the appointment. “His background is exactly the right fit for SHRM as we continue to elevate our profession and represent the positive change we want to see in the workplace.”

Taylor himself is a relatively new leader for the organization, having taken over in early 2018 from Hank Jackson.

Most recently, Sullivan was vice president of human resources at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, where he was responsible for human capital practices and labor relations for the 5,500-employee academic medical center. Previously, he was vice president of human resources at Science Applications International Corporation, a $4 billion publicly traded technology company with 15,000 employees worldwide. Sullivan holds a master’s degree in public administration and a bachelor’s degree in political science and American studies from Syracuse University.


 

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