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Posted on March 2, 2023February 16, 2024

5 benefits of job rotation + tips to do it right

Summary

  • Job rotation can be a vital part of training and development programs and can help companies upskill employees without incurring high costs. 

  • While job rotation is beneficial for employee engagement and reducing turnover, it can disrupt operations if not implemented correctly. 

  • WFM technology can help managers stay on top of job rotations and ensure employees get the most out of the program.


Job rotation is a business practice that allows employees to temporarily move between job roles. It’s a strategy that, at its core, seeks to develop employee skills and interests in new areas of the organization. 

It is a practice that is vital to many different aspects of workforce management — from employee engagement to succession planning. Here are five key benefits of job rotation and why you should consider implementing a system for it. 

Key advantages of job rotation

1. Boosting employee engagement

Communicating a person’s value to the team is at the core of employee engagement. While the proverbial pat on the back and consistent encouragement are useful, exposing employees to other job roles is a much more concrete way of communicating to an employee the value they bring to the entire organization.

Webinar: How to Drive Engagement

2. Promoting lateral movements and internal promotions

Job rotation can pave the way for employees to upskill. Through this experience, employees can gain the knowledge and technical skills needed for a higher position or role. In addition, hiring or promoting from within the organization can boost employee retention and keep recruitment and training costs low.

3. Training and skills development

Job rotation can be vital to an organization’s training and development program. While employee courses and company-sponsored seminars are great opportunities, job rotation enables employees to learn from first-hand experience. It promotes learning by doing and allows employees to try their hand at all kinds of new skills they otherwise would never have a chance to practice. While job rotation may introduce new technical skills to an employee’s repertoire, it can also hone soft skills they might already possess like teamwork, communication, self-direction. 

4. Succession planning and workforce flexibility

When you conduct job rotation, you get to assess your talent base. You can determine which employees have the potential for specific roles or discover certain gaps needing to be filled. With this insight, you can make your succession planning more effective, especially when a core team member in the organization leaves. 

Furthermore, job rotation equips your staff to be more flexible. In unexpected changes or shifts in the organization, your employees can rise up to the occasion and be more comfortable dealing with these changes — all thanks to the exposure and crosstraining they gained during job rotation periods.

5. Increased collaboration

Job rotation helps break silos between departments by allowing employees to work outside of their traditional teams. This promotes better communication and rapport and helps employees ease into the idea of working on cross-departmental projects or tasks. In addition, it fosters better relationships and a stronger sense of belonging across the organization.

Industry-specific benefits of job rotation

Job rotation generally benefits all kinds of organizations, but it has critical benefits specific to business size or industry. 

Small businesses

Due to their limited talent pool, small businesses must ensure that staff are flexible and multi-faceted, ready to adapt to any situation where they are needed to fill in. Doing this saves on wage costs in the long run, as investing in recruitment and training is not a luxury small businesses typically have. 

Enterprises

Job rotations in large organizations primarily helps professional development and succession planning. Rotating employees allows staff to enrich their network within the company, equipping them with more knowledge and capacity to participate in cross-functional projects or even qualify for lateral movement. 

Service-oriented organizations

Hospitality businesses, retail stores, and restaurants can use job rotation to equip their employees with the skills necessary for better customer service. Aside from that, allowing them to rotate to different roles in the company can improve their agility when facing shorthanded situations. 

Manufacturing and industrial businesses

Job rotation provides employees with a deeper understanding of what happens at every step of the production line. This can broaden their skills, equip them to be more flexible, and provide opportunities for them to suggest how to make things more efficient. 

Best practices for conducting job rotations

While job rotation has advantages, it can also be detrimental if not done right. It can disrupt operations, reduce productivity, and increase training costs. There are also cases when employees tend to resist going on job rotations. So these are factors you must consider as you devise a plan for your organization. 

To make job rotation effective for you, here are some best practices to keep in mind. 

Set specific goals and timelines

Employees perform best when there is clarity. Rotating them in between different roles is no exception. Clearly state why they will be temporarily assigned to a different position and what’s expected of them after training. 

For instance, if you want to move an employee from marketing to support, set a clear goal and objective after job rotation. Is it how quickly and accurately they respond to product-related queries? Or is it the number of content types and topics the marketing team could do based on actual customer questions? 

It’s also essential to set a specific timeframe. For example, job rotation can last a few weeks to even a few years. Regardless of the duration that makes the most sense for your organization, it’s best to determine and specify this right off the bat to manage expectations.

Devise a preparation plan for employees who will go on job rotation

Transferring to another team and doing a new set of tasks can be daunting to employees. That’s why you must allow them to prepare before they go on job rotation. While the goal is to equip them by experiencing the job first-hand, that doesn’t mean that you just allow them to go in blind. It would be beneficial to schedule orientation sessions with the supervisor they will work with. Providing learning materials to help them have a basic knowledge of the job will also help. 

Time job rotations accordingly

Identify if there are periods within a year where there’s not much activity, and consider scheduling job rotations during this period. Then, because it’s not too busy, you have more room for adjustments and coaching. For instance, if you’re in hospitality, you can schedule job rotations during off-peak seasons. 

Gather feedback 

Remember to gather feedback after each job rotation finishes. Doing so will give you insight into your job rotation program’s effectiveness. Make sure to act on employee feedback and improve whenever necessary. 

Develop job rotation policies according to career path

Identify what career paths employees want to take. Some employees are more interested in technical advancement, which means it’s more focused on a particular function or being an individual contributor. Meanwhile, some workers are more inclined to go on a managerial track, where they would be more involved in leadership and managing teams. 

Whatever it is, make sure that you curate a job rotation program according to employees’ preferred track. Employees are more likely to be receptive to the program when it’s aligned with their career goals. 

Managing job rotations with technology

Using the right technology helps you implement and stay on top of job rotations. Workforce.com has the tools for ensuring that staff is scheduled correctly, job rotations are timed at the most appropriate time, and that communication is seamless during this period. 

Scheduling for job rotations

Creating shifts for employees on job rotations is as simple as creating regular schedules. Select the location and department they’re assigned to work in and add necessary notes or reminders before you send out the schedule. 

Workforce.com also gives you an oversight on potential gaps and areas you need to fill once job rotation starts. This enables you to quickly find another team member who’s qualified to work any vacant shift. 

Identifying the right time to implement job rotations

We talked about how crucial it is to time job rotations during slow work periods. Workforce.com’s reporting and analytics give you an insight into these things by looking at your historical data to identify less busy seasons. 

Communication and gathering feedback

Get immediate and regular feedback from your employee during job rotation. Within the Workforce.com app, staff are prompted to rate their shift and can easily share feedback on how it went while on the program. With this, you can address concerns promptly and ensure that employees on job rotation are achieving their goals and objectives. 

 

Workforce.com is a robust workforce management platform designed to streamline performance, skills management, scheduling, and employee engagement for mid-market businesses to enterprises. It’s built with tools to ensure you’re never over or understaffed, regardless of the season.

If you plan to implement job rotation schedules within your organization, Workforce.com can help ensure that your operations are running smoothly, even with staff temporarily assigned to other roles. 

To know more, book a call with us today.

Posted on April 27, 2021

Why would a company wait a year to implement an anti-harassment program?

sexual harassment prevention requirements

McDonald’s has lots of secrets. What’s in its sauce? What part of the chicken do the McNuggets come from? How come every time I crave a cone the soft-serve machine is out of order? Why do their soft drinks taste better than anyone else’s?

Something that’s not a secret, however, is that McDonald’s has a serious sexual harassment problem.

From CBS News:
Young women from across the country with remarkably similar accounts of workplace abuse and harassment at one of America’s largest, most iconic fast-food restaurant chains: McDonald’s: ”

“He would make comments on my body, and other workers’ bodies, saying, like, ‘I would have sex with you, I wouldn’t have sex with her,'” said Emily Anibal.

“First he was like, ‘You have nice hair,’ started touching my hair,” said Jamelia Fairley. “Then he was like, physical; then he actually started grabbing my butt.”

Kat Barber said, “Any woman that he could get his hands on or be near, he was taking advantage of that moment.”

Kimberly Lawson said, “It kind of made me feel isolated. I thought I was the only one this is happening to right now, you know what I’m saying? So, I just felt, like, completely alone.”

Lawson, Fairley, Barber and Anibal have all either filed discrimination charges or filed suit against McDonald’s corporate restaurants or their independently-owned franchises. Each tells a story of persistent and unwanted harassment from male co-workers.
In response, CEO Chris Kempczinski said the following:
Let me say plainly: every single person working under the Arches must have a safe and respectful work environment. Sexual harassment in the workplace is an affront to everything we stand for as a System. It has no place in any McDonald’s restaurant, and it will not be tolerated.
If, as Kempczinski added, McDonald’s takes “these allegations very seriously,” and “must acknowledge our mistakes and make them right,” why then is the company waiting until next year to mandate a new anti-harassment program?

Per ABC News, beginning January 2022 the company will mandate new employee training to combat harassment, discrimination, and violence in all 39,000 of its restaurants worldwide. According to Kempczinski, the details are still being worked out, but he expects training at the time of hire plus annual training for all employees.

While this is all makes sense, why does it take nine months to implement this training? McDonald’s has a serious problem that it needs to solve, and all waiting until next year won’t solve anything. McDonald’s is not some rinky-dink company.

It’s a $5 billion corporation with more than enough resources to fund a quick and thorough solution to this problem. A nine-month wait is simply not acceptable, especially considering this training is something it should already have in place and should have been providing to its employees for decades.

Posted on December 8, 2020

Tipped restaurant and other service workers at high risk for ‘maskual harassment’

construction, mask, mobile technology, COVID-19
Everyone has been hit hard during the COVID-19 pandemic. Service industry employees, however, have been hit particularly hard. Many are out of work. And those who are able to work are working fewer hours and earning less in wages and tips.
Moreover, according to this survey (h/t: NPR), a majority of service industry workers are being forced to choose between earning valuable tips and staying safe by wearing a mask.

Consider these statistics regarding tipped employees:

  • 78 percent report experiencing or witnessing hostile behavior from customers in response to staff enforcing COVID-19 safety protocols.
  • 83 percent report that their tips have declined during COVID-19, with two-thirds reporting a decline of more than half.
  • 58 percent report feeling reluctant to enforce COVID-19 protocols out of concern that customers would tip them less.
  • 67 percent report actually having received a lesser than usual tip after enforcing COVID-19 protocols.
  • 84 percent report being within six feet of at least one person who is not wearing a mask in every shift, and one-third report being within six feet of 30 or more maskless individuals on every shift.

The kicker: 37 percent of tipped workers reported that their employer had not conducted mandatory training on COVID safety protocols and 69 percent reported that their employer is not consistently following all COVID safety protocols.

This is unacceptable. Restaurant workers are on the front lines of this virus working inside one of this pandemic’s most dangerous spreading environments.

They shouldn’t have to be de facto safety sheriffs, enforcing mask mandates and other health rules. Yet, that is the position in which many of their employers have put them, which, according to the above survey, is often without training or the enforcement of COVID safety rules.

Employees should not be placed in the position of enforcing COVID safety rules with a customer, especially when they risk the loss of tips and revenue as a result. Employers, do your part. Train your workers and set up a system of enforcement that takes your front-line workers out of the enforcement equation.

Posted on November 24, 2020June 29, 2023

Jushi Holdings builds its workforce in the cannabis industry despite pandemic

marijuana, Jushi Holdings, cannabis industry

While many industries have suffered through massive cutbacks in 2020 and were forced to make large-scale layoffs, at least one sector has weathered the economic downturn as hiring trends have blossomed.

According to Marijuana Business Daily’s Annual Marijuana Business Factbook, U.S. medical and adult-use cannabis sales has climbed by nearly 40 percent this year to about $15 billion as industry employment in 2020 will jump by 50 percent over 2019 to almost 300,000 full-time jobs.

To lend perspective to that figure, a story in Forbes points out that the number of cannabis industry jobs is on par with the beverage industry and computer programming. And to add a bit more perspective, cannabis is a highly regulated industry requiring strict compliance measures. Just 11 states have fully legal adult-use markets with four more states adopting laws following the November election.

Evaluating safety and hiring

Despite the industry’s growth, cannabis operators had to take a breath to evaluate their operations as the pandemic swept across the economy. Jushi Holdings Inc. remained operational at the pandemic’s onset, said Executive Vice President of Human Resources Nichole Upshaw, but company leaders assessed what actions needed to be taken.

Being a vertical operation with 450 employees (335 are hourly) in retail, cultivation, processing and manufacturing, there were certain logistical issues they had to address.marijuana, Jushi Holdings, cannabis industry, hiring

As an essential employer, Jushi immediately focused on the safety of their employees, patients and customers.

“We worked together as a team to source cleaning supplies and PPE for all locations and employees,” said Upshaw. Currently Jushi has operations in seven states as well as offices in Denver and Boca Raton, Florida. “We were early to provide N95 masks for our employees and start taking employee temperatures upon arrival to work.”

Prompt communication became key

Communication was immediate and urgent for this frontline employer. They established daily calls and senior management received regular updates to influence important decisions, Upshaw said.

Retail, corporate, and cultivation/manufacturing teams each had their own calls, she added. They also spoke with industry peers and constantly tracked health and employment law guidelines. Jushi also launched “Blazing the Trail,” a quarterly all-hands call where senior executives updated employees on company performance and initiatives.

Upshaw emphasized the importance of both executive and companywide calls. “Members of the legal and HR team each attended weekly industry calls to discuss how we were all addressing the safety of our businesses,” she said. “We attended webinars and read countless published articles to ensure we had the most up-to-date information and response measures in place. We reviewed the CDC website daily and communicated out each update that impacted our locations.”

Communication also was key to balancing employee safety and customer needs, she said.

 Also read: Managing people in the growing cannabis industry

“The best thing you can do in the case of differing perspectives is communicate,” Upshaw said. “Changes that supported the safety of our employees created an environment of understanding. Reminding our employees of the responsibility we have to keep cannabis accessible to our patients and customers during these turbulent times also created an environment of understanding. These are the times when being a great listener is the best service you can provide to customers and your employees.”

Seeking talent from outside the industry

Jushi temporarily tapped the brakes on hiring at the outset of the pandemic, but it’s clear that has changed. A glance at Jushi’s careers site lists dozens of positions, from dispensary store manager and shift supervisor to HR generalist.

Upshaw said that Jushi enlists cannabis executive search and staffing company FlowerHire to assist its hiring. With its burgeoning employment numbers, the cannabis industry presents an opportunity for those who were laid off or looking for a career change to redeploy their skills. Cannabis could greatly benefit from leading professionals outside of the market, according to a release from FlowerHire.

“While we did have about a month when recruiting halted, that period of time didn’t last long,” Upshaw said. “FlowerHire was ready to jump in like a member of the Jushi and (retail locations) BEYOND/HELLO team and be our talent scouts while we focused on keeping our employees safe.” 

Initially there was a lot of instruction to remind employees how important it was to follow safety protocols, she said.

“After months of adjusting to the pandemic, I believe that human behaviors have been forever changed,” she said. “People will continue to join the organization ready to work and adhere to safety standards because they have been doing so since March of 2020.”

Upgrading the onboarding experience

With the influx of new employees lacking a background in the cannabis industry, HR is responsible for onboarding employees with knowledge of what to expect before and after their first day, Upshaw said.

“My desire is to build out a mature pre-boarding, onboarding and training experience that equips every employee for their role at Jushi and BEYOND/HELLO,” she said. “Although we have all adjusted to the new work order, there are many initiatives and projects that have taken a back seat to the main priority of keeping employees safe.”

Jushi has implemented pulse surveys to gather feedback on various topics, she said. During a time when health care is on everyone’s mind, Jushi also increased the level of company contributions to benefit plans.

Adhering to compliance measures

Following governmental guidelines is nothing new to cannabis companies, Upshaw said. At the federal level, marijuana remains classified as a Schedule I substance under the Controlled Substances Act, while states and local agencies have layers of regulations and policies.

“We are accustomed to operating in highly regulated environments and we have a culture of doing what we can to elevate the reputation of our industry,” Upshaw said. “This opportunity has brought us together and allowed us to continue to reach our unified mission. I am proud of the way we have worked together, have had a bias for action, and have complied with all local, state and federal guidelines.”

Dump manual tracking and avoid costly labor-law penalties. Ensure simplified and automated compliance to federal, state and local labor regulations with Workforce.com’s powerful compliance platform.

Posted on November 14, 2020June 29, 2023

VF Corp. invests in empathy and resources for working parents

VF Corp., COVID-19, mask, education

Challenges related to the COVID-19 pandemic have affected most people in the workforce in one way or another.

Working parents have not only coped with their own retooled job responsibilities as many of them adjust to working from home, but in many cases they have also added daycare worker and classroom instructor to their resumes.

New research from Microsoft Corp. revealed that 54 percent of parents reported that it’s been difficult balancing household and professional demands while working from home. And according to a recent WalletHub study, 54 percent of parents with young children at home don’t think they are being more productive at home than they are in the office.

VF Corp., a Denver-based publicly traded global company of 50,000 employees, realized the plight facing many of their workers as summer was ending and as parents faced the specter of another school year of distance learning for their children. Leadership of the apparel and footwear company, whose brands include The North Face, Vans and Dickies, quickly prioritized providing educational resources to alleviate the extra pressure and stress that working parents whose children would be learning remotely may be experiencing. The pandemic created significant uncertainty and posed new challenges for everyone, said Anita Graham, executive vice president, chief human resources officer and public affairs at VF Corp.

“Through conversations with associates and responses to our employee surveys, we knew that many of our associates were struggling with balancing work and the responsibilities of caring for their families,” she said.

Technology partnerships ease remote learning

One program, Laptops for Learning, provided more than 500 reconditioned laptops at no cost to eligible U.S.-based employees at VF Corp.’s distribution centers, retail stores and customer service centers, providing children with the technology necessary to participate in distance learning. The organization also implemented Rethink, a resource for parents with special needs children, Graham said. Another initiative, Guidance Now, provides employees with access to tutoring support and free access to SitterCity to help identify baby-sitting resources that could serve as a substitute for traditional child care.

Case study: PFS dials up a rapid work from home solution for its call center staff

“We believe that a good education is a critical and significant stressor for parents, and we wanted to help alleviate the added stress,” she said. “Virtual learning has posed challenges that working parents haven’t previously encountered. How do associates keep their children engaged in virtual school while also doing their own work? How do they afford reliable technology needed for virtual learning? The laptop program emerged from this need.”

A boost for those needing elder care

VF Corp. also amped up its communications so that employees were aware of resources such as telehealth and the benefits available through a partnership with Bright Horizons, which provides backup child care as well as elder-care support.

VF Corp., COVID-19, education“The coronavirus pandemic has been particularly impactful on older communities,” Graham said. “Adult children have had to take on more responsibilities for their elder parents, from running errands to providing full-time care. Our partnership with Bright Horizons has provided help to those employees who are providing elder care.”

Through the partnership, employees can take an online needs assessment, find information on selecting elder care resources, and utilize a search tool for finding and evaluating care providers, Graham said.

Moving to flex schedules and remote work

The pandemic has tested organizations’ agility to adjust to new ways of living and working. VF Corp. recognized early in the pandemic that it would need to introduce new programs and resources to keep morale up and employees engaged. Placing emotional and physical well-being at the forefront, they partnered with employee assistance program provider ComPsych to offer emotional well-being webinars to equip employees with the tools to keep themselves mentally healthy.

They also implemented new schedules and training programs to help employees put themselves first. Understanding that working from home poses child- and elder-care challenges, VFCorp. encouraged employees to rethink the traditional workday and create a flexible schedule that works best for them and their families.

Case study: COVID-19 causes Radial Inc.’s 25,000 seasonal hires to practice safe shipping

“The flexible scheduling program is an initiative we introduced at the start of the pandemic as a result of the stressors we were hearing from employees,” Graham said. “An employee can work with their manager to develop a schedule that allows them to take afternoons off to take care of children before resuming work in the evening.”

Considering that within the United States 70 percent of VF Corp. employees are hourly, 17 percent are salaried and 13 percent are contingent workers, Graham said they are sympathetic to accommodate employee needs while maintaining organizational operations.

“We have a wealth of initiatives and programs available to all our employees, no matter their role, location or level,” she said. “However, we do recognize that there are different needs across the enterprise, so we have developed unique programs for employees in retail stores and distribution centers.”

Remote work into the future

Rather than declare an “at least until” date, VF Corp. intends to remain flexible as a permanent approach and launched a future of work workstream called “Workplace Next” to define their vision for how they work in the future. The outcomes will be shared with employees in early 2021, Graham said.

Placing the needs of employees at the forefront of their actions is crucial to VF Corp. successfully navigating the pandemic, she said. It’s important to listen and it’s OK to over-communicate, she added.

“By listening to our people and taking action, we have been able to successfully keep morale high and our employees engaged and ultimately meet our consumers’ needs, and we’ll continue to listen to them to understand how we can help support them moving forward as our world continues to change.”

Whether you have 10 or 10,000 staff, building schedules is easier and faster with Workforce.com’s scheduling platform. Optimize and automate your complex scheduling patterns and provide peace of mind and know that you are in compliance.

Posted on October 25, 2019June 29, 2023

Interpreting and Improving Performance Reviews of Multicultural Employees

Have you ever encountered a performance review in which a manager criticizes a behavior that’s tied to an employee’s cultural norms rather than to performance issues?

As more multicultural employees join the workforce, organizations are challenged to identify, interpret and assess potentially biased evaluation input on these workers. According to a recent Harvard Business Review article, “while biases can affect any of an organization’s talent decisions, they can be especially harmful when it comes to diversity and inclusion efforts.” And there is perhaps no setting that shapes careers, salaries and lives like annual performance evaluations.

When it comes to developing and advancing multicultural employees, performance reviews can be a double-edged sword. Too often, reviews are either underutilized, resulting in missed opportunities to intervene, or administered with a lack of cultural awareness. This can leave multicultural employees feeling isolated and unable to make reasonable advancements, ultimately deeming them a retention risk.

After seeing more than one multicultural employee depart after a disappointing performance review, I’ve wondered if a different review experience could have prevented that outcome.

Common Review Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

From coaching many multicultural clients over the years, I’ve compiled some best practices that may be useful for HR and learning and development practitioners, as well as managers faced with these performance review challenges.

  1. No Surprises! Give Feedback Early and Often

When concerns over his clarity of speech were expressed for the first time, one multicultural coaching client said, “I had no idea they felt that way. It’s good to know now, but I had never heard that from them before.”

Negative or constructive feedback coming late in the cycle can unintentionally put multicultural employees at a disadvantage. Addressing language and communications development needs (presentations and writing skills, interpersonal communications or dimensions of emotional intelligence) requires extra time. These “higher order” skills are progressively learned and attained, so infrequent feedback, or feedback that relies too much on human memory, can limit multicultural employees’ progress.

  1. Don’t Let Comments Get ‘Lost in Translation’

Performance review comments are not always written in a way that is clear or actionable. Or they are overly nuanced, reflecting the commenter’s lack of comfort with direct, straightforward language.

For example, a consulting firm employee of Asian background was given the vague advice to “get verbal presence training,” instead of being told that he might explore speech coaching to help improve his speech clarity and articulation. Another multicultural coaching client noted, “It is always disappointing to get my work back with so many corrections — and no explanation of why it is wrong.”

A better way: Focus on clear, actionable steps, as in these recommendations excerpted from a multicultural employee’s review:

  • Speak louder — both in person and on calls.
  • Inject energy — vary tone and place emphasis on key words.
  • Be direct — clearly tell listeners what you have to say and recap if necessary.
  • Provide coherent structure — organize your points clearly so your key messages are not disjointed or confusing.
  1. Read between the Lines

Some managers are (understandably) reluctant to be too direct in their critiques for fear of giving offense or being politically incorrect. Others may display unintended bias or lack understanding of how cultural differences play into behaviors.

During a manager review feedback conversation, one Springboards coach was told: “My employee is an incredibly strong technical contributor, but accent gets in the way — wait, are we allowed to say that?”

When a senior level employee is either receiving or providing performance feedback, the process is especially delicate. It could benefit from having a neutral third party like a specialized coach who can assess communication, language and culture needs and present recommendations. A well-designed peer review tool really helps managers to articulate potentially sensitive development needs in a way that’s impartial and actionable. This tool also provides a clear roadmap for coaching follow-up.

Managers can zero in on specific employee competencies, for example:

Based on an effectiveness rating scale from 1 to 5, to what extent does the employee:

  • Speak English with clear pronunciation, appropriate word choice and proficient grammar?
  • Deliver the appropriate, essential message to the audience: high level or in-depth summary to colleagues/team as necessary?
  • Guide her audience through complex material with appropriate storytelling, leading them to a strong conclusion and clear takeaways?
  • Present analysis effectively to a range of audiences?
  • Speak clearly and at the right pace, pausing appropriately, allowing audience to absorb, interject, and engage naturally and comfortably; display a confident cadence and vocal style?
  1. Mind the Gap

In coaching engagements, we’ve often seen three to five month gaps between the review and the onset of follow-up training. By that point, the next talent review cycle is already well underway. Ideally, employees should immediately have a clear set of recommendations and goals and the appropriate resources to get there, like internal mentoring, coaching or skills training.

Given the extra time multicultural employees often need to address feedback recommendations and make training progress, for some, the writing may already be on the wall.

  1. Unintended Consequences: ‘There’s nowhere to go here’

Consider how frustrating it must be for an individual who has been given constructive feedback but has not been pointed in the right direction for immediate upskilling. “I feel embarrassed that people don’t understand me,” a multicultural coaching client recently shared. “Sometimes I think they are pretending to understand me so as not to hurt my feelings, but it is awkward either way.”

Thoughtful messaging can eliminate any stigma or suggestion that the employee needs to be “fixed.” If coaching is perceived by multicultural employees as remedial or as a last-ditch effort, their next step may well be to contemplate opportunities elsewhere. But when managers frame their feedback and subsequent recommendations to be both constructive and inclusive, performance reviews can be a positive force in advancing career development and opportunity for all employees.

 

Posted on April 10, 2019June 29, 2023

When Workplace Training Goes Very, Very Wrong

active shooter training

A few months ago I participated in active-shooter training.

I presented harassment training for a local manufacturer and at its conclusion the company played a 10-minute video explaining to its employees what to do in an active-shooter situation.

Generally I’m not a fan of training videos. They tend to be boring, poorly acted and ineffective. This one, however, was quite effective. It was not only chilling to watch, but, a few months out, I still recall the ABCs of what to do during an active shooter (Avoid, Barricade, Confront).

An Indiana school district, however, had a different idea of how to train its employees to prepare for an active shooter.

This employer had its employees shot in the back, execution style, with plastic pellets.

Vox offers the details.

Local law enforcement carried out the drill with the teachers of Meadowlawn Elementary School in Monticello, Indiana, in January, the Indiana State Teachers Association said in a meeting with state legislators on Wednesday. The drill involved dividing the teachers into small groups and instructing them to face a classroom wall and kneel. Then, deputies with the White County Sheriff’s Office fired plastic pellets into the backs of more than 20 teachers without warning. Several teachers were injured, a representative for the district’s union said, though none have publicly come forward about the incident.

The employees’ union further detailed on Twitter the mental anguish its members suffered.

Indiana State Teachers Association@ISTAmembers
 · Mar 20, 2019
Replying to @ISTAmembers

During active shooter drill, four teachers at a time were taken into a room, told to crouch down and were shot execution style with some sort of projectiles – resulting in injuries to the extent that welts appeared, and blood was drawn.

Indiana State Teachers Association@ISTAmembers

The teachers were terrified, but were told not to tell anyone what happened. Teachers waiting outside that heard the screaming were brought into the room four at a time and the shooting process was repeated.

This is NUTS.
We all want our teachers to know how to keep our children safe in the event of an active shooter. I can’t believe I’m typing this … but mock executions are not the answer. To look at this another way, we want to end sexual harassment, but we’re not molesting our employees either.
Sometimes, a training video is all you need.
Posted on March 21, 2011December 30, 2019

Deloitte Gets Physical with $300 Million Learning Center

Consulting giant Deloitte is putting serious cash behind its stated priority of training and development. Many companies have hoarded money in an uneven economy, but the New York-based firm is dipping into its profits to build Deloitte University, a $300 million “learning and leadership development” campus near Dallas.

Slated for completion this summer, Deloitte University will feature 35 classrooms, each outfitted with technology for interactive learning. The 712,000-square-foot complex also will be self-contained, including 800 hotel rooms on site to house visiting Deloitte employees who attend training. The company plans to hire a hospitality management vendor to operate the hotel.

Deloitte University’s primary purpose will be to help consultants buttress their technical proficiency with leadership, collaboration and team-building skills, says Bill Pelster, a Deloitte managing principal for talent development, who is based in Seattle. More than 45,000 consulting professionals make up Deloitte and its U.S. subsidiaries. Worldwide, the company has nearly 170,000 employees.

Deloitte consultants specialize in highly technical fields, such as tax accounting, auditing and risk management, corporate financial advice and regulatory/legislative matters. They also have expertise in selected business sectors.

It is unusual for consulting firms to adopt the corporate-university concept, says Sue Todd, president of the Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania-based Corporate University Xchange, a research and advisory firm. In fact, Todd says most consultancies still cling to older models in which consultants specialize strictly in one strategic area.

However, the need for continuous learning by technical professionals is greater than ever and likely to remain so given the rapid pace of the changing business climate.

“Consulting firms are slowly finding the models they’ve used to define jobs need to be significantly expanded. Either they get more value from their consultants, or they risk losing whole hunks of business to competitors,” says Todd, whose organization is not directly involved with Deloitte University.

Still, it is unusual for companies in the current economy—even large concerns like Deloitte, which posted global revenue of $26.6 billion in 2010, up 1.8 percent—to sink vast sums of money in a physical learning campus. But Deloitte has been transforming the learning curricula across its varied lines of business, including switching last year from a regional to a national model for talent management. Construction of the leadership center dovetails with that effort, officials say.

As the most visible outgrowth of the strategy, Deloitte University will sprawl across 107 acres in Westlake, Texas. When operations begin—probably in October—it will deliver 1 million hours of training per year, or roughly one-third of all Deloitte’s U.S. training.

All told, more than 420 learning programs are scheduled during the first year of operation.

“It embodies our commitment to developing professionals in a much more dynamic way” than traditional learning formats, Pelster says.

Deloitte University plans to jettison traditional learning methods. Lecture-based learning is out. Instead, interactive training activities will force employees to anticipate hypothetical problems and devise solutions as a group. Computer-simulated business scenarios, case studies and role-playing will be the norm.

The participatory format should help consultants see things from a client’s point of view—an important attribute when addressing business issues fraught with ambiguity and complexity, Pelster says.

Some of Deloitte’s U.S. partners, managers, and executives will serve as instructors at the Dallas campus, facilitating small groups of cross-disciplinary teams and providing feedback. For roughly every five participants, one Deloitte leader will be on hand as a sounding board.

“It’s basically a leadership laboratory that gives us the opportunity to see how teams react, and then provide immediate feedback on their decisions. It’s important that our leaders be in the classrooms to teach and mentor the next generation of Deloitte professionals,” Pelster says.

Deloitte decided to invest money in a learning campus largely because it will provide flexibility in how learning is delivered, Pelster says. Video and other interactive technologies are being installed to connect classroom learners with colleagues in Deloitte offices, including another learning center in India. Classrooms also can be reconfigured to accommodate different types of learning events, Pelster says.

It’s not a true corporate university, however, in which employees can choose to enroll in professional courses. Rather, participants will be invited to attend by business units or sponsors of specific learning programs.

Deloitte’s sizable investment also comes amid growing optimism by senior executives, 70 percent of whom expected to spend more on all types of capital projects during the first quarter, according to a February survey by the Corporate Executive Board in Arlington, Virginia. That’s up from 52 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.

Deloitte isn’t alone in pouring money into a building dedicated to employee development. This year, Planned Cos. is celebrating the second anniversary of its 2,000-square-foot interactive educational facility. The company, which provides building management and maintenance services at commercial and residential properties, built the $200,000 center next to its headquarters in Parsippany, New Jersey.

It features 14 workstations, each providing simulated exercises on a specific area of building management. A front-desk module, for example, enables employees to watch a live feed from a luxury condominium in Jersey City. “It lets them visualize what it means to man a front desk in a professional manner,” says Robert Francis, president and CEO of the company his family has owned for four decades.

Planned Cos. uses the facility as a retention tool for existing customers, as a sales tool to persuade new prospects, as well as a way to improve employees’ skills and help them plan their careers, Francis says.

The learning center also helps Planned Cos. hold onto its employees—a key goal in an industry with volatile turnover. “The higher our retention rate, the more it helps our bottom-line productivity,” says Francis, whose company’s efforts at career development earned it the 2010 Optimas Award for Vision from Workforce Management.

Even with the rise of e-learning and virtual technologies, Deloitte placed a high value on having its own leadership campus. The decision to build Deloitte University came after extensive internal research, including surveys across its multigenerational workforce. Pelster was surprised to find that throughout the company, including millennial employees, support for a physical learning facility was strong.

“It’s one place we’ll all go at key milestones in our careers, and it’s one place we’ll all have in common,” Pelster says.

Workforce Management Online, March 2011 — Register Now!

Posted on February 28, 2000September 19, 2019

Employees’ Top Training Needs

Do you ever wonder whether your training needs are similar to your competitors’? Do you want some ideas on where to focus your training?

Leadership development is the No. 1 training need of employees, according to a survey of over 200 organizations nationwide. In a tight labor market, organizations have become more interested in developing employees they already have on board, and providing them with the training they need to take on additional responsibility, such as training in interpersonal skills, communication skills, managing change, and teamwork.

The Top 10 training needs of today’s employees are:

  1. Leadership development (selected by 65% of respondents).
  2. Interpersonal skills training (59%).
  3. Communication skills training (53%).
  4. Managing change (52%).
  5. Teamwork (52%).
  6. Management skills training (51%).
  7. Problem solving (45%).
  8. Customer service (41%).
  9. Retaining employees (40%).
  10. Creativity and innovation (36%).

You can bet your competitors will be working to satisfy these needs. Try to do the same if you want to keep up with the Joneses.

SOURCE: Manchester Inc., Jacksonville, Florida, February 2000.

Posted on September 1, 1997June 29, 2023

Interview with U.S. Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman

More than 100 years ago, the first Labor Day was established in New York City. That was on September 5, 1882. Now Labor Day is a national holiday, and as the United States once again pays tribute to the American worker, human resources professionals can join the legion of employers, unions and government officials in celebrating the evolution of today’s dynamic workplace.

Among those top government officials is Alexis M. Herman, 49, the nation’s 23rd U.S. Secretary of Labor, appointed by President Bill Clinton and confirmed by the Senate in April with an 85 to 3 vote. She succeeds Robert B. Reich who resigned last year for personal reasons.

As secretary of labor, Herman will enforce U.S. labor laws and regulate workplace activities as required by laws. Her duties fall under the U.S. Department of Labor’s mission, which is to “foster, promote and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, to improve their working conditions and their opportunities for profitable employment.”

As a Cabinet member, the secretary of labor also counsels the president on American workplace policies. Herman also is a member of more than 30 councils, committees and boards, such as the President’s Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry. Some of the principal laws the secretary administers include: the Job Training Partnership Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, Unemployment Insurance and the Consumer Credit Protection Act.

After her first 100 days in office, Herman recently gave Workforce an exclusive interview. She survived a tough confirmation process that took several months (see the end of this article for information on how to obtain fax material describing Herman’s confirmation hearings) and has since drafted a game plan that reveals her commitment to creating partnerships between management and labor, ensuring the rights of women and minorities, and furthering the competency and skill level of America’s workforce. Described as unusually pro-business for a labor secretary in a Democratic administration, she prides herself in building bridges to Corporate America since her days as a management consultant and a liaison with company executives for the White House.

As human resources leaders ponder the future of labor-management relations and the workforce in general, Herman’s forward-thinking agenda is reassuring. Below are her comments:

Q: Now that you’ve been confirmed as U.S. Secretary of Labor, what do you consider the key elements of your agenda-and why?
A: In my testimony before the Senate, before my confirmation, and at every opportunity since then, I’ve presented my five goals for the Labor Department. First, we must equip every working American with the skills to find and hold a good job with a rising income throughout his or her life. Our economy is part of an ultracompetitive, and often unforgiving, global marketplace. In this economy, the workers who succeed are going to be those who are able to improve their skills throughout their careers.

My second goal is to help people move from welfare to work. I understand with all my heart that fulfilling work and a decent paycheck are the two most direct paths to human dignity. But it will take a profound depth of commitment to learn what skills employers are looking for, to equip welfare recipients with those skills and then to convince employers to hire them.Alexis Herman

Third, I want to assure that working Americans are secure when, as labor leader Walter Reuther used to say, they’re “too old to work and too young to die.” Our department’s responsibility to working Americans doesn’t end when they retire. We must safeguard private pension funds and encourage workers to save on their own for retirement.

Fourth, we in the Department of Labor will guarantee every working American a safe and healthy workplace, with the rights and respect he or she deserves-and with equal opportunity for all. If an employer’s practices threaten workers’ safety and health, if an employer discriminates on the basis of gender, race or disability, or if the company deprives workers of fair wages, then tough enforcement is necessary. But our ultimate goal is compliance with employment laws, not punishment for its own sake.

My fifth and final goal is to help working people balance work and family because Americans must be able to succeed at home as well as on the job. Companies with policies that support families find it’s simply good business and good family values.

Q: What do you anticipate will be the greatest obstacle to finding common ground between business and labor? What assets will help you achieve success?
A: [As a society,] we’re still trying to form that “more perfect union,” both in our nation and in our workplaces. I believe it’s possible for this country to move toward a remarkable era of broadly shared prosperity. But first, we must begin by facing-seriously and realistically-the issues that continue to tear us apart. We must begin, through honest and constructive dialogue, to work through the issues that divide us, whether it’s fair pay, safe and healthy working conditions, moving from welfare to work-and, yes, racism and sexism.

As a black woman who was born and raised in the South, I easily could have become bitter. But in fact, I’ve been blessed, because I have always focused on the positive. I refuse to buy into stereotypes, and my experiences with bad people are completely outweighed by those who are good.

Q: Given your previous experience managing HR in the private sector, what would you say are some of today’s key human resources issues?
A: Number one is that skills matter. Evidence suggests that Americans with inadequate training and education and no technological expertise will face declining wages or unemployment. As the pace of technological change continues to accelerate, many more low-skilled or unskilled workers in the United States will be displaced by more sophisticated technology or confined to an ever-diminishing part of the job market. For those who maintain their skills, the changes are likely to bring rewards.

We must begin, through honest and constructive dialogue, to work through the issues that divide us.

Second, Americans are getting older. Baby boomers who have prepared well for their retirements may be in a good position to retire. But what about everyone else? This is of particular concern to women who outlive men and are less likely to be covered by pensions. Sixty percent of all working women have no pension coverage. That’s a figure we need to increase.

Third, America is becoming more culturally diverse every day. This offers enormous potential for more creative and innovative workplaces.

Q: What were your greatest lessons from your previous HR experience?
A: President Clinton often has said that this country doesn’t have a person to waste. And I believe that the same thing is true of companies. In the 1980s, I spent most of my time advising companies on how to create a climate of understanding so those hired would stay on and succeed in their corporate cultures.

This is far from being an altruistic notion. It’s a bottom-line issue. I know from experience that corporate success is maximized only when every worker at every level is enlisted as a partner in the effort to achieve top performance. The benefits of using the talents of every employee rebound not just to the employees, but also to the companies themselves.

Q: What kinds of labor-management trends are shaping the workforce of tomorrow?
A: I think any time we see true labor-management cooperation, we’ll see innovation. I want to particularly recognize and congratulate the Service Employees International Union and other AFL-CIO unions at Kaiser Permanente for endorsing a landmark partnership to review national business strategies on issues affecting the quality of health care. It’s an important breakthrough on one of the nation’s toughest issues.

The Communications Workers of America, to use another example, is doing some great work with U S West, along with the Labor Department, to provide continuing education and skills development for the workers at the company. Its Pathways program, which provides tuition reimbursement, career planning assistance and skills assessment, is a perfect example of the kind of partnership that’s possible between labor, business-and in this case-government. It’s one I hope will be duplicated by other companies and other industries.

Q: How do you think HR leaders can become more strategic partners in their companies?
A: My advice would be to base their recommendations on the best available information. They need to acknowledge that technology and human capital aren’t substitutes but complements. They must help companies and workers prepare for change through the use of technology, transition planning and training. They also need to help companies think about how to creatively recruit and retain workers by adopting nontraditional working arrangements and family-friendly practices. To do this they should learn what the best companies, even their competitors, are doing and learn from their successes and their failures.

Q: Which HR functions do you believe are taking on greater importance as we move toward the 21st century?
A: If I were a human resources manager, I’d give attention to several areas. Among them:

Training and development: For a number of years now, we’ve heard it said, and have said repeatedly, that no longer should a worker expect to begin and end his or her career with the same employer. As the workforce continues to change, employees should possess the necessary basic skills that will allow for lifelong learning to meet the demands of a shifting job market.

Recruitment and staffing: Particularly in an era of change and restructuring in both the workforce and the workplace, achieving a goal of hiring and retaining the best workers will be a real challenge.

Flexibility/work and family: Although alternative work schedules-flextime, part-time, job sharing, compressed workweeks and telecommuting-were originally designed to help working mothers balance work and family, recent surveys and some actual experiences show that more men are interested in and using these provisions than previously thought. Also, the issue of child care has been joined by that of elder care, especially as many baby boomers are now expressing concerns relating to the care of parents and other relatives.

Pay and benefits: The question of pay equity must be appropriately addressed as a fairness issue that particularly affects women and minorities in the workplace. Several states and some companies are evaluating jobs as a way of determining fair pay for all employees, irrespective of gender and race.

Retirement planning: Never has it been more important nor have there been so many options available to prepare for retirement. We in the department will continue to do everything possible to safeguard pension funds, while smart employers will find new and more effective ways of encouraging workers to save for retirement.

Workforce diversity and discrimination: Although affirmative action is repeatedly coming under fire, there’s still a great need to address this issue in terms of discrimination faced by women and minorities. We know from the calls and letters we get at the department that sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination and other forms of disrespect on the job are still a problem for many.

Q: Where have you seen innovations between the private and public sector in terms of job training?
A: The National Skills Standards Board is a good example. This unique organization was created by Congress in 1994 with bipartisan support and is composed of leaders of business, education, labor and community affairs. It’s charged with encouraging a business-led effort to develop a voluntary, national system that spells out skill requirements across broad economic sectors. The board’s work is helping business specify the knowledge, skills and abilities a worker should have to get and keep a job, and it’s helping workers make sound decisions about training.

In addition in the Department of Labor, we’re in the second year of a demonstration program to help train out-of-school youths in some of the nation’s poorest communities. Grantees work with public and private organizations in the broader community, such as schools, community colleges, community-based organizations, private-sector employers and the judicial system, to reduce the high school dropout rate in the area and to provide mentoring support, leadership development and other services that young people need to start career paths with earnings sufficient to support a family.

These are just two of many examples.

Q: What do you think it’s going to take to close the wage gap between women and minorities and their white male counterparts?
A: The good news is that the economy has created more than 12 million new jobs during the past four years, most of which have paid higher wages than the average for all jobs combined. But, unfortunately, the employment and wage gap between minorities and others didn’t narrow much. There are several reasons for this.

First, not enough minority youths entered and completed remedial job training programs. And not enough of those who completed high school and skills-training programs entered better-than-average paying jobs, many of which were located in areas not easily accessible to minority youths. And sadly, on the eve of a new century, race and gender discrimination continue to block equal opportunity for minorities to get into better paying jobs.

In addition to providing training opportunities, I think it will take several things to close the wage gap. These include efforts to eliminate gender segregation of jobs and to promote fair pay practices, such as what we’re trying to do with the Labor Department’s Women’s Bureau Fair Pay Clearinghouse. [The clearinghouse provides free information to working men and women about fair pay.] We also need to continue vigorous enforcement of anti-discrimination laws.

It won’t be easy to reverse a pattern of wage inequities in our society, but I’m determined to make a difference.

I have spent a substantial part of my career, including as the director of the Women’s Bureau, fighting for equal employment opportunity for women and minorities. It won’t be easy to reverse a pattern of wage inequities in our society, but I’m determined to make a difference.

Q: How likely is it that you’ll be successful at mediating an agreement on compensation time?
A: The president is firmly in favor of giving employees a real choice between earning overtime pay or paid time off when they work more than 40 hours in a week. Giving employees more flexibility serves everyone’s interests-but we must make sure we do it in a way that’s good for both business and employees.

That’s why the president insists upon a strong, responsible comp-time bill. Although most employers will be fair to their employees, a change in the law to allow comp time must include adequate safeguards to maintain and protect the rights of employees. I am hopeful that Congress will agree to and send to the president a bill he can sign, one that gives employees real choice, protects them from those employers who might abuse comp time and preserves workers’ paychecks and the 40-hour week.

Q: What kind of new partnerships need to be formed in order to improve the quality of today’s workforce?
A: Stated most simply, my vision for the new American workforce and the next American century can be achieved only by building strong partnerships with the business community; the labor movement; every level of government; and community, charitable, religious and professional organizations of all kinds.

Q: What role should unions play?
A: I grew up under the tutelage of the great labor leader A. Philip Randolph, so I understand the importance of the labor movement for working Americans, especially for workers, such as those in the garment and other low-wage industries, who are too often underrepresented and ignored.

We’ve seen throughout this nation’s history that strong unions mean a higher standard of living, a more productive and involved workforce, safer jobs, better pensions and easier access to health care.

There’s no doubt in my mind that today’s unions are a critical solution to some of the most difficult economic problems facing our nation right now.

Q: What is the one thing that companies must change in order to remain competitive in the global marketplace?
A: They must invest more in human capital: increase the training opportunities and skill levels of all workers. This is no longer just a job for government. Government, employers, labor organizations and workers themselves need to keep pace with change and secure our position as the world’s most highly skilled workforce.

Q: What do you feel was the previous labor secretary’s legacy to you?
A: My predecessor and friend Robert Reich deserves the country’s recognition and gratitude for his service, perhaps most significantly for being a “godfather” of the School-to-Work initiative.

This program recognizes that a good education must teach our young people how to live well and how to make a living. Today’s economy puts a premium on skills. While professional jobs may account for approximately 20 percent of our workforce, 60 percent of American jobs are skilled, and only 20 percent are unskilled.

In 1997 it comes down to this: Knowing how to read and reason are as much practical as academic skills for at least four out of five workers.

Q: What mark would you like to make during your term of office?
A: I believe that by working together -leaders from labor, business, community organizations and government-we can deliver on a vision of an America that works for working people. We must keep faith with the social compact that built our prosperity: If working Americans learn new skills and work hard at their jobs, they’ll enjoy better lives for themselves and a better chance for their children.

As secretary of labor, it is my honor and my obligation to work for an America in which every woman and man can find useful work with rising wages and for an America that offers opportunity for our youngest people and security for our older people. And I will work for an America where work is honored and justice is done.

Workforce, September 1997, Vol. 76, No. 9, pp.40-47.


 

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