Frustration is growing among a handful of past presidents and board chairs of the Society for Human Resource Management who have been calling for a meeting with the industry association’s leaders to discuss recent board decisions and concerns about the future of the organization.
The splinter group, called SHRM Members for Transparency, recently announced a June 26 press conference to air its grievances.
UPDATE: SHRM agrees to meet with protest group.
The event will take place across the street from Las Vegas Convention Center on the opening day of SHRM’s 63rd annual conference, which is set for June 26 to 29. Kathryn McKee, a former SHRM board chair and transparency group member, will be speaking, says Mike Losey, former SHRM CEO and the transparency group’s leader.
“There’s so much misunderstanding and confusion after so much effort on our part,” says Losey, whose group formed last year shortly after the SHRM board voted to nearly double the annual honoraria paid to board members and to allow reimbursement for business-class travel. “Why do they say we’ve met when they haven’t met with us and why won’t they meet with us? It’s extremely frustrating. This is an opportunity for us to address some of these issues.”
The press conference is being triggered in part by the SHRM board’s failure to respond to repeated invitations for a meeting with the transparency group, Losey says. At the heart of the group’s concerns is the board’s 2005 decision to pay board members an annual honorarium.
Other issues include the number of SHRM board members without credentials from the HR Certification Institute, or HRCI.
While the group lists 46 official members only a few will attend the conference, Losey says, pointing to the board’s decision to repeal a provision offering free conference registration to past presidents and board chairs. He says some plan to skip the conference in protest and others can’t afford to go.
It’s unclear whether the press conference will pave the way for a meeting with SHRM leaders. SHRM interim president and CEO Henry Jackson declined to comment.
For more on the growing dissent between SHRM Members for Transparency and SHRM, click here.
—Rita Pyrillis
The Last Word: Fathers Figure
With Father’s Day fast approaching, many men will soon be celebrating the joys of parenting. But just how joyful do they really feel about the amount of time they spend with their children?
Certainly, men have made great strides since the days of the demeaning “Mr. Mom” stereotype. The number of stay-at-home dads has mushroomed—154,000 last year, double the total in 1994, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s count. Some men also take short-term paternity leaves now, while others manage to do part of their work remotely to reduce hours spent in the office.
Yet despite such progress, many men still fear negative repercussions if they cut back on face time at work. In a new global study titled Men and Work-Life Integration, WorldatWork and WFD Consulting found that men feel more challenged than women in finding enough time for their families, even though they crave it just as much and often enjoy access to flexible workplace arrangements.
The study uncovered some troubling disconnects. More than 80 percent of the business leaders in the survey said they consider work-life programs important to talent recruitment and retention, as well as employee satisfaction and productivity. Even so, the majority also believe “the ideal employee is available to meet business needs regardless of business hours.”
Among all of the workers surveyed, there were conflicting results, too. More than 20 percent of the men and women in developed countries worried about being penalized if they used flexible work programs, but a smaller percentage said they actually experienced retaliation or other negative consequences. Employees in both developed and emerging countries rated their companies as fairly supportive of work-life integration, but at the same time, they felt they must be somewhat secretive when they adjust their work schedules for personal activities.
Although both men and women sometimes resort to such stealth behavior, Kathleen Lingle, the head of WorldatWork’s Alliance for Work-Life Progress, told me, “Men are more likely to go to their kids’ games and not say why they left the office early.”
I can understand the fears and secrecy. I was stationed in a corporate office in New York when my son was an infant and toddler, and I sensed hostility from some colleagues when I left in time to catch the 6:50 p.m. express train home and see him before bedtime. Part of the problem was that my supervisor and most others in my group didn’t have children. But there also seemed to be less tolerance in general for flexibility for fathers than for mothers.
Fortunately, I worked primarily from a home office as my son was growing up. I shared many extra hours with him, including attendance at nearly all of his baseball games, from third grade through most of high school. It was an experience I wouldn’t trade for anything.
But I’m the exception. Most men need greater support from their employers to feel comfortable about reshaping their work lives so they can enjoy fuller personal lives. A good first step: Provide a forum for more honest discussion. WorldatWork convened a group of men at a retreat in New Orleans this year, and some of the participants felt relieved to have a safe place to express concerns about work-life issues after keeping such thoughts bottled up at work.
To spur further conversation, WorldatWork and WFD Consulting are urging men to share their experiences in a men’s study dialogue on LinkedIn. The organizations also wish more corporate executives and human resources departments would encourage men to form their own employee resource groups where they could vent their feelings and trade information. Thus far, however, only a handful of companies, including Accenture and State Farm Insurance, have offered support groups specifically for men.
Corporate leaders also can affirm the importance of work-life balance through example. For instance, Cathy Benko, chief talent officer at Deloitte, tried to encourage the accounting firm’s executives to be more transparent by revealing her own little secret—the time she skipped a high-level meeting to shop at a big Nordstrom sale.
“We can send a huge signal,” she told me, “by our example, by not making excuses when we fit life into work.” Now let’s see some courageous male executives stand up and share their stories about ducking out early for a daughter’s dance recital or a round of golf. Greater candor just might go a long way toward giving men the confidence to take advantage of flexible workplace options.
Workforce Management, June 2011, p. 50 — Subscri be Now!
Ford Improves Worker Safety, Hollywood-Style
Ford Motor Co. is applying Hollywood-inspired animation technology to its new manufacturing facilities in Asia, Africa and other regions.
The goal is to create a less physically stressful workplace and improve the quality of vehicles. The technology also helps Ford trim costs by not having to replace unworkable parts.
Ford has been using the animation technology, known as motion capture, since 2005 in North America.
“We’re very pleased with our results,” said Allison Stephens, Ford’s ergonomics specialist with vehicle operations manufacturing engineering.
The motion-capture technology digitally captures movement, making nonhuman characters appear more lifelike. It’s similar to the technology used in movies such as Mars Needs Moms and in games such as Mortal Kombat.
Researchers combine motion-capture technology with human modeling software in Ford’s Detroit labs to design physically safe jobs at its global facilities. Researchers can simulate nearly the entire assembly of a vehicle.
“If you’re creating a situation at a workstation, you simulate how you would move as a worker by using the digital manikin,” Stephens said.
Ford researchers are creating a multinational avatar based on Ford’s North American virtual workers Jack and Jill. The new avatar will reflect the sizes and shapes of workers at assembly plants across the globe, Stephens said.
Using this technology in North America has led to an 80 percent decrease in job-related injuries since 2005, she said.
Ford also can address quality issues in the virtual workplace before they occur in the real world, Stephens said. This yields higher-quality vehicles and earns Ford greater economies of scale in buying parts from suppliers because Ford knows which parts work best.
Ford will use the global digital manikin for new products planned in China, the 2012 Focus being assembled in Germany and the United States, and the global Ranger small pickup being built in Thailand and South Africa.
Filed by Jamie LaReau of Automotive News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, email editors@workforce.com.
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Black Firefighter Applicants Win Ruling in Chicago
A group of more than 6,000 black firefighter applicants has scored a court victory in a lawsuit raising questions about discrimination and employment-related testing.
On May 13, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit in Chicago largely upheld an earlier ruling that the city had to pay damages and hire scores of black firefighter applicants because a job test had an unfair negative impact on them.
“After many years fighting for justice, our African-American clients will finally have a fair chance to serve their city,” says John Payton, director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. “The only remaining step is speedy implementation of a robust remedy for this long-standing injustice. The city of Chicago will be better for it. And beyond the immediate results in Chicago, this case will help ensure that no other fire department or employer utilizes a discriminatory test to unjustifiably eliminate fully qualified applicants of any race.”
From May 1996 through November 2001, the city hired 11 groups of applicants based on the results of an employment test. A lower court ruled that the cut-off score used by the city was not justified by business necessity. The city appealed, arguing that the initial charge of discrimination in the case was not filed in a timely manner with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The 7th Circuit court agreed with the city. But the U.S. Supreme Court reversed that decision, sending the case back to the appeals court.
Many organizations are turning to employment-related tests, in part, to establish hiring procedures that are objective and therefore legally defensible. But, as the Chicago case shows, tests can land employers in hot water, as well.
The Last Word: Tapping Social Workers
Ford must be a good company because my neighbor likes working there.” That comment about Ford Motor Co. came from a respondent to a corporate reputation study I was the editor of a few years ago. Though it was simply put, the statement impressed upon me just how powerful employee word-of-mouth can be in forming favorable—or negative—perceptions. Indeed in a later reputation study, my colleagues and I found that 84 percent of respondents considered word-of-mouth messages from employees credible, compared with 75 percent for media coverage of a company and 70 percent for PR and advertising spiels. Only an individual’s own personal experiences with a company carried more weight than the words of its workers.
As this month’s story on employee “brand ambassadors” shows, companies can try to shape word-of-mouth messages to work to their advantage. They can encourage workers to become ambassadors of sorts to burnish their reputation as a good employer and corporate citizen, and to tout products and services. Of course, employers can’t be heavy-handed and dictate what people say.
But like PepsiCo Inc. and IBM Corp. in our article, companies can provide communication tools and suggested messages to enable employees to spread positive information to friends and family. And these days, employees’ reach can extend well beyond their inner circle as their tweets and posts ripple through the blogosphere and social media networks.
Yet, because of the untamed nature of social media, companies increasingly view employee communication to the outside world with more wariness than eagerness. They worry that workers are more apt to gripe about them than glorify them on Facebook, Twitter or YouTube.
A recent study by Forrester Research Inc. indicates that, unfortunately, employers’ fears appear to be well-founded. The survey of 5,519 workers in North America and Europe found that critics far outnumber cheerleaders. When asked whether they would recommend a job at their employer to a friend or family member, 27 percent were classified as promoters; 29 percent, neutrals; and 43 percent, detractors. As for touting their company’s products and services, 27 percent were promoters; 24 percent, neutrals; and 49 percent, detractors. Forrester observed that, “It’s entirely possible that the struggling economy has kept disgruntled workers in their jobs longer than normal, artificially depressing scores.”
Which employees are most likely to sing the praises of their company? North American workers, senior managers, and employees in sales account management, retail sales, finance and human resources, according to the Forrester study. And in North America, technology mavens tend to be among the most ardent employee advocates. For example, nearly half of respondents who use social media tools for work were promoters, compared with only 31 percent of nonusers.
But it takes much more than technology to create employee evangelists. A vibrant culture is what truly inspires workers to crow about their companies. When I wrote my book The 18 Immutable Laws of Corporate Reputation: Creating, Protecting and Repairing Your Most Valuable Asset, I found that the most revered companies understood the value of a distinctive culture and clearly defined mission in engaging employees and making them their reputation champions.
At FedEx Corp., committed workers proudly brag about the “purple blood” in their veins (a reference to the color of the corporate logo) and their dedication to customer service. Similarly, enthusiastic employees helped make Ben & Jerry’s Homemade Inc. world famous for its culture of social and environmental activism and a playful workplace atmosphere.
While researching my book, I also discovered that some companies tried to promote positive word-of-mouth long before corporate intranets and social media existed. In fact, a century ago Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. posted signs throughout its offices and factories with the simple dictum: “Protect our good name.”
In an advertisement in the Saturday Evening Post in 1915, F.A. Seiberling, then president of the tire maker, vividly described how the company’s reputation was linked with that of its workers: “Stripped to the waist, his huge torso streaming with sweat, a workman swings the heavy iron core to an iron table, and wrenches off a tire, which has just come steaming from the heater. His eye falls on the legend over his head, and he smiles. Our good name is also his good name. The two are intertwined. He will protect the one, while he subserves the other.”
Workforce Management, May 2011, p. 50 — Subscribe Now!
Trendy Topics Grab Ink, but HR Hot Line Reveals Basic Workplace Worries
In a time when legislative and economic issues are evolving as rapidly as interpersonal and social dynamics, perhaps no business discipline has been transformed as much in recent years as human resources. Or has it?
Cincinnati-based Employers Resource Association’s 2011 list of the top 10 questions received on its human resources hot line reveals that while bedbugs, social media and background checks are among the hot topics in the mainstream and business media, demand is still high for expertise with HR staples such as the Family and Medical Leave Act, discipline and termination, and performance management. According to Dan Chaney, the association’s director HR Advisory Services who handles the majority of inquiries, more than 15 percent of the calls relate to FMLA.
The not-for-profit organization, which specializes in human resources consulting, training, development and legal updates, receives more than 8,000 calls each year to its phone and email HR Hotline from human resources professionals in the Midwest who work for businesses and not-for-profits of all sizes.
The association has compiled the list for several years but has only published it since 2010. The new list released in March reflects the concerns of years past, Chaney says. Termination or discipline issues ranks second among the queries after FMLA, followed by questions regarding performance management, Fair Labor Standards Act and immigration.
“This list highlights several topics on the minds of both employees and supervisors,” says John Robak, executive vice president and chief operating officer for Greeley and Hansen, a global environmental and engineering consulting firm in Chicago. “In my experience, employees are often looking for clarification of company rules, regulations and policies. One of the first places they turn to is the human resources department.”
Ed Lawler, a professor of business and founder and director of the Center for Effective Organizations at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business, believes that’s a dilemma for HR professionals.
Lawler, who is the author of Management Reset: Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness, says, “Our data shows that the HR function has stayed the same. HR folks get caught up with these day-to-day transactional issues and don’t see the bigger, more strategic issues of the business and therefore are not included in strategy discussions.”
Robak says he would like to see more emphasis from HR on ways to increase employee engagement and reduce staff turnover.
“My hope is that over time more employees and supervisors will transition toward asking questions on ways to create a stronger work environment and culture and on how to manage work flow more effectively,” he says.
“In general, I believe this list is an accurate reflection of what’s happening in the human resources world today, but I would move No. 3 [performance management strategies] to the No,. 1 spot [FMLA]. The issues I deal with most for clients revolve around performance,” says Michael Newman, labor and employment partner at Cincinnati-based Dinsmore & Shohl, a client of the Employers Resource Association.
Newman also handles numerous Americans with Disabilities Act claims, noting that almost every lawsuit he sees involves retaliation.
“This is huge,” he says, “and HR professionals need legal advice on how to document and fire a nonperforming employee to avoid lengthy litigation.”
Some of the calls are from people who are in a bind, Chaney says.
“They either ignored the basics of consistency, fairness and documentation or simply were over their heads in HR practice or law that they didn’t understand,” he says.
According to Lawler, part of the answer is to create separate pieces of the HR function with different areas of expertise, such as a division that is dedicated to issues other than administration or outsourcing.
“So much knowledge is needed, and we’re seeing growth in outsourcing, especially in the areas of compensation and employee assistance programs, done more for cost than for strategic reasons,” he says.
Robak believes the questions HR professionals ask will evolve over time as companies place even more emphasis on communicating their mission and values and improving their methods to effectively onboard new employees.
“This transformation is necessary if organizations are to truly create an environment where staff is highly engaged and upwardly mobile,” he says.
Workforce Management Online, May 2011 — Register Now!
Is Your Performance Review Underperforming?
There are few corporate rituals more dreaded than the annual performance review—an experience that Jacob Palmer, a recruiter at online retailer Zappos.com, describes as “physical and mental” turmoil. “I don’t think people realize that when you’re about to go into one these review sessions, the heart rate goes up, the palms get sweaty, it’s a physical reaction,” he says. Worse, he would walk away knowing what he did wrong but not how to improve. He wondered if there was a better way.
Luckily for Palmer, a team of Zappos managers had been working on a solution—dumping the traditional performance review for a new approach based more on self-improvement. Last August, the company announced that employees would no longer be rated on how well they accomplish tasks, such as meeting deadlines or being punctual. Instead, success would be determined by how well employees embody Zappos’ 10 core values, such as delivering “Wow” service or showing humility.
The change makes sense for a company famous for its distinctive corporate culture. “We hire on our culture so why weren’t we doing that from the beginning?” Palmer says. “We live and breathe the core values. Employees are more in tune with the process now. There are no surprises. Before, it was like, ‘Whoa, I didn’t know you really think that about me.’ ”
Beyond the angst
It’s no corporate secret that managers hate giving performance reviews almost as much as employees hate getting them—prompting at least one expert to propose getting rid of them altogether. A new survey shows just how dissatisfied employees are with the performance review process. More than half (51 percent) of 631 respondents believe reviews don’t provide accurate appraisals of their work, and nearly one-fourth dread them, according to the 2011 Globoforce Workforce Mood Tracker, a new semiannual online survey conducted by Globoforce, a business software developer with headquarters in Southborough, Massachusetts, and Dublin, Ireland.
Such angst may become a thing of the past, however. Performance appraisals are evolving as employers seek better ways to evaluate and motivate workers. Sitting down with a manager once a year for a perfunctory review isn’t enough for career-minded workers anymore.
“Feedback needs to happen more than once or twice a year,” says Rebecca Henry, director of human resources at Zappos. “We thought that the traditional annual review was a crutch for managers to do just that and no more.” In order to facilitate continual feedback, the company also directed managers to provide employees with regular task-oriented status reports, such as the percentage of time spent on the telephone with customers. The manager decides how frequently to distribute the updates, which Henry says are informational only.
Zappos’ employees are no longer scored on a traditional 1 to 5 scale ranging from unsatisfactory to exceptional. Under the new values-based system, managers document how many times they notice an employee exhibiting certain behaviors, such as expressing their personality or acting humble. Henry says while the behaviors are open to interpretation, managers must cite specific examples of how an employee displays them. There are 22 questions on various behaviors on the evaluation form, each with an optimum score of 10.
“We try not to script out what those things look like because they differ by person,” Henry explains. For example, she says that someone in her department who actively participates in discussions and isn’t afraid to offer opinions would probably rate high on the personality measure.
“This is a tool to help employees understand how they are being perceived,” Henry says. “It’s saying, ‘We know you have personality—you wouldn’t be here if you didn’t—but here are some missed opportunities to express it.’ ” Or in the case of humility, she says “it’s not a judgment of how humble they are, but how humble they appear to others. It’s like a mirror and employees can use the information as they see fit.”
The assessments aren’t used for disciplinary actions or promotions, she says, but if someone scores low on “be passionate and determined,” for example, they can take a free on-site class to improve. Zappos offers a course on each of its core values.
The search for innovative ways to provide more meaningful feedback and improve performance is being driven both by technology and by the growing number of millennials entering the workforce—many of whom relish immediate and frequent feedback.
“Over the past five to six years, I have found that the definition and expectations of reviews” have been shifting, says Sussane Bond, director of professional services for Halogen Software Inc., which is based in Ottawa, Canada. “It’s no longer a sit-down once a year. Performance reviews mean timely feedback face to face with employees.”
Companies such as Halogen, Rypple and SuccessFactors Inc., all developers of performance management software, are helping employers automate and streamline HR functions such as performance reviews as well as compensation, recruitment and training. Their focus is on helping managers do their jobs more efficiently, giving them more time to assist employees in developing their careers. What’s more, these applications allow managers to collect and track data, giving them the tools to link individual and company performance.
“A Word document writeup was not allowing employers to see the results across the company,” says Jeff Diana, chief people officer at SuccessFactors, based in San Mateo, California. “It’s hard to look at a piece of paper without the analytics to explain what you’re seeing. The real change in performance management is that we can now link these things in a transparent way. Employees want transparency. They want to know they’ve been treated fairly. They want to understand how their performance impacts results.”
Especially the vocal and sometimes impatient millennial generation. In fact, Rypple had the younger set in mind when it designed its performance management platform, which resembles a Facebook page. Employees and managers can send each other colorful icons called “badges” to recognize a job well done. The badges feature images and slogans like “you rock” or “kicking butt.” The system not only provides ongoing manager feedback, but also allows employees to receive anonymous appraisals from peers.
“We live in a real-time world,” says Daniel Debow, co-CEO and co-founder of the Toronto-based company, “so it’s crazy to think people wouldn’t want real-time feedback.”
While Rypple was designed with an eye toward social media-savvy millennials, Debow says the company’s products appeal to older generations, too. “We’ve heard that, to a boomer, feedback feels like judgment, while a younger person sees it as an opportunity to learn,” he adds. “We thought it was all demographic, but it’s really psychographic. It’s not just young people. It’s the high performers who seek feedback, regardless of their age.”
Kathy Anthony, 55, a partner with O’Sullivan Creel, a Pensacola, Florida-based accounting firm, concurs. O’Sullivan Creel adopted eAppraisal, Halogen’s Web-based performance review system that enables instant feedback and helps employees and managers create professional development plans.
“You would think a boomer wouldn’t embrace this as much as younger people, but everyone loves it,” she says. “Before we had an automated process there wasn’t any consistency. There wasn’t even a direct link to our firm’s goals. We had employees writing goals who didn’t know where they were supposed to be headed. This system has helped us tremendously.”
But before a company starts investing in the latest technology, some experts caution that an appraisal system—no matter how sophisticated—is only as good as the process and the manager using it.
“The heart of performance management lies with that manager,” says Lori Holsinger, a principal at Mercer, a New York-based consulting firm. “If you look at what drives overall performance management systems, it’s leadership at the top and the ability to differentiate performance. But few companies have confidence that their managers are doing it well.”
According to a 2008 Mercer survey of 350 major U.S. companies, nearly one-fourth of respondents said their managers are “marginally skilled” at doing performance evaluations, and only 12 percent rated their managers as “highly skilled.” When asked how their managers fared in “having candid dialogue with their direct reports about their performance,” 38 percent of the respondents deemed them “marginally skilled” and only 2 percent found them to be “highly skilled.”
Because of such responses, Mercer consultants encourage employers to examine and redesign their performance appraisal process before considering a technology-based solution, Holsinger says. “This may sound crass, but if you put junk in, you get junk out.” It’s also critical for employers to provide managers with the training they need to give meaningful feedback.
Such training is mandatory at Lubrizol Corp. a chemical manufacturer that recently launched a two-day training course to help supervisors become better coaches. “We talk about how do you question and help people reframe things, how do you give feedback, who do people need help from, and how can they hold themselves accountable,” says Dean Noble, director of talent planning, development and systems at the Wickliffe, Ohio-based company. The company’s goal, he adds, is to become “the best developer of people in the business.”
Scrap ’em?
Indeed, strong leadership is critical to managing performance, according to HR consultant Dan Walker, former chief talent officer at Apple Inc. “Great leaders talk to their people all the time,” he says. Filling out a performance appraisal form once a year “doesn’t make someone a good manager.”
That’s why Walker believes companies should go even further and scrap traditional annual reviews. Like Zappos, Apple did away with reviews in 2000 after Walker persuaded leaders that the evaluations were unnecessary. “No one could convince me that there was any value to it,” he says. “You’ve got to be able to explain the process to a 10-year-old. You want to talk to me once a year about what I did for the whole year? What if I told my kids that I was going to give them a once-a-year discussion on their behavior? Sometimes we do stupid things.”
Apple left it up to managers to assess performance anyway they saw fit, or not at all, Walker says. “I believe in performance management when you can measure it, like if you’re in a call center or work in sales. If it’s something you can measure, like how much someone sells, great. If not, performance reviews are a total waste of time.”
Samuel Culbert, a professor at the Anderson School of Management at the University of California at Los Angeles, agrees. Reviews are a source of torment and not in the best interests of employees or companies, he says. They cause “people to knuckle under and make it a personality contest and not an accomplishment.”
Culbert, author of Get Rid of the Performance Review: How Companies Can Stop Intimidating, Start Managing—and Focus on What Really Matters, advocates what he calls “performance previews.” Previews are designed to provide feedback before a problem develops, unlike reviews, which he describes as a “stockpiling of bad results.” Previews require employees and managers to set goals together and hold supervisors accountable for the success of their workforce.
“Why are managers so terrified of having to stand as a partner with employees and losing the power they get from intimidating others?” Culbert says. “You’d think managers would want to hear what employees have to say and do everything in their power to make it possible to hear it—if only to set it straight, if only to get rid of erroneous thinking. It’s managers that cause this problem, not employees.”
When Paul Colichman, a former student of Culbert’s and CEO of Here Media Inc., acquired the gay magazines Advocate and Out in 2008, he adopted the preview model to help him create a more collaborative and less hierarchical culture. Instead of a traditional score card review, managers and employees meet twice a year to discuss goals and ways to meet them. For example, one employee’s goal was “staying committed to good attendance” by making sure her “desk will be covered at 9:00 every day.”
“A punitive system helps no one,” Colichman says. “Instead of talking with someone about an incident after it happened, we do semiannual ‘previews’ to catch situations before they happen. Our corporate culture is much better because people feel more empowered.”
Yet, most companies still opt for the highly judgmental approach of a manager sitting across the table telling an employee what he or she did wrong, says Jeffrey Pfeffer, professor of organizational behavior at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. “It’s true that younger generations have different expectations, but I don’t think companies have responded.” He says he still reads surveys about the “abominable levels of employee engagement and dissatisfaction. Some things have changed but companies haven’t.”
The reason, Pfeffer says, is because “fundamentally organizations are more interested in control than improvement. You give most senior managers a choice between control over their employees and improvement of performance and they will choose control.” A controlling boss who does a poor job of providing feedback can drive away good employees, even from good companies, he says, citing the HR axiom that “People don’t quit companies; they quit managers.”
For proof, look no further than Denise Tucker, a former training supervisor who fled a job she loved because of a capricious boss and what, in her opinion, was a mishandled performance review.
She was a top performer with a bright future at a North Carolina educational supply company—until she got a new manager. He wasn’t as collegial as his predecessor, but even so, she wasn’t worried when it came time for her performance review. She had always received glowing feedback.
At first glance, everything looked fine—most of her scores exceeded expectations. But her final rating was below expectations. “I was stunned,” she recalls. She says she asked her boss to explain and “he gave me a smug look and said that he was hard on performance evaluations and that I shouldn’t take it personally.” She refused to sign the review.
“It was his turn to be stunned,” she says. “He stammered, ‘But you have to. I’ve never had anyone refuse to sign their review.’ I said that I’d be his first.” She quit six months later.
That was four years ago, but she still remembers the experience vividly. “I still miss” the job, says Tucker, who is now a freelance writer. “But I don’t miss corporate America.” Or the performance review process. “I haven’t had one since,” she says, “and I hope I never do.”
Workforce Management, May 2011, pgs. 20-22, 24-25 — Subscribe Now!
The Search Is on for HRs Best and Brightest
Workforce Management is pleased to announce the launch of its Game Changers awards, which will recognize the next generation of innovative, dynamic leaders to watch in human resources and workplace management.
We are seeking nominations of high-potential people under age 40 who already are making their mark. They can be HR professionals, consultants, academics, technology experts or members of companies that develop HR products and services. Professional accomplishments are key, but community service and other achievements will also be considered.
This is an excellent opportunity for you to publicly recognize your employees or professional colleagues. We also will accept self-nominations as long as they are accompanied by a letter of recommendation from an executive in your organization. Winners will receive a Game Changers award and will be profiled in Workforce Management‘s magazine and website.
Nominations are due by midnight CT on July 15, and entries will be judged by Workforce Management senior editors and writers.
The 2011 Game Changers will be announced and profiled in the October issue of Workforce Management and on workforce.com early that month. To submit your entry form and learn more about the awards and nomination process, please visit our Game Changers website at
—Ronald Alsop
Editor, Workforce Management
Workforce Management Online, May 2011 — Register Now!
The Hot List: 2011 Employee Assistance Program Providers
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Workforce Management, May 2011, p. 19 — Subscribe Now!
Dear Workforce Our HR Function Is Doubling Headcount. What Do We Need to Do to Prepare?
Dear Growth Spurt:
Any company that in this challenging economy is expecting to double headcount must be doing a lot of things well. Even so, take a step back and ask if your human resources function is ready for the challenges this presents.
Assemble a cross-functional task force. To double in size, you will need all of your company’s brain trust. This is not solely an HR issue. Sales, research and development, marketing, operations, administration and finance and other functions are affected, as well. Clearly, everyone has a stake in your company’s ability to transition smoothly. Create a cross-functional task force to address the challenge. It should focus specifically on creating an overall action plan, complete with specific goals, objectives, time lines and responsibilities within each functional area.
Assess the current HR department. Examine the strengths and weaknesses of your HR department. It is like opening a window to your future growth. Key questions to ask include: which service offerings (training and development, recruitment and retention, performance management, payroll, benefits and so on) does HR make available now to employees? To what extent are the current HR service offerings successful? How well are you assessing your offerings?
Create university partnerships for access to research and analysis. Master’s-level students often need real-world projects to complete course requirements. Students also have access to the latest research, which would also benefit toward solving the rapid growth challenge. Key questions: With which universities or colleges does your company already have collaborations in place? How could your company specifically create relationships with universities to have master’s-level students analyze your rapid growth and its relationships to the HR department?
Stimulate a focus on culture and values. HR often plays a key role in making sure new employees understand and embrace the organization’s culture and values. Be cognizant of the strain on culture and values caused by rapid growth. The end result will be employees that share a greater sense of commitment to the organization’s mission and who will continue to add value to the company’s growth.
SOURCE: Dana E. Jarvis, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh
LEARN MORE: Please read tips on how to set realistic goals for new HR metrics.
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The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.
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