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Posted on February 22, 2011August 9, 2018

Coaching Takes Center Stage

Defense contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. uses internal coaches for succession planning across multiple lines of business; group coaching for technology workers helps Genentech Inc. boost employee engagement and retention; and focused, individual coaching enabled a vice president at Philips Healthcare to provoke a daunting culture change that touched more than 6,000 employees.


Industry observers say professional coaching has gathered steam, and is being used to tackle a range of strategic business issues. Its application is changing, though. Rather than trying to “fix” underachievers, organizations are pairing high performers with coaches to accelerate their development—and get the best return on investment.


Ellen Kumata, managing director of Boston-based Cambria Consulting Inc., says organizations increasingly are targeting employees with potential to create great value over the long term as leaders. “Coaching has kind of grown up in the last five or six years. It’s an expensive solution, so companies are putting the money into people who have the longest runway to success.”


Coaching can serve a variety of purposes for companies. In an era when employees are seeking greater employment security, it can serve as a retention tool by demonstrating an organization’s commitment to career development. Coaching also helps make up for decades of “shortsighted” human resources practices when organizations failed to capture the knowledge of veteran employees, says Carl Nielson, a management consultant in Dallas. “Now they see a lot of people rising into leadership roles before they are ready. That’s where coaching comes in.”


Organizations using professional coaching for business reasons recouped an average of seven times their initial investment, according to a 2009 report by the Lexington, Kentucky-based International Coach Federation, or ICF. That report was produced for ICF by professional services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers and Canadian consulting firm Association Resource Centre Inc.


Los Angeles-based Northrop Grumman Corp. is sold on the value of coaching. The global conglomerate, with 2010 revenue topping $35 billion, has a program to train and certify employees in coaching skills. Since its inception in 2004, the initiative has produced nearly 40 internal coaches from its managerial ranks, company officials say.


By developing its own coaches, Northrop Grumman has a clearer picture of leadership gaps across the company and is better able to plan for succession, says Barb Goretsky, the corporate director of learning and leadership development.“We’re creating a culture in which coaching is used to develop our leaders. We don’t use coaching for remedial activities” for poor performers.


Northrop Grumman’s voluntary yearlong coaching program is “on par with that of large coaching providers,” says Anita Stadler, manager of the Internal Coach Development Program, which certifies the candidates as coaches. Applicants need a solid grasp of their industry, and “we look for people who already display innate people skills.”


Upon certification, internal coaches commit to a two-year coaching stint, working with two to four high-potential co-workers, Stadler says.


At roughly the same time Northrop Grumman began to groom potential leaders, San Francisco-based Genentech faced more immediate concerns. The biotech pioneer launched its Personal Excellence Program, or PEP, about five years ago, after an internal survey showed its information technology department ranked last in employee satisfaction.


PEP provides a cost-efficient blend of group and individual coaching for the firm’s 700-person IT organization, says Pam Weiss, an independent coach who works with Genentech’s program. “I really didn’t know if the one-on-one impact of coaching would translate to a group setting. But the benefits have been exponential.”


According to a Genentech-commissioned study in 2009 by the Advantage Performance Group, a Larkspur, California-based consulting firm, PEP helped to boost employee satisfaction between 10 percent and 20 percent. It also led to a 50 percent improvement in employee communication and collaboration. In addition, PEP’s business impact was more than double that of other leadership programs, generating roughly $2 for every dollar invested, according to the study.


IT employees approved for Genentech’s voluntary program receive coaching in several different formats. First, a larger “community of learning” takes part in a series of workshops.


The larger group subsequently is broken into smaller facilitated groups. Lastly, each individual participant receives three one-on-one coaching sessions. “It provides the best of both worlds: People learn collectively as a community, but also have the opportunity to get individual reinforcement and support,” Weiss says.


In fact, coaching may help boost employee engagement. Companies are eager to hasten leaders “who drive performance by the work environments they create. Building relationships is at the heart of coaching,” says Janet Harvey, president-elect of the ICF and an independent coach.


Coaching helped Lisa Barnett spearhead culture change at Philips Healthcare. Barnett, a vice president of sales for the western zone with the Seattle-based company, was surprised when top brass tapped her to lead an effort to bolster core company values. “I said: ‘I’m just a sales chick. Why do you want me to take this on?’ ” The company, which has more than 6,000 employees, sells medical imaging systems to hospitals and health care providers.


The project’s intention was to “make our core values to show up more consistently and overtly in employee behaviors,” a market differentiator, Barnett says. Those behaviors, she says, include stronger employee accountability and a rekindled passion for patient care.


The initiative was intended to influence not only sales reps, but also support teams, business development professionals and others who deal directly with customers, Barnett says.


Barnett hooked up with Harvey for one-on-one meetings, practical exercises and other activities. Coaching provided a new slant on her role as a leader, leading to above-average performance by her direct reports as well as improved employee engagement and better business results for her sales team, which includes reps from Minnesota to Hawaii.


For example, the West zone exceeded sales expectations, while each individual region in the zone achieved its sales goals—a rare occurrence, says Barnett, and one she attributes to coaching.


Although the culture-change effort is a work in progress, Barnett says “the change in our people who deal with customers has been deep and profound.”
 


Workforce Management Online, February 2011 — Register Now!

Posted on February 18, 2011August 9, 2018

Companies Again Giving It the Old College Try

On a recent snowy morning, Scott French, a 32-year-old first-year MBA student at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, rode the train to downtown Chicago to prepare for an internship interview at a top consulting firm. Dressed in a dark suit and tie, French was heading for a practice session the firm offers to prepare candidates for a rigorous interview. He was nervous, but optimistic—and with good reason.


Campus recruiting for both internships and full-time positions is on the rise at top MBA programs, and students such as French face a much friendlier job market than those who graduated in the wake of the 2008 financial meltdown. According to a recent survey of 79 graduate schools during fall 2010, 63 percent said on-campus recruiting increased from the previous school year. Additionally, 70 percent reported more full-time job postings and 81 percent predicted an increase in internships over last summer. The survey was conducted by the MBA Career Services Council, an association of business school career management offices and employers.


Although hiring is on the upswing, starting salaries are likely to remain at 2010 levels for most new hires, according to a recent poll by the Graduate Management Admission Council, which administers the business school entrance exam. Of 210 employers surveyed, 69 percent of those planning to hire MBAs and 71 percent of those expecting to hire undergraduates intend to keep salaries flat this year.


“Last year the general mood was: ‘I just need a job and I don’t care where it is,’ but now it’s going back to where students have a lot more power, and we’re being more discerning,” says French, a corporate lawyer who is studying for a career in management and strategy. For many Kellogg students, that means the pressure to attend employer-sponsored recruiting events isn’t as intense as in previous years. “Before people killed themselves trying to go to everything,” French says, “and now it’s like, ‘Eh, I’ll see.’ ”


Companies realize they must be more strategic to woo top students at the most elite schools, which are seeing more action than less-heralded programs. Like many employers, Deloitte has changed its recruiting approach in recent years to better target the talent it needs, eschewing large “meet and greet” events for smaller gatherings. The New York-based consulting firm hired 370 full-time MBA students this fall, up 51 percent from 245 the previous year, and plans to recruit about 200 interns this summer compared with 130 last summer.


“Our approach is relationship recruiting,” says Diane Borhani, Deloitte’s campus recruiting leader. “We focus on one-on-one interaction. It’s not about the flashy presentations and taking them to the best entertainment venues. It’s about learning and developing. We find people who are attracted to that culture.”


Conveying a company’s culture is critical to the recruiting process. For Deloitte, that means highlighting the firm’s commitment to community service to both undergraduate and graduate students. For the past four years, the firm has teamed up with United Way Worldwide and Teach For America Inc. to sponsor alternative spring-break programs for undergraduate students who work alongside employees to help communities in need. And this fall, Deloitte sponsored a campus tour of three Olympic gold medalists, including speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno, who spoke with students about achieving success and the importance of giving back to society.


Today’s students are more socially conscious and want a clear idea of the kind of company they will be working for, says Jeff Rice, executive director of career services at Ohio State University’s Fisher College of Business. “The new trend is more personalization and that is dictated by the current crop of students.” Historically, recruiters cast a wider net, but these days, more companies are reducing the number of colleges they visit. “It’s a smarter investment from a human capital and travel expense standpoint,” Rice says. “The goal now is to deepen the relationships they have with those invested schools.”


In fall 2008, Nestle USA Inc. made a radical shift in its recruiting approach, going from about 35 campuses to only four. “In the past we didn’t have a rhyme or reason around the number of schools we went to,” says Laura Warren, a campus recruiter, at the Glendale, California-based unit of the Swiss company. “We don’t hire hundreds and hundreds of students each year, so going to that many schools didn’t make sense. Now, we get to know the teachers, the students, and they get to know us, too. We’ve built relationships with professors who are referring top students to us.”


In 2009, Nestle started a program to help teachers and student clubs at those four schools purchase equipment such as computers. Employees also lecture in classes throughout the school year.


The new approach is paying off. Last year, Warren says, Nestle hired 78 interns and 75 full-time employees from the schools’ undergraduate and graduate programs and expects to hire 100 full-time employees in 2011.


At Boston Consulting Group, recruiters still host large “marquee events” for 150 or more students, according to Meldon Wolfgang, a partner and managing director. But the firm is also organizing more personal get-togethers, such as a cooking class in which first- and second-year Kellogg students interacted with the consulting group’s employees last month.


Campus hiring at Boston Consulting has seen double-digit growth over the past five years, and 2011 promises to yield the largest crop of student recruits ever, says Wolfgang, who heads up the recruiting effort in the Americas. He declines to provide numbers, but says, “This year it could be a 15 to 20 percent increase from last year.”
Some companies are focusing on interns as a way to fill their talent pipelines. “If I had my budget slashed and only had $100 to spend, I’d spend it all on my internship program,” says Steve Canale, manager, global recruiting and staffing services, at General Electric Co., based in Fairfield, Connecticut. “They become my brand ambassadors. Students are bombarded with ads and sales pitches but what they really believe is other students.”


GE hired about 1,000 students in 2010, he says, and three-fourths came from its internship and apprentice programs.
 


Workforce Management, February 2011, pgs. 16-17 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on February 1, 2011August 9, 2018

As We Transition to Internal Coaching, What Obstacles Should We Expect?

Dear Out to Nurture:

It sounds like you are embarking on a pretty comprehensive talent management program. You haven’t given much detail on how you will design the process, but there are some common patterns and pitfalls with any design.

Be aware that a program with this wide a reach requires a lot of work if you wish to produce something meaningful and keep it up-to-date. A good program should be multifaceted and detailed.

The best “career-pathing” tools help an employee understand:

1. What jobs are logical next steps?
2. The skills and competencies needed for those jobs.
3. How the employee measures up to each of them.
4. What he/she can do to build any skills/competencies they are missing (and in particular whether there are jobs, projects or teams that can serve as skill-building stepping stones)

Often, HR professionals who are trying to build these programs underdeliver in one or more of these four areas. It’s important to ensure that your plan addresses all of these areas, because if it lacks substance, it will not be useful.

The most common mistake I see is in not paying enough attention to item No. 4. Many organizations merely provide employees with a list of books, training classes or websites as growth tools. The better way is to build a system that helps people find “on the job” roles and projects to round out their skills.

Employers also have difficulty designing item No. 3. Their programs do not offer employees any way to frankly and accurately assess their own skills. Employees have a pretty good idea of their capabilities in their current role, but many struggle to vet their skills for roles they have not held. You can avoid this problem by ensuring your employees connect with your company’s HR professionals who can help them informally evaluate their skills or have access to skill assessment tools they can administer themselves.

As I mentioned above, if a system is not robust, then it isn’t valuable to the workforce and therefore isn’t used. To ensure that your program is meaningful for your population, it might make sense to involve a group of employees—either in design or for feedback—before you go live. This can help you tailor aspects of the plan to ensure that it meets user needs.

Another area that causes problems with programs of this type is oversight. In other words: Who is responsible for seeing that employees improve—and how will effectiveness of the program be measured?

It’s no surprise that the programs that require managers to take an active part in shepherding their employees’ careers are more successful. Some companies ensure manager commitment by evaluating managers on how many of their direct reports have development plans in place, have been promoted or have moved into a role that will improve their skill set.

Likewise, organizations that measure things like the increase in the number of internal promotions or turnover of employees being actively developed, compared with the general employee population, tend to correctly focus on impact rather than activity.

Finally, ask yourself how long this will take. Building a program with the specificity and breadth you mention can take three months to a year depending on the complexity of your design. Employee learning and growth on the other hand is constant and ongoing. Remember, growth paths for employees will mirror your company strategy. As the business needs change, so must your career path tools.

While employee development programs take time and attention if they are done right, the payoff far outweighs the work.

SOURCE: Ellen Raim, vice president of human resources, Cascade Microtech, Beaverton, Oregon

LEARN MORE: Please read an outline of eight steps to use in the coaching process.

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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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Dear Workforce Newsletter
Posted on August 18, 2010June 29, 2023

Focusing Knowledge Retention on Millennials

Employers may be overlooking an important side effect of turnover: losing the knowledge of Millennial Generation workers.


With baby boomers retiring, many companies realize the impact of losing that generation’s professional and institutional knowledge. But few seem to be focusing knowledge retention efforts on younger workers.


“It’s not sinking in yet” with employers, and they’re just starting to look at this concern, says Steve Trautman, president of Practical Leader, a consulting firm in Seattle.


Employees change jobs more often when they’re younger, and losing their technical knowledge could be a problem for the business, depending on their skill set and industry. The average turnover cost is 25 to 50 percent of salary, studies show.


“Large companies don’t move fast enough for that generation, which is [switching employers and] looking to expose themselves to new and different things,” explains Brad Mullahy, president of Synaptis, a supplier of employee training products and services.


Bureau of Labor Statistics data show the average American will have 10.8 jobs from age 18 to 42. Many workers have clung to their jobs amid the recession and high unemployment. Still, the overall turnover rate across all industries was 16.3 percent in 2009, according to a survey from Compdata.


“How are we going to maintain quality when we have that kind of turnover?” Mullahy says. “How are we going to maintain consistency with that kind of change going on?”


Interviews, mentoring programs and written reports are common ways to retain employee knowledge. Synaptis offers technology called Knowledge Harvest, which allows users to create a searchable library of video and audio clips. Employees answer questions about best practices, operations or any data that are important. For instance, a pharmaceutical company used videos to document its sales representatives’ top 10 challenges and how best to handle them. Synaptis relied on archived videos when its information technology specialist left the firm and the network went down.


To be an effective tool, videos need to be short—three to five minutes, Trautman says. Otherwise, it can be hard to identify and retrieve the right information.


In the YouTube era, there’s a wider acceptance of video learning, especially by the younger generations, Mullahy notes.


Employers should find out who has special knowledge, regardless of age, Trautman says. Focus on the technical competencies and skills of each worker, he recommends.


“Nearing retirement does increase the risk profile, but being young does not reduce it,” Trautman says. “You could be five years on the job and be very unique and very important to the business, and your age doesn’t have anything to do with it.”


Workforce Management, August 2010, p. 6 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on June 28, 2010August 9, 2018

Dear Workforce Are First-Time Managers Really Better Off With Training?

Dear Skeptical:

Unfortunately, when it comes to this topic, the adage is true: Where there is smoke, there is fire. … At least a four-alarm fire.

During the past few years, my company has studied the readiness of individual contributors to step into a managerial or supervisory position. A majority of frontline leaders said they had a difficult time making the transition from a nonmanagement role to a first-level manager. Only 57 percent said they possessed the leadership skills needed when they first stepped into a management role. As expected, the most common areas of struggle relate to core managerial competencies: coaching, communication, decision-making and delegation/empowerment.

Most organizations are wise to this issue. According to a 2010 report from Bersin & Associates, “HR leaders rate their first-line managers as their ‘least ready’ workgroup, even less capable than their entry-level employees.”

There are three big reasons this is happening.
• All parties involved need better insight into an individual’s readiness. The individual, his or her manager and the organization have blind spots when it comes to accurately understanding the individual’s strengths and development needs. With hundreds or even thousands of existing and potential frontline leaders, it can be difficult for organizations to get more than a superficial read on an individual’s managerial readiness. Organizations can obtain more information about an individual’s readiness by a variety of methods, including behavioral interviews, 360s and in-depth assessments.

• Knowing someone’s development areas is not enough. According to my company’s research, less than one-third of frontline managers say that they have agreed to a specific, written development plan with their manager. About one-quarter of frontline managers say that they have enough time to devote to their development. Organizations need to put better processes in place to ensure that development planning occurs and that individuals have sufficient time and accountability to complete their development plans.

• They need more support and guidance from their manager. About half of frontline managers say that their managers have the knowledge and tools to support their development. Less than two-thirds say that they get sufficient feedback from their managers. The most discomforting thought is that less than 60 percent believe that their managers are committed to their development. To overcome these beliefs, organizations have to do a better job of providing the frontline manager’s manager with the skills needed to nurture him or her.

There is evidence of new leaders being thrown into the deep end and left to either sink or swim. That’s hardly a “best practice”—especially when there is so much that can be done to prepare leaders to take on such a new job.

SOURCE: Bradford Thomas, Development Dimensions International, Pittsburgh, May 19, 2010

LEARN MORE: Please read tips on how to prepare a new leader to manage a culturally diverse team of employees.

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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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Dear Workforce Newsletter
Posted on June 1, 2010August 9, 2018

Why Employers Should Expand Management Training

Most employers train their managers and supervisors on applicable federal, state and local anti-discrimination laws. But not as many employers conduct training on general contract and tort law, although these are areas of law that also may serve as the basis for employment-related lawsuits. Because these so-called “common-law” claims can prove every bit as problematic—and costly—as statutory discrimination claims, employers should incorporate training in these general areas of the law into their overall management training program. Here’s a discussion of why this training is so important:


Contracts and their complications
Simply speaking, a contract is an agreement between two or more people or entities to do or not do something. Many people think of a contract as a written document, but, subject to the laws of the various states, an oral promise related to the terms of employment can sometimes be enforced as well.


Furthermore, many people think that a written contract cannot be changed by a subsequent oral promise. But again, subject to the limitations of the laws of the various states, a written contract sometimes can be changed by an oral promise—even if the written contract says that it can be changed only in writing. Therefore, managers and supervisors need to be trained to be clear and careful in communicating with employees about company policies and other work-related documents.


For example, a breach-of-contract claim based on an oral promise may arise when an employee is seeking compensation outside of the applicable plan or is seeking otherwise to avoid limitations set out in company policies or documents. A sales commission plan typically contains language stating that only certain persons (or persons holding certain positions) can change the terms of the plan. (Such language is preferable to vague limitations indicating that such changes can be made only if approved by “management.”)


Still, if a manager or supervisor represents to an employee that the employer is willing to deviate from the written terms of the plan under certain circumstances, and if the employer has occasionally deviated from those terms under such circumstances in the past, an employee’s reliance upon the manager or supervisor’s representations may be deemed sufficiently reasonable to permit the employee to recover commissions in an amount in excess of the specific written limitations of the plan.


Why would a manager or supervisor suggest that the specific terms of the written document might not apply? Perhaps the manager or supervisor is unaware of recent changes to a plan or policy. Or perhaps the manager or supervisor is attempting to motivate the employee to continue his or her efforts in pursuit of a difficult sale by holding out the hope of additional compensation—even though the manager or supervisor believes it extremely unlikely. Perhaps the manager or supervisor is simply worn down by the relentless lobbying of the employee to escape the limitations of the commissions plan.


In any event, a poorly trained manager or supervisor certainly can make more difficult an employer’s legal defense based on the terms of the plan or policy. On the other hand, the combination of a carefully crafted plan or policy, the consistent application of its terms, and a well-trained manager or supervisor significantly increases the likelihood of successfully defending against such “outside-the-plan” claims.


Torts for beginners
A manager or supervisor’s actions also may subject his or her employer to liability in tort. Lawyers struggle to define precisely what a “tort” is, but it generally means an unlawful act that is not based on a contract. Non-lawyers are more familiar with the concept of a tort as one often involving a claim for a personal injury.


Federal and/or state law typically protects specific characteristics (e.g., race or sex) and activity (e.g., certain forms of whistle blowing). A manager or supervisor’s workplace misconduct, however, may expose an employer to liability for various torts under state law as well.


For example, a manager or supervisor who engages in sexual harassment subjects a covered employer to potential liability under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and a manager or supervisor who makes improper hiring inquiries may subject a covered employer to liability under the Americans with Disabilities Act.


Such conduct, however, also may subject the manager or supervisor’s employer to liability for state-law torts. These can include assault and battery or intentional infliction of emotional distress based on allegations of unlawful harassment. The conduct also could create a state-law cause of action for invasion of privacy based upon the manager or supervisor’s inquiries. A negative employment reference may subject an employer to a claim of retaliation under one or more of the federal anti-discrimination statutes, but improper communications regarding current or former employees also may subject the employer to liability for defamation under state tort law. Subject to the limitations of the various state laws, an employer may be held directly liable for the conduct of the manager or supervisor, or an employer may be held liable for negligently hiring, failing to train or continuing to employ the offending manager or supervisor.


Why contract and tort claims complicate employment law disputes
In addition to the general question of liability, state-law contract and tort claims also can hinder the successful defense of a lawsuit as a procedural matter. State-law contract and tort claims may provide a basis for the plaintiff to sue and remain in state court, where judges are more inclined than their federal counterparts to conduct trials and less inclined to grant motions to dismiss or for summary judgment.


The addition of the manager or supervisor as a co-defendant also may require securing separate legal representation for that manager or supervisor, thereby increasing the cost of litigation and making strategic decisions more complicated. (By contrast, several federal anti-discrimination laws have been interpreted as not permitting the assertion of claims against individual managers and supervisors.)


Furthermore, state-law contract and tort claims often have longer statutes of limitations than federal claims. State-law claims typically place fewer (if any) limitations on the amount of damages a plaintiff may recover, thereby creating at least the potential for a greater monetary recovery against the employer. To the extent the employer wishes to avoid trial, the addition of such claims, as well as the presence of individual managers or supervisors as defendants in the case, may make a reasonable settlement more difficult.


Federal anti-discrimination laws often focus on the manager or supervisor’s intent and, so, employers can often escape liability for undisputed acts as long as the manager or supervisor did not act based on any improper reason.


The question of liability under state common-law claims, on the other hand, often focuses on the conduct itself. Although there are several defenses that may be available to employers in defending against such state-law claims that are not available in defending against related federal-law claims, the best defense is still for manager and supervisors to avoid engaging in conduct that might subject their employers to potential liability under state law.


For these reasons, employers should consider incorporating training on state-law contract and tort claims into their overall management training programs.


Workforce Management Online, June 2010 — Register Now!

Posted on May 28, 2010August 9, 2018

Dear Workforce Why Won’t My Team Members Help With Training?

Dear Enabler:

I suspect that your staff members have become disengaged and that you have allowed this uncooperative culture to develop over some considerable time. Take a big-picture view and ask yourself what it is you do on a daily/weekly basis to engage your employees—how you cultivate a team-based approach to work. For example:

• Do you set challenging department goals that are mutually agreed upon with your staff?

• Do you devise goals that require collaboration for success, or only individual goals?

• Do you track and report progress on your department’s/team’s goals?

• Do you meet weekly in a team meeting with all of your staff to share ideas and update progress?

• Do you meet with each of your staff members weekly for a one-on-one “What Is Going On” meeting to discuss individual concerns and progress?

• Do you show a personal interest in each and every staff member? Do you practice “management by walking around”?

• Do you provide both positive and negative feedback on a regular basis?

• Do you reward positive behavior and team achievements?

• Do you confront poor behavior in a non-emotive and direct way? (Or do you blow up?)

• Are you open to criticism without becoming defensive? Do you actively seek feedback from others?

• Do you compliment existing employees by asking them to buddy with or mentor new recruits?

Apply these ideas to improve your situation
Start by clearly articulating the benefits derived in training other employees. Benefits to your department may include shorter lag time to productive output for new recruits. Benefits to team members may be increased respect from peers and new recruits. Once you have articulated the benefits, call a special meeting to discuss your new direction. You now have a base from which to work.

Second, find out why staff members do not want to train others. Find the real reasons, not just the presenting reasons. You can do that at your regular weekly one-on-one meetings with each of your direct reports. Find out the roadblocks and remove them. It may be that they are under-resourced or feel unappreciated. Whatever the reasons, fix them.

Third, reward those who act on their responsibilities and discipline those who do not. Their behaviors will not change if there are no or inconsequential outcomes. Perhaps set up a “trainer of the month” award or give the best trainers some time off. The rewards do not need to be financial to be effective. For those who continue to refuse even after the roadblocks have been removed, start them on your company’s disciplinary process. Ignoring obstructers will only serve to demoralize those who are putting in the effort.

I have touched on some of the questions raised in the above list. Now go through the remainder and fill out further how you can more actively engage your staff in carrying out their responsibilities.

SOURCE: Leslie Allan, managing director, Business Performance Pty Ltd., Melbourne, Australia, April 30, 2010

LEARN MORE: Wanting managers to mentor isn’t enough. They must have a desire to help others through coaching.

Workforce Management Online, May 2010 — Register Now!

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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Dear Workforce Newsletter
Posted on May 4, 2010June 29, 2023

Special Report on Training and Development The Leadership Formula

General Electric, one of the most iconic names in American business, has managed to become not only the 12th biggest company in the 2009 Fortune Global 500, but also one of the most resilient and agile. Even in the depths of the global downturn in 2009, the company earned $30 billion while simultaneously positioning itself to grow in emerging markets such as Latin America and going after opportunities in “ecoimagination” technologies such as smart grids, offshore wind installations and cutting-edge batteries. At a time when much of corporate America was too scared about survival to contemplate the future, GE not only kept its focus on innovation, but also increased its spending on research and development by 7 percent. 


While the giant manufacturer has plenty of successful wares, in a 2009 Harvard Business Review interview, GE chairman and chief executive Jeffrey R. Immelt gave much of the credit for GE’s success to one thing that the company is particularly good at producing: highly capable, forward-thinking leaders who can execute his growth and innovation strategy. In addition to using 360-degree reviews, bottom-line data and other tools to assess how well its leadership candidates are progressing, GE has its Leadership, Innovation and Growth management development program (LIG for short). The Harvard Business Review article, which is posted on GE’s website, described one such LIG session in which scores of senior managers spent days analyzing case histories of GE projects in an attempt to discern the impediments to innovation and growth in their departments and find ways to overcome them.


Immelt explained: “When somebody asks me, ‘At your level of the company, what does a leader do?’ I always say, ‘Drive change and develop other leaders.’ LIG gave me a chance to do both at the same time.”


(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


To be sure, there are numerous factors that combine to create high-performance corporate cultures like GE’s, according to the Institute for Corporate Productivity, a business think tank of which GE is a member. The institute, which goes by the acronym i4cp, has spent several decades trying to figure out what sets high performers apart from the pack. Its researchers have identified five key attributes, or “domains,” that distinguish companies: strategy, leadership, talent, culture and market. But i4cp has found that while doing well in all of these areas is critical, the domain that seems to most greatly influence the others and promote overall excellence is leadership.


“We’ve been surveying companies about critical issues since 1986, and leadership is something that they’re always concerned about,” says Jay Jamrog, i4cp’s senior vice president for research. “Not only do they see it as important, but they’ve always worried that they’re not doing a very good job at it.” The recently published 2010 i4cp Major Issues Survey of more than 600 companies in various industries, for example, found that 75 percent of them were concerned to a high or very high extent about leadership development, but only 24 percent thought they were effective in developing leaders.


Jamrog says that the trauma of the recent economic downturn has intensified that concern. 


“The recession was a real wake-up call on leadership for companies,” he says. “They’re looking at the changed environment and asking themselves whether they’re training leaders with the right competencies. And because they had to stop hiring for a long time, they’re concerned about having enough talent in the pipeline. They’re thinking, ‘How can we put leadership development in the microwave and produce the leaders we need faster?’ ”


But while the importance of good leaders is apparent to most companies, many aren’t clear on how to produce them. To that end, companies have spent princely sums to seek wisdom from management gurus and experimented with a wide range of philosophies. They’ve even turned for guidance to political, historical and religious figures such as Colin Powell, Attila the Hun and Jesus. At i4cp, however, researchers have taken a more systematic, data-driven approach to discerning what makes for an effective leader, and how to develop one. By surveying management at successful, average and underperforming companies in a variety of industries and crunching the numbers, they’ve been able to develop a data-driven template for what constitutes good leadership and how to develop it. 


How important is leadership? 
Traditionally, high-profile corporate leaders—from Chrysler’s Lee Iacocca to Apple’s Steve Jobs—often have been celebrated in the media as the keys to companies’ successes. But business researchers have struggled for decades to determine the extent to which leadership actually contributes to corporate performance. A study of 48 Fortune 500 companies published in the Academy of Management Journal in 2001, for example, found that top executives’ charisma—that is, their ability to influence and persuade employees to follow strategy—had only a small effect on profitability, though that effect rose when business conditions were more uncertain. 


(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


At i4cp, researchers also have attempted to correlate leadership with bottom-line performance, but from a different angle: by surveying hundreds of companies and zeroing in on both the actual and perceived differences between high, midrange and low performers. “We’re asking people not just what they’re doing, but what they think they should be doing,” Jamrog explains.


The 2009 i4cp Leadership Competencies Pulse Survey, for example, found significant differences between how high-performing and low-performing companies develop and evaluate their leaders. High performers are nearly 40 percent more likely to have a process that enables them to identify development gaps in their next generation of leaders. They are more likely to use tools and training to develop leadership competencies, and to gather data to gauge the programs’ effectiveness afterward. They also are more likely to measure leadership success through a variety of performance indicators—ranging from the obvious, such as profits and revenues, to deeper metrics such as customer satisfaction and time needed to make critical hires.


The survey also found that low performers had more difficulty overcoming barriers to leadership development. The most glaring gaps: Low performers were 50 percent more likely to complain that their companies didn’t have a supportive culture for leadership development, and by a similar margin were more likely to struggle with identifying which staffers they should try to develop as leaders.


Leadership components
When i4cp researchers asked companies to rate the importance of 56 leadership competencies and then compared them with the companies’ rankings on both leadership and market performance, their finding was startling. Only two competencies—being an effective role model for organizational values and hiring talent—had a significant correlation to both types of performance. Statistically, both turn out to be roughly equal in importance.


“The example you set, in terms of values, has as much impact as who you hire,” Jamrog explains.


“What we’re seeing with leadership is that it’s more important than anything else to have the right attitudinal and behavior fit with the organization,” Jamrog says. “It’s all about walking the walk, being a coach, a teacher and a mentor. Leaders who do those things are the ones who get employees to do what’s needed to help make the organization successful.”


Jamrog says that most companies understand the importance of such charismatic leadership, at least in theory. But when it comes to valuing it day in and day out, many have different priorities. He explains: “Companies will tell me, ‘Jay, I know that building relationships is important. But how do I measure that stuff and reward it?’ It’s easier to measure the effectiveness of a leader on how many widgets he gets out the door each week. And we tend to model the behavior that’s rewarded.” 


(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


A recently published i4cp paper, based on multiple studies over the years, identified the top five elements of leadership in terms of correlation with market performance. The top element was the ability to clearly communicate the organization’s goals. This quality not only scored a top-ranking correlation to performance, but it also was the item on which high performers had the highest average score and, perhaps most significantly, had the biggest gap between them and lower performers. Other key elements included being an excellent decision maker, empowering employees, making sure that programs support the desired culture and continually adopting innovative approaches to increase employee effectiveness. 


What leaders need to learn
Even successful companies have doubts about the effectiveness of their leadership-building efforts. The institute has found that only 50 percent think their officer-level leaders surpass most of their industry. About 45 percent of them think that their organizations emphasize continuing development of current leaders’ skills, and about 30 percent think that they’re strong at developing future leadership talent. Even so, they’re twice as confident of their leadership development as low-performing companies. 


When asked what elements help them to develop leaders, high-performing companies tend to rate commitment from executive row, a positive corporate culture and a basic leadership development strategy as more important than the actual processes used to develop leaders. 


Almost half saw CEO support as an important factor, while roughly 40 percent viewed the top executive’s personal involvement in development, a transparent and high-trust culture and a leadership development strategy as important.


By comparison, only 28 percent put their faith in processes for identifying employees with leadership potential and 23 percent valued developmental assignments—a popular technique for seasoning leadership candidates. Just 15 percent thought fast-track development programs were critical.


When it comes to educating leaders in specific business competencies, there are significant gaps between what high-performing companies and low performers do, according to i4cp’s data. The most glaring differential: 66 percent of high-performing companies say that they emphasize teaching leaders about operations, while only 44 percent of low performers make that a priority. 


Another big gap is in understanding the bottom line, which is emphasized by 65 percent of high performers, compared with 47 percent of low performers. Perhaps the most basic knowledge set of all—knowing the company’s business—is another area that distinguishes high and low performers. Eighty-two percent of top-performing companies believe that they emphasize this in training, while only 62 percent of low performers make sure that leaders understand what the company actually produces and markets. 


Training for high performance
One surprising i4cp finding is that leadership courses from training outsourcers—both the off-the-shelf and custom-designed ones—have little correlation to companies’ market performance. Instead, according to Jamrog, research shows that the leadership-cultivating tools with the most bottom-line impact are performance management and development plans, mentoring and internal coaching. 


“I know that’s going to make vendors cringe,” he says with a laugh. “The problem is that it doesn’t take much thought for companies to just buy an off-the-shelf course. It takes more time and energy to train leaders in a more hands-on way, though it doesn’t necessarily cost more money.”


Oddly, only 5 to 7 percent of all companies use what i4cp has determined to be the most effective training methods—role-playing simulations and business case studies. 


“With case studies, the key seems to be to have leaders look at issues in their own company,” Jamrog says. “It’s all internal, as opposed to the way you might do it at Harvard. A lot of times, they’ll work on an actual business problem at the company and try to learn from solving it. They may end up writing up the exercise and actually producing something as they do it.”


Jamrog says that simulations and role-playing are more costly and time-consuming to stage, but that research shows they are even more effective. “You can use technology to create a simulation where you have to make a decision, and then see how it plays out,” Jamrog explains. “Or it can be more of a staged scenario where you play parts like actors and improvise. The key thing is that you learn how to handle different situations and get a sense of what behaviors you need and how to make decisions.”


How leaders translate what they learn into behavior is crucial. According to Jamrog, effective executives combine transactional and charismatic leadership techniques—using gestures of appreciation, for example, to reward employees for good performance and to model.


“I know one CEO who walks around with dollar bills in his pocket,” Jamrog explains. “When someone does something positive, he gives the person a dollar bill in front of everyone. Another CEO sends anonymous bouquets that will suddenly show up one someone’s desk when they accomplish something. It takes time and energy and focus to build these things into the culture, so that it begins to reward the right kind of behaviors.”  


Workforce Management, May 2010, p. 25-26, 28-31 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on January 6, 2010August 31, 2018

The Four Types of Training That Should Never Be Cut

Often one of the first line items to be cut from HR budgets is training, which can be perceived by high-level executives as “a good thing to do” but nonessential to their organizations in these challenging financial times. In reality, workforce training has never been more important, and it provides a stronger-than-ever return on investment.


The recession has put employers under attack by employees government enforcement agencies. Consider the following facts:


• From 2007 to the end of 2008, employment claims filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission increased by 14.5 percent, from 83,000 to 95,000.

• In 2008, retaliation claims filed with the EEOC jumped 22 percent, from 27,000 to 33,000 claims.

• The EEOC just hired 170 new investigators for intake and investigation purposes.

• Corporate counsel reported significant rises in employment disputes in the past year, with discrimination suits rising by 11 percent.

• The Department of Labor recently added of 250 new wage-and-hour field investigators—a staff increase of more than a third—along with additional new staff in the department’s Office of the Solicitor.


• In December 2008, Wal-Mart agreed to pay as much as $640 million to resolve 63 class-action lawsuits involving wage-and-hour violations across the nation.


In light of such statistics, there are four types of training that should never be cut. These programs—essential for most workforces— are training in the prevention of unlawful harassment and discrimination, prevention of workplace violence, prevention of wage-and-hour law violations and adherence to the organization’s code of conduct. There are sound return-on-investment arguments for each one.


1. Training to prevent discrimination and harassment
The EEOC charge numbers cited above represent only the tip of the iceberg. They do not include harassment and discrimination charges filed with state enforcement agencies, in state courts or those related to conflicts that settle before the charges are formally filed.


In the event of a layoff, employees who are terminated might perceive that they were targeted for belonging to one of the legally protected categories, such as age, race, gender or national origin. Employees who haven’t been laid off might view filing a harassment or discrimination claim as “job security,” falsely believing that such a claim makes it impossible for an employer to terminate their employment.


The return on investment

Many courts have held that regular—generally, that means annual—harassment prevention training allows an employer to establish an affirmative defense to avoid liability in cases where the allegedly aggrieved employee has not suffered any tangible job detriment, such as a demotion or termination. (If there is a tangible employment action, such as a termination, this affirmative defense is not available.)


Additionally, numerous courts have held that employers that do not train in harassment prevention, or do so only sporadically, can be subject to punitive damages for negligence. Conversely, if an employer can demonstrate it made good-faith efforts to comply with harassment and discrimination laws by training employees, punitive damages can more likely be avoided.


2. Workplace violence prevention training
Incidents of workplace violence are in the news nearly every day. Homicide is the second-leading cause of fatal occupational injury in the U.S., according the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ most recently revised report, which covers 2008. And while workplace homicides fell by 18 percent in 2008, workplace suicides rose from 196 cases in 2007 to 251 cases in 2008, an increase of 28 percent and the highest number ever reported by the fatality census, according to the BLS.


Many employees and former employees are feeling desperate—over layoffs, terminations, foreclosure on their homes, their plummeting (or nonexistent) retirement accounts. In nearly every case of extreme workplace violence, there were many early warning signs that were ignored because employees and supervisors were not trained in recognizing them and taking appropriate action.


The return on investment
Not only can proper training of employees and supervisors prevent an incident of horrible tragedy from occurring, but it also can be used as a legal defense should an incident occur. Employers that show they have acted prudently to protect their employees by conducting training will likely avoid multimillion-dollar jury awards finding that the employer was negligent or assessments of punitive damages.


3. Training to prevent wage-and-hour violations
Current economic conditions have resulted in drastic cost cutting and the slashing of work hours and overtime, which can lead to unwitting violations of wage-and-hour laws. Wage-and-hour violations most frequently occur simply because employees do not have accurate information on how to properly record hours or supervisors lack training in wage payment practices.


The return on investment
As with other types of training, programs for employees and supervisors in this area can help not only to prevent violations, but also to establish a legal defense—in this case, by demonstrating good-faith compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act.


Employers that have instituted a wage-and-hour training program and have instructed employees and supervisors in proper wage-and-hour record keeping and payment practices can avoid the liquidated damages that can arise from a willful violation of the law. Employee class-action wage-and-hour lawsuits are a substantial threat to U.S. employers, and wage-and-hour training for employees and supervisors can minimize the risk of such suits, potentially saving an employer millions of dollars in violations and liquidated damages.


4. Ethics and code-of-conduct training
Employers are being scrutinized for ethical violations like never before. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 strongly encourages training on an organization’s code of conduct and requires education about systems available to employees to report ethical violations. Additionally, federal sentencing guidelines mandate training on ethics and legal compliance for all organizations as one of the two ways in which an organization’s sentence for criminal misconduct might be mitigated.


The federal sentencing guidelines clearly state that employers can be held liable for their employees’ illegal conduct. Employers can substantially mitigate potential fines and punishment for criminal violations if they take proactive steps to prevent unethical and illegal conduct through an effective ethics and compliance program, including training. Conversely, the lack of an effective ethics and compliance program can be used by a fact finder to increase fines and liability.

The return on investment
Ethics training can prove an essential defense should an ethics lapse occur, demonstrating to an enforcement agency that your organization took ethics seriously enough to train your entire workforce. Such good-faith efforts can make regulators less likely to assess fines or penalties and can lessen public relations damage to the organization.


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.

Posted on January 4, 2010June 27, 2018

Employee Engagement: Define It, Measure It and Put It to Work in Your Organization

Employee engagement is to HR what customer loyalty is to marketing and sales. It is that often elusive frame of mind that goes beyond satisfaction and ensures the long-term and productive tenure of the faithful employee with the employer.

This article describes how leading organizations define employee engagement, how they collect and measure and put into play relevant information and how they ensure senior leadership is held accountable for making employee engagement a part of the organizational culture.

Defining employee engagement
In order to make the most of such key talent processes as recruiting, training and development and retention, organizations should be tuned in to the “voice of the employee” and ensure that valued employees are engaged with the organization.

A manager of organizational effectiveness and employee engagement at a Fortune 100 company put it this way: “The typical organization today views talent management as three building blocks: attract, develop and retain. These are solid building blocks. The challenge is that these blocks won’t stick together unless there is mortar. And that mortar is employee engagement. A robust, world-class talent management process has to put the mortar between those three key building blocks.”

To avoid platitudes, every organization should define employee engagement to ensure that the information it is gathering from the workforce on can be put into practice. For example, one organization researched by APQC for its newest collaborative research project, “Rewarding, Engaging, and Retaining Key Talent,” defines employee engagement as commitment, work ethic and loyalty.

Another organization defines employee engagement as a combination of perceptions—including satisfaction, commitment, pride, loyalty, sense of personal responsibility and willingness to be an advocate for the organization—that have an impact on behavior.

And a third defines engagement centrally as “an individual sense of purpose and focused energy, evident to others in their display of personal initiative, effort and persistence, that is directed toward organizational goals.”

Each organization in the study is clear about what it means to be an engaged employee. That definition is reinforced through standard processes and practices for collecting employee engagement information.

Why employee engagement is important
Both qualitative anecdotes and quantitative research indicate that organizations realize positive outcomes from employee engagement.

For example, a best-practice organization candidate for APQC’s “Rewarding, Engaging, and Retaining Key Talent” study found that high levels of employee engagement have been correlated with high levels of quality, productivity and attendance. Another has correlated higher levels of employee engagement with higher levels of new product innovation. And a third has observed some very positive business outcomes, in large part because of its focus on employee engagement over the past four years, including a reduction in team member turnover of 19 percent, a reduction in workers’ compensation claims of 27 percent, an increase in net revenue of 22 percent, and an increase in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of 43 percent.

Quantitative research reinforces the relationship among customers, employees and the bottom line. For example, the classic 1994 Harvard Business Review article “Putting the Service Profit Chain to Work” establishes relationships among profitability, customer loyalty, employee satisfaction and productivity. A 2003 article from Journal of Applied Psychology—“Which Comes First: Employee Attitudes or Organizational Financial and Market Performance?”—found consistent and significant positive relationships over time between overall job satisfaction and financial and market performance (as well as reciprocal relationships).

Measuring employee engagement
Employee attitude or climate surveys are two tools for gathering feedback and enhancing workplace communication. APQC’s Open Standards Research shows that workforce climate surveys primarily take the form of an annual census, which means that all employees are surveyed once a year. (About half of survey participants conduct employee satisfaction/engagement surveys at least once per year.) The results are then communicated to senior leaders and the top managers responsible for such key employee areas as talent management, compensation and benefits for action and process improvement.

APQC’s qualitative research also sheds light on how best-practice organizations monitor the voice of the employee and take action. For example, one organization calculates an employee engagement index, based on a subset of employee survey items measuring the engagement of respondents:

• Satisfaction: Employees are asked, “Considering everything, how would you rate your overall satisfaction with the company at the present time?”

• Advocacy: Employees are asked whether they “would recommend the company as a great place to work.”

• Retention: Employees are asked to respond yes or no to the statement “I rarely think about looking for a job with a new company.”

• Pride: Employees are asked to respond yes or no to the statement “I am proud to work for the company.”

At another organization in APQC’s collaborative research, employee engagement is measured two times per year through a formal survey. First, the organization administers a formal employee engagement survey to all employees worldwide. This information is analyzed, and action plans are developed and implemented based on results. Participation is voluntary; in 2008, roughly 92 percent participated in the survey. Then about halfway through the year the organization conducts a random poll to assess how well it is doing with the action plans generated from the annual survey results.

Sustaining a commitment to employee engagement
The final steps in the engagement process are ensuring that the information can be acted upon, that senior leadership is held accountable for the results, and that a focus on employee engagement is instilled in organizational culture.

Employee satisfaction and engagement research should be important elements in HR and organizational strategic planning processes. Of the organizations participating in APQC’s Open Standards Research, 77 percent indicate that employee feedback and surveys are key aspects of the organizational HR planning process (Figure 1, N=75). Because employees are important customers—indeed, the ultimate customers—of HR plans, policies and strategies, their opinions can help organizations gauge the success of particular initiatives, determine strategic priorities and pinpoint needed improvements.

 

Which of the following are inputs into your HR planning process?

Organizational long-term objectives

  83%

Organization mission statement

80

Senior management directive

79

Employee feedback/surveys

77

Internal and external analysis

75

Corporate and unit strategies

72

HR customer satisfaction surveys

52

Other

  5

 

Organizations must also reinforce how seriously they take employee engagement. According to APQC’s Open Standards Research, employee satisfaction and the growth of key staff members are the most common employee- or HR-related metrics factored into leadership compensation (Figure 2, N=156). Employee satisfaction is typically gauged via employee satisfaction, engagement, climate or culture surveys. Staff development is typically measured by the number of promotions and developmental opportunities completed.

 

Which of the following people/HR metrics are built into the compensation plan for the leadership team at your business entity?

Employee satisfaction (climate/culture survey)

  40%

Growth of key staff (promotions, developmental opportunities provided)

40

No people metrics built into compensation plans for leadership

32

Attrition/retention of key staff

28

Staff training completed in comparison to learning goals

21

Number of available positions filled internally

19

Diversity

15

Other

 9

 

Here are some examples from APQC’s collaborative research of how leading organizations act on this information:

• The organization feeds results of the employee engagement survey into action plans and process-improvement initiatives. Through data analysis, it compares each group’s employee engagement index against the organization overall and against the benchmarks.

• In another example, each business unit develops action plans based on results of the previous year’s engagement survey and the follow-up pulse survey. The organization also requires that all managers with direct reports have performance objectives related to engagement.

• A third organization directs information from the customer and employee surveys to the appropriate process owners for action and improvement. This information is used as one factor in computing bonuses for senior leadership and is communicated to managers for process-improvement purposes. Results are also used for group training purposes when necessary. The organization also convenes a cultural council for every operating location to review information from the employee and customer surveys and discuss other employee issues and concerns, such as turnover and career paths. The cultural council comprises employees who meet on a monthly basis as part of the council and discuss improvement opportunities. Actions and feedback suggested by the councils then are communicated at the district and the division level.

The final consideration is making employee engagement part of an organization’s culture. One way to do this is by integrating employee engagement into other key talent initiatives and activities. For example, one organization integrates employee engagement into such activities as learning and development, Six Sigma, succession management and nonfinancial recognition:

• In learning and development: One e-learning module focuses specifically on the “fundamentals of employee engagement.”

• In Six Sigma: The company has been able to calculate estimated improvements in business outcomes based on improvements in the employee engagement scores using Six Sigma processes.

• In succession management: Successors are ultimately selected based not only on their performance and potential, but also on their engagement, leadership and values, as measured by the employee opinion survey.

• In nonfinancial recognition: The company grants an annual “Chairman’s Recognition for Engagement” award to deserving employees each year.

In this manner, employee engagement is integrated throughout different aspects of talent management and is instilled as a key part of organizational culture.

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