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Posted on November 14, 2007July 10, 2018

Blues to Stop Paying for ‘Never Events’

Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans will no longer pay for serious errors and hospital-acquired conditions called “never events,” a senior executive said at the annual National Business Coalition on Health conference in Scottsdale, Arizona.


“We believe it’s time to not continue to pay for never events,” Kevin Shanklin, executive director of the office of the president at the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, told attendees. The 39 Blues plans nationwide insure 100 million people.


Discontinuing these payments could take several years, Shanklin says .


“Part of the work we have to do is build these medical procedure errors into the claims,” he says.


This could include changing coding rules to make never events easier to identify in claims, he added. Never events include performing the wrong surgical procedure, hospital-acquired pressure ulcers and leaving foreign objects in the body after surgery.


No Blues plans were yet denying payments for never events, and some plans will be moving more quickly than others to discontinue payments, Shanklin says. The plans will no longer pay for never events starting October 1, 2008. Other major insurers have said they will adopt similar policies.


This story was filed by by Rebecca Vesely of Modern Health Care, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, please e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Posted on November 14, 2007July 10, 2018

HotJobs, N.Y. Newspaper Join Forces

Yahoo HotJobs is teaming up with the New York Daily News, the country’s fifth-largest newspaper.


The partnership was announced November 9. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.


HotJobs, like its peers in the job board industry, has been turning its attention to newspaper partnerships as a means to increase brand awareness and extend national reach. The HotJobs deal comes several months after online job board Monster sealed a high-profile partnership deal with The New York Times earlier this year.


The Daily News is of strategic importance for HotJobs because it is the biggest-selling metro newspaper in the state and has a loyal readership.


“We’ re very pleased to welcome the Daily News as a valuable addition to the Newspaper Consortium,” Lem Lloyd, vice president of HotJobs’ Newspaper Consortium, said in a release.


The Newspaper Consortium now includes 21 partners representing 377 daily newspapers. It was launched in 2006.


—Gina Ruiz

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Managers as Talent Magnets

At Bristol-Myers Squibb, part of the business strategy focuses on talent as a major component to success. The company has broadly defined its talent strategy as the ability to attract, develop and retain the depth and diversity of talent to successfully execute the strategy. In an effort to better understand what engages and retains employees, the company conducted internal research and found that the role of the manager was pivotal to every key aspect of engagement (career and development, reward and recognition, quality of management and alignment of work to broader business issues). As a consequence, Bristol-Myers Squibb believes that the role of the manager is key in executing both the business and talent strategies.

Leadership and competencies
   Suzan McDaniel, senior director of talent management at Bristol-Myers Squibb, says that the business leaders at the company have played a key role in building management capability. They believe that developing great managers is critical, and they have worked on a series of communication and development tools to support managers in their development. First, they created a set of core behaviors (one of which focuses on the development of people) that are explicitly defined at different career stages. This serves to clarify expectations for all Bristol-Myers Squibb employees.


    After seeing the results of company research, members of the leadership team decided to define what it means to be a great leader at Bristol-Myers Squibb, and to give employees tools to build their skills. This has led to the development of a program, “What Do Great Managers Do at Bristol-Myers Squibb?” It includes both education and a tool kit for how to emulate the attributes and actions of great managers and leaders. McDaniel says leaders in the organization are role models for the behaviors, and talk about them daily in their divisions.


Communication and competencies
   The company not only talks about the core Bristol-Myers Squibb behaviors and how they are carried out by great managers and leaders every day, but highlights them in announcements of internal promotions. The behaviors are woven into all key HR processes at the company. “You can’t let up on this, and you can’t compromise on its importance,” she says.


Measurement and rewards
   Because these key behaviors are part of the company’s HR systems, there is a constant focus on measuring employees’ performance against these behaviors. Whether it is in selection, feedback tools, promotional considerations or performance management, employees are constantly being assessed and given feedback to improve their performance.


    McDaniel stresses the importance of selecting people for qualities the company seeks, developing those qualities and holding people accountable. “The best way to build the capability is to build the foundational skills and provide role models of what great managers do,” she says. “Then you need to let them thrive in their own work environment and use upward feedback to help managers hone in on areas they need to improve.”


Structure and symbols
   As part of establishing its performance management system, the company created a stretch goal for managers: spend 50 percent of their time doing their work and 50 percent of their time managing others. Like every other organization in the past decade, Bristol-Myers Squibb sees increasing pressure on managers. Their own work has not diminished, but their spans of control have gotten larger as the company operates in a leaner environment. Although aspirational, the goal does communicate what the company believes is important: good management.

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Growing Fast and Going Global at Cisco

Cisco Systems knew it needed to build stronger managers, but there never seemed to be enough time to work on it.

    “We knew our management capability was stretched, given the growth trajectory of the company,” says Annemarie Neal, vice president of talent management and diversity. “There just was not time to build management capability in the past, but we need to do it now.” Neal says that the company’s internal employee pulse survey and exit interview data indicated that managers were a major factor in employee turnover.

   “Although employees were very committed to the organization, they were not committed to their managers,” she says. In a high-growth company like Cisco, employee retention is essential.

Cisco East: at the forefront of innovation
   Cisco has set up “Cisco East” in Bangalore, India, and expects to have a significant population of employees working from there. They will not be doing back-office work, but rather completing innovative development work. In the near future, most employees will be spread out across the world, and managers will be working with a geographically dispersed set of workers from several different cultures. Cisco is currently looking at how it can gear up managers for this new challenge.

   “Nearly 50 percent of the employees in our development group are from non-Western backgrounds,” Neal reports. She says the company is focused on identifying new ways for them to accomplish their work using collaborative technologies and work practices.

A common platform tied to business strategy
   Cisco understood that to build management capability for the future, it first needed to understand the business strategy and the implications Cisco’s strategy had on leading and managing people. With this foundation, the organization created a leadership competency model and an interlocking management competency model. HR and line development specialists have worked with management to build a common definition of the critical components of a manager’s job: translating strategy into action; managing the financial and risk components of the role; operational excellence; and people and culture. This definition played a key role in the creation of the management competency model, Neal says.


    The manager role definition and the competency model provide the foundation for a management development portal that is currently being developed and tested. The portal provides access to assessment and development tools. It also provides an arena for collaboration and an opportunity to create communities of practice. It also sets up a venue for group learning. Managers are held accountable for delivering on the key elements of their role through their performance management process.


    The Cisco leadership team has shown its support for this important initiative through participation in the development of many of the foundational elements, continued funding of initiatives to build management capability, and day-to-day discussions on the importance of management capability.

Posted on November 13, 2007October 18, 2024

Why You Must Build Management Capability

In the past, organizations have clung to the belief that as long as they had competitive products and services, they could enhance their performance by hiring strong leadership and top talent. While this focus has worked in some cases, in today’s highly competitive labor market—and yes, it is going to get much worse—organizations competing for top talent may be missing the essential managerial skills and processes needed to succeed over the long term.

Today’s Generation X employees have much higher expectations of what managers should do to support them compared with the prior generation. Furthermore, the new entrants into the workforce, known variously as Generation Y, Millennials or Generation Next, have still greater needs for immediate feedback and development. These young workers are accustomed to praise, reinforcement and time to develop their interests and skills. How can organizations capture and retain this new talent, as well as slightly older up-and-coming leaders?

Research suggests that most organizations neglect the role of managers, undervalue it and therefore suffer from a lack of strong management capability. A 2006 survey from BlessingWhite indicates that employees who plan to stay with their current companies are twice as likely as employees who say they might or might not stay to report that their managers recognize their talents and encourage them to use those talents to the fullest extent.

I would say that the trend that is emerging is not pretty. Today’s managers are also individual contributors and they spend more of their time doing their “real” jobs—technical aspects of their positions—than they actually spend managing their employees. This behavior poses a problem because today’s employees want more from their managers and workplaces, not less. And they are willing to walk out of your workplace if they don’t get it.

While employees are hungry for praise and eager to get help expanding their capabilities, there is, unfortunately, a corresponding capability gap among managers to give them what they need. This deficit exists for many reasons, including:

Years of downsizing means companies expect more from fewer employees. There simply is not enough time for managers to devote to mentorship and employee development.

  • Insufficient skills. Managers don’t know how to provide feedback and develop people.
  • A dearth of rewards. Managers are rewarded based upon individual contributions and achievements, not their management skills.
  • The mistaken belief that “one size fits all.” The same rewards approach won’t motivate everyone.
  • Organizations do not place a high enough value on the role of the manager.

Employees don’t leave companies; they leave their managers
   Employees want managers who will provide goals and direction, feedback and coaching—and who recognize and reward them for good performance. Yet research indicates that managers are not delivering on these expectations. One possible reason is that managers’ roles are not designed to focus on managing people. Most managers spend 90 percent of their time on technical and administrative tasks and only 10 percent of their time on activities related to managing and developing the people who report to them.

There is a wealth of research indicating that management behavior is a key factor in retention. This is nothing new. In 1968, Frederick Hertzberg published his seminal work on what motivates employees. This research showed that satisfaction with one’s direct manager is not a satisfier, but it can be a major source of dissatisfaction—and thus, turnover. Recent research has consistently shown that dissatisfaction with one’s manager is a top reason for leaving the organization.

More recently, three different research studies—from the Hay Group in 1999, McKinsey & Co. in 2000 and Towers Perrin in 2003—examined the factors that predicted whether employees would stay with or leave their current organizations. Some of the most commonly found items predicting intention to leave were:

  • Insufficient feedback and coaching.
  • Insufficient learning and development opportunities.
  • Insufficient reward and recognition for their work.
  • Insufficient sense that their organization values them.

Management is responsible for delivering on each of these job factors. No one else can affect how an employee feels as dramatically and tangibly as an employee’s immediate manager. The most effective managers are those who know their employees’ strengths and development needs so well that they know which assignments to give based on balancing both organizational needs and those of the employees.

Coaching and feedback make up one area that is receiving the most attention in organizations today. Employee survey results in company after company are showing that employees want and expect feedback. Research conducted with Gen Xers tells us that this age group not only expects feedback from their managers, but demands it. The Millennial Generation is even more voracious in its need for coaching and input.

Finally, people want to know that they are appreciated when they do a good job or put in extra effort. Good managers praise employees in ways that raise self-esteem and commitment to the organization. Poor managers just expect it all, and, as a consequence, praise nothing. What they really get is turnover, and lots of it. And then they get less productivity out of the people who do stay.

Actions to take
   Doing the bare minimum of training and development—just enough to keep your organization within the law, and to keep from being sued—can easily lead to behaviors that damage companies’ reputations. Once damaged, a reputation takes significant time and money to restore. Some companies never really recover. Before find yourself in a position of losing top talent or dealing with a weakened organizational reputation, you can invest in processes to improve the management capability in your organization.

Human resource leaders are in an ideal position to influence all the elements needed to change the role of managers and to help their organizations build management capability. Many elements are needed, of course, but the first is the sponsorship of the most senior leaders to ensure buy-in and demonstrable support for the process. The rest of the elements involve your organization’s beliefs, values and culture. All of these are levers for change and are necessary to reinforce norms and expectations.

Building management capability goes beyond training. It includes transforming the organization’s culture so that it values the role that management plays in attracting and retaining top talent and setting forth clear expectations for the manager’s role. As this model indicates, all organizations have an underlying set of beliefs about the importance of the manager. Organizations that have strong management capabilities believe that managers are critical for their ability to attract, retain and motivate employees. Strong beliefs influence the values of an organization, and consequently, culture.

Each of the levers of change in the model represents an area that organizations must consider if they want to build strong management capability. Just focusing on one lever of change will not bring about lasting change in management capability; the current culture will overwhelm small changes. By focusing on numerous change levers, organizations can modify the culture and create long-term change. Briefly, the levers represent the following considerations:

  • Leadership: An organization’s leadership must both believe in the value of the role that managers play and must lead by example.
  • Communication: The leadership team must consistently communicate the importance of the role of the manager to the organization and its ability to achieve high performance, attract talent and retain it.
  • Competencies: Management competencies must be assessed and developed. Entry into a management role must be predicated on an appropriate, although not necessarily perfect, set of skills.
  • Measurement and rewards: Any effective strategy must be integrated into the scorecard. It must be measured and rewarded.
  • Structure and symbols: The role of a manager must be structured so that the manager can spend sufficient time with direct reports. The term “manager” must mean something in terms of role expectations.

By focusing on these levers of change, the organization will develop new norms and expectations for behavior. The organizational beliefs regarding the management role will actually conform to what the levers of change are encouraging: a belief that managers’ roles do make a difference.

Leadership first: showing the way
   Levers for change begin with leadership. Leadership sets the tone and shows the way. How your leaders think will cast the mold for the rest of the organization.

It must be clear to others that your organization’s leaders believe that management capability is an asset worth time and resources. Where leaders demonstrate this through their own behaviors, the organizations will have corresponding success. Having leaders publicly recognize individuals for outstanding team management (as opposed to personally exceeding business goals) will set the tone for the importance the organization places on the role of the manager in delivering results.

When leaders spend time with their direct reports, setting clear goals and expectations, providing feedback and actively working to build bench strength in the organization, they are setting expectations for how others will act. Take Jack Welch during his GE days. He spent a great deal of his personal time both developing his own successor and developing leadership capability throughout the organization by participating the GE’s management development programs. As a consequence, GE is constantly cited as having one of the best leadership development programs in the world. This happened because the senior leadership believed in the value of its leaders and made investments to insure they could deliver their maximum capability.

Also, leaders are the ones who primarily create an organization’s fundamental beliefs, values and culture. Where leaders go astray, organizations often follow. Creating a powerful culture takes time. But leaders can play a powerful role in establishing the outward signs of culture and behaviors that they both embody and endorse.

Communication: keeping everyone on the same page
   Organizations tend to undervalue communication. But communication plays a powerful role as the vehicle through which leaders demonstrate and publicly recognize the desired behaviors in the organization. How leaders talk about managers sets a clear message for what is expected in the organization. Strong communication systems can help organizations build strong cultures and enhance performance.

Competencies: The essential building blocks
   Identifying the critical competencies that make managers successful in your organization is the first step in creating the new manager role. New managers who are hired and current employees who are promoted into management roles must be selected because they have the capability to deliver on key functions of this role. These competencies include such skills as setting goals that fit the business strategy, providing coaching and feedback to others and helping employees understand how they fit into the big picture.

Often promotions are given because someone is a good individual contributor. Good technical skills are a far cry from good management skills. We need alternative career structures if the only way to move up in the organization is to become a manager. Not all great individual contributors make great managers. By having management competencies defined within an organization we can also coach and develop individuals on how to improve in these specific areas.

Measuring, rewarding and reinforcing
It’s a clichĂ©, but it’s true: That which gets measured and rewarded gets done. If you don’t include management competencies and results for such areas as reduction in turnover or developing staff to improve organizational bench strength in performance appraisal systems, managers will not focus on these issues. Organizations that reward their managers for being good managers will stand the greatest chance of building strong management capability over time. Rewards do not need to take the form of money. In fact, simple public recognition of strong management skills sends a message to the rest of the organization: Managers are important to us.

Organization structure: the key symbol
   When organizations design jobs so that managers must spend 90 percent of their time doing non-management work, we send a very clear message about how we view the management aspects of a manager’s role: They are not important. We need to redesign organizational structures to support managers so they can truly manage the talent within the organization.

By involving your leaders, crafting key messages, developing managers and examining the current messages managers receive about their role in managing others, HR leaders can change how managers are viewed, and how they view themselves.

The process of building better managers is not fast or cheap. But the rewards can be substantial and well worth the effort.

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Rethinking the Company Match

New research from Harvard and Yale universities provides defined-contribution plan sponsors with more food for thought.


    A paper titled “The Impact of Employer Matching on Savings Plan Participation Under Automatic Enrollment” contends that the success of automatic enrollment in increasing employee participation in defined-contribution plans is only marginally dependent upon whether the company makes a matching contribution.


    In the paper, researchers John Beshears, David Laibson and Brigitte Madrian, all from Harvard, and James J. Choi from Yale conclude that “participation rates under automatic enrollment decline only modestly when the employer match is eliminated or reduced.”


    The report finds 401(k) plans with automatic enrollment that move from offering employees the typical match of 50 percent on the first 6 percent of pay to offering no match at all reduces savings-plan participation by 5 percent to 11 percent.


    Plan sponsors may argue over whether that percentage-point decline is indeed modest. This type of reduction in participation could mean the difference between passing and failing nondiscrimination testing.


    Nonetheless, the findings should give plan sponsors pause: If defined-contribution plans can obtain significant participation rates under automatic enrollment without a company match, is it really necessary?


    The possibilities extend much further than saving companies the cost of the matching contributions. After all, there are a number of other productive ways that funds currently dedicated to the company match could be employed:


    ● Create an employer-sponsored retirement “floor” for all employees. Instead of a matching contribution, 401(k) plans with automatic enrollment could switch to non-contingent company contributions—as did one of the plans in the study. Under such a structure, even employees who don’t participate in the defined-contribution plan would still receive some defined-contribution-related retirement benefit from the employer.


    Instead of matching 50 percent of participants’ contributions up to 6 percent of pay, the company could simply provide a contribution equal to 3 percent of pay, whether or not participants contribute to the plan.


    This could be a very important goal for companies whose only retirement benefit is the defined-contribution plan. It would assure that all employees, including those who have opted out of the plan that had a match, would have some level of employer-sponsored retirement benefit.


    Plan sponsors might wonder whether non-contingent contributions would further exacerbate automatic enrollment opt-outs. The concern would be that employees might feel so “wealthy” in retirement funding as a result of receiving the company’s contribution that they would believe there was no need to contribute to the defined-contribution plan. That reaction is known as an “income effect”.


    In the analysis, a plan that switched from a match to a non-contingent company contribution was estimated to experience a 6 percent to 6.7 percent decrease in participation because of an uptick in opt-outs under automatic enrollment as well as the income effect of the company’s contribution.


    ● Reduce or eliminate participant-paid defined-contribution fees. A somewhat more controversial alternative for plan sponsors with automatic enrollment plans is to redirect some or all of the funds that would normally go to matching contributions to the payment of plan expenses. Unlike the first solution, participants in defined-contribution plans might view the decrease in matching contribution as something being taken away from them—even if the effect is economically neutral. Nonetheless, in an environment where the burden of monitoring and disclosing fees appears to be increasing, as are the number of fee-related lawsuits, this approach is still worth considering.


    ● Enhance other benefits. From a total benefits perspective, plan sponsors may also view a move away from matching contributions as a way to enhance other benefits—such as health care. Again, the message to employees would have to be carefully crafted. However, in situations where health care subsidies are more greatly valued than defined-contribution matching contributions, this may be a winning strategy for employers.


    Of course, the reality is that the existing matching structure will probably remain the logical approach for most plan sponsors. The majority of companies offer defined-contribution plans not only to create an effective benefit, but to compete in an environment where talent is difficult to attract and retain.


    For most plans in most industries, that means offering a match. Further, many plan sponsors will likely remain more comfortable with the collaborative approach to saving that results from matching contributions, rather than the gift-giving approach represented by non-contingent company contributions.


    Plan sponsors will also likely find the challenge of communicating a change to the matching program more onerous than it might be worth. Even if the change has no true negative economic impact (such as using the funds to pay for plan expenses), it may be too difficult to offset the negative perception by participants.


    Finally, even a small increase in opt-out rates that would likely come from decreasing or eliminating the company match may be too much of a sacrifice for plan sponsors.


    The point is this: As plan sponsors consider the options presented by the 2006 Pension Protection Act, such as adding automatic enrollment, they can choose to act tactically or strategically. The tactical approach is to address specific plan issues, such as participation. The strategic opportunity is to rethink the goals of the defined-contribution plan in particular and benefits overall.


    Even if the outcome is embracing the status quo, it can be an important exercise for plan sponsors to consider all of the strategic possibilities and re-evaluate why they are offering their defined-contribution plans, what they hope to achieve and whether they can reach their goals more effectively in the current environment.


    By thinking differently, plan sponsors may even come to question legacy decision-making and realign their retirement programs with new business realities and workforce needs.

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Meeting Malaise

I’ve never been a big fan of John Kenneth Galbraith, the late economist and Harvard professor, but he once said something I wholeheartedly agree with. “Meetings are indispensable,” Galbraith observed, “when you don’t want to do anything.”

    Thomas Sowell, the Stanford professor and conservative columnist, had an equally strong feeling about the usefulness of meetings—and the people who seem to thrive on attending them—when he said, “People who enjoy meetings should not be in charge of anything.”


    As someone who has attended more than his fair share of meetings, I safely say that Sowell knows what he’s talking about.


    I can’t begin to tell you how many brain cells I’ve lost over my career attending senseless, wasteful, mind-numbing meetings. When I left one employer after more than 11 years on the job, I calculated that I had attended in excess of 11,000 meetings during my time there—and those were just the regularly scheduled ones that I could easily count. Add in special or unscheduled meetings, and I easily was up around 13,000 meetings in less than 12 years. Some were necessary, but many were futile and wasteful. I’d be surprised if more than 10 percent of them were truly productive.


    This all came to mind recently when I read a new survey by NFI Research that found that 57 percent of business leaders spend 21 percent to 60 percent of their time each week in internal meetings. Some 56 percent of the executives found half of their meetings to be productive, a stunning figure when you consider that these same executives considered the other half of the meetings they attended to be unproductive.


    “While meetings are a necessity of businesses, some organizations can tend to go overboard with internal gatherings, which can take away from a customer focus,” NFI chief executive Chuck Martin said in a press release that announced the survey findings. I hear what Chuck is saying, but I think he’s understating the issue. Structured, tightly focused meetings with a clear purpose and goal can serve a business purpose, but as the great UCLA basketball coach John Wooden once noted, “Never mistake activity for achievement.” Meetings should never be confused with actually taking action and getting things accomplished. At best, they’re a road map to focus the participants on what needs to get done.


    Monty Python’s John Cleese made a funny motivational video about this—it’s called, appropriately enough, “Meetings, Bloody Meetings.” But embedded in the classic Cleese humor are some smart tips on how to make sure that meetings are effective and productive. For example: “Control the flow. Keep participants from jumping from one area to another. Keep participants on task.”


    I have a million stories about all those meetings to which I surrendered brain cells, but the one that sticks out most is when my brutish, tyrannical boss told me that the daily afternoon scheduling meeting I ran was TOO efficient and made TOO many decisions TOO early in the day. He took over running the meeting, and of course, he failed to make any real decisions on anything, procrastinating long into the evening and driving everyone crazy. His sterling decision-making abilities drove the company to “encourage” him to take “early retirement” a few years later.


    Wikipedia, the online do-it-yourself encyclopedia, makes an interesting point in its definition of a “meeting.” It says, “In organizations, meetings are an important vehicle for human communication. They are so common and pervasive in organizations, however, that many take them for granted and forget that, unless properly planned and executed, meetings can be a terrible waste of precious resources.”


    In other words, too many meetings can suck the life out of a workforce. Those who love to schedule lots of meetings would do well to
remember the words of the late, great management guru Peter Drucker: “Meetings are a symptom of a bad organization. The fewer meetings, the better.”


Workforce Management, November 5, 2007, p. 58 —Subscribe Now!

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Young Professionals Find Opportunity in Devastated City

While Katrina’s devastation may have driven many workers out of the city, some are actually finding opportunity amid the rubble. With an abundance of entry-level and professional administrative positions to be filled, some recent college graduates and adventurous Gen Xers see New Orleans as a new frontier of opportunity. Tom Pyburn, president of the Human Resource Management Association of Greater New Orleans, says that many young professionals are coming to the city out of a sense of adventure or social responsibility.

“A lot of them know that it is rough now, but it’s a good time to get their foot in and really go places in the next five years or so,” Pyburn says.

Richard Campanella, associate director for geographical analysis at the Center for Bioenvironmental Research at Tulane University, estimates that between 2,000 and 3,000 young professionals have moved to the city since Katrina struck the city. His research was based on the 2006 Louisiana Health and Population Survey, which found that 7,042 respondents living in Orleans Parish between June and October 2006 said that they “changed their residence due to job opportunities. Some human resource directors say the true number of newly arrived professionals may be even higher.

“While we don’t have specific numbers on it, it is a significant trend that one encounters a fair number of newly arrived young professionals working in fields that relate to post-Katrina circumstances,” Campanella says.

Rebecca Zabel, a young attorney from South Carolina, came to the city in May 2006 to take a job with the firm Phelps Dunbar. She graduated from the Tulane University School of Law in 2004 and returned to the city for the opportunities and a chance to help in the rebuilding.

“I think there is a lot here for young professionals in particular. The fact that so many people left has created a lot of opportunities,” Zabel says.

Across town at Ochsner Hospital is director of reimbursement Tim Vanderford. He and his wife moved from Seattle to New Orleans in August 2006. Partly out of adventure, partly out of a desire to help out the city, they’re quickly settling into their uptown neighborhood and find great opportunities here.

“We wanted to come down here because we wanted to get in on the ground floor of building something back up. It just makes you feel whole and good to be able to get here and build things back again,” Vanderford says.

Professionals are being attracted not just to the array of open positions, but also to the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to rebuild an entire American city. Barbara Johnson, senior vice president of workforce and area development for GNO Inc., a public/private economic development group, says that the “brain gain” is especially being felt in the education system, health care delivery, urban planning, coastal restoration and real estate development.

“There is a major draw to be a part of the rebuilding and to cut your teeth—establish a beachhead, develop your résumé,” Johnson says. “We’re seeing some incredible talent being attracted to this region.”

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Liberty Mutual

On a day that comes about halfway through Liberty Mutual’s management training program, Larry Israelite, vice president of human resources development, waits with anticipation, keeping an eye on the meeting-room door. It opens, and in comes Liberty Mutual’s chairman, president and CEO, Edmund Kelly. Israelite says that he can almost hear what the participants are thinking: “What is he doing here?” The CEO then walks around the room and shakes every single person’s hand, opening an hourlong session of discussion of what it means to be a manager in the company.

    A lot of companies give lip service to the notion that management development programs have C-level support. At Liberty Mutual, top executives are completely involved in the process of supporting its future leaders.


    Headquartered in Boston, Liberty Mutual Group has more than 900 offices in more than 23 countries. It employs more than 39,000 people and is the sixth-largest property and casualty insurer in the U.S., as measured by its 2005 premiums.


    Each year, Liberty Mutual trains close to 4,000 employees in management development and professional development. Israelite’s training organization at Liberty Mutual includes 24 professionals in the corporate human resources development department. The group runs 30 to 35 programs a year.


    With 26 years in the training field, Israelite is in a position to size up how top executives—particularly CEOs—regard training. He puts them in four categories.


    “There are CEOs that don’t talk about it, don’t care about it,” he says. “There are CEOs who talk about it but don’t give me money for it; and there are CEOs that talk about and give you money for it, but don’t show up.


    “And then there is what we have,” he says. That means a CEO and other top executives who “care about it and talk about, give you money for it, and are completely involved in the process.”


    When Kelly visits classes, he greets each manager and then gets down to the business of talking about their jobs, Israelite says. He discusses the importance he places on the manager’s role and offers some thoughts about his own time as a frontline manger, and his experiences working with frontline managers. Then he discusses the critical issues facing the business and their relevance to frontline managers. But he spends the bulk of the hour fielding questions from participants about their roles and his views of them.


    Support like that from the top of an organization is “without question the greatest differentiator among management and leadership development programs,” says Deborah Wallace, a leadership consultant with Massachusetts-based BrinkPoint Consulting. “This means that the top executive team, as well as the board, participates in some sort of development program.”


    Training at Liberty Mutual is a requirement of the job. All new frontline managers must attend and complete the four-day frontline manager program within the first 120 days of taking the job. The program provides “great role orientation, significant level of CEO and executive commitment and a great first step in helping managers feel welcome and aligned in new manager roles,” Israelite says.


    The course is integrated into a broader curriculum that includes a set of online learning programs, which are taken in advance of the live program; pre-work that requires participants to gather and review information about their new work units; and post-program follow-up and feedback to help focus application and coaching opportunities.


    The content is broad, but focuses on such areas as the context and role of frontline managers, how to create a motivating work environment, coaching for performance, setting the foundation for successful performance, monitoring and sustaining performance, assessing and rewarding contribution and creating long-term value.


    To align managers to new roles, Israelite’s team uses RightSTART, an orientation road map used by new managers and, in turn, their own managers to get them into the right mind-set for the new job. The training team also uses Role Orientation, a coordinated online learning program that’s taken immediately upon placement. It helps build understanding and knowledge of key management roles, practices and resources, Israelite says.


    “Feedback is available from their managers and we make available tools and templates to help managers collect and respond to feedback from peers and subordinates at specific points in their development,” he says.


    To measure goal achievement, the training team does standard evaluations of learners’ reactions to the course, and the new knowledge they say they gathered from it. The trainers also “continuously interview upper management in the business units about the alignment of the program and the needs of our businesses, and adjust content accordingly,” Israelite says.


    After training, “a great deal of the focus for frontline managers is on the effective application of people management processes and tools,” he says. “We use our employee opinion survey and important talent management metrics data to assess our progress on these important people management measures.”


    Another successful program at Liberty Mutual is “Achieving Profitable Growth,” a three-day program available to senior managers, who are nominated by their own managers. This program includes intensive simulations that let managers see the consequences of their decisions on a fictional company’s performance.


    They get feedback and coaching from very senior executives. The CEO and other executives are directly involved, leading discussions and providing analyses. They also are the major facilitators of the assessment and feedback portions of the program. Participants complete extensive pre-work about a case study to be used in a simulation, which covers four years of a fictional company’s performance.


    “This single simulation looks at the financial and operational consequences of management decisions given a complex set of variables, outcomes, market conditions and competitive forces,” Israelite says. “Decisions made by other teams can impact the outcomes of all others. The intensity is a function of focused teamwork to arrive at important decisions, analysis of outcomes, rethinking of strategy and presentations, and defense of those decisions in front of senior leaders.”


    Participants consider the program important to their success, he says.


    “Our simulation is very tightly integrated with our business. … The executives who attend immediately relate to its content, its structure, the decisions it requires them to make, and the ways in which they have to discuss and justify them,” he says. “And because of that, it is very effective.”


    The C-level support at Liberty Mutual has had an enormous effect on the success of its management development programs, Israelite says.


    He still has a wish list, though: Continued executive sponsorship for management development; more creativity in the design of training solutions, since they help the company deliver better products and services to customers; and, something that most training leaders want: “A general belief that training is an investment, not an expense.”

Posted on November 13, 2007July 10, 2018

Convergys Wants to Help Employers Relate

HR outsourcer Convergys is on a crusade to upgrade clients’ employee relations.


The Cincinnati-based company on Thursday, November 8, announced a “a new relationship management approach” designed to give clients a strategic leg up. Convergys said its new method applies consulting services, analytic tools and technology to generate more value from the interactions clients have with customers and employees.


Naomi Bloom, managing partner at Bloom & Wallace, a consulting firm in Fort Myers, Florida, says the announcement shows that Convergys is pursuing the “holy grail” in human resources outsourcing—seeking to provide employees with an Amazon.com-like experience that reduces costs and errors, enhances service quality and improves business outcomes.


“It’s no surprise that Convergys is doing this,” Bloom says. “Everyone is doing this who wants a fighting chance of being successful in HRO.”


Human resources outsourcing—in other words, farming out a variety of employee-related tasks such as benefits enrollment, payroll and recruiting—has been a growing market as organizations try to lower costs and focus on core competencies. HRO vendors have struggled at times to make the often-complicated deals profitable.


Convergys reported in late October that its employee care unit suffered an operating loss of $8.3 million for the three months ended September 30. On the other hand, the employee care unit saw revenue jump 24 percent year-over-year, to $63.2 million.


Despite the fast growth in HR services, Convergys’ biggest business is its “customer care” segment, which brought in $462.9 million during the third quarter. 


The recent “relationship management” announcement was directed at both Convergys’ customer care and HRO clients.


“Our decades of leadership in both customer and employee care outsourcing, innovative software development, and the application of analytics for continuous improvement enable us to drive greater efficiencies and effectiveness in the customer and employee service experience for large organizations around the world,” Convergys president and CEO Dave Dougherty said in a statement.


Other HR outsourcers are offering software or services to improve the value they can provide to clients. ADP, for example, recently said its national account services unit is offering “sales incentive compensation management” software through a partnership with application maker Centive.


—Ed Frauenheim



 

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