|
Human Resource
Innovations, Inc.
"Innovative Approaches
to Human Resources"
ASSESSMENT SOLUTIONS
Changing Role of HR:
Jack and Suzy Welch, in the July 17 edition of Business Week,
took on the issue of what HR must do to leave the line-item overhead
category on most business balance sheets. Any HR professional who has
experienced cuts in HR budgets, reductions in staff and outright
elimination of HR departments will understand the importance of this
move. Every HR professional should read the article, or stop pretending
to want a strategic role in the company.
Welch says that HR must first become a functional part of corporate
financial management. Quantify. Dollarize. Given the very large, real
and documentable costs of vacancies, turnover and legal problems, this
is relatively easy. The real payoff, though, is on the positive side of
the coin, when HR can track and document the dollars associated with
productivity increases, longer tenure, better managers and employee
satisfaction. In assuming this role, HR professionals have two major
obstacles:
1) Lack of training in finance, numerical reasoning and communication
of financial impacts (and worse);
2) Lack of interest in any of these things.
Traditionally, people go into HR because of the warm and fuzzy,
intuitive, "health-and-happiness" approach. Welch even counsels, "Drop
the socialist 'treat-them-all-the-same' mentality." In the words of
cartoon character Pogo, "We have met the enemy and he is us."
If you're still not convinced you can (and must) take this route,
answer the Welches' challenge: "What could possibly be more important
than who gets hired, developed, promoted or moved out the door?"
If you're having trouble with the numerical side of this challenge,
make the CFO your ally. As John Sullivan noted in his Workforce Week
review of the Welch position, "The CFO is the undisputed king of placing
valuations on activities that are difficult to enumerate." By the way,
your CFO is probably as uncomfortable with your warm and fuzzies as you
are with the financial reports. But together, you can make things
happen.
Look at a specific example of this way of thinking: Talent
retention - As far back as most of us care to remember, HR has tracked
"turnover" as one of our few consistent metrics. As commonly used,
however, turnover is at best a hodgepodge statistic, lumping together
the results of current hiring practice, past practice, management change
or failure to change, the winds of the economy and goodness knows what
else!
Talent retention, on the other hand, is more focused on current
practice. According to Leslie Stevens-Huffman, writing for Workforce
Week, "Nearly 70 percent of executives say that they view talent
retention as important or extremely important." Identify the costs (both
direct and indirect) of replacing talented individuals in your company,
learn when new hires are most likely to leave and identify the factors
causing them to leave.
Design a program to extend the average life of talent in your company
by even a few months and calculate the direct dollar impact. You will
find you have reduced the costs of hiring, training, unemployment
insurance, workers' compensation, management time and negative impacts
on coworkers. Simultaneously, you will have improved productivity, job
satisfaction and leadership, while holding on to valuable company
knowledge and loyalty. The total positive financial impact of your
talent retention initiative alone may well pay for your entire HR
operation!
'Execution' in Business -
Opinion By John W. Howard, Ph.D.
"Business Execution" has become the latest catch word of the
book-and-seminar meeting industry. Google the words, you'll get
122,000,000 hits!
Ralph Welborn, in his new book with Vince Kasten, Get It Done!
A Blueprint for Business Execution, says, "It's a big, big
problem. Consider this statistic: More than 64 percent of C-level
executives from 250 midsized-to-large companies in the United States and
the European Union have said that being able to execute, to react
quickly to changing business opportunities and technologies, is critical
for their success. Yet nearly 80 percent of them said that it is nearly
impossible to achieve." They go on to say you will never close the
execution gap, just reduce it.
In another "execution" tome, Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan (Execution,
the Discipline of Getting Things Done) focus on the effect that
people, especially leaders, have on execution within a business. They
use stories about specific leaders and their effects on business
outcomes to illustrate the differences between companies with great
execution and those with poor execution. In some cases, they point to
changes in leaders that caused a change in the company's ability to
execute, and the consequences.
Given the acknowledged importance of the topic, the high probability
of differences in execution being differences in leadership and our own
strong bias toward empirical data, it would be interesting to see a
study based on the Profile XTTM
and the Checkpoint 360TM
that is looking to identify the differences between the leaders of
companies with famously, verifiably good execution, and the leaders of
companies with execution challenges. Volunteers, please step forward!
Trim the Time Wasters -
Karen Susman's NextLevel Tools
Summer is still with us, and the heat is on. It can be hard to get
things done when you are wishing you were running through the sprinkler
or playing in the kiddy pool. If you are spending time with your face
pressed against the water cooler, here's a cool way to manage your time:
Trim the time wasters!
A few of these productivity piranhas are:
- Unnecessary meetings
- Television
- No plan
- Phone calls
- Unfinished projects
- Tasks interrupted at illogical stopping point
- Human and technological interruptions
- Not listening
- Giving and getting unclear instructions
- Undefined job roles
- Clutter
- Not having supplies handy and ready
- Circulating junk e-mail and junk regular mail
- Lack of support staff
- Technological breakdowns
- Filing systems focused on storage instead of retrieval.
- Bad relationships
If any or all of these strike a chord with you, here are some actions
to take:
- Stop. Look. Listen. Be aware of how you spend your time.
Keep track for three-to-five days. Determine where time is lost.
- Ask yourself what's in it for you to use your time in
unproductive ways. Can you say "procrastination?"
- Delete the time wasters. Pick one or two wasters so you are
not overwhelmed with productivity.
- Set boundaries with others so you are not so easily
interrupted. This is important when you work from home, too. Friends
and relatives often think you are not working if you are at home. Let
them know when you can take non-business-related calls (aside from
emergencies).
- Set boundaries with yourself. Determine how much time you
will sacrifice to television and Internet surfing. Schedule these
activities for non-productive hours. (Sorry, Oprah.)
- Get systems in place.
- Delegate.
- Learn to communicate effectively and to the point.
Don't wait until all your ducks are in a row (one more time waster)
to start reclaiming your time and productivity. If you are more
productive, you will have more time to chill in the kiddy pool and
run through the sprinkler!
Call Center Working to Improve
Sales Force with the Profile XTTM
An inbound call center for a neutraceutical and supplement
manufacturer was experiencing turnover as high as 500 percent a year.
Sales performance among its 60 agents varied widely, with top performers
producing as much as six times the average sales of marginal performers.
Ten top performers and eight marginal performers were identified in a
current study. The 18 agents were instructed to complete the Profile XTTM
online during paid working hours. However, two of the marginal
performers were terminated before completing the assessment, leaving six
in their group providing data.
A success pattern was generated using a concurrent pattern from all
10 in the top-performer group. All agents in the study were matched to
the success pattern for top performers. The average match-to-pattern for
the top performers was 86 percent, while the marginal performers
averaged 73 percent. This 13-point spread between the group averages
provides evidence that the pattern is discriminating between top
performers and marginal performers.
If this pattern had been used when the sample agents were hired and
if the company had used a criterion of 75 percent match-to-pattern or
better to select for hire (see Proposed Criterion 1 in the graph), they
would have hired all of their top performers in the sample but would
have reduced their hiring of marginal performers by 50 percent.
If they had used a more stringent criterion of 82 percent or better
to select for hire (Proposed Criterion 2 in the graph), they would have
missed 20 percent of the group who became top performers, but would have
reduced their hiring of marginal performers by 83 percent! The issue of
setting criteria and the factors that should be considered in the
process has been discussed in earlier articles in this newsletter (see
Volume 3, Issue 6), but the issue of which criterion to use will likely
be decided by some intersection of the need to fill seats and handle
calls, with the size and characteristics of the pool of available
candidates for the sales positions.
If, over time, the bottom 25 percent of the current sales force could
be replaced with people who perform at the level of the current top
performers, the effects on total sales would be profound. These
increases would also be expected to affect profitability to an even
greater degree, since the sales increase would come without
proportionate increases in fixed costs. Eventual return on investment in
the assessment process would likely be in multiples above 10:1.
The call center is now conducting additional differential studies of
the sales force, using the Profile Sales IndicatorTM,
and the Customer Service group in the call center, using the Profile XTTM,
looking for possible additional improvements in the selection process.
|