Tuesday, December 16, 2008

So...I was inspired to write more from a reader- like a self review or analysis


I just did an interesting thing...I reviewed my salesmanship from 2007 vs. my performance from 2008. "Very, very Interesting"...someone once said that from a famous movie. As a salesperson...I am gauged on my performance. And my performance this year was entirely different..and better, than last year. Incredibly so, somehow all of the pieces just fell into place. Selling software solutions is a time-consuming, often detailed process. Getting all of the pieces to fall into place requires some intrinsic strategy, requires the customer or stakeholder to understand, acknowledge and trust you.


I had a good time, enjoyed the fruits of labor...more like the juices of the grill.

It's kind of weird how it happened, it was a suddden change in what I was doing...somewhat impercpetible to myself and the people around me. Using a coach and adopting some of the philosophies of a number of disparate sales books, i made it gel together and IT WORKED. Like 7 of 9 customers trusted me enough to buy from me and you know what...I never asked for their business. I exceeded my goals and downstream made some good money.

So, now the question is..how repeatable is this? can I replicate in '09 what I did in '08?

Well, that is an open question and the results are TBD....

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

I Want to Have My Performance PRE-Review


Well it's getting to be that time of the year...you sit down, answer a bunch of sections of your performance review, provide some cogent commentary, hit the send button and DING!, your manager has a task assigned to them via email. So, they log into the portal, start their review of your performance over the past year...seeing all of your thoughts and comments, they append their own subjective comments on top of yours. And DING!, off it goes to HR.

Is this really what should be happening? I just wrote my own PRE-view and sent it to my boss. I wrote about what I would like to do next year based upon my perceived performance this year. Based upon problems I encountered this year, I proposed solutions and options that might be applicable for next year. Do I really want to review my entire past year, what was good, what was bad, where I can improve? Will I learn anything from that analysis? Maybe, I could get some developmental ideas to improve some aspects of my job or increase my competencies...but shouldn't we be talking about that during the course of the year?

I want to be able to look forward, anticipate what problems & issues I might encounter and be able to plan proactively. It's like an IDP, but it's not based upon what was done but upon what needs to be done. I don't know why people haven't thought about this. Selling performance systems, I always hear the same stories about the process, the work flow and the development plans. Everyone is looking back, I have yet to hear any company or department that is looking forward, using the PRE-review!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Building a salesperson's self-development plan from your customers



I don't know why I didn't think of this sooner. I have a sales coach that supports me, helping to analyze my actions during the sales process. It's very focused on what we are doing now and what we should do next. But I just realized that I should know what has worked best in the past and what has not worked. I can sit down and write out what went right on the project I won, what went wrong on those same deals and then I can write out what went wrong on the deals I lost (most everything...) but won't that yield an entirely biased list?

So, I started to think about every time I call on my customers, asking them questions on their progress, their roadblocks, their strategies. Everyone of them loves to talk about the product, their project and how things are progressing. So this is where the connection happened.

Now that I personally have a number of customer projects that I have lead the sales effort, it would make the most sense to query those people on how I did. What went right, why they selected my company, what I could have done better. That might also yield a positively biased reaction (we would hope). So, I thought I should include some prospects that didn't select me because of some obvious reasons.

Now, I put together a scenario of how I would contact each customer, introduce my coach and then lead the coach into an assessment interview. All of my customers are from the organizational effectiveness and development space. So, they should get the fact that I want to conduct a peer review using them.

This is the email I laid out.

Dear Customer of Mine,

I am trying to create some development actions and improve my performance (boy, those words sound very familiar). I obviously sell talent management software and certainly feel the need to have my own talent plan. Since you are I have had a close vendor/client relationship that has lasted for quite some time, I was hoping that you might be able to participate in my performance improvement program.

I have been working with a sales coach for quite some time conducting mentoring and coaching sessions. To expand my program, I thought some peer reviews would be of valuable to my coach and allow some different perspectives (I am sure he is tired of hearing my own assessment!) So, I have asked him to contact you (with your permission) to provide some input to about 5 assessment questions that he has created . In respect of your time, this will only take 10 minutes on the phone.

Can I ask him to contact you directly for this short interview session?

Signed,
Jamie

How does that sound?

Here are my set of questions to pose....the question is "Will I gather the information I am looking for, some unbiased third-party opinions of me, my selling process, my attitude and how I compare to others doing the same thing???

1) (FOCUS ON THEM) Overall, how much impact on your final selection did the product have or did the salesperson have? (maybe percentages, maybe preferences)
2) In looking at this buying process, could you describe some best practices that you uncovered that will help you in future buying decisions?
3) (FOCUS ON ME) What did the salesperson do that was particularly effective and helped to differentiate him from his competitor's salespeople? maybe ONE top of mind example that sticks out?
4) Could you describe your experience (in a couple of sentences) in the process of buying a product from Jamie in comparison to other corporate purchase decisions you have been involved with?
5) What could the salesperson have done differently to help you along in the selection process or towards a buying decision?
6) From a best practices standpoint, what could you recommend to the salesperson? maybe doing something better that might have changed the buying process - made your life easier, made things simpler?
7) If you uncovered a colleague with a similar need to the product or service you purchased, how likely would you be to refer that colleague to Jamie?
8) Finally, Would you be willing to give this salesperson a testimonial? written via email or place directly into linked in?

published at http://ezinearticles.com/?id=1399030

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Article: Managing Careers and employee development planning


Published June 2008
Performance Management - The Two Faces of Career Management

Charles Coy of Cornerstone OnDemand


Until recently, it was the sole responsibility of employees to plan their career management strategies. They might quietly seek out new positions outside an organization or hope to be among the select few groomed for a higher position internally. Inevitably, those who did not want to follow the lockstep path of advancement within large organizations — often among the most talented and highly qualified — voted with their feet.

A confluence of economic and demographic factors has given new urgency to reversing this phenomenon. According to a 2006 survey by the consultancy Knowledge Infusion, 6 to 10 percent of the workforce will retire by 2010, putting considerable pressure on organizations, particularly those with more than 10,000 employees. This emerging global shortage of talent — driven by fast-growing economies, increasing competition and the first wave of retirements among baby boomers — is forcing organizations to seek out new strategies to retain top talent in a tight labor market.

Offer Formalized Career Development
One proven strategy is collaborative career management: helping your best people develop their talents and skills for positions within the context of your organizational needs instead of watching helplessly while your competition lures them away.

Leighanne Levensaler, director of talent management research at Bersin & Associates, has defined a framework in which career management can be thought of as an umbrella term containing several core elements or processes.

First, from the perspective of individual employees, the notion of career planning indicates employee-driven choices and career exploration. Second, and from the perspective of the organization, career development points toward formalized programs intended to drive employees along closely defined and strategic career paths.

Thoughtful management of these two sides of career management can make or break any workforce planning strategy. Keeping talent engaged, providing opportunities for development, helping them steer along a self-directed career path and striving to align their daily activities with company goals is crucial to retaining your human capital.

"In this intensely competitive knowledge economy, talent can be the biggest differentiator and the most critical factor in driving a company's performance," Levensaler said. "Looming gaps in the talent pool threaten every company's ability to execute on their current and future business plans."

Research shows gaps will persist across job functions necessary to compete in a knowledge-based, industrialized economy, especially in areas such as sales and customer service, IT, finance, marketing and research and development. Yet, despite widespread acceptance of the growing talent shortage as a real business problem, few are taking action to formally assess or counteract it.

Technology Integrates Career Management Processes
One barrier facing all organizations has been the lack of a comprehensive career management solution. Traditionally, the HR function has been highly decentralized, consisting of complex manual processes loosely supported by disconnected technology solutions. Information about individual employees resided in different silos, hampering managers' ability to effectively guide and develop employees. At the same time, employees did not have clear views into their own career management and possible career paths within the organization.

Early efforts to integrate HR functions within a single software package were a mixed bag. The good news is software solutions are catching up with the needs of the marketplace. Vendors such as Cornerstone OnDemand now offer comprehensive talent management solutions that touch on the entire life cycle of the employee, from development to performance assessment to compensation and succession management. By integrating these functions into a single suite of software tools, the best solutions give organizations a big-picture view of current and future needs.

Levensaler advises using caution when viewing talent management solutions as a kind of magic bullet that can be bought off-the-shelf and plugged in. But when implemented effectively, career management platforms offer a win-win for both employee and employer.

"Talent management solutions are starting to mature," said Levensaler. "The potential long-term returns from such solutions are huge, as long as organizations are willing to make the investment of time to tailor the solution to their business needs."

Career Management Benefits Drive Deep
The best technology solutions help HR managers produce measurable results that justify their functions while delivering on business goals. The benefits include:

-Increased retention (and lower costs of recruiting).
-Organizational needs matched with the best candidates.
-Optimized use of existing talent resources.
-Increased productivity.
-Individual career paths better-aligned with broad needs of the organization.

Further, many systems can dynamically produce organizational charts and organizational readiness models to identify future needs and provide HR practitioners and line managers with the ability to set individuals on satisfactory career paths. Automating the processes that drive this next generation of organizational modeling makes real, long-range planning possible.

Deep in specific business units, the benefits can be felt acutely, as well. The promise of these technologies does not live strictly in the boardrooms or with higher-level HR. Supervisors can take advantage of real-time access to employee career preferences, performance data and development records to developing a better, more well-rounded understanding of employees' professional goals, strengths and training needs —which can result in more realistic staff and development planning.

"Done right, career management serves the best interests of both the employee and the organization," said Levensaler. "The employee benefits from a well-thought-out road map leading the way to future advancement while the organization retains and engages its best talent."

Individual Development Planning
The core of any career management process and system to support these processes is the individual development plan (IDP) that allows managers to work with each employee to develop a personalized career development plan. Employees are encouraged to seek out future interests or new roles within the organization.

A competency appraisal lets the employee assess readiness for a new position and identify gaps in his or her resume or skill set. And employees can link to resources that allow them to upgrade their skills through training, education or certification.

The technology delivers these development plans as templates that can be easily customized to the needs of the organization and the employee. Development plans can be directly tied to the competency assessment process, allowing managers to link corporate goals into personal learning plans such as shadowing a manager, taking an online course, etc. Free-form objectives and goals also can be entered, and any type of training can be directly linked so the entire process is self-contained. Target dates can be established and managerial comments can be attached to any learning plan.

For the employee, this personalized approach bonds them to the organization, aligning their personal career goals with those of the organization. The overall effect helps:

-Boost morale and increase productivity.
-Improve workplace engagement.
-Encourage employees to take active roles in career development.
-Keep employees' sights focused on future positions and roles within the organization.
-Increase value of each employee to employer.

Employees derive value from the whole experience, especially in light of the fact that continuous improvement of job skills is critical in a tight knowledge economy. Further, employers develop systematic inventories of employee skills and can identify gaps for workforce planning.

By breaking down the barriers between employee and employer and bringing them together under a common cause, career management offers one of the most promising ways of addressing the current talent crunch. When career management is embedded within an integrated talent management solution, organizations have a tool to guide, develop and reward their best talent.

To keep employees engaged and aligned with company goals, today's most forward-thinking organizations work aggressively to implement career management solutions.

http://www.talentmgt.com/performance_management/2008/June/658/index.php?pt=a&aid=658&start=0&page=1

Friday, June 27, 2008

Succession Planning: Extending Beyond The Executive Suite


Succession Planning
Published June 2008


The Succession Fix
Cindy Marsh, Ph.D., L.P.


The purpose of a succession plan is to decrease interruptions and negative business impact in the event a leader leaves the organization. Traditionally, succession efforts focused only on C-suite-level positions, but pivotal non-C-suite roles also should be included in a comprehensive succession plan.

For most companies, showing leadership consistency during CEO transitions is essential to ensure business continuity and maintain the confidence of customers, investors and key talent. Imagine the business and stock implications for Apple if Steve Jobs' health scare had turned out differently or if McDonald's didn't have a successor ready in 2004 after Jim Cantalupo died suddenly of a heart attack at age 60.

Smart organizations also realize interruptions in leadership below the CEO level can have a major impact on business operations and productivity. This knowledge has prompted many companies to look for a more comprehensive succession management system that will allow them to operate seamlessly during any leadership transition.

Succession Value Beyond the C-Suite

Succession management should not be a stand-alone practice. A good succession management plan is woven into an overall HR system that values continuous talent assessment and development programs. For example, programs that identify which high performers have the potential to ascend the corporate ladder should be linked with succession management.

Succession management plans also should reflect overall business objectives and projected challenges. If a company has a large pool of baby boomers in executive positions that plan on retiring relatively soon, the succession plan should have a large pool of potential candidates ready or being readied to step into those roles.

Or if the business plans to expand into new global markets, talent to fill necessary roles abroad should be reflected in the plan. Executing these tasks will almost certainly require leaders outside the C-suite.

Every position at a business serves a functional purpose, but some roles are so crucial that even minimal disturbances could have a detrimental impact. The concept behind comprehensive succession management is to take the necessary steps to have the right people in these crucial positions and a pool of able candidates ready to fill them when the time comes.

Which Levels Should Have Succession Management Plans?

Knowing succession management is valuable and knowing how to execute a comprehensive succession management plan are two different things. One of the biggest challenges is deciding which levels and positions to focus on. Should there be a successor in the wings for every senior executive? What about mid-level leaders? Are there other specific positions that need attention?

Overall, succession management plans should include:

Chief executive suite (CEO, CFO, etc.).
Senior executive positions (frequently referred to as the Top 50, 100, etc.).
Pivotal roles.
Generally, constructing an expanded succession program to include every senior executive role makes sense. These roles have greater importance because the business units or groups they oversee would be significantly impacted by sudden transition or leadership gaps. However, it is essential to remember each business is different, and the unique aspects of each business model will determine other positions that should be included in a succession management plan. These positions are pivotal roles, positions that significantly impact operations or overall success regardless of leadership level.

Consider an engineering company. Program managers at engineering companies tend to manage multimillion dollar programs, as well as large teams. While the position is not in the senior executive ranks, a sudden transition or departure would dramatically impact a large number of employees, as well as a large budget. Thus, the program manager position is a pivotal role, and engineering organizations should have succession plans in place.

Another example can be found in the oil and gas industry. In this sector, some roles are responsible for negotiating deals on oil drilling rights or access to pipelines with other countries and competitors. The impact of these deals can last for 20 to 30 years and involve billions of dollars. Clearly, this is a pivotal role, and it's in the company's best interests to have successors ready to fill these spots should they turn over.

Define Skills and Experiences Successors Need

No two companies are the same. Nor should two succession management plans be the same. Each position included should be clearly defined.

That said, some skills and characteristics will be similar for positions at the same level. Vice presidents all will need certain leadership competencies to be successful. But they also will need a certain set of skills and experiences that are specific to their roles. Despite the positions being relatively equal in terms of compensation and job tasks, managers in France would need to function under different government regulations than their counterparts in China.

Despite the same VP status, a vice president of marketing would need a different set of skills and experiences than a vice president of finance. A succession plan should reflect all of this.

To maximize resources, broad-based skills training pertinent to multiple positions should be standard, and additional training dollars for tailored coaching or skills training should be available as needed. A full set of expectations and requirements for each role must be identified prior to setting up a pool of potential successors. After all, how can talent managers prepare to support a role without understanding the full breadth of responsibilities and tasks the role requires?

How Should You Identify Successors?

Generally, the best way to identify successors is to pay continuous attention to the performance assessments of the host organization's high-performance and high-potential employees.

Talent assessment might look at four components: performance, potential, readiness and fit. Performance indicates how well individuals are doing in their current roles and how they achieve results. Potential indicates whether individuals are capable of performing well several levels above their current roles. Readiness measures an individual's ability to take on a new role at the next level, now. And once an individual has the potential and readiness to take on a new role, his or her fit for the new position must be considered.

Fit should take into account whether the person's particular set of strengths are appropriate for the business challenges to be faced, whether his or her leadership style will mesh with the culture of the group or organization, whether the promotion is being given at the appropriate time in the person's career, whether the person is mobile and whether he or she has the right mix of experiences.

When designing a program, it also is important to understand work silos that may exist and block the organization's comprehensive succession plans. Ideally, a good succession plan should identify multiple people for any one position, and multiple positions for any one person. If a company is separated by specific business units or geographic areas, they tend to miss potential pools of talent outside of immediate work groups.

For example, many companies look to each individual leader to identify successors within each business unit. Although there may be likely candidates in this pool, the approach doesn't offer much breadth on an enterprise level. A director in one unit may have several traits and characteristics that, with some minimal additional experiences or skills training, could be a perfect fit for another business unit. Looking across business units allows talent managers to expand their potential talent pool and take advantage of leaders from different business units who can bring a broader range of business knowledge to a new position.

The goal of a succession program is to create the largest qualified pool of candidates possible for each position. When planning for the unknown, talent managers certainly do not want to put all of their employees/eggs in one basket.

Pushing the Right Development Experiences for Succession

When successors have been identified, the development process begins. Successors can be given general development opportunities and specific exposure to the roles they most likely will be asked to fill. Providing experiences does not need to be an activity separate from real work. In fact, development activities or experiences should be integrated with the host organization's business needs in the same way a company's strategic plan should align with its succession planning process.

Consider a high-level executive who is being groomed for the CEO position at XYZ Corp. This individual may have exceptional skills but might need more exposure to the overall business. This exposure might mean a stint as the CFO. In this particular company, the CFO position certainly has a high level of responsibility, but placing the high-level executive there offers lower business risk due to the overall strength of the finance function and the existing financial systems in place across the company's business units. By providing this experience, the high-level executive is able to do useful work while getting the necessary exposure and experience needed to further his readiness for the CEO position.

Address Business Risks and Talent Constraints

Finally, a good succession plan should address talent-related business risks. For key strategic initiatives or critical parts of the business, talent managers can't afford to lose a person in a pivotal role. The succession process should ensure there are viable successors being groomed, and where none are available, it should provide ways to bring in talent from outside.

Executing comprehensive succession planning proactively, before there is a crisis, will minimize the likelihood of business disruption. Similarly, a good succession process will identify where an organization's business plan may be at risk and highlight alternative approaches to achieve an organization's strategic goals.

Succession planning is not just for CEOs anymore. A solid succession plan should reflect business challenges, identify as many successors as possible and take the steps needed to ensure qualified candidates are ready to fill key positions and maintain business continuity.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Product Training for Employees and Your Value Chain



Published April 2008

Best Methods for Product-Based Training by Lindsay Edmonds Wickman

When it comes to launching a new product, the learning function should do more than develop training. It should be involved in strategic planning from the very beginning.

As soon as the salesperson initiates conversation with a potential customer, the clock starts ticking. The representative has seconds to capture the customer’s attention and interest. In a competitive environment such as this, salespeople try to distinguish their products in a world of choices, while working within the constraints of time.

To make a successful sale, the rep not only needs to have excellent selling skills, but also needs to know the product inside and out. One of the most effective ways to obtain that depth of knowledge is through training. But how do you train a sales force that is field based, geographically dispersed and time starved? The best way is through a blended learning initiative that reaches a sales force in the field, but also takes the time to bring the employees in for interactive, face-to-face training.

Sophisticated Training for Sophisticated Products
With complicated products, the training becomes more complex — not only because sales representatives have to understand the intricate nature of the product, but also because they need to understand how that product fits into the marketplace.

At Steelcase, an international office furniture manufacturer, a sale can take as long as 12 to 18 months. The company’s 2,300 North American sales reps and distributors have to understand where the customer is in the buying process, how that aligns with the com-pany’s sales methodology and, eventually, the best product fit for that customer.

“Part of our process is understanding how the client is working,” said Ken Dutkiewicz, director of global learning and development for Steelcase University. “For instance, in a legal firm, you might have a situation where you have a lot of partners who are working in their own private offices. On the other hand, you go into a marketing firm, and you’re probably looking at people who are working together. Putting them into private spaces would actually be counterproductive to the way they work. So we have to understand what’s going on in the company, and our line has to be broad enough to be able to meet those various needs.”

Because of the sophistication of the sale — and, therefore, the learning — Steelcase has developed an internal system for categorizing training into the following levels: awareness, knowledge, understanding and skill. In the awareness stage, sales associates just need to know that an aspect of a product has changed. That takes place through an e-mail or a letter.

At a knowledge level, sales reps should be able to speak about the basic features of a product. In that instance, the training blend is a little more elaborate, so it will start with an e-mail, but that will be augmented by some sort of Web interaction or distance learning.

“Understanding means that [sales reps] can talk about [the product] and relate it to the needs that they’re hearing from the client,” Dutkiewicz said. “When we have to get somebody to that level, we want to see the performance of a person before they go in front of [the] client. Whenever we want to do that, that’s when we know we have to put a trainer or a human being in front of a class, and usually, that also tells us that this isn’t a one- or two-hour intervention.”

For employees to attain a level of skill, there has to be coaching and mentoring in an actual sales situation, as the classroom is still an artificial, simulated environment.

“Usually, when we want to bring things to skill, we build in a coaching element because that requires the salesperson’s manager to go out, watch the person do it in front of real people, give them immediate feedback and see that the things that we built in the classroom are actually being used in the real world,” Dutkiewicz said.

Creating a learning initiative in the pharmaceutical industry adds an entirely different element, as the product always needs to be reviewed and approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration before it hits the market. As a result, the training is on hold until the product is approved, forcing those in charge of learning to work within a condensed period of time, usually between three and six months, to develop a product-based training module for field-based employees.

“In the pharmaceutical industry, training departments tend to work at a very fast pace between the approval of a product by the FDA and, ultimately, the training of the field forces,” said Michael Capaldi, associate vice president of sales training and leadership development at pharmaceutical company sanofi-aventis U.S. “You do as much as you can leading up to the approval stage, but anything related to the product itself really has to wait until the label is approved before it can be developed [to meet legal requirements].”

Product-Based Training Is More Than the Product
Learning initiatives shouldn’t end at the product. They also should delve into the skills needed to sell and support that product. Unfortunately, most companies aren’t training sales reps on the skills, but instead are concentrating all of their efforts on the product itself, according to Nancy Stephens, president of international management consulting firm PI Worldwide.

“We always ask and talk with a client first about product knowledge,” she said. “Most companies that we interview tend to say that they feel that their folks are most equipped in [product knowledge]. The product knowledge is critical to the sales process and sales presentation, but it is not the only piece. Companies can do a fantastic job at product training, but if they’re not teaching the surrounding skills, they’re actually not completing what a sales rep needs.”

An enhanced learning initiative would cover product training in sync with sales training. Steelcase University does just that in its training programs.

“We don’t want to make our training all about product,” Dutkiewicz said. “Our training is about what the underlying customer needs are. If our people can understand that, then they can start applying our product in a way that will get the maximum for the client. If you do a great job of selling, if your skills are wonderful, you may need little product knowledge, but when you need product knowledge, it better be really good. If I get to the end of a process and a person wants me to say how this particular file is built, I better be able to tell them. Otherwise, I might lose the credibility that I’ve gained through my consultative process.”

Creating Effective Product-Based Training
Sanofi-aventis takes a modular approach in the initial phase of its training. After a product receives FDA approval, the sales staff is trained on anatomy and physiology, the disease associated with the product, the clinical trials and the approved labeling. These four training elements are considered the product foundation and are taught through distance learning.

While paper and online delivery are not as interactive as face-to-face training time, sanofi-aventis takes into account where its staff is, what is most accessible and where live instruction is best carried out. Because the staff is field based and doesn’t always have access to desktops throughout the day, sanofi-aventis has to give up some interactivity for flexibility in delivery.

But Capaldi said sanofi-aventis also includes live, instructor-led sessions in its training suite. Sales employees need the opportunity to interact with one another, simulate the sales process and receive feedback from their superiors. In the pharmaceutical industry, this is especially important, as sales reps are dealing with physicians, and the access to those customers is limited.
As a result, the company’s training program culminates in a national launch meeting where all sales professionals and their management come together.

“Generally speaking, in the pharmaceutical industry, most companies will launch their products and train at that launch in a live setting,” Capaldi explained. “Once you leave that launch meeting, where you get all the tools to sell the product, then people are able to go into the field and promote the new product to the customer. If you look at it in those two phases, there’s the modular approach on the front end, which tends to be more self-paced and distance based, and then building up to a launch meeting, which is more application based and a simulation of what the sales professionals will actually do in front of the customer.”

The most successful product-based training aligns objectives with methodology, and has the following com-ponents: good instructor-led training, assessment, reinforcement through e-learning and d-learning and management support.

“I work with a lot of chief learning officers, and I’ve seen the best understand how to have the objective and the methodology work together,” Stephens explained. “For example, if it’s a product rollout and it’s going public in three months, they have a plan. We’re going to do a launch meeting, which is face-to-face, a month before. Two months before, there is going to be an e-learning module that everyone has to complete before they attend the launch meeting, and that’s going to be the foundational information on the product.”

The Marketing-Design-Sales Triangle
In sophisticated product-based training, the marketing, design and sales departments can’t be at odds. There has to be an open flow of communication between the groups, and they need to work cooperatively to create a plan for a product rollout, which in the end will help improve the training and result in a better return on investment.

“In an ideal world, those three work closely together,” Stephens said. “The worst-case scenario, which happens in lots of companies, [is when] research and design creates a product and throws it over to marketing, marketing creates messaging and throws it over the fence to sales and sales says, ‘This doesn’t make sense.’ You have this fabulous product that then has a mediocre acceptance by the marketplace because those three didn’t work together. There’s a very expensive cost to not working together, but it’s common because we have different roles and we have busy people. It’s understandable why it occurs, but it’s not acceptable.”

At Steelcase, the communication between departments is essential to developing a successful launch with a great product, messaging, distribution and training, and that communication has to start early, Dutkiewicz said.

“We want to be in the planning meetings with our sales leadership, marketing leadership or distribution leadership because if we understand what they’re trying to accomplish in the market, we can help them build the training that they need to make their plans come true,” he explained. “The last thing you want to have happen is us find out a couple of months before something’s coming to market [that] somebody thinks they need training for it. It’s difficult to build the right training and get it implemented, so we have to have early visibility in order to be successful, and visibility equates to communication.”

Blended Learning
In creating a product-based training solution, companies should include a variety of modalities. There has to be a blend of methodologies. Sanofi-aventis does this by using d-learning modules for about 70 percent of its training. The other 30 percent is live training.

“To me, it’s about maintaining that delicate balance. Any one method, if that’s the only method that you utilize, you’re limited,” Capaldi said. “In other words, if it’s all to be delivered via instructor-led training or it’s all to be delivered via online, you’re missing the opportunity to raise the level of effectiveness. Giving people the foundational materials and pacing the learning associated with that material, that’s a great way to use distance learning and e-learning.

“However, when you get to the actual behavior associated with what you’re going to do with the product knowledge in front of the customer, to me, that’s just difficult to replicate in distance or in an online fashion — as well as the shared learning that occurs from having other learners around you. Even if you have budget constraints, there is always a way to bring together the learners so that they can participate together in that latter component.”

No matter what changes happen in the industry, there will always be a place for instructor-led training, as a sales staff needs the interaction, simulation and feedback that occurs only in a face-to-face setting.

“For example, we could put everybody on a plane and spend X amount of money, or we could keep them where they are and give them log-in information,” Stephens said. “[Virtual learning] looks easier, cheaper and better, but if you put all your eggs in one basket and assume that’s the way adults learn, you just shot yourself in the foot. A lot of companies have tried a variety of things, and they end up with some blended learning combination that has occurred through realizing what works in our environment, what works for our products and what works for our people. There is not one perfect answer.&rdquo

Lindsay Edmonds Wickman is an associate editor for Chief Learning Officer magazine. She can be reached at editor@clomedia.com.

Customizing Talent Mgmt to the Individual: article



Published April 2008
Make Every Person Count: Customizing Talent Management
by David Smith and Susan Cantrell

Most HR practitioners would agree people learn in different ways, are motivated by different rewards and perform at various levels. Yet, for the most part, they design and apply talent management practices as if everyone were the same.

In an era of workforce abundance, a general talent management approach might have worked. Generic practices were good enough for the majority of workers. As for the rest — well, they had to adapt or find another line of work.

Today, as most industries and organizations enter a period of talent scarcity, talent managers have to adapt. To achieve high performance in an era of stiff competition for talent, organizations must address the unique and diverse needs of individuals they hope to attract and retain.

Further, when talent management practices are not relevant to business goals, nor tailored to workers individual performance needs, productivity can suffer. Organizations can no longer absorb poor individual productivity within the general cost of doing business. Talent management practices today must reflect the fact that every person counts.

Recent Accenture research — conducted with more than 60 organizations using a proprietary human capital measurement tool — suggests the key to creating customized talent management solutions lies in a close and integrated partnership between HR and an organization's line managers.

An organization is more likely to support individual workers' needs if it gets closer to where the work is performed. That means integrating talent management practices into the very fabric of business — away from the centralized domain of HR and closer to those who have direct contact with people as they perform: the line managers.

HR retains responsibility for setting the broad context of policies and programs and for creating specific, coherent and logical talent management practices at a global level, while also remaining open to flexible interpretation and implementation at the local level. Line managers are charged with making the policies and practices come to life. Because they are more knowledgeable of particular workers and their situations, and more attuned to local needs and pressures, line managers are optimally positioned to tailor general HR practices to the situations and individuals at hand.

Here are some ways companies are tailoring talent management practices and processes to local and individual needs.

Customize Performance Management

Top-down processes to manage employee performance are useful, but must be supplemented with more customized, day-to-day development and performance management discussions that managers have with their employees. Managers at higher-performing companies provide feedback and recognition in a more frequent, informal and personalized manner than at more average-performing companies.

The primary goal of customized performance management is to treat every employee as a unique and important contributor. All too often, formal performance reviews rely on performance criteria that are neither relevant nor customized to an individual's work -— nor is the feedback typically delivered how an individual receives feedback best. To avoid these problems, leading companies such as Microsoft and U.S. mechanical contractor TDIndustries supplement formal reviews with organizational systems in which managers and employees can confidentially record frequent, informal feedback.

Jessie McCain, managing director of human resources at TDIndustries, said informal performance reviews are "live, organic and working documents filled with edits, updates and changes that encourage frequent, honest and specific feedback at the point of need." Issues can be dealt with in a manner best suited to the individual and resolved on an ongoing basis rather than once a year under formal, often uncomfortable, circumstances.

Similarly, companies focused on individual employee development do not wait until the end of a year to reward employees with bonuses or raises. Instead, they offer frequent, informal recognition and praise customized to what motivates an individual most effectively.

For example, SAP Americas, the U.S. subsidiary of German software company SAP, established a multi-tiered, values-based recognition program to encourage managers and peers to reward performance throughout the year. The program is based on recognizing and rewarding employees for demonstrating the company's core business values. Managers are provided with a list of predefined reward choices — ranging from movie tickets to trips to designer handbags — and can select from that list based on their employees' unique preferences.

Customize Career Development

Career development paths should not presume all employees have the same sense of how their careers are to play out. Career development is no longer a linear phenomenon. It may involve organizational cross-jumping or job experiences that take an employee away from the mother ship for a time.

Instead of narrowly defined HR policies that define lockstep, linear career paths, HR staff at Procter & Gamble encourage managers to work with employees to define their ideal destination jobs anywhere in the company and to create plans to help them get there.

At Nike, the movement of employees across functions and divisions as they mature is seen as especially valuable, both to the individuals and the company as a whole. Line managers get together periodically to identify new stretch opportunities for their people or where experiences in other parts of the organization might benefit them based on their unique strengths and interests. The process was originally targeted only at leadership candidates, but many divisions have adopted it to support all employees.

Customize Learning

People learn in different ways, and different learning experiences are more appropriate for different roles and environments. Enterprise learning departments must continually explore ways to engage employees with the right content, in the right form, at the right time.

For example, Health Partners, a nonprofit HMO, encourages managers to help employees choose learning that best meets their needs and preferences. Options include classroom-based training, simulated role-playing programs, e-learning, books and one-on-one coaching.

Other organizations use line managers to help employees structure experience-based learning paths. This approach increases the need for managers to become learning coaches, not just project managers and supervisors.

The Coventry Building Society, a savings and loan institution in the United Kingdom, moved five of its 50 call-center employees into full-time manager-coach positions. In this new role, the manager-coaches provide two hours of coaching each week for every employee by listening to calls and providing immediate feedback and suggestions for improvement. Although the number of people taking calls went down, the call center's performance went up.

Technology research firm Forrester also encourages this close learning relationship by pairing a novice with an experienced manager in an open, transparent work environment so newcomers can improve their competence through day-to-day observation of an experienced mentor or coach.

Active manager involvement is key to creating customized talent management solutions for an increasingly diverse workforce. Companies that successfully engage line management in talent issues may do the following:

Create Flexible Practices and Policies

If line managers are to actively tailor talent management practices to individual employees, policies and practices must be flexible. Such flexibility is not the norm. Research revealed many managers say job competencies and descriptions are too generic or out-of-date to be of real value. Further, their organizations' one-size-fits-all learning or rewards programs do not enable them to account for the unique ways employees learn or are motivated. Predefined career paths and narrow salary ranges also limit managers' ability to place employees in positions to maximize their strengths and capabilities.

Global talent management practices and policies need to be designed so they can be applied to differing local needs. In the past decade, many companies have achieved customization by offering flexible work arrangements, cafeteria-style benefits plans and broadband compensation schemes in which job titles are collapsed into fewer, wider salary ranges. But companies must break new ground to design discretion, choice and flexibility into all talent management practices and programs.

To get different behaviors, talent managers may need to offer different incentives. Putting new incentives in place is especially important if line managers are to take on new talent management responsibilities. Organizations often attempt to hold managers accountable for human capital development, but do little more than ask managers to check off various activities and processes.

At Procter & Gamble, managers' compensation, stock options, performance ratings and assignments are tied to their success in recruiting, developing and retaining top-performing employees. At a leading medical equipment maker, managers are assessed on whether they are "net exporters of talent," a metric indicating how many of their employees have been promoted into management in other parts of the company.

Support Managers

Busy and overworked line managers are more likely to maximize performance if they are coached to handle a variety of situations and problems involving their people. Effective people management is not a skill learned at most business schools, nor is it easily picked up on the job without conscious attention and practice. Many organizations now require line managers undergo extensive training for effective people management.

Training is a step in the right direction, but the informal and everyday interactions between line managers and employees are less amenable to being shaped by formal training. More focused coaching and mentoring is needed.

At SAP America, HR business partners work with managers one-on-one. The company boasts low ratios of HR business partners to line managers and conceives the HR business partner's primary role as consulting to line managers. One HR business partner, for example, works with 30 line managers and spends about 60 percent of her time coaching them on people issues.

Line managers can make or break performance and must be charged with a broader sense of responsibility to maximize the impact of an organization's talent. Those given freedom to customize basic talent management practices and tailor generic programs to the unique needs of their people can propel their organizations toward high performance.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Why Bother With Succession Plans?



Succession Planning - Published March 2008
Creating Consistency:
Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans
by Agatha Gilmore


When its CEO left, the Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS) celebrated his 40 years at the company.

When its COO left, the company celebrated his 27 years at the organization.

When several other 20-plus-year executives left, senior executives at NGHS started to panic.

"We went from a 40-year CEO with a community-minded culture to a growth plan that really just defies the imagination," said Jack Fulbright, vice president of human resources at the NGHS. "It's amazing."

The plight of the NGHS isn't unique. In fact, the scenario might become commonplace during the next few years. With more than 70 million baby boomers eligible to retire and not enough skilled workers to fill the ranks, the U.S. Department of Labor estimates the workforce will be short 10 million employees by 2010.

And according to research from the Aberdeen Group, fewer than half of organizations surveyed for the 2007 report "The Looming Leadership Void: Identifying, Developing, and Retaining Your Top Talent" currently have a succession planning strategy in place, though this number is expected to jump to 75 percent by the end of 2008.

"Succession planning, once reserved for the most senior positions at organizations and considered a component of leadership development, is being viewed more holistically across the organization and its stakeholders," wrote Aberdeen Research Director Kevin Martin.

Further, the concept of a successful succession plan has evolved. Gone are the days of the hush-hush, case-by-case replacement process. Today's market requires organizations to look at succession planning as a visible, integral, enterprise-wide part of their overall business strategies, plot out projected growth and be clear with employees about how they fit into the equation.

The Push to Promote From Within

"One of the reasons succession planning is so key is the way that we work is changing," said Ilene Ringler, principal of Ilene Ringler Associates, a consulting firm based in Phoenix. "So to have the right people ready to move when you need them is more critical than ever before."

This certainly became clear to those at the NGHS, who, without an integrated succession plan, had to wait until longtime employees retired before scrambling to find replacements.

"The organization knew these people were going to retire, and yet we still had to go out and replace the executives that we lost," Fulbright said.

This resulted in external hires of more than 60 percent in top executive jobs. Recruiting talent externally — perhaps one of the most costly and unwieldy side effects of not having an enterprise-wide succession plan — can have a debilitating effect on a company's bottom line.

For example, research done on CEO succession by the Hay Group showed hiring externally can result in shorter employment terms, less stable company culture and morale and compensation-related costs, as organizations often have to bump up pay to attract external hires.

The cost of recruiting new talent also is a factor, regardless of organizational level.

"The financial repercussions — and forget about the downtime of making a bad decision on the placement, in terms of lost business opportunity — just looking at the replacement costs, are significant," said Ron Garonzik, vice president of leadership talent at the Hay Group in New York. "Internal candidates are more likely to succeed because organizations that have figured it out have time to develop the candidates and to address the risks that they pose in relation to critical positions."

To help lessen the extent of external hiring in the future, the NGHS has since begun to implement an enterprise-wide succession planning strategy whereby each employee identifies three potential in-house successors, estimates how long it would take those successors to work into the positions and then helps create specific development plans for them.

"We just can't afford to have the inconsistency and the silos that existed in the past," Fulbright said.

Succession as Business Strategy

The push to promote from within also has helped highlight the fundamental connection between succession planning and key business goals around development and retention.

"Succession planning isn't this stand-alone thing," said Kevin Martin at Aberdeen. "It's something that feeds recruiting, performance management, learning and development."

For this reason, the first step in creating a successful succession plan is to think of it as a fundamental element of a dynamic business strategy. The plan should not only identify potential gaps within the organization, it should explicitly define current and future job roles.

"First and foremost, succession is about ensuring your business has the organizational capability in place to prosper," Garonzik said. "That means looking at the business context and strategy very carefully and understanding in terms of strategic requirements what the operating model needs will be going forward. How is the organization going to run to generate the revenue it requires?"

To fill these well-defined job roles requires a high level of openness and transparency within the organization.

"You have to know how the organization is going to grow and be really clear on what people need to know and need to be able to do to be successful in that future state," Ringler said. "And that's not just hard skills. It's how people like to work, what motivates them. It's, 'Do they want to be a part of the organization's growth?'"

While many organizations have high-potential programs, they often don't delve deeper to find out what the individuals themselves are interested in pursuing, Garonzik said. This depth can be particularly helpful when considering multigenerational workforce preferences.
"What we're really pushing companies to consider is, 'High potential for what, exactly?'" he said.

A consistent succession plan helps employees understand where they fit in the organization, as well as where they might want to grow. It also helps foster a culture of understanding that might assuage the effects of external hiring, Ringler said.

"If the culture is one of full disclosure, which many cultures are not, people know who the higher [potentials] are, so it helps people to know how the organization goes about doing its decision making," Ringler said. "And that helps the hi-pos know, or anybody know, 'How can I be part of the succession planning process?'"

This sense of employee empowerment has become a crucial advantage in today's market. Organizations that offer workers the opportunity to track their own progress will recruit the best talent, Martin said.

"It's no longer a nice to have. It really becomes a need to have," he said. "It becomes this holistic recruiting, developing, retention type of strategy."

It's also at this learning and development stage of succession planning that applying technology can vastly improve results.

"The automation brings consistency, it brings facilitation, it brings the ability to leverage that data into another system," Martin said. "[It] provides so much greater insight; it provides greater access organizationally to talent."

Dynamic Learning and Development

With such a deep-reaching organizational impact, the succession planning process might start as an human resources function, but ultimately would be taken over by department heads as it became fully integrated into the business strategy, said Mike Reingruber, group vice president at Plexus Scientific, a technology consulting company.

Additionally, other aspects of succession planning, such as knowledge capture and information sharing, would become dynamic, applied processes rather than one-time deals.

"[When an employee retires], you've got a very limited time period to extract what you can know from that person," Reingruber said. "[And] it's tough for someone who's now in your footsteps and doing your job to say, 'Let me check the lessons-learned repository and see what's there.' You don't self-prompt to go and look. A lot of the agencies are looking to replace antiquated systems with something a lot more proactive because it's actually applied."

Reingruber pointed to the Air Force as an example. Before engineers begin the design process for airplanes, he said they are prompted to read through closeout packages or after-action reports on similar projects. When they complete their projects, they are encouraged to make submissions into the knowledge database.

"You've kind of got to embed this idea of capturing these knowledge nuggets throughout their lifetime as an employee, so when they do leave, it exists somewhere, it's used proactively and the other folks — regardless of skill set or time within the organization — can access it," Reingruber said.

The use of technology at this point also is incredibly useful, Reingruber said. A lot of companies are experimenting with intelligent agents or digital repository systems. The program pulls up appropriate stored knowledge and processes for an employee who has just entered a new phase of a project. The employee then has the opportunity to review and apply the relevant information.

"Now, for the first time, we've actually got a requirement that's driving everybody to look at [intelligent agents], and we've got the technology to support it," Reingruber said.

Looking Ahead

Ultimately, the benefits of a consistent, enterprise-wide succession plan are vast and varied. Namely, organizations can adapt to the potential talent crisis by doing more with fewer resources.

"It's allowing the folks that are there to work more efficiently," Reingruber said. "As these folks retire, you may find out you can do just as well by having the information available with fewer resources."

Additionally, a company's ability to plan succession can have major effects on marketplace perception, as well as on the bottom line, Ringler said.

"From a customer service perspective, if the organization doesn't have that kind of solid planning in place, the potential loss to business is very large," she said. "Creating strategic partnerships has a lot to do with succession planning, [as does] creating good customer relationships, building your business base. All of those external profit benefits are in many ways based upon the organization's ability to run itself internally."

In the case of the Northeast Georgia Health System, which is set to open several additional centers as well as a whole new hospital in 2008, establishing an enterprise-wide succession planning strategy was a no-brainer.

"The need is recognized," Fulbright said. "This is going to be a significant cost-saving strategy in the long run

Monday, March 17, 2008

A Sweet Spot: Competencies and Learning


Published March 2008
Influencing Competency Management
Brian Summerfield


Recent research from the Aberdeen Group showed that best-in-class performers are up to 86 percent more likely than “laggard” companies to know which skills and traits make top performers. This statistic points to a relationship between understanding what core competencies are for the various roles within the workforce and how bringing in those skills and enhancing them contributes to the overall success of the business.

Obviously, having the right competencies in the right part of the enterprise is critical for aligning its personnel to its goals. Equally obvious is the fact that corporate learning can help ensure employees have the specific skills and knowledge they need to succeed in a particular role from both an individual and organizational perspective. But chief learning officers should be doing more than just developing training in reaction to a perceived need for this or that competency. To make themselves and their function more strategic, they should be deeply involved in the competency conversation from the outset.

This likely isn’t a profound revelation for learning executives, most of whom have been aware of how employee development relates to competency management for some time now. However, many of them probably aren’t where they need to be in terms of influencing this other aspect of talent. For the good of their organizations, this must change.

Effecting this change is not terribly complicated, either. Recognizing that learning and competency management share the same “people” rubric with many other related functions, learning leaders should involve themselves in other associated aspects of talent. These include:

1. Hiring: By creating hiring profiles with detailed and standardized competencies for various positions, organizations can bring on employees who will be more likely to hit the ground running. CLOs might want to participate in the creation and maintenance of hiring profile programs or simply voice support for them. In any event, these will make efforts around onboarding easier from the perspective of the learning department.

2. Technical infrastructure: CLOs should make sure their learning management system can track employee competencies somehow. There are essentially two ways to do this: Get a comprehensive LMS that includes some sort of application around competencies or attach the LMS to a separate but connected competency management system. This decision probably will rest largely on the resources and proficiency of the organization’s IT department.

3. Performance management: Once learning executives have some technical means of aligning competencies to learning, they can assess employees to make sure the knowledge actually has been absorbed and retained. It’s even better if there’s a feedback loop in place that can show employee performance well after the fact to make sure learning programs are having the right impact. For example, if several workers are evaluated as competent in certain areas but don’t achieve the desired job performance, learning professionals can revisit their programs to see if something is wrong with the content or delivery, the competency baseline needs to be raised or they need to teach altogether new skills.

4. Succession planning: Learning programs shouldn’t only familiarize employees with the competencies they need to know for their current jobs. They also should identify high potentials (via assessment methodologies) and eventually instruct them on the competencies they need to know for higher-level positions within a logical career progression. This will help prepare a talent pipeline for key positions within the enterprise, ones the organization might otherwise have trouble filling.
Brian Summerfield is a managing editor for Chief Learning Officer magazine.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Let's be strategic and integrate our systems


published February 2008
Integrating Talent Management Systems Strategically by Leighanne Levensaler


With the increased emphasis on talent management, companies are looking to integrate at least some of these systems, while adding solutions for other processes, such as workforce planning, succession planning, recruiting and competency management. In response to the interest, software vendors of all types are scrambling to pull supporting modules into integrated suites.

When it comes to HR-related systems, most companies have a tapestry — or crazy quilt — of systems that have been built, bought and implemented over many years. HR technology infrastructures can include payroll, HRMSs, LMSs, applicant tracking, compensation and benefits, and performance management systems — all of which have different levels of maturity and are commonly owned by different parts of an organization.

Talent managers involved in setting their company's integrated talent management systems strategy have many good reasons not to leap into purchasing decisions. The market offers many options, with different strengths, maturity and levels of integration. Purchases should fit the company's IT architecture with an acceptable range for risk tolerance. How the organization governs talent management also comes into play.

There are major considerations involved in developing this critical system strategy. If skipped, absence of these important and often soul-searching steps will lead to confusion with the wide variety of systems, architectures, delivery models and approaches available.

Start With Business Problems

The first step is to identify business problems the organization wants to solve with an integrated talent management system. Problems typically fall into one of three hierarchical categories:

1. Automation. By implementing these systems, the organization will reduce the cost of errors, save time, reduce paper and better meet compliance requirements.
2. Process improvement. The company's goal is to better implement existing processes and perhaps even improve them because the software will facilitate a more integrated and complete, data-rich approach to a given process.
3. Business and talent breakthroughs: These systems will empower the organization to execute new tasks.

Focus on Talent Processes First

Recent research shows the greatest business results come not from HR systems, but the underlying processes. In fact, Bersin & Associates has identified the Top 22 processes (out of 62 studied) that drive highest levels of business impact. These include coaching; development-based performance management; the use of strategic competencies in recruiting, performance management and leadership development; implementation of skills and competency-based workforce planning; and creating personnel and organizational goals that align with current and strategic business goals.

These processes are not dependent on software solutions. Most are more dependent on company culture, business and organizational maturity. If the investment in talent management systems is to drive dramatic business impact (and positive change), examine and prioritize talent management processes first.

Once the talent manager determines which processes are most important to business success and how they should be prioritized, he or she will be better prepared to evaluate the available options and set expectations for future investments.

When examining current processes, also consider "breakthrough processes." Up to now, most of these processes have not been practical to achieve. But now, new, integrated technology options put them in reach. These include:

* Integrated performance and learning.
* Integrated performance management and
succession planning.
* Pay for performance.
* Integrated recruiting and performance
management.
* Career planning.