meeting the global challenge for talent
TRANSCRIPT
© CAPITAL CONSULTING 2005
Meeting the Global Challenge for Talent
Professor William Scott-JacksonDirector, Centre for Applied HR ResearchOxford Brookes University
CEO, Oxford Strategic Resourcing LtdOxford, UK
Director, Mayo Learning International Ltd
[email protected]+44 7785110910
2
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent:Agenda
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and Key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
3
Talent Management: The threats and the opportunity
• ‘War for talent’ is a recurrent theme• Intangible assets, mainly human, now represent the largest contributor to
overall market value for many organisations.• The effective acquisition, management and retention of human resources has
a direct and significant impact on the bottom line and on share price.• Needs surgical precision to identify, acquire and retain the key high-
performing talent that will add sustainable competitive advantage• Global market for talent presents significant opportunities – and risks• Many global organisations have no resourcing strategy –
– many don’t even have a manpower plan, – many don’t even know what talent they have– many don’t know what they need
4
War for Talent: 1998 recommendations
We affirm all our people but invest differentially in our A,B and C players
We treat everyone the same, and like to think that everyone is equally capable
We fuel development through stretch jobs, coaching and mentoring
Development happens in training programmes
Recruiting is like marketingRecruiting is like purchasing
We shape our company, our jobs, even our strategy to appeal to talented people
We provide good pay and benefits
All managers, starting with the CEO, are accountable for strengthening their talent pool
HR is responsible for people management
The New WayThe Old Way
We know which critical capabilities will be needed to achieve our strategy - and we know how we are going to build them
We know how many we need in defined roles
We know what our strategic skills gaps are and we have clear plans to fill them
We recruit when we need to
Scott-Jackson 2006 recommendations
Michaels.E., Handfield-Jones. H & Alexroyd. B (1998, The war for Talent, Harvard Business School Press
5
Top global management issues
26%Developing employees into capable leaders10.
26%Being flexible and adaptable to rapidly changing market conditions10.
27%Using IT to reduce costs and create value8.27%Increasing shareholder value8.28%Improving workforce performance7.29%Managing risk6.29%Increasing customer loyalty and retention5.
29%Developing new processes and products to stay ahead of the competition4.
32%Acquiring new customers3.
33%Changing organizational culture and employee attitudes2.
35%Attracting and retaining skilled staff1.
Percentage of respondents
selecting issues
Top 10 current business issues for senior executives
Accenture (2005) Global survey of management issues, July 2005
6
How has business responded?
• at the top level, as a series of one-off responses to unplanned tactical issues– e.g. reorganisation, new business stream, resign, retire or die
• in the mid-tiers as a tactical responsibility of specific line managers working uneasily with HR, preferred suppliers and ‘pet’ search consultants/agencies
• at the lower, high volume, levels - a procurement problem to be solved at the lowest cost.
89 percent - more difficult to attract talented people now than it was three years ago,90 percent - more difficult to retain them. Just 7 percent strongly agreed that their companies had enough talented managers to
pursue all or most promising business opportunities.Only 14% strongly agreed that their companies attract highly talented people.Only 3% strongly agreed that their companies develop talent quickly and effectively.89% said candid performance feedback was essential, only 39% said they received it
(Axelrod. E.L, Handfield-Jones. H. &Welsh T.A. (2000) War for Talent updated in 2000)
7
Barriers to effective Talent ManagementMcKinsey: interviews with 50 CEOs across 29 global organisations.
% of interviewees who rated obstacles amongst the 8 most critical
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
CEO and/or senior team don't have shared view of mostpivotal roles.
Succession planning and/or resource allocation processesare not rigorous enough to match right people to roles
Line managers do not address chronic underperformanceeffectively
Senior leaders in organisation do not align talent-management strategy with business strategy
Line managers are unwilling to differntiate their peole as top,average and underperformers
Organisation is siloed and does not encourage collaboration,sharing of resources
Line managers are not sufficiently committed to peopledevelopment
Senior Managers don't spend enough high-quality time ontalent management
Guthridge.M., Komm.A.B. and Lawson. E (2006) The people problem in talent management The McKInsey Quarterly 2006. 2. 6-8
8
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent:
The Talent Strategy
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and Key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
9
Talent Strategy: What it is and what it isn’t
• NOT the plan for HR developments in recruitment, training, employee relations etc
• NOT simply how HR will deliver various services• NOT how HR will introduce the latest HR thinking• NOT a plan for HR’s internal activities
A plan to meet strategic talent needs of the business and create competitive advantage through
differentiating capabilities.
10
Talent Strategy: main elements
• Dealing with current resource issues – keeping a ‘seat on the board’Immediate: tactical problem solver
• Meeting strategic business needs:– How will the people (numbers, skills, characteristics) required to achieve the business’
objectives be made available in the most (cost) effective way?– Define the demand (predict resource flows – in, out, across)– Review supply over the period (5 years?)– Gap analysis, – Proposals for action: costs, benefits and business case.
Medium term: enabler of strategy• Creating strategic advantage
– How can we create differentiating human resources to provide real competitive advantage?
– Competitive analysis– Identify potential differentiating resources– Actions to build differentiating resources– Business case to support their development
Long term: driver of strategy• Benefits summary in business terms
– increase revenues, decrease costs, shareholder value, cost income ratio etc
11
Talent to enable business strategySupply and Demand Questions
• Demand - Resource flows: numbers, skills, competencies e.g:– We will be reducing sales of ‘x’ but increasing our focus on ‘y’– We will be competing in new global territories– We will be outsourcing more but will need more people able to manage supplier
relationships– We will need more specialist ……..– We will need far less ….....– We want to be seen as the most technically advanced company
• Supply– All our competitors will need exploration engineers– GIS expertise is only available from 3 Universities– China is starting to hire petrochemical analysts from European Universities– European and Japanese workforce is aging– Chinese Engineering graduates are too theoretical – only 13% useful– We lose x% of our Dutch graduates within 3 years
12
Example – Global Oil Co
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
2001 2006
Programmers
We will need 200 less programmers by 2006
Resource Implications:
Exit strategy?
Turnover levels?
Redundancy costs?
13
Example – Global Oil Co
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
2001 2006
Cobol
C++
Actually we need 500 less Cobol programmers but 300 more C++ programmers
Resource Implications:
Exit strategy?
Turnover levels?
Redundancy costs?
Recruitment?
Employer of choice?
Retraining?
14
Example – Global Oil Co
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Cobol
C++
By the way … we’ll need the C++ people by 2002 and some of the Cobol people till 2005
Resource Implications:
Exit strategy?
Turnover levels?
Redundancy?
Recruitment?
Employer of choice?
Retraining?
Retention?
Temporary staff?
15
Example – Global Oil Co
The C++ will be based in Plymouth, Current Cobol people are in LondonBoth Cobol and C++ must be
experienced in ‘extreme’ programming
… and don’t forget …..
Twice as many Team Leaders needed for C++ people
Takes about £8000 and 12 months to retrain a Cobol programmer – 10% fail!
Costs c£60k and 6 months to make a Cobol programmer redundant and recruit a C++ programmer – 15% leave within 1 year!
C++ salaries are rising fast - they are in demand and not being trained.
16
• Training and retention plan for Cobol programmers in C++ and extreme programming.
• Cobol contracting as exit path (set up own business).• Early career counselling to allow self-selection for new roles or exit.• New sources for trainee C++ people (non IT/science grads, older people, non
IT mid-career people, admin staff with aptitude.• Early liaison with colleges worldwide and regional schools/colleges• Creating programming centres in Eastern Europe and Australia• Outsourcing some work to Pakistan
Example – Global Oil Co:Actions
17
Opportunity for the business …. And for HR
• Resource flows are the critical strategic enabler/limitation for most large organisations
• They are poorly understood, rarely analysed properly and, if unplanned, can cause strategy to fail
• No one has time• They are completely within HR’s remit• They are quantifiable, business oriented, involve big scary numbers
and are extremely important!
18
Strategic Capabilities: example
Identify strategic intent
Identify capabilities needed (particularly ‘key capabilities’)
Identify what we have
Plan to meet gaps(+ve and –ve)
Gap and Flow analysis
Top 3 in Australasian Fertiliser market within 5 years -via acquisition
20 M&A specialists with Australian agribusiness expertise
50 European M&A specialists, 5 ‘worldclass’.
Can we develop existing? Do we need to buy-in? Where from? Buy some experience and develop rest?
Redeploy, develop, recruit
19
Strategic capabilities – Sources of competitive advantage (e.g.):
Global IT provider
International bank
Communications company
Diverse global holding group
Strategy Consultancy
Project and Deployment Managers
‘Friendly’ cashiers
Global telecoms experts
Knowledge Managers Consultancy
Internal Search consultants
Product builders
Global Petrochemicals conglomerate ??
20
The Talent Strategy:Questions for you
• What are the CRUCIAL talents that you will need in the future?
• Do we own that Talent now?
• Do we need to build more of it?
21
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent
Developing and deploying talent
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and Key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
22
Global Gas Co: the problem
• Fast track graduates (and high-performers in general) tended to leave after 3 years – because there was no planned career progression– Because they were no longer treated as ‘special’ or looked after
• Individual Divisions tended to protect and defend their best people – not allow them to be moved to other key roles.– Hide them - so the organisation’s best talents were invisible– Much easier to find someone from outside via executive search– Much easier to leave the company to progress, rather than move internally
‘Passport’ to success
Internal Executive search
Solution
Solution
23
Passport to Success (web based)
• For every senior role (destination):– The competencies and skills required to do that role– The experience necessary to be considered for such a role– The kinds of jobs and roles necessary to gain that experience
• On-line ‘passport’ for each high-potential– CV and personal details– Jobs done and experiences gained (Visas)– Competencies and skills achieved
• Internal talent market– All vacant or future roles accessible by everyone on the web– Everyone’s passport available via intranet – Matching facility via intranet
• Individual responsibility– Up to the individual to make sure they moved into jobs to gain the necessary experiences
and competencies– No handholding or career planning
• Internal search
24
Internal Executive search
• Executive search consultants were allowed to actively search internally• Advantage:
– Accessed ‘hidden’ talent– Lone managers can focus on building., protecting and building loyalty in staff
Search consultant focuses on unearthing talent for the business as a whole.– Movement is healthy– Better to be poached for an internal job than an external
• Disadvantage:– Some Managers object– Deliberate ‘unsettling’
25
Developing and Deploying Talent:Questions for you
• How can you encourage people to develop their own talents?
• How can you ensure that top people are seen as organisational assets and move between business?
• What would be the advantages of deploying internal search?
• What would be the disadvantages?
26
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent
Retaining Talent
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and Key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
27
Retention: A differentiating strategic capability
Survey of 500 Global organisations
• 68% - retaining talent is ‘far more’ important than hiring
• Over 50% altered salaries, bonuses or stock options to retain talent
• Only 27% tried to provide employees with advancement opportunities within their
organizations
• Most companies continue to struggle with retention because they rely on salary
increases and bonuses to prevent turnover.
• Why doesn’t this work?
* Accenture: "The High Performance Workforce:Separating the Digital Economy's Winners from Losers”
28
Example - High Tech firm losing high value people
To reduce turnover in key groups Who should we retain and how?
Identify root causes and solutions why do people stay or go?
The Manager’s role What can we do?
To identify and use non-financial intervention How can we retain (and spend more wisely)?
Project Objectives
29
Dimensions of Staff Turnover:
Involuntary -
organisation decides not to retain the staff member (or retain). Voluntary -
individual decides to leave the organisation (or stay). High Value or Low value staff
Short term and long term Risk of quitting
Catch ‘intention to quit’ early in the process
If someone of low value is at high risk of leaving voluntarily - encourage and celebrate!
30
Some turnover is OK!
Type A
Inadequate selection for dismissal etc
Type C
Dismissal, etc
Type B
Retention Problem
Type D
Career development moves, management
persuasion etc
Involuntary Voluntary
Value to the organisation
High
Low
31
Segment the ‘voluntary’ population
High Risk
High value
Target retention actions
Target improvement
or cost effective exit
Maintain
No action - or encourage
to leave
Low value
Low Risk
32
The Quitting Process
JobSatisfaction
Organisational
Reward/recognitionQuality of supervision
Work and socialstimulation
Conditions of workand environment
Personal
Personality (e.g. Self esteem +ve) Congruence of job with interests (-ve)
Status/seniority (-ve)General satisfaction with life (+ve)
External
Unemployment ratesEconomic situation
Scarcity of/demand for skillsGeography
Demographics
Thoughtsof quitting
Intentionto search
Intention toquit or stay
Actionquit or
stay
Probability ofachieving
alternative/attractiveemployment
Thoughtsof quitting
Organisational Commitment
Pull (e.g. Search Consultants)
PUSH
PULL
33
Type B Turnover - When to attack
Job SatisfactionSelf esteemManagement style
Action quitor stay
Probability ofalternative/attractive
employment
Thoughtsof quitting
Intention tosearch
Intention toquit or stay
Main factors
Job offer atsame/more
money
Perception ofjob market vs
internal
Stage
34
Actions
Regular confidential survey to identify high risk groups/individuals
Confidential interview to identify individual and general USPs
Confidential feedback form completed
Managers agree individual and group actions
Actions and monitor via survey
Identify high value groups/individuals
35
Example Value/Risk spreadsheetValue Score (1-5) Weight (1-3) Total/5Impact of losing on next 3 months 5 1 5Impact of losing on long term 1 2 2Difficulty/cost of replacement 5 3 15TOTAL 3.7
*Risk 55 - Likely to look in next 2 months4 - Likely to look in next 6 months TOTAL 18.53 - Thinking of looking2 - Disatisfied1 - Happy
Can be used at Group or individual level
36
Example potential actions
Special projects - recognition Golden handcuffs (stock options, bonus) Patents and publications awards Internal fellowship & instructor (external publicity) Dual careers (non-managerial ‘Star Tracks’ strategic role) Career counselling Self driven working (time, projects, place, invest) Learning accounts Cafeteria benefits Innovation Banks Personal Growth Leave Management attention Communication involving employees in company decision-making processes. project-oriented work, employees work on diverse, limited-term assignments. Developing internal "talent exchanges,”
37
Summary – Targeted Retention: resourcing at its best!
• Retention much more cost effective than replacement• Retention must be targeted• Aim to minimise involuntary quitting (low or high value)• Take control/influence over voluntary staying and quitting• Need information – segment the internal market
– Who is valuable?– Who is at risk?– What they think– What they want
• Need deliberate highly targeted action - Marketing• Demonstrable, significant savings possible!
38
Retaining key Talent:Questions for you
• How could you segment its own talent
• Which key talents need to be retained
• How can we best retain these people?
39
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent
Acquiring Talent
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and Key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
40
Strategic Talent Acquisition
• Proactive continuous search– Search out the right people – don’t wait for them to come to you– Look continuously for key skills – don’t wait till you have vacancies– Plan ahead (see previous section)
• Global Talent intelligence– Know where the best talent is and how to reach it– Web based geographic database of universities, competitors, alternative employers
etc– Tracked database of global potential hires – traced from University through career
and including searches, applications, etc• Internal Talent Market
– Line managers build and protect their own talent– Internal search helps make sure it ends up in the best place– Is it better for one of your people to be poached by a competitor or a colleague?
41
• Use the intranet to access information
– knowledge x speed x accessibility = competitive advantage• Understand the market so well that information can be used to disrupt competitors• Extend information gathering internally – learn from the huge knowledge resource of
our current employees• Form relationships with key information ‘nodes’ – databases, professional organisations,
publications, universities – to get the inside track• Link to Talent database of current and future candidates – fully tracked!• Develop everyone to use the information
– Competitive intelligence isn’t a department – it’s a way of working!
TELECOM PLC Global Talent Intelligence:
Aims
42
TELECOM PLC Global Talent Intelligence: Foundations
• Talent Market Data – in-depth knowledge about skills markets, competitors, strategies and tactics– Third party research (commissioned)– Published data– Sales & Marketing– Research & Development– Professional Services– Customer Services– Major Educational Establishments
• Competitive Company Reports– Supporting the business on specific bids and resourcing initiative– Responsive, pragmatic and focused
• Global Talent database– Tracks potential future employees from graduation through career– Fed through employee brand advertising, agencies, University careers offices, our own
employees, speculative applications (over 2000 pa).
43
TELECOM PLC Global Talent Intelligence:
Intranet Portal
TELECOMS PLC Global Talent Intelligence Portal
News ArchiveHome CV DatabaseDiscussTalent Maps
Breaking News…Cisco's Components Feast
Marconi and Compaq join for service management
Find a supplier…
Search:
Quick CV search
Keywords:
Recent discussions…
46
Talent Map – Italy
• Accessible through TELECOM PLC Intranet and via web
• Maps now for all strategic countries• At-a-glance picture of TELECOM PLC’s
talent competition• This map shows ‘associated
industries’ – darker colours = more employees in region
• Stars highlight company sites• Geographic link to ‘prospect’ database
47
Italy in Detail – Rome (Lazio)
• Maps are interactive – zoom in to any region
• Information from regularly-updated database – ‘live’
• Show all competitors, or slice information by technology, company, skillset etc.
• Next steps – link this to individual employee details
48
• Questions the portal can answer (examples)– “What’s the current average salary for project managers in Paris?”– “What experience do fellow talent managers have of recruiting in Qatar?”– “Who can I ask about recruiting in Holland?”– “How many people do Alcatel employ in Japan?”– “What is the potential skills market for 3G engineers in Northern Russia?”– “Where can I find Thai-speaking Project Managers?”– “What have Cisco been doing recently?”– “What can I tell my business about Lucent’s recent joint venture?”
• Search: Italy based GIS experts with Geology– John Cvanagh – 1990 MSc Spatial Analysis Milan – 10 years GIS for Shell global £70k– Abdullah Kaziz – 2000 BSc 1.1. Oxford Geology – 5 years BP Middle East £50k– Etc etc
TELECOM PLC Global Talent Intelligence:
Functions
49
Executive Search integrated with Resourcing and Talent Management
Pre-selection Selection Post-selection
Promote company values and ‘Employee brand’
Induction begins with first call
Retention via mentoring for first six months
Succession allows early planning
Fast track project managed selection
Resourcing strategy drives search strategy
Competency frameworks utilisedCompetitive
intelligence from market research
Internal candidates ‘searched’ and compared
Reward data incorporated from search
Database built for future requirements
Mgt development - part of screening
50
Acquiring Talent:Questions for you
• How can you track and access key external talent
• Should you recruit key talent – even when it hasn’t got specific vacancies?
• How can you keep track of all the people who apply?
51
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent
Talent Strategy
& Planning
AcquiringTalent
Developing&
DeployingTalent
Summary and key action areas
Talent Management:the threat and the opportunity
RetainingTalent
52
Meeting the Global challenge for Talent:A major source of competitive advantage
Talent Strategy&
Planning
Developing &
DeployingTalent
RetainingTalent
AcquiringTalent
Identify strategic intentIdentify capabilities needed (particularly key capabilities)Identify what we haveGap and flow analysisStrategic Plan to meet gaps (+ve and –ve)
Create an internal market for talentSelf development ‘passport’ for individualsInternal executive search
Identify critical talent that must be retainedAssess ‘propensity to leave’Intervene at early stage of the leaving process
Create Global Talent Intelligence web toolGlobal database of potential external talentInternal executive search