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Tag: change management


What Are We Going After?

August 4th, 2009 — 3:11pm

Recently, I had a conversation with a group of business executives who were hired with the sole purpose of turning the business around.  As we discussed the range and perceived intensity of the problems and issues, I quickly discovered that a deep understanding of the root causes that revealed a turnaround was even required was missing.

For example, one executive stated that he needed skill development/technical training.  My questions to him were How much was the training going to cost?  What kind of training (specifically) was needed?  And, How did would he know that training being provided was effective?  In particular, what led him and the organization to come to the conclusion that  more training was needed:  Was it market position, defect rate, employee satisfaction feedback, customer satisfaction feedback, accident rates, or lost time?  Was it a combination of all of these measures – or did you even measure at all?

The second executive stated to me that he needed to have his particular SBU performance on par with the other SBU.  He also stated that because his product/service line was new that he was under much scrutiny.  My questions continued.  How do you know that the other SBU has it right? How is your SBU performing among industry competitors (locally, nationally, internationally)?  When do you know (or will you know?) you have gotten to where you need to be when two different markets are being served? Continue reading »

Comment » | HR Communication, HR Methodologies, HR Thoughts, Strategic HR, change management

It’s All Hibba-Hobba – Sorting Through the Maze of HC Language!

February 2nd, 2009 — 5:49pm

As I focus on strategic human capital projects and opportunities, my mind drifts back to a moment not so long ago when I was speaking with a senior line manager thrust to lead a complex-integrated human capital transformational initiative that linked with the ” 21st century organizational vision.”  During our meeting, I was explaining the importance of supporting initiatives that ranged from knowledge management implementation-improvement, diversity-inclusion strategies, competency-based job modeling, and data migration/ERP-CRM strategies to name but just a few of the processes involved.  As I was speaking, this senior leader looked at me and said, “George, it’s all hibba-hobba.”

Of course I laughed it off and just thought that his analytical skill set and thought process just wanted black-and-white and binary rule set data that made it all digestible and easy for decision-making.  However, as I progress through subsequent assignments and conduct interviews and conversations with other business professionals and HR leaders, I have come to realize that he had a point.  Specifically, during one meeting, I sat and listened to a senior HR leader explain to me that the company’s goal was to “align the workforce to meet the strategic initiatives of strategic planning so that they could deliver on organizational objectives.”  I thought to myself – huh?  Are you not the face of senior leadership representing the most valued asset of the organization and that’s the answer you are providing?

Now don’t get me wrong.  There is nothing wrong with being able to communicate in contemporary, relevant, common language that can be shared with other professionals internal and external to the organization.  However, to explain to someone who is trying to get to ground truth (with concurrence) in such abstract terms leads to one conclusion: You have no idea what you are talking about.

Do you know what you are talking about?  Can you state in concrete terms what your organizational strategic goals are where it makes sense to anyone listing.  If you communicate like the example I just gave above, I will answer that question for you: You may know, but only you know that you may know. Continue reading »

1 comment » | HR Communication, HR Methodologies, Performance Management, Strategic HR, change management

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