Tag: Education
Questions to Ask in an Interview
WHAT SHOULD YOUR PTO POLICY LOOK LIKE?
What Do Your Competitors Do?
Incentivized Yearly Vacation
Separate Sick and Vacation Days or One PTO Bucket?
Unlimited PTO
Should Vacation Rollover?
LEARNING CORNER WITH JEFFREY PFEFFER: HOW TO REDESIGN JOBS TO IMPROVE EMPLOYEE HEALTH & COMPANY PERFORMANCE
-
83% of U.S. workers suffer from work-related stress
-
In 2018, a third of US-based respondents visited a doctor for something stress-related
-
16% of workers have quit their jobs due to stress
Redesigning Jobs and Work Environments to Fix the Problem
Making a Real Commitment to Change
FIVE CONSIDERATIONS FOR TM BUYERS IN THE WAKE OF SAP/SFSF
1. This is the beginning of talent management, not the end.
2. Confusion and distraction will certainly be among the immediate consequences.
3. Innovation will continue to come from the best-of-breed talent management vendors.
4. HR technology should be owned by HR and not IT.
5. Organically developed talent management has never been more meaningful.
TALENT MANAGEMENT AND SUCCESSION PLANNING IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Administrator Talent Crisis
- Nationally, more than 40 percent of the top investment executives within universities and endowments left in 2005 and 2006, according to a 2007 compensation survey by Mercer
- A national study of 323 chief academic officers, conducted by Eduventures Academic Leadership Learning Collaborative, found that 43 percent of provosts surveyed are holding their positions for shorter periods of time.
- A 2009 study of chief academic officers by the ACE found that the average tenure was 4.7 years on the job — less than half that of presidents
Where to Go From Here
- Provides cascading goals that align the objectives of the institution with the professional goals and needs of the employee. Managing and measuring the employee performance of each of these goals is critical to performance management, but without automation and integration, it becomes a time-consuming, daunting task.
- Assesses critical competencies and skills based on pre-defined criteria for staff success. Institutional leaders need an easy-to-use system that helps them predict and address potential competency gaps, performance strengths and opportunities.
- Reviews and measures performance on a ongoing and interim basis. The cascading goals an employee will be assessed by might not reflect the institution’s current goals and objectives. Automated and integrated systems make managing and assessing performance an ongoing process — always keeping the employee and the institution aligned.
- Identifies and tracks high-performing individuals. Performance management enables institution leaders to know who is a high-potential employee with the skills and motivation to transition into a leadership or administrative staff position.
- Enables the creation of development plans that engage employee career development. Identifying high-performing, high-potential employees is great, but even more important is creating career development plans for those employees.
THE CHOICE IS YOURS: ORACLE-TALEO ACQUISITION HIGHLIGHTS STARK CHOICES FACING HR BUYER
At the Crossroads
TALENT MANAGEMENT FOR HEALTHCARE
- Build with an eye toward integration – E-learning may be a natural starting point for healthcare organizations implementing new talent initiatives, but onboarding, performance management and succession initiatives all benefit from strong tie-ins to a learning management system (LMS). For example, performance assessments can automatically generate development plans for any area where deficiencies are identified. Don’t overlook targeted, formal development programs for employee supervisors. Extra training will prepare them to mentor and coach employees and maximize the value of your investment.
- Automate job descriptions with a foundation of competencies – Establishing the competencies – the knowledge, skills and behaviors that are used to develop people in your healthcare organization – is a critical step for success of any talent management initiative. In the healthcare setting, it’s a requirement because compliance demands it. Maintaining one set of job descriptions and competencies is one way to integrate multiple locations common in large healthcare systems into a single culture and to build job profiles that will guide career development, training and performance improvement across your organization. You will also find it easier to deliver the ROI because the business impact of career planning is 45 percent higher for organizations with good or excellent leadership competencies. (Bersin & Associates, Competency Management 2008)
- Build internal talent pools – Every healthcare organization needs to fill positions in critical roles such as nursing, IT and senior management. Yet, suitable candidates are hard to find. Most healthcare employers understand that the only solution is to “grow their own” talent. Implementing appropriate talent management and learning tools and processes makes identification of high-potential employees and development of critical skills far easier to accomplish.
- Collaborate to build a comprehensive succession strategy – Most healthcare organizations have a critical need to develop their next generation of leadership. The current senior leaders must understand the critical need to address this gap. HR can – and must – play a crucial role in facilitating this conversation, and technology can provide a key assist to identify the gaps and assign development plans for designated successors.
- Leverage the power of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) – SaaS technology allows healthcare employers to rapidly implement talent solutions at a far lower cost and with greater operational efficiency than traditional legacy on-premises ERP implementations of the past. The advantages include rapid deployment and easy scalability, and a lower cost with higher satisfaction, as well as less time to ROI.
EMPLOYERS NEED TO STEP UP TO CLOSE THE “SKILLS GAP”
Many of us have recently endured a bruising U.S. presidential electoral cycle centered squarely on economic and labor market issues and chock full of speechmaking focused on the need to create new jobs at any cost. We also hear a message of doom and gloom from loads of CEOs who echo a lingering message that they simply can\’t find enough skilled workers.A Skills Shortage?
With Bosses Like These, Who Needs Enemies?
- Only 32% of respondents have received training and development to better perform their job in the past six months;
- Only 25% have established career goals with their manager/employer;
- A full 66% said they haven’t received useful feedback from their manager/employer; and
- Only 19% said their employer’s performance review process helps them increase their potential through education and training.
Narrow the Gap at Home
GAZING INTO THE CRYSTAL BALL: CORNERSTONE ASSEMBLES A CRACK PANEL TO DISCUSS THE FUTURE OF WORK
- The current state of learning and training in organizations;
- The state of recruiting and the perceived “skills gap” in hiring decision-making; and
- The role of technology in the workplace and how we work.
Is the Future Already Here? Broad Themes for 2013
Learning & Development: You Can’t Hire Your Way Out of This One
The Shifting Nature of Employee Learning
Filling Talent Gaps
How Does Technology Fit Into This Picture (and What Is SnapChat)?
GOOD MANAGERS MANAGE. GREAT MANAGERS COACH
“I’m a big proponent of losing the word ‘manager,’ and replacing it with the word ‘coach,’” says Jay Forte, a former financial executive who traded his day job to launch Humanetrics LLC, a company that consults organizations on how to capitalize on the strengths of their employees. “‘Manager’ is an Industrial Age word, and now that we’re in the Intellectual Age, most managers don’t know how to get the most out of their employees.”
From coaching “managers” and inspiring employees to helping companies hire and retain the best talent, Forte\’s main goal is to advance personal performance in the workplace and beyond. Often times it starts with good leadership skills. So how does a manager become a great coach? Forte had three pointers:
1. Stop Telling and Start Asking
The first step to becoming a coach is reassessing how you treat and interact with your employees. Establishing an open, respectful relationship is key — and will bring long-term benefits. An example that stood out in Forte’s experience came when a customer service manager at a large company overheard one of his employees having an argument with a customer over the phone. Instead of flying off the handle and intervening, the manager stepped up as a coach, observing his employee’s behavior and then inviting the employee into his office after he hung up the phone.
By speaking with the employee behind closed doors and asking powerful, pointed questions about the situation at hand, the manager determined that what he observed was, in fact, a problem and discussed alternate solutions. This allowed the two to address and solve the problem as a team, rather than having it blow up as an employee/manager dynamic. And it established more trust, communication and engagement between the two.
“That’s a coach in action,” Forte said. “A manager might have had a meltdown and taken control of the call. He was truly conflicted about whether he should have interrupted, but it was a wise and hard decision for him not to get involved. It was a wonderfully powerful teaching moment.”
2. Match Talent With Challenges
Today’s job descriptions aren’t as cut-and-dry as they were even a decade ago. These days, employees are often hired for their talent and ability to get the job done, rather than their actual experience with said job. By getting to know about employees’ talents, interests and lives beyond the workplace, coaches can tap into strengths that run much deeper than any job description. Whether it’s planning the office holiday parties or running the company newsletter, employees often get satisfaction and fulfillment out of duties that have nothing to do with their day-to-day activities. Utilizing these talents makes the most of each employee’s potential and, in turn, adds value to the employees’ work experience.
“Look deep into your people, their talents, their capacity, and match what they have to offer with your company’s needs,” Forte said. “A coach takes a good look at what you’re extraordinary at and matches it to a particular need, so you soar.”
3. Tap Into Your Softer Side
The best coaches possess qualities that are easier said than done. This includes being a good observer and listener, really getting to know employees and trusting employees to get the job done. It all comes down to giving your workforce the tools and resources to do their job, so you can do your job.
“You have to trust in your employees,” Forte said. “Give them the ability to step up and own the situation. The mindset of a manager is often ‘I’m responsible to do the job’ when it should be ‘I’m responsible that the job gets done.’”
Ultimately, the coach takes on a role of parent, to some extent, Forte said. Like parenting, the relationship between coach and employee is often one that vacillates between guide, mentor and boss. Holding employees accountable while guiding them toward success is no simple task – it’s easy to take the reins when something’s not going right or chastise an employee for his mistakes. But handling the situation from the perspective of a guide or coach will benefit your business, your relationship with your employees and, ultimately, your bottom line.
HIRING FOR ETHICS AND INTEGRITY: 4 TACTICS THAT WORK
Surprise them with an ethical scenario
The CEO of a predominant design and building company Maravelas had worked with stuck out in her mind for a unique interviewing tactic. The CEO would interview candidates directly, starting off with warm, getting-to-know-you conversation. A bit into the interview, the CEO would then ask, “If we ever got into a bind with a client, would you be willing to tell a little white lie to help us out?”
“If the candidate said yes,” Maravelas explains, “the offer evaporated. You really have to have a lot of integrity to say no.”
Listen to how they praise – or blame – themselves and others
Is the candidate constantly saying “I, I, I” or referring to collective achievements she accomplished as part of a team? Does she refer to a great mentor or a close relationship with her boss as a contributor to her success, or is she constantly patting herself on the back?
An alternative way to gauge this quality, Maravelas suggests, is to ask candidates about a time when they really tried their hardest, yet failed, and listen to how they assess their own responsibility in that failure.
Tap into referrals from your best employees
Trust your gut
HOW TO WIN BIG TALENT IN SMALLER MARKETS
The answer is no, and there are ways to attract great talent to less sough-after markets. Jeff Zisner, founder of Blue Bell, Pennsylvania-based executive talent search firm Right Recruiting, says that although a lot of 20-something candidates he sees tend to head New York over Pennsylvania, he has had success attracting talent by taking a more personal approach.
\”We have had great success bringing people back home to our region once they’ve had kids and want to buy a home,\” says Zisner. \”We get reverse transplants who want to come back all of the time for family and household reasons.\”
HOW BUILDING A ‘SOCIAL BUSINESS’ CAN BOOST EMPLOYEE RETENTION
Introducing social business. Vala Afshar, social business expert and co-author of “The Pursuit of Social Business,” says it’s built on the premise that open and transparent social communication between people and organizations at all levels improves attitudes, performance and company culture. And today’s nascent cloud services and social collaboration tools make that opportunity easier and cheaper than ever to explore in the workplace.
Flatten the Social Hierarchy
Establish a Social and Transparent Mindset from the Top
Use New Tools to Jump-Start Collaboration
HUMAN CAPITALIST: THE KEY TO GREAT HR TECH? NOT BIG DATA — GOOD DATA
\”Time and again,\” she writes, \”I have watched HR professionals spend an inordinate amount of time defending their data to leaders and employees who don\’t believe that the data is credible.\”
Anderson\’s advice? Stop obsessing about Big Data, and start focusing on Good Data. Here\’s how:

You must be logged in to post a comment.