May 07, 2008

NetWORK-ing

I am not an English major but I believe that words ending in -ing signify action or verb--or describing an action in the moment.  It is interesting to me that people consider going to networking events networking.  Showing up does not mean we are doing. How many people go to work and are not actually working?  The same applies to NetWORK-ing.  Networking is more than showing up. It is going to the event and taking action.  For some people, this action does not seem like WORK. For others of us, it can be WORK or even painful.  Here are some rules I apply when I go NetWORK-ing.  And for the record, it used to be a painful experience for me and now it is actually enjoyable. 

1.  Nobody cares about you.  They are there to talk about their business.  Help them do this well and you will make great connections. 

2.  The majority of people are nervous to some degree in new environments and social situation so keep this in mind and be the one to take the first step.  I was working with a client recently who is still fearful of networking events. She stepped into her fear zone at an event recently and initiated a conversation with a woman in line for drinks.  The woman ended up being a key contact with a client of her firm and they are now talking and building a relationship.  SCORE!

3.  Help connect other people and you are the star!  If you know two people in the room that would benefit from meeting one another, take the time to introduce them.  When you do they will appreciate your help in facilitating the meet. 

4.  Stay away from the brochure people.  You know, the ones with the stack of brochures in their hands and laser beam eyes constantly scanning the room for their next contact. Just don't make eye contact and act like you did not see them.  If you do get trapped, take a brochure and be on your way.

5.  Use the pocket system to separate out the wheat from the chaff.  Good contacts in left pocket, duds and brochure pushers in right pocket.  At the end of the night, walk to the nearest recycle bin and empty out your right pocket.  This will keep your good contacts from getting lost in the piles of cards.

6.  Email left pocket people and ask them to go to coffee.  If you met at a mixer or event that you are both members of, ask them to meet you for a drink before so you can get to know them and just add on a few minutes of time for both of you.

7.  Don't go if you are not up to it.  This is not a cop out or excuse not to network.  What I mean is if you are not feeling good or upbeat it would be best to not go versus go and have a horrible experience and a negative impression of networking.  This makes it harder to go in the future. If you are constantly skipping events when you really need to go for your line of work then there is a different issue going on.

8.  When you get to your car jot down a few notes about each left pocket card so you remember some details of your conversation. 

I am sure there are 800 more tips to successful networking.  My main tip is it is WORK and requires action. 

May 01, 2008

The Impact of Interest on Outcomes at Work: How to Motivate Younger Workers to a Higher Level of Performance

Last fall I was hired to assess an executive administrator at a small business in a technical industry.  She was in her first job out of college, placed in the job by a staffing firm, and was considered very bright at the time she was hired.  Unfortunately, her output did not meet up to the owners’ expectations.  It was a puzzle to the owners because they knew she was capable of doing a good job, she had the skills to do a good job, even a great job.  What they were witnessing was a steady and accelerating decline in quality of work and more frequently missed deadlines. 

I used a total person assessment tool to understand her thinking style, her behaviors, and finally, her job interests.  The results I received back confirmed that she had the correct thinking style for the job, she had the perfect behaviors or personality, but she just had little interest in administrative work.  In fact, she scored a 2 out of a possible 10 in administrative interest.   

The fact was she could do the job well, she just chose not to because she was not interested in the work itself.  As a result, she was blowing her chances to succeed and do well in her first job—as well as her chances of getting a positive recommendation for future work.  It made me realize that gone are the days where younger people take jobs and work hard, invest themselves whether they liked what they were doing or not, just for the chance to move ahead.  Today these younger people want to be good at what they do, but they want to like the process and the work itself.  If they don’t like the work, they will perform to a lower standard or they will leave and go somewhere else. 

This realization caused me to coach my clients to ask some questions in the interview that will uncover interests so they can gauge if the position they were applying for will line up with the candidates interest areas.  I also coach my clients to make sure and help these younger workers develop a clearly laid out succession plan.  They need to know where they can be in 3 years at the company, what they need to learn and develop to get there, and that they have a supportive manager to help them along the way.  If they do not see a clear career path and an opportunity to grow, they will lose interest and go somewhere else. 

So you are probably wondering what we did to help the performance of the admin.  The truth is we did nothing to help her performance as an admin.  There is no training or coaching in the world that would boost her performance as an admin.  She simply was not interested in the work that admins do. Instead of wasting time and money for little return, we focused our time on uncovering what her true interests were and finding a position at the company that would be a better fit for her.  We discovered that she is very interested more technical and creative work so she was placed in a technical support role and is doing much better.  I would not consider her to be a top performer, but I would say she is B performer.  As the company grows, and as her maturity grows as a worker, my hope is that a new position will open up and she will have the maturity to take it on as an A performer. 

Amy Hedin is a professional speaker and executive coach at HumanPoint.  She works with senior leaders to help them improve their performance as leaders, and the performance of their employees.  For more information, contact amy@human-point.com or call toll free 877-494-7947.

April 27, 2008

Great Article on Interviewing Younger Generations

A Millennial Dilemma

Rethink the tired old list of interview questions to work well with this generation

4/23/08 by William Pisaro in ERE Daily

Millennials are entering the workforce as quickly as boomers are retiring, and they've brought with them a set of ideals and skills that differ greatly from those of previous generations. Needless to say, they're really shaking things up.

This generation, which most experts define as those born in the 1980s and 1990s, has grown up immersed in a technological world where their friends, families, and almost any piece of information are a click away. They are unabashedly self-confident; they believe they deserve respect; and they value work/life balance even more than financial rewards.

As workers, Millennials are more likely than their predecessors to push for flexible work schedules, extra benefits, and frequent promotions; and, they're far less likely to accept the concept of "paying your dues." At the end of the day, they're also less loyal to their employers; if Millennials don't get what they want, they're not about to stick around and wait patiently.

Millennials present a new dilemma for employers who want to attract and retain good people but don't want to compromise established company standards.

Companies that do opt to accommodate the "sense of entitlement" that is so common with Millennials may be putting themselves on a slippery slope that can lead to decreased productivity, lower profits, and resentment among staff who worked hard to earn the right to such benefits. On the flip side, those companies that stubbornly stick to tradition run the risk of repelling a generation of uniquely talented workers, many of whom aren't prepared to settle for a job that's less than perfect.

If you're like most of the HR professionals being confronted with this dilemma, your gut reaction is probably to scoff at this generation's audacity. But the reality is, we can't do without this workforce, nor would we want to.

The largest generation outside of baby boomers, there are approximately 75 million Millennials in the U.S. alone. Not only are they poised to take on the positions being vacated by retiring boomers, but they possess crucial technological skills and ideas that will drive businesses forward in the 21st century.

In addition, Millennials are known for their exceptional multitasking and team-building abilities, a direct result of the high-tech, interactive manner in which they've communicated nearly all their lives.

Finding a Middle Ground

To form successful and productive working relationships, employers and workers should meet on common ground where they understand and appreciate each other's approach to work. It sounds pretty straightforward, but recruiters and employers can't exactly enforce behavioral change in a generation that has been largely brought up believing the perfect job awaits them, and if this one doesn't fulfill there are plenty out there that will.

What HR professionals can do is make an effort to understand where this generation is coming from, and keep an open mind regarding future organizational policies, work/life balance, and benefits packages. They can even confront change head-on and make deliberate decisions that affect and benefit the entire company. More immediately though, companies can avoid the slippery slope altogether by simply hiring the right people.

By taking a more direct approach throughout the interview process, where the interviewer clearly communicates the company's culture and expectations, and asks questions designed to screen the Millennial candidate's work ethic and values, both parties will have the opportunity to gauge whether the fit is a good one.

A New Generation of Interview Questions

In service of this more direct interview approach, it's time rethink the tired old list of interview questions. By modifying traditional questions and incorporating new ones that speak directly to Millennials' strengths and weaknesses, recruiters and HR professionals will accomplish two things. They'll be more successful at weeding out applicants whose demands and expectations may not mesh with a company's culture, and they'll gain insight into the unique and valuable qualities Millennials can contribute to a company.

Rework traditional questions in a way that elicits honest and enlightening responses.

Millennials aren't as likely as their elder colleagues to have a clear vision of their professional selves in five or 10 years, but that doesn't mean they won't have an answer. Rather than asking them what job title they want to have in the future, it might be more telling to determine a candidate's perceptions of how one gets ahead in your industry, and how quickly.

Try delving deeper:

·          After you're hired, how will you advance from this position to the one just above it? More specifically, what qualities and actions do you believe are necessary to continue moving up in this organization?

·          Where do you see yourself in two/five/10 years? Explain how you'll get there.

·          What do you expect to get out of this job?

Incorporate more personal questions that expose a candidate's personality, work ethic, and personal motivations.

How a person approaches life is often indicative of how they'd approach work.

Rephrase typical interview questions to apply to the candidate's personal life:

·          How do you primarily communicate with friends? How often?

·          When you have a dilemma to solve, how do you approach it?

·          How do you spend your free time? (Do you prefer doing activities solo, with friends, or in groups?)

Ask questions that speak directly to Millennials' strengths and weaknesses.

This generation is used to giving and receiving feedback on everything from online purchases, to blog and message board posts, to quick exchanges via IM and text messaging. Constant interaction is their way of life, and they'll probably expect it to be their way of work.

Ask straightforward questions that could predict a candidate's work style:

·          When you do an outstanding job, how do you want to be rewarded?

·          Describe your ideal feedback scenario (i.e., What format? How often do you want to receive it? Who should provide it?)

·          Describe the ideal work/life balance.

·          Is the concept of "paying your dues" outdated?

Make a Millennial Match That Works for You

You've probably already hired Millennials. Over the next few years, you may even find that they make up most of your and your clients' staffs. While it's tempting to dismiss this generation's unconventional approach to work as an unfortunate side effect of technology or parental coddling, it's counterproductive. Sure, they're shaking things up a bit, but who says it can't be a good thing?

No one can deny the benefit of fresh ideas from a fresh perspective. It's just important to know that the success of those ideas depends first and foremost on making an employee/company match that makes sense.

When all is said and done, each side still must be open to a working relationship that may not exactly fit past experiences or future expectations, but that can be enjoyable and profitable nonetheless.

Bill Pisano has over 10 years of experience in the recruitment profession, having worked at Spherion Professional Recruiting for nine years prior to joining Stephen James Associates in March of 2006. With a footprint firmly placed in the Baltimore metropolitan area, Bill has built a solid reputation in providing quality service at various levels to clients large and small.

April 08, 2008

Crib Sheet Is Key to Straight 'A' Performance

Buying the answers may have been grounds for dismissal in school, but it's a sure way to win in business.
by Ann Amati, new HumanPoint associate
I have a friend who teaches sixth grade Language Arts. One of the disciplines she teaches is spelling. Every Monday she writes ten words on the blackboard, turns to her students and says, "These are the answers to Friday's test."
Isn't school great? You're told what's expected of you. It's either handed to you or you're told exactly where to find it. If you make a mistake, there is someone there to correct you immediately-someone who really wants to see you score 100% all the time. The best thing is, you always know where you stand and how you were judged. If you want to improve, all you have to do is apply the lessons that are handed to you.
Why can't business be that clear? It's hard to know where we stand with our customers and why-especially with our external customers. Why do they buy from us? Just how loyal are they? What factors are we being judged by? What changes could we make to strengthen the relationship? How can we review the answers to the test in advance?
How? Ask. Your customers will tell you, but unlike in school where it was the teacher's job to hand you information, now you have to ask for it. In college it was an infraction to buy the answers to the test in advance. In business, it's smart. Whether you buy with the opportunity cost of your internal resources or with dollars paid to an external resource, take the initiative and ask your customers. During the heyday of Total Quality Management, lots of businesses conducted some form of customer satisfaction surveying. As the bloom fell off the TQM rose, most companies' surveying programs ended. But customers grade you whether you studied for the test or not. 
This article was published in Top Talent Trends, a monthly newsletter produced by HumanPoint.  To subscribe click here

April 07, 2008

What Matters Most to Mature Workers

Comprehensive retirement package  (16%)
Comprehensive benefits package  (14%)
Work that enables me to learn & grow  (13%)
Work that is personally stimulating  (12%)
Workplace that is enjoyable  (11%) 
Flexible work schedule  (8%)
10% more in total compensation  (8%)
Work that is worthwhile to society  (7%)
Flexible workplace  (6%)
Two additional weeks of paid vacation  (5%)

Source: The New Employee/Employer Equation Survey

April 05, 2008

Work Life Balance

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Work-life balance is one of the greatest challenges facing executives today.  Mastery of work-life balance holds the keys to career advancement and greater enjoyment of life.  Time is a limited resource – there are only 24 hours in a day – and if we want to maximize our productivity and find the highest and best use of our limited time, we have to find ways of doing things more efficiently.  Eating healthy is an engine that drives success on both sides of the work-life balance equation.  Good nutrition will help you work smarter, relax easier, and recover from stress faster.  Eating healthy helps you keep a more even keel throughout the day, minimizing those highs and lows, enabling you to focus better.  And healthy eating plus moderate exercise will keep your weight down and your energy up – in concert these effects will improve your self-image and productivity, increasing the likelihood of advancement in the workplace.  There are also great psychological benefits to be gained from successfully preparing a meal and sharing it with the people who matter in your life.  It increases your sense of self-confidence and improves your interpersonal relationships, creating a “virtuous circle” of self-improvement.  OK, there are lots of great things to be gained by eating healthy.  But with the limited amount of time you have to work with, planning and executing healthy meals is difficult – unless you have some help.  And one of the keys to success in life is knowing when to ask for help.

My friend and colleague NJ Shelsby recognized the need for help in this area and created a simple yet powerful online meal planning system called HastyChef.com.  HastyChef was designed for people who want to cook healthy dinners, but don't have time to plan the meals, find the recipes, figure out the shopping list, or spend a lot time cooking.  A 5-day planner suggests healthy meals for each night.  Take the plan as offered or customize it to suit your preferences and schedule ... move dishes around, change serving sizes, review recipes, select from your saved favorites.  It takes only a few minutes to plan an entire week's worth of dinners.  And as you change your meal plan, your customized shopping list and recipes are automatically updated.  Once your meal plan for the week is set, just print out your shopping list and go.  Then each night use the automatically created instructions to cook dinner and put a healthy family meal on the table in about 30 minutes.  It really is a no brainer.  And because HastyChef makes it so easy, you can eat healthier and gain all the positive work-life benefits that come with it.

HastyChef has generously offered to provide my readers with a discounted subscription price.  Take advantage of their free two-week trial and if you choose to continue your subscription, the rate will be only $19.96 a month, which is a 20% discount off the regular $24.95 rate.  And the 20% discount is good for the entire life of your subscription.  To receive your discount, just enter the promo code “AmyH” when you sign up at www.HastyChef.com.  This offer is good until June 1st, 2008 so take advantage of it.  Once you start using HastyChef to plan and cook healthy dinners, I think you'll see it have a huge positive impact on your work-life balance and the success you achieve both in your career and at home.

April 01, 2008

What Matters Most to Young Workers

Comprehensive benefits package  (19%)
Workplace that is enjoyable  (13%)
Work that enables me to learn & grow  (12%)
Comprehensive retirement package  (10%)
Work that is personally stimulating  (10%)
Flexible work schedule  (10%)
10% more in total compensation  (8%)
Two additional weeks paid vacation  (7%)
Work that is worthwhile to society  (6%)
Flexible workplace  (5%)

Source: The New Employee/Employer Equation Survey

March 11, 2008

People are Born Into this World as Assets, not Liabilities

Today Howard Schultz posted Transformation Agenda Communication #10 and mentioned Bill Strickland in the following way:

People Are the Outcome of High Expectations. We were all inspired by a presentation from Bill Strickland, who I met more than a decade ago. Then, he was a social entrepreneur in Pittsburgh, who had the audacity to build a training center in one of Pittsburgh’s toughest neighborhoods -- just four blocks from where he grew up. Filled with light, art, jazz, jobs, and hope, his center was producing remarkable results. Boy, what a difference ten years makes! Bill’s ideas have taken flight in nearly a dozen cities around the world, where his centers and his thinking are sparking hope and futures for thousands of youth, most of whom society considers "at risk" or "disadvantaged" Bill joined us at our three-day meeting, and he countered, "People are born in this world as assets, not liabilities. In the end, we are the product of expectation. Expect a lot, and you create amazing people"

I was recently mailed a copy of his new book Make the Impossible Possible and I have not been able to put it down.  I recommend that everyone get a copy and tell everyone you know about it. 

Here is a top CEO of a top company callingon a speaker in a time of need to inspire his top managers at an event.  Bill did not get there by making excuses but by dedicating his life to helping people. 

February 12, 2008

Buried Treasure

                           

Who Knows What’s Hidden Right Under Your Nose?

In the 1970s, the Dallas Cowboys football team adopted the philosophy of drafting the best athletes they could find, some of whom did not have any college football experience. In the process, they found genuine talent that everyone else in the National Football League had overlooked. However, in the long run, the Cowboys decided it was more productive to focus on drafting football players who had already proven themselves on the football field.

We see that many businesses have designed their selection process in a similar manner: they almost always hire good people, but they make the mistake of placing some of these people in positions for which they are ill suited. Perhaps you’ve heard someone say, “He looked good in uniform, but he couldn’t play.” That’s a way of saying that an employee appeared to have all the attributes for success in a particular job, but didn’t perform up to expectations. Everyone has hired and promoted people who turned out to be disappointments. The number of times we have heard about top salespeople who became lousy sales managers is painful. That mistake occurs because neither the company nor the employee has a clear understanding of what it takes to become an outstanding sales manager. Oh, for sure, the company has a job description in a file somewhere that the sales manager could dust off and read if he or she wanted to, but traditional job descriptions are inadequate today.

A complete job description goes beyond listing the duties that go with a job title. A complete job description has to describe the attributes of the person who will perform the job in an extraordinary manner because he or she has the right brain power, the right behavioral traits, and the right occupational interests for the job.

A Personal Story from Bud Haney

We all subscribe to the idea that our people are among our greatest assets, recognizing that those organizations that stand head and shoulders above our peers and competitors in business tend to have superior people policies and, on the face of it, superior people. Accordingly, many of us spend a huge amount of time chasing the rainbow, at the end of which we know we’ll find a pot full of those perfect people that our industry leaders seem to have, instead of focusing upon identifying the best in those who already make up our teams. And therein lies the secret of those organizations with people-based competitive advantage – it’s not just that they identify and recruit great people (and, of course, that does help), but that they work with those people that they have to make them great, to find just what attributes they uniquely possess that can be developed and employed effectively within the organization, to build the sort of serious competitive advantage that only good people can confer.

So what? Well, the simple point is that sometimes looking at the familiar in an entirely different way can produce results that we scarcely expect. Your people are like that – you assume that because you’ve worked with them for a while, you know what they are, and what they’re capable of. That’s truly only up to a point. To uncover genuine hidden potential requires a shift in the way you evaluate your people.

Take the following actions to get started.

  • Uncover Your Team’s Career Goals, Aspirations, Likes/Dislikes and Strengths/Weaknesses 

You can’t begin this process without knowing a lot about each and every member of your team. Start by talking with them regularly. Find out what they like to do. Research published in a 1999 Harvard Business Review demonstrated that people excel at jobs that interest them deeply more than at jobs that their education, skills or experience might suggest fit them perfectly. Find out what your people enjoy doing, what career plans each has, and where they aspire to go in your business or in life in general. Don’t confine yourself to informal chats. Use more formal means like the Profiles Checkpoint 360°™ and psychometric assessments like the ProfileXT™ to determine the particular strengths of your key assets. The authors of the HBR research cited above put it perfectly: “…the best way to keep your stars is to know them better than they know themselves – and then use that information to customize the career of their dreams.”

  • Make Better Use of Strengths 

When you have a good appreciation of the particular strengths of each member of your team, start to look for new ways in which to apply them. Brainstorm on how you can apply these strengths in new or imaginative ways to enhance the roles of each of your people and to address problems that you haven’t previously been able to address. In one successful example we observed recently in the IT industry, a talented project manager was put into the role of sales manager – not because she knew an awful lot about sales or had a gleaming sales record – quite the contrary – but because she was particularly good at organizing campaigns, marshalling resources, motivating her team to action, and seeing initiatives through to the end. Take off the blinders when it comes to applying strengths in new ways.

  • Turn Weaknesses into Strengths 

In the movie Enemy of the State, Gene Hackman tells Will Smith, “…in guerrilla warfare you gotta turn your strengths into weaknesses…if they’re big and you’re small, then you’re fast and they’re slow…you’ve got to work with what you’ve got.” You’ve got to do the same with your people. Look at what you currently perceive as shortcomings, and then look at situations where those attributes could be positive. After all, most weaknesses are just overused strengths.

For example, a customer service representative who’s just too assertive to “put up and shut up” with angry customers may actually make a very successful salesperson, capable of overcoming objections not easily overcome by others. Consider the marketing executive who comes up with killer campaigns but just can’t seem to follow them through to the end. Focus that person solely on developing the creative campaigns, and assign project management and completion to someone better suited. Look at every shortcoming you currently perceive in your team members, determine where a weakness might become a strength, and figure out how you can capitalize upon it. You’ll be amazed at the results.

  • Feedback, Feedback, Feedback 

In a recent study, 25 percent of employees said lack of feedback from management about their performance was one of the main reasons for changing jobs. Make it a formal objective to provide positive feedback on a job well done to every one of your people at least weekly. This requires you and your management team to actively seek opportunities to provide feedback. Not only does this increase the interest level in the job being done (we all like to be recognized), but it helps to reinforce positive behavior and performance at the expense of more negative alternatives. Also, experience shows that when you provide feedback to the team, they’ll provide feedback to you.

If you’ve been searching for a competitive advantage, then the answer may be just under your nose. Before you start exploring more exotic sources, look at the people who are driving your company right now. You’ll find untold treasure buried behind those familiar faces you see every day.

*From the book 40 STRATEGIES FOR WINNING IN BUSINESS by Bud Haney and Jim Sirbasku. © S&H Publishing Co., 5205 Lake Shore Drive, Waco, Texas 76710-1732. All rights reserved. Contact S&H Publishing Co., (254) 751-1644, for reprint permission.


Taken from the January Edition of Top Talent Trends Newsletter.  To receive our monthly newsletter with helpful info on improving your people's performance, click here!

January 10, 2008

Employee Engagement leads to Bottom Line Results-- Part 1

Employee engagement drives business results.  When employees are engaged, they stick around.  When they are not engaged, they leave or will leave if an opportunity presents itself. 

The cost of voluntary employee turnover is very high when you consider the following impacts:

1.  Employee morale is affected.

2.  When top people leave and join competitors there is a great chance they will attract their peers to join them in the new endeavor. One person walking out can lead to several over time.

3.  All of the energy put towards hiring new people could be directed at more profitable initiatives. 

4.  If reasons are unknown for departure it could be several months or years meaning many lost people. 

5.  The changing workforce is shrinking the number of available people for jobs.  If we have to constantly replace people year after year and there are less people available we will be forced to hire lower performers just to fill open positions. 

Now that we have reviewed the costs--let's review the benefits of having engaged employees:

1.  Employee engagement drives business results. 

2.  Client feedback says engaged employees are better to have working for them. 

3.  An engaged employee will go the extra mile.   

4.  Engaged employees are happier and create a motivated culture.

5.  Engaged employees stick around.

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