66 STRATEGIES FOR BECOMING A POWERFUL HUMAN RESOURCE EXECUTIVE
“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
committed citizens can change the world.
Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”
-Margaret Mead
Becoming a strategic partner to a company is an exciting challenge for any human resource executive. The suggestions set forth below come from CEO's, employment law attorneys, consultants, Chief Relationship Officer Forum members (www.croforum.com) and other human resource professionals. May they prove to be of great value in setting your career on fire!
Are You Up For The Challenge?
1.
Are you crystal clear about what you want from your career? Do you really want to become a strategic partner? If so, why? How good do you want to be? Top 25%, 10%, 1%? How would you rate your level of commitment? What is the ultimate benefit you are after? More money? More power? More responsibility? Career growth? Greater acknowledgement? It is important to understand the "why", so you can refer back to it during challenging times.
2.
Define what you like most about HR. Will you be able to do more or less of it in a strategic role? For example, will you have to abandon any of your "duties" in the role of "Employee Champion" to become a strategic partner?
3.
Focus on your highest and best use. What can you do better than anyone else? What are you gifted at? Eliminate wasteful activities, outsource administrative ones, and focus like a laser beam on what you do best. Write down the five things you can do best and then circle the two things you love doing best. This is your highest and best use
4.
Fast Company magazine claims today's mantra for success is "change, learning and leadership." To what extent are you conversant and able to add value to your company in these three critical areas?
5.
How does your academic and professional background affect your
human resource focus? Do you have a
degree in HR management? Do you have a
financial background, or one in sales?
Do you need to broaden your academic background?
6.
It is the expectation in corporate America that strategic
partners have an MBA. Enroll in part
time MBA classes and watch the perception of your value to the organization
grow dramatically.
7.
Don’t over commit.
This is another way to lose credibility. Delivery is key to strategic success. Focus on three critical deliverables at a time. Do not dwell on trivial concerns.
8.
Maintain your mental and physical balance. If you are over-worked and lack proper
sleep, exercise or diet, you will make you a poor candidate for the executive
boardroom.
9.
Expect to grow. Like
crazy. Sometimes in ways least expected.
Your professional growth is limited only by your imagination. Dialogue with the President or CEO about
your career expectations. Get their
support for your career growth in advance.
Use “up front” contracts. Get
your understandings in writing.
10.
Be prepared to address other people’s judgment about the human
resource function. For example, some people
may feel that “human resources is an administrative function” or “you don’t
know about business.” Know what
emotional filters to expect and how you will respond to them.
11.
Be prepared to accept the pressures, risks and rewards that
come with being a strategic partner.
Becoming a strategic partner involves many trade offs. With added responsibility will come added
stress, as well as a bigger paycheck.
It may also mean less personal/family time, recreation time, lunch
hours, extended coffee breaks, etc.
12.
The mantra for today’s leader is “the less you control, the
more you can do.” If you want to
take on new responsibilities you must learn to delegate. Make sure you delegate to people with the
skills and character necessary to be trustworthy so you can free up your time
to focus on critical functions.
13.
Be prepared to make mistakes…and take responsibility for
them. The more risks you take and the
faster you learn what doesn’t work, the faster you will advance in your career.
14.
Think “out of the box”. The “processional” or “lateral” effect of events and
decision-making must be explored. In
other words, be creative, experiment, test and find out.
15.
Develop a strategic plan.
Identify your long-term vision, the mission that will take you there and
the goals that you must meet to stay on course. Put it in writing and update it every 90 days.
16.
Read at least one business book every month? A great short
book to read is A New Vision For Human Resources by Jac Fitz-enz &
Jack J. Phillips. Dave Ullrich’s books,
including HR Champions, are also excellent. Also, listen to books on tape.
At least one per month. Many
excellent books and tapes are available for free at your public library.
Dealing With Other Strategic
Executives
17.
Get their attention!
You have to be your own best public relations consultant. One way to get someone to notice you is to
send him or her an article they may find of interest. Send it with a simple “FYI” and let them be impressed with your
business acumen.
18.
Always be prepared when speaking with other strategic
partners. You only have to be
unprepared once to lose your credibility.
19.
Take other executives to lunch at a restaurant you know
they’ll enjoy. Then, when you get to
speak with them, focus on them. Don’t
tell them everything that you can do, dig to find out their needs and
pain.
20.
Understand something from the world of sales. Don’t focus on telling people what you can
do. Focus on getting them to ask, “Can
you help with ______?” Better it is
“their idea” than yours.
21.
Once you have their interest, get to the point. Executives do not like longwinded
explanations – period. Find out in
advance what their commitments will be if you are able to meet certain
value-added propositions. Then write up
in a one page follow-up memo to memorialize the understanding.
22.
When presenting information, stick to one page “hot sheets.” Too much information results in overload and
shut-down. Keep it simple and let them
know you have additional information readily available.
23.
Do not allow yourself to be bullied, manipulated or sabotaged
by other executives. Speak in “I” terms
and make sure the other person does too.
If they cross over into your emotional space or take credit for your
efforts, let them know you feel such conduct is unacceptable and define
possible consequences. Then do what you say you were going to do. Get help when dealing with villains.
24.
Do not fear losing your job.
If you find yourself fighting against a management philosophy that
simply “doesn’t get it” then it is time for you to move on. Don’t fight it. There’s always another job.
You deserve the opportunity to be a strategic partner.
25.
Learn about the business you are in. Read industry related magazines and journals. Attend industry conferences. Learn the facts and trends. Speak the language.
26.
Find out the vision of those at the top. Don’t assume their objectives or values, ask
them. Dig deeper when the opportunity
arises. Then help communicate it to the
rest of the workforce.
27.
Get involved in the strategic planning process. Create a strategic plan for your
department. Don’t wait for someone else
to ask you to do it. Just do it.
28.
Ask for feedback on your job performance from other
executives, as well as your subordinates and peers. Be open to their insights and suggestions. You want to create an environment of
“radical honesty” when it comes to in assessing your progress. Ask what is going well, what can go better and what else would they like to share. Then say "thanks" and do something positive with the feedback. Immediately.
29.
Be prepared to dress the part of a successful
executive. You lead with all your
actions and can’t afford to look more
casual than your peers.
Money, Money, Money
30.
You must have a complete understanding of finances. If you are not well versed in accounting, or
cannot analyze a financial statement, consider taking an accounting class at
your local community college. Go to www.amazon.com and buy The Great Game of
Business by Jack Stack and The Accounting Game by Darrell Mullis and
Judith Orloff.
31.
Learn how to measure and benchmark. If you are not sure how to do this, read Jac Fitz-Enz’s book, The
ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance. As the author states, today’s strategic HR
executive has to show how he or she contributes to the organization’s service,
quality and productivity (SQP).
32.
Keep a scorecard to help document your success. Benchmark the costs of turnover, training,
recruitment, benefits, compensation and other aspects of the employee
relationship. Focus on leading factors
more than past results. Strategic
partners know how to speak in “bottom-line” terms.
33.
Reduce the incidence of unwanted turnover in your
organization. We estimate the cost of
turnover for a $50,000 a year employee to be in excess of $50,000! How many unnecessary turnovers can you help
prevent? See our Sample Turnover Cost Calculator.
34.
Show how outsourcing administrative functions will
allow you to focus on your highest and best use while saving the company time
and money in the process. Potential
vendors should be more than pleased to help you with this calculation.
Hire Only The Best
35.
Your most important job will always be to help the company hire
great people. This means pre-hire
job needs analysis, meaningful interviews, extensive background checks, credit,
criminal and driving investigations where appropriate, skills assessment,
character assessment and drug testing.
Develop a sound hiring process and follow it every time. We recommend www.brainbench.com and www.zeroriskhr.com to help judge
applicant skills and character. We
recommend www.infolinkscreening.com
to perform your credit, criminal and other background checks.
Take full advantage of online recruiting. Online recruiting can cut costs and expand
your hiring sources. If you don’t
already have an online recruiting program on your web site, take a look at www.careerscout.com.
37.
Involve co-employees in the hiring process. It is the first
step in building team chemistry.
Encourage and reward qualified candidate referrals. Have future co-employees involved in the
interviewing process. Use the Co-Employee Applicant Appraisal form.
38.
Form a strong relationship with a few temporary employment
firms. Make sure they know your
personnel needs. Make sure you know how
they hire, train, compensate and manage their employees. If you face a downsizing, they can help by
finding work for displaced employees.
39.
Develop a fun and powerful employee orientation process. Cap it off by having the employee complete
the 60-Day New Employee Survey where
they give insight into the hiring and orientation process, as well as how they
are adjusting to their new role with the company. Tap into their fresh insights while you can.
Increasing Productivity
40.
Learn about how technology can help the h.r. function. Become a master of human resource
information systems (HRIS) such as those sold by ABRA, Ceridian and PeopleSoft.
Once you’ve mastered that, then learn about workflow technology.
41.
Get to know the management philosophies of Dr. W. Edwards
Deming. He is credited with developing
the concept of Total Quality Management (TQM).
Read a Deming book and learn his 14 Principles. Take a visit to www.deming.org.
42.
Study the competition.
What human resource initiatives are other companies doing that are producing
favorable results? How can you model
or test these initiatives at your company? Remember, just because they did it first doesn’t mean you can’t
do it too! Don’t get caught with a “not
invented here” mentality.
43.
Get familiar with character assessment and development
tools by taking a half dozen or more of them yourself. Most companies (ZeroRisk HR, ClearDirection,
Predictive Index, McQuaid, DISC, etc.) will allow you to take at least one free
examination if they view you as a potential client. You can be in charge of increasing your company’s collective E.Q.
44.
Survey the workforce.
Constantly. Use open-ended
questions and don’t make responses optional or anonymous. Post the results. Encourage employees to
speak up without fear. Consider using our
Employee Survey. Test its effectiveness on a few of
your employees to assure yourself of its many benefits.
45.
Develop an employee suggestion program that works. Start with the I-Power program available for
only $99 at www.I-Power.com. It’s based on a Peter Drucker
suggestion. Tell ‘em we sent you.
46.
Make sure your job descriptions are up-to-date and accurately
reflect the “value added aspects of the job.”
Involve employees in identifying essential job performance functions.
47.
Eliminate traditional performance appraisal thinking. It seldom improves performance. It is your job to help eliminate “more
than/less than” thinking in the workplace and focus on what is going right
and what can get even better. Save poor
performance discipline for warning notices and counseling. Take a look at the Performance Improvement Dialogue Worksheet.
48.
Help employees go through the career mapping process. Help them discover where they want to go and
define the skills and character traits they will need to get there. If you can’t expand job opportunities for
valuable employees you will lose them.
49.
Train the workforce constantly. Education is the greatest form of leverage. Very simply, companies that train more earn
more. Consider use of our Training Modules. You can further develop your training abilities by becoming a
member of ASTD (www.astd.org).
Legal Compliance
50.
Educate business partners on ever-changing personnel law
obligations. Make sure your handbook
and personnel policies are up to date. Help prevent claims by training managers
and the rank and file. Either do it
yourself, or work with your local employment law firm.
51.
Think in terms of Management by Agreement. Bring employees in on decision-making and
memorialize the mutual commitments. In writing.
52.
Work with an experienced employment law attorney to audit your
personnel practices. Use them in
advance to help make critical personnel decisions. What a company should be after is wise decision making – not
cheap decision making.
53.
Make sure your company purchases a comprehensive Employment
Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) policy.
Work with a knowledgeable broker to help advise them on different
coverage options and claims management history. See the EPLI Coverage Worksheet.
54.
Distribute the Compliance Survey
at least every six months. Make sure
employees know their rights and obligations and that no violations exist.
55.
Spend $2,995 and get yourself access to the entire HR
That Works program for a full year (www.hrthatworks.com). These materials were designed to help
increase productivity and protect the bottom line – guaranteed!
Belonging and Mentoring
56.
Meet with other human resource executives who strive to be
strategic partners. Join a mastermind
group such as the CRO Forum (www.croforum.com)
or simply take each other to lunch. You
will need the support of professionals outside your company if you are to
become a strategic partner. Support
each other’s challenges and help each other commit to getting things done.
57.
Step up the depth of your relationship with professionals from
the insurance, legal and accounting professions. Buy ‘em a lunch and ask a whole bunch of questions. Then immediately do something with
what you have learned.
58.
If you haven’t already done so, obtain the SPHR Certification
from the Society for Human Resource Management (www.shrm.org)
or IPMA Certification from the International Personnel Management Association (www.ipma.org).
You can also get specialized certification related to compensation and
benefits from World At Work (www.worldatwork.org ).
59.
Be prepared to give back.
Take an inexperienced HR professional under your wing. Help them discover their highest and best
use.
60.
Volunteer to a non-profit organization that can use an hour or
two of HR advice during the week. Teach
a class at your local community college. What goes around comes around!
61.
Get out and speak to non-h.r. executives about the benefits of HR as a strategic partner. Be a spokesperson for the cause. Speak at Kiwanis, Chamber and other business events. Help people discover the power of building powerful employment relationships
Get Paid What You Are Worth
62.
Truly strategic HR partners are in high demand. Find out what similarly situated
professionals are getting paid. Go to
local salary surveys, check with your peers, and look at online resources such
as www.salary.com. Check in with HR recruiters such as www.donnadavisassociates.com.
63.
Negotiate for bonuses based on your ability to directly impact
the bottom line. For example, if you
are able to reduce unwanted turnover by 50%, what bonus should you be entitled
to? How can you tie your compensation
to your success as a strategic partner?
64.
Shop around your resume. This does not mean you are not committed to your employer. It means you are investigating your true
potential and giving yourself career options.
This will allow you to negotiate from in a position of strength.
Publicize And Celebrate Your Success
65.
Don’t just let your success stories sit there – publicize
them! Use intra-company
newsletters. Pin a note on the bulletin
board. Send an article to an industry
or HR publication. Send out an intra-company
news release. Strategic partners know
the value of tooting their own horn. So
should you.
66.
Celebrate every chance you get. Reward yourself
and others when things go well – and for no reason at all!
CONCLUSION
Many consider becoming a strategic partner as the
greatest challenge for today’s human resource executive. It is a challenge that beings within. You will have to shift your focus from
administrative to “value-added.” You
will have to become a master of finances, benchmarking, planning and
empowerment. Once you know who you are
and what you want to do, you have prepared for success.
Becoming a strategic partner will be a rewarding
experience. You can do it!
Who I Will Become:
The three things I want to
be well known for in my career are:
1)
2)
3)
Now Take Action!
Remember, the idea is to deliver, not over-commit. Stick to the "Rule of Three" and your success is guaranteed
The CRO Forum was developed to give the senior
professional in human resources an empowering and confidential forum for
growing their careers. A maximum of
fifteen members meet each month for two hours to share insights, strategies,
war stories, anxiety, triumph and tragedies.
You can learn more about the many benefits of CRO Forum membership by
going to www.croforum.com.