e know it matters. Some go to war for it. Professional sports teams draft for
it. Actors audition to show they have it. Others consider it the ultimate solution
and try to manage it. Agents contract for it. Some are innately endowed with it,
while others strive diligently to develop it. We all want it.
"It" is talent, which is evolving into a science for some
HR professionals and a passion for many line managers. A multitude of programs and
investments have been made to attract, retain and upgrade talent.
Yet, sometimes after stipulating that talent matters, it is
easy to get lost in the myriad of promises, programs and processes and lose sight
of the basics. At the risk of grossly oversimplifying, let me suggest that there
is actually a deceptively simple formula for talent that can help HR professionals
and general managers turn their talent aspirations into actions: Talent equals competence
times com- ¬mitment times contribution.
Competence means that individuals have the knowledge, skills
and values required for today’s and tomorrow’s jobs. One company clarified the usual
definition of competence and framed it as "right skills, right place, right job."
Competence clearly matters because incompetence leads to poor
decision-making. But without commitment, competence doesn’t count for much. Highly
competent employees who are not committed are smart, but don’t work very hard.
Committed or engaged employees work hard, put in their time
and do what they are asked to do. In the past decade, commitment and competence
have been the bailiwicks for talent.
But my colleagues and I have found that next-generation leaders
for an organization may be competent (able to do the work) and committed (willing
to do the work), but unless they are making a real contribution through the work
(finding meaning and purpose in their work), then their interest in what they are
doing diminishes and their willingness to harness their talent in the organization
wanes. Contribution occurs when employees feel that their personal needs are being
met through their participation in their organization.
Organizations are the universal setting in today’s environment
where individuals find abundance in their lives through their work. They want this
investment of their time to be meaningful. Simply stated, competence deals with
the head (being able), commitment with the hands and feet (being there), and contribution
with the heart (simply being).
In this talent equation, these three terms are multiplicative,
not additive. If any one is missing, the other two will not replace it. A low score
in competence will not ensure talent even when the employee is engaged and contributing.
Talented employees must have skills, wills and purposes; they
must be capable, committed and contributing. HR leaders can engage their general
managers to identify and improve each of these three dimensions to respond to the
talent clarion call.
Competence
Competent employees have the ability to do today’s and tomorrow’s
tasks. Creating competence comes by following four steps:
1. Articulating a theory or setting a standard.
Competence begins by identifying what’s required to deliver
future work. Rather than focus on what has worked in the past by comparing low-
and high-performing employees, more recent competence standards come from turning
future customer expectations into present employee requirements. At any level in
a company, an HR professional can facilitate a discussion sparked by these questions:
What are the current social and technical competencies we
have within our company?
}What are the environmental changes facing our business and
what are our strategic responses?
}Given our future environment and strategic choices, what
technical and social competencies must employees demonstrate?
By facilitating a discussion about these questions, HR professionals
help general managers create a theory or point of view on competencies that leads
to a set of employee standards. When general managers build competence models based
on future customer expectations, they direct employee attention to what they should
know and do. The simplest test of the competence standard is to ask target or key
customers: "If our employees lived up to these standards, would they inspire confidence
in our firm?" When customers answer yes, the competence model is appropriate; if
they answer no, it needs more work.
2. Assessing individuals and organizations. With standards
in place, employees may be assessed on the extent to which they meet or do not meet
standards. In recent years, most talent assessments have evaluated both results
and behaviors. Talented employees deliver results in the right way. The right way
is defined by the competence standards I described in Step 1. These behaviors may
be assessed by the employee and others through a 360-degree evaluation by subordinates,
peers and supervisors. But to provide a holistic view of employees who have contact
outside the company, they can also be evaluated by such stakeholders as suppliers,
customers, investors and community leaders. This shifts the 360 to a 720 (360 times
2 equals 720). This assessment lets the individual know what to do to improve, and
it also provides valuable input to the organization about how to design and deliver
HR practices to upgrade talent.
3. Investing in talent improvement. Individual and organizational
gaps may be filled by investing in talent. In work my colleagues and I have done,
we have found six investments that may be made to upgrade talent:
Buying: recruiting, sourcing and securing new talent into
the organization.
Building: helping people grow through training, job assignments
or life experiences.
Borrowing: bringing knowledge into the organization through
advisors or partners.
Bounding: promoting the right people into key jobs.
Bouncing: removing poor performers from their jobs and/or
the organization.
Binding: retaining top talent.
When HR professionals create choices in these six areas, they
help individuals and organizations invest in future talent.
4. Following up and tracking competence. Hoping for talent
won’t make it happen. Ultimately, talent measures should be derived to track how
well individuals are developing their skills and how well the organization develops
its talent bench. Individual employees can be tracked on their understanding of
their next career step and their capacity to do it. Organizations can track the
extent to which backups are in place for key positions. Or, leaders who are measured
on how much money they contribute to their company can also be assessed on the extent
to which they are talent producers rather than talent users. Here is what I mean:
If these leaders run through an organization’s talented employees, driving them
away or burning them out, there should be some accountability for such outcomes.
As leaders produce money for a company, so should they be held responsible for replenishing
the talent pool, and must be expected to answer to the organization if they are
only tapping it out.
These four steps will help HR professionals and general managers
ensure competent employees to do today’s and tomorrow’s work. In the past 20 years,
almost all companies have done at least minimal work in these four areas.
Commitment
Competence alone is not enough. Commitment means that employees
are willing to give their discretionary energy to the firm’s success. This discretionary
energy is generally conceived as an employee value proposition that makes a very
simple statement: Employees who give value to their organization should get value
back from the organization. The ability to give value comes when employees are seen
as able to deliver results in the right way.
Those employees who give value should get value back. In many
studies of employee engagement, researchers have identified what employees get back
from their work with the firm. Almost all consulting firms have engagement indexes
that can be used as a pulse check to track employee engagement. Generally, these
instruments suggest that employees are more committed when their organization offers
them:
Vision: a sense of direction or purpose.
Opportunity: an ability to grow, develop and learn.
Incentives: a fair wage or salary for work done.
Impact: an ability to see the outcome or effect of work done.
Community: peers, bosses and leaders who build a sense of
community.
Communication: knowing what is going on and why.
Entrepreneurship or flexibility: giving employees choice about
terms and conditions of work.
When these seven dimensions exist in an organization, employees
have a VOI2C2E, as shown in the acronym above. They demonstrate their engagement
by being at work on time, working hard and doing what is expected of them. Commitment
(not just satisfaction) may be measured through surveys or productivity indexes.
Contribution
One of my colleagues graduated from a top business school
(a validation of competence), got her ideal job and was willing to work very hard
(which demonstrates commitment). But after about a year, she left. She still savored
the job and was willing to work hard, but she felt that the job was not helping
her meet her needs.
In recent years, many people have been finding that traditional
organizations, such as families, neighborhoods, hobby groups and churches, which
had once met people’s needs, have been faltering. As employees work longer hours
and with technology removing the boundaries between work and life, companies need
to learn how to help employees meet their needs. When people have their needs met
through their organizations, they feel that they are contributing and finding abundance—the
personal fulfillment and meaning that we seek in life.
My wife, Wendy, and I have scoured theory and research from
positive psychology and developmental psychology—individual motivation, personal
growth and organizational theory—to figure out what organizations can do to help
employees find abundance, which occurs when individuals feel they are contributing.
We have identified seven questions that leaders may help employees answer so that
employees experience abundance in their work:
Who am I? How does the employee identity meld with the company
reputation?
Where am I going and why? How can the organization help the
employee reach his or her goals?
With whom do I travel? How does the organization build a community
of support so that an employee feels connected?
How well do I practice spiritual disciplines? How well does
the organization practice such spiritual disciplines as humility, service, forgiveness
and gratitude?
What challenges do I enjoy? How does the organization help
an employee find challenges that are easy, enjoyable and energizing?
How well can I access resources? How does the organization
help the employee manage health, physical space and financial requirements?
What are my sources of delight? How does the organization
help the employee have fun? Fun work environments mean that employees have the ability
to laugh at difficult situations, thereby becoming resilient and positive.
When managers help employees find answers to these questions
through their participation in the organization, these employees will find abundance
and feel that they are contributing.
Talent is not an "it"—some abstract, unknown and impersonal
set of ideal principles. Nor is talent a random set of programs and policies that
evolve according to the whims of talent-fashion trends. Using the simple talent
formula—competence times commitment times contribution equals talent—leaders and
HR professionals may join in helping talent become a reality. It is worth doing.
Workforce Management, September 10, 2007, p. 32-33
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