Reporting to the Depot
Home Depot prizes the skills and leadership abilities that former military personnel bring to the company, and that’s why it hired 13,000 of them in 2004. Now it has launched Operation Career Front, an even more extensive campaign to recruit veterans into its ranks. "It’s good for the individual, it’s good for the company and it’s good for the country because it rewards the brave men and women who serve in the military," says Donovan.
By Martin Booe
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the main corridor in Home Depot’s 22-story suburban Atlanta headquarters, 1,800
"Blue Star" banners are mounted flat against a wall, each honoring a company
employee currently deployed in Iraq.
The flags, a revival of a World War I tradition
commemorating those gone to war, are significant on more than one level.
Patriotism and support for troops long have been a focal point of Home Depot’s
image and branding. And while that certainly makes for good public relations, it
is also clearly a bedrock conviction of the company’s corporate culture.
Home Depot hired 10,000 veterans in 2003 and more than
13,000 in 2004. It expects to increase those numbers in the coming year with
Operation Career Front.
Inaugurated in November, this public-private partnership
with the departments of Defense, Labor and Veterans Affairs extends employment
opportunities to military veterans and their spouses.
Given the company’s commitment, it’s no wonder that Home
Depot was ranked No. 1 among the top military-friendly employers last year by
G.I. Jobs magazine, and was also honored with a Secretary of Defense
Employment Support Freedom Award. In 2002, it was the recipient of a Corporate
Patriotism Award from the American Veterans Association.
But the company’s gung-ho attitude toward the military is
a lot more than a feel-good proposition. Hiring vets is a three-tiered blueprint
for success, says Dennis Donovan, Home Depot’s executive vice president of human
resources, who, along with CEO Robert Nardelli, credits the influx of military
talent with upgrading the company’s performance.
"It’s good for the individual, it’s good for the company
and it’s good for the country because it rewards the brave men and women who
serve in the military," Donovan says.
He says that the company isn’t yet able to quantify its
military associates’ performance in terms of boosted sales, but anecdotal
evidence suggests "they’re performing very, very effectively"--and in a way he
thinks will prove measurable for the company’s bottom line.
Home Depot may be leading the charge to hire former
military, but it’s not the only company to set its cap for the best of the
estimated 200,000 to 250,000 vets who transition into the private sector
annually, making them the nation’s second-largest renewable labor force, next to
graduating college students. (There are currently an estimated 17 million vets
in the workforce.)
Like many Fortune 500 companies that have active
programs to recruit veterans, Home Depot says it’s about employee quality, not
quantity. Military experience has become a highly valued commodity in corporate
America. The Big Three automakers currently employ 47,000 vets, according to the
President’s National Hire Veterans Committee, which was created by the Jobs for
Veterans Act of 2002 and counts Nardelli among its board members.
But banish any notions of Sgt. Carter and Gomer Pyle.
Today’s armed services are high-tech, and its members are endowed with expertise
in a range of fields including human resources, finance, accounting and
information technology--skills that are prized in the private sector.
"Corporate America has definitely started to take notice
of the military," says Chris Hale, general manager of G.I. Jobs magazine.
"They bring a lot of very translatable job skills to the table. Their long-term
value is that they come armed with leadership skills, tons of real-life
management experience and reliability."
They also bring challenges to the workforce that companies
must address, says Damian Birkel, a career counselor for Williams, Robert, Young
Inc. in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, who has worked with many military people
and is also founder of Professionals in Transition Support Group Inc.
"There still is very
black-and-white thinking in the military, and quite frankly, that’s very
important. But civilian life is very gray."
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"Military re-entry is a challenge because the
dynamics of a civilian company are very different than the military," Birkel
says. "And the longer a person has been in the military, the greater the
re-entry challenge.
"There still is very black-and-white thinking in the
military, and quite frankly, that’s very important. But civilian life is very
gray."
Still, no one disagrees that the armed services saturate
their members in experience. Hale points out that a 23-year-old Army sergeant
manages 50 people; a 28-year-old catapult officer on an aircraft carrier manages
250 troops; and even the lower echelons are used to putting in 18-hour days
under grueling conditions for low pay. It’s the sort of seasoning few, if any,
recent college grads bring to the table.
The value is particularly acute at the senior levels, says
Ira Krinsky of Korn/Ferry International Los Angeles, which has placed hundreds
of vets in corporate positions during the past two years. Many career military
people, he says, retire relatively young, frequently in their late 40s or early
50s, a stage in life when they bring energy, experience and enthusiasm to their
second careers.
Krinsky, himself a former U.S. Army specialist who served
with the 173rd Airforce Brigade in Vietnam, notes that there is a significant
shift in the public’s perception of military culture that is helping to fuel
corporate enthusiasm. For one thing, 9/11 did much to dispel unflattering
military images held over from other eras.
"Now people see and hear stories of military
accomplishments in the media all the time," Krinsky says. "The assumption used
to be that they would bark orders and just tell people what to do. But look
who’s in the military today: young people who grew up questioning everything,
who weren’t authority-oriented. So it takes genuine leadership to get them all
moving in the same direction.
"That’s always been the case, but it’s especially true
now."
Terry O’Mahoney, chairman of the President’s National Hire
Veterans Committee, says that hiring vets "isn’t good will, it’s good business.
It’s a bargain. The government spends $17 billion a year training forces, and
the soft skills they learn--performance under pressure, respect for an
organization, integrity and triumph over adversity--all translate exactly to
what we’re trying to do in business."
Leadership is a prime attraction, but so are
problem-solving capabilities. "Anyone who ascends to any rank in the military
has to be able to conceptualize and solve problems globally," says Robert
Sternberg, who heads Yale’s Center for the Psychology of Abilities, Competencies
and Expertise.
Going into action
None of this is news to Nardelli and Donovan, who had
recognized the advantages of hiring associates with military experience early on
when they worked together at General Electric, where Donovan was vice president
of human resources for a division from 1986-98. He also was a senior vice
president at Raytheon Co. before joining Home Depot.
"Bob Nardelli and I have hired military through a big part
of our careers, so we know this model works," Donovan says. "It’s in our value
proposition to take care of people who are defending our country, so we take
this very seriously. We look at it not as a cost but an investment. We don’t
look at it as an obligation but as an opportunity."
If the country has undergone a "jobless recovery," no one
bothered to mention it to Home Depot. It is the world’s largest home improvement
retailer and the second-largest retailer in the United States after Wal-Mart,
and it is now expanding into Mexico and China. The 25-year-old company has
undergone volcanic growth, with its store count exploding by more than 400
percent in the past 10 years, from 340 stores to 1,835 today, including its Expo
Design Centers.
The company’s total workforce has expanded by more than
100,000 new positions since early 2001, when Nardelli became CEO, bringing
Donovan aboard a few months later. A new store opens on the average of every 48
hours.
Now with more than 325,000 associates, the company expects
to hire at the rate of more than 100,000 people per year to cover both turnover
and newly created jobs, the latter of which account for 20 percent to 30 percent
of hires, Donovan says. (He notes that the company invests 23 million hours a
year companywide in training.)
"Anyone who ascends to any rank
in the military has to be able
to conceptualize and solve
problems globally."
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This would suggest a turnover rate of about 15
percent to 25 percent, a figure that Daniel Mitchell, a professor of management
and public policy at UCLA’s Anderson Graduate School of Business, says is within
retail industry norms.
Profits, too, are growing. After previously reporting
flagging earnings because of competition from Wal-Mart and Lowe’s, Home Depot
reported third-quarter fiscal 2004 net earnings of $1.3 billion, up 20 percent,
ending the quarter with $39.6 billion in total assets, including $3.4 billion in
cash and shareholders’ equity of $23.7 billion.
At a time when the most pressing issues facing many
executives are related to hiring and managing talent, and when plenty of people
need jobs, the trick is attracting the right people. Home Depot receives 11
million applications a year from 3 million applicants, most of whom apply more
than once.
When Nardelli and Donovan were new at the company, they
realized that Home Depot had outgrown its decentralized human resources
infrastructure. As they overhauled the system, they realized that there was an
acute need to place a new emphasis on talent.
With customers ranging from professional builders to
befuddled amateurs, the ability of employees to deal with diversity was a must.
The two executives recognized that Home Depot thrives on human interaction,
meaning that store customers need a good deal of tender loving care, and workers
therefore need to be especially savvy and motivated.
Previously, the company had been "hiring more to numbers
than competencies," Donovan says, and many of its store managers were failing.
In the meantime, analysis showed that there was an especially strong correlation
between customer care and profits. Individual attention from knowledgeable,
motivated associates drives up sales.
People transitioning from the military seemed the perfect
talent pool from which to draw.
"We find that there is a level of maturity that people
coming out of the military have," Donovan says. "There is certainly leadership,
and it’s a great place for us to source people with logistics backgrounds,
plumbers, electricians and carpenters. They have discipline, and we can see that
discipline at work in our stores."
The plan for Operation Career Front, an extension of a job
partnership formed with the Department of Labor in 2002, was a year in the
making. The program reaches out to veterans through transition assistance
programs and Web links with the departments of Defense, Labor and Veterans
Affairs.
Also flagged for special consideration are the roughly
400,000 military spouses whose careers are interrupted by transfers to new
bases. The company strives to place them in Home Depot stores near their new
homes, whether or not they’ve worked for the retailer before.
The company also continues to provide benefits for its
associates pressed into service, all of whom have jobs waiting for them upon
their return.
Even before Operation Career Front, Home Depot actively
recruited retired military. Its Store Leadership Program, launched 2½ years ago
to groom the best and brightest as store managers, is a case in point. The
intensive 24-month program involves more than 250 hours of classroom learning,
four different job rotations and mentoring by company leaders. To qualify,
candidates must have a minimum of four years’ experience in business or retail
management--or four years as a commissioned military officer.
Although the program was not specifically created to
target them, nearly 70 percent of those accepted are former military; of the
program’s 800-plus combined recent alumni and current participants, 530 are
junior military officers, including 119 graduates from such military academies
as West Point, Annapolis and the Air Force Academy.
They are often recruited at military outplacement fairs
and, like others in the program, are coached by senior managers, including
Nardelli. (The company declines to disclose the total number of veterans it
employs, nor will it reveal the cost of Operation Career Front.)
"We just found that when we put them through the
assessment during hiring, they excel," Donovan says.
Soldier execs
Among those who stood out is former Navy Lt. Chris Harkness,
31, who spent five years on a nuclear submarine. He became a Home Depot store
manager through the Store Leadership Program and is now Home Depot’s director of
implementation, a position created to standardize the application of companywide
directives from merchandising to finance.
Military training, he says, breeds confidence, a necessary
attribute in managing a typical Home Depot store, which normally grosses $50
million annually.
"Military structure is very similar to how our stores are
structured," Harkness says. "A store manager is basically the equivalent of a
ship captain. You’ve got a leadership team under you, and I think the
relationships you need to build between your hourly and management associates
are a natural fit for military leaders."
Also stationed at Home Depot headquarters is Maj. Mike
Jernigan, one of nine Marine Corps Corporate Fellows, whose mission is to study
strategic thinking, operational excellence and crisis decision-making and take
lessons learned from the corporate world back to the Marines. Conversely, he
also provides military insights that might be valuable to Home Depot.
"You may not believe it, but the Marine Corps embraces
change," says Jernigan, a fit 35-year-old officer who saw active duty in Iraq,
where he swept minefields as a combat engineer. "The corporate world and the
military are really quite similar. At the end of the day, we just keep score
differently."
Nardelli wants Jernigan to learn about the company from
top to bottom, and has given him access to top-level meetings.
Others, however, attest to a sometimes difficult cultural
adjustment for transitioning military. "When you walk into a room full of
military people, you instantly know by the rank on their sleeves where you stand
with them," says G.I. Jobs’ Hale.
"In the corporate world, if you go to a Christmas party,
you may not know whether you’re talking to a manager or the janitor. That’s part
of the learning process, and it can take some adjustment."
For companies, there is also the possibility that
reservists and other retired military may be unexpectedly pressed into active
duty, and companies have to accommodate that, says Margaretta Noonan, executive
vice president of human resources for the Hudson Highland Group Inc. in New
York.
"There are two problems," Noonan says. "One, you
temporarily lose some people. Another issue is the people that are left behind
in a call-up. Co-workers are impacted; family is impacted." Also, the death of a
co-worker in action can be devastating to an organization, she says, stressing
that there is a real need for companies to foster a sense of community.
That’s a challenge Home Depot has seized. When the company
donated $1 million toward the upkeep on stateside homes of military personnel
stationed abroad through Project Home Front, associates stepped in and matched
the sum with 1 million volunteer hours.
"Anybody can give money to some organization, but we
wanted to do something that demonstrates our values and our commitment," Donovan
says. "We thought, ‘They’re protecting our homeland, let’s protect their home
front.’"
Workforce Management, January 2005, pp. 26-32
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Martin Booe is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.
Next Article: 1. Agent of Change
Home Depot's Dennis Donovan says that "nobody believed that we could implement this amount of change is such a short period of time."
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