Succession Progression
Done with the right technology, succession planning that reaches deep into the hierarchy can build a company's reputation as a great place to work and, perhaps most important, further strategic goals.
By Ed Frauenheim
ngela Braly might still be writing legal briefs if it weren’t for the
succession-planning program at insurance giant WellPoint Inc.
In 1999, she was the top attorney at a company that was later bought by
WellPoint. But she had bigger ambitions. Braly now serves as executive vice
president, general counsel and chief public affairs officer for Wellpoint. She
reports directly to CEO Larry Glasscock.
"I credit my success to the succession-planning process," Braly says of a
program that includes computer software for tracking some 1,400 internal
candidates as well as daylong conversations among executives about talent.
WellPoint, an Indianapolis-based firm with more than 42,000 employees, is one
of many big companies making succession planning a higher priority and a
catalyst for broader talent development. Companies increasingly recognize that
preparing for high-level turnover and grooming new leaders are crucial, in part
because business conditions in many fields are growing more turbulent.
The company, formed out of the 2004 merger between Anthem and WellPoint
Health Networks, faces challenges such as hard-to-predict changes in health care
regulations, potentially costly lawsuits and declining public sentiment toward
health insurance companies. In this tough climate, it has outlined an ambitious
five-year plan for making health care more affordable and becoming the most
trusted partner in the field for consumers.
As Braly sees it, the same program that helped her achieve personal goals is
vital to keeping a steady bead on the company’s overall aims. Succession
planning and strategic planning "go hand in hand," she says.
Work in progress
Succession planning at larger companies has gotten a shot in the arm in just the
past few years, says human resources consultant Jim Walker. Firms have been
transforming what in many cases were annual executive replacement plans done on
paper into comprehensive leadership development programs that reach down into
the ranks of middle managers, often with the aid of computer software.
"It’s more a talent review," Walker says. "It’s not so much filling the job
as it is about reviewing the leadership talent and helping it progress."
Still, there’s room for improvement. Lack of sound succession planning for
CEOs in particular amounts to a "crisis," consultant Ram Charan argued in a 2005
Harvard Business Review story.
Recent research supports his view. In a 2003 study of succession management
involving more than 270 organizations worldwide, the Corporate Leadership
Council, a research firm, found that nearly 90 percent of the participants said
succession management was "a top corporate priority for 2003." But just 6
percent said they were confident the systems they have in place "will do the job
to build top-flight executive teams."
And according to a survey of 20 CEOs at large companies conducted by the
authors of a recent Harvard Business Review article, almost half had no
succession plans whatsoever for vice presidents and above.
Board members and CEOs tend to avoid the issue of succession planning, says
Jeff Cohn, one of the authors of the Harvard Business Review article and
managing partner at New York-based consulting firm Bench Strength Advisors.
"It can be a tender subject for even a skilled board to bring up," Cohn says.
CEOs "don’t like to plan for their retirement."
Charan points the finger at the amount of time boards have been spending on
governance and fiduciary duties. "A packed agenda is the chief culprit," he
writes.
Some companies, though, are putting succession management higher on the
corporate agenda. For years, General Electric and IBM stood out as the standard
bearers for smart leadership planning and development. Now such practices are
proliferating. Energy utility Southern Co., for example, has juiced up its
succession planning by identifying and grooming "high-potential" internal
talent. In 2006, the company is moving its annual succession planning process
from the end of the year--where it can get short shrift amid performance reviews
and other tasks--to the spring.
"It’s more a talent review," Walker says. "It’s not so much filling the job
as it is about reviewing the leadership talent and helping it progress."
--Jim Walker, HR consultant
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And auto parts and services chain Pep Boys revved up its succession planning
about a year ago with a software service that helps the company standardize
performance reviews and share talent across divisions. The software, from
provider SuccessFactors, cost about $180,000 in its first year. But in the
coming year, Pep Boys expects the figure to drop to $130,000 and for the
technology to pay for itself through more hiring from within. External hires
cost Pep Boys about $20,000 each, while internal hires cost about half as much.
The expense of hiring external candidates, combined with increased turnover
in the corner suites, is helping to fuel the new focus on succession management.
What’s more, a recent study from consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton concludes
that "over their entire tenures, CEOs appointed from the inside tend to
outperform outsiders" when it comes to returns to shareholders.
Succession planning also has become a bigger deal because of anxiety about
baby boomers leaving the workforce. At Southern Co., 50 percent to 60 percent of
the leaders are eligible to retire in the next five to seven years. A decade
ago, that number was closer to 20 percent. "Our business challenge has been to
identify who is the next generation of leaders," says Jim Greene, the company’s
director of talent development.
Planning from the top
Company boards and officers should take planning for the future of the executive
management team seriously and set the tone for a process that filters down to
supervisors throughout the organization, says Bench Strength Advisors’ Cohn.
Another key to smart succession planning, experts say, is an integrated
program tied to a company’s overall strategy. Ad-hoc approaches to succession
management or leadership development--such as unfocused executive training--can
add little value.
Installing software without taking a hard look at internal succession
processes can be a wasted effort. On the other hand, companies seeking to extend
succession planning to the mid-manager ranks all but require a computerized
system with a database, Walker says. In the past, organizations may have wanted
to track their lower leaders and create wise career development plans, he says,
but with today’s software "they actually do it."
WellPoint officials point to software from Pilat HR Solutions as one of the
strengths of their program. Before the merger, Anthem lacked such a software
system. That meant limited visibility for rising stars, says Judy Wade, who came
from Anthem and is now WellPoint’s director for executive development and
succession planning. "It was really hard for one of our executives in the
Northeast to know who the really talented people in the Midwest were," she says.
WellPoint asks its managers at the director level and above to enter into the
Web-based system such data as educational background, what jobs they’d like a
shot at and whether they’d be willing to move to various parts of the country.
Supervisors of director-level and higher positions are asked to assess their
direct reports’ potential and approve career development plans. They also
consider each individual’s risk of leaving and the likely impact of their
departure.
Armed with such information, the company holds what it calls "talent
calibration sessions" that focus on planning for departures as well as the
development of up-and-coming leaders. The annual sessions start with CEO Larry
Glasscock and his executive leadership team. Results from that review are
reported to the board of directors. The sessions--which can last a day or
more--then cascade down through four levels of management.
Key to these discussions is candid talk about the company’s talent, which
includes managers contesting ratings given by their peers. "You need honesty,"
says Jean Hopper, vice president of talent management and organization
development at WellPoint. "Garbage in, garbage out in this system."
WellPoint declines to provide details about the overall cost of its
succession-planning program or the return on that investment. But the company
cites an incident four years ago in which two top-level executive posts were
filled internally thanks to the system. The company then "backfilled" each
resulting vacancy with internal candidates, and used its succession-planning
process to fill the cascading set of openings going down five management levels
beneath the president. In part by avoiding external recruiting fees, WellPoint
estimates it saved $1 million.
The program isn’t perfect. About 15 percent of the company’s managers did not
complete their online tasks in 2005, though Hopper expects the figure to get
closer to the 99.8 percent compliance rate of WellPoint managers before the
merger. In addition, Braly says the company can do more to allow people to win
promotions without having to leave their home regions.
Maintaining strategic focus
WellPoint’s succession planning and talent development likely will be tested
in the coming years. The company, whose divisions include Blue Cross of
California as well as dental and vision units, faces competition from rivals
such as Aetna and Cigna. The health care field continues to be plagued by
lawsuits. And ever louder calls for more government action on health care could
lead to a dramatic business disruption for insurers like WellPoint.
What’s more, even as it seeks to win the trust of health care consumers, the
company is part of an industry viewed with increasing skepticism. In a Harris
Interactive study published in 2005, just 40 percent of U.S. adults said health
insurance companies do a good job of serving their consumers. That’s up four
percentage points from 2004 but a far cry from the 55 percent that said the
industry was doing a good job in 1997.
WellPoint’s succession-planning process is key to keeping it focused amid
tumultuous business conditions, Braly says. She also sees a positive side effect
to the succession-planning program. Talent-review discussions foster better
teamwork overall, she says, because managers build trust as they share frank
comments.
With examples like Braly, WellPoint’s succession-planning and career
development efforts also have earned high marks from advocates for women’s
advancement in corporations. For the past two years, the National Association
for Female Executives has ranked the company in the top 10 firms for executive
women. In 2005, it applauded WellPoint as being among the firms where the board
of directors reviews succession planning with an eye toward gender equity.
Without effective succession planning, potential leaders like Braly can be
overlooked, and end up leaving. Long-term plans are less likely to be realized.
Done well, however, succession planning saves money, furthers strategic goals
and builds a firm’s reputation as a great place to work, Cohn says.
Barbara Lewis, director of training and consultancy at the Institute for
Personality and Ability Testing in Savoy, Illinois, says companies often expect
leaders to sweep in and save the day even though research shows that companies
succeed when a CEO has others to lean on and learn from. That’s what helps
companies avoid falling prey to what she calls the myth of the hero CEO.
Leadership is rarely a solo ride.
Workforce Management, January 16, 2006, pp. 31-34
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Ed Frauenheim is a Workforce Management senior staff writer based in San Francisco. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.
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