1. HR vs. Managers: Are They From the Same Planet?
Despite great strides made by HR, the battle between line managers and HR is far from over. Here's how to improve relations with your primary customer.
2. Is This Our Legacy?
Commentary: I long ago gave up trying to convince early-career HR professionals to spend enough time in labor relations to become proficient, but shouldn’t we expect them to develop mastery of something?
3. What Your Personal Board of Directors Wants From HR
Rather than give you the usual ‘blah, blah, blah’ from me, I’ve commissioned my own personal board of directors to tell us what HR should do to take the seat. Here’s HR’s real path to influence and achievement, as outlined by a CEO, a CFO, a VP of marketing, a director of customer service, a general counsel and a VP of sales.
Whether your boss is in HR or she’s the person running the entire show, all bosses need some straight talk sometimes from their HR pros before an oversight or blind spot mortally wounds them.
By Kris Dunn Comments 0 | Recommend 0
o you’re in HR, a partner to whomever you serve. Guess what? That means you’re
supposed to tell people when they’re messing up. For a lot of us, that’s easy when
the target of the constructive feedback is an employee, or even the managers we
serve in other departments. It gets trickier when we have to tell our bosses that
there’s
something rotten in Denmark related to, well, them.
If you, as an HR professional, have been faced with
giving your boss needed feedback, you will know that bosses come in one of these
two different flavors:
Your boss is a line manager or business executive to
whom you report directly. While the personalities and styles of the business-focused,
non-HR boss are many, the common denominator here is they aren’t HR pros. You are.
That means your relationship and communication style should be focused on the fact
that you are the expert in the areas you cover. I’ve always found it easier to give
straight feedback to the line managers and executives to whom I reported. After
all, they aren’t in HR. So when you apply the people and culture stuff to them,
they can easily rationalize it, thinking, "Well, you know, that’s why I’ve got you."
But that only works if your overall relationship with them makes them feel that
way.
Your boss is an HR manager or HR executive to whom you
report directly. If you report directly to an HR manager, HR director or HR vice
president, giving feedback to your boss is usually either going to be really easy
or really hard. When it’s easy, it flows as it should. The HR boss gets what you
are saying and why you are saying it. But it’s not always like that. Sometimes,
especially if the issue is an emotional one for them, it’s harder for the HR boss
to hear the feedback you must provide. Deep in your heart, you know why: The boss
is in the HR game, so he should likely be aware of what you are telling her. Except
he isn’t. And yes, it’s very uncomfortable.
But like the boys from
Depeche Mode once reminded the
world, people are people. It’s the same with bosses, whether yours is in HR or is
running the entire show. Even bosses need some straight talk from the HR pros before
an oversight or blind spot mortally wounds them.
With that realty in mind, here’s my list of things to
keep in mind once you decide to give the boss an "opportunity for improvement,"
otherwise known as feedback or coaching:
You’ve got to give to get. Mix positive reinforcement
often. It’s a good practice and money in the bank when you need to make an "opportunity
for improvement" withdrawal. If the boss has heard good stuff from you periodically,
you’ll automatically have credibility with the challenges you eventually point out.
Positive reinforcement to the boss, while not necessary
for your survival, is necessary if you want real dialog. The one-on-one opportunities
are everywhere and don’t take a lot of time. For example, you can hit the boss with
a private reply to a group e-mail they sent out that simply says "Nice job." You
can also share "heard on the street" feedback that’s positive about how the boss
is viewed by the troops. The only limit is your imagination.
Actually, there’s another limitation. It’s the potential
for you to feel like a brown-noser in giving positive feedback to the boss. You
can avoid feeling like a suck-up by only sharing positives periodically, keeping
it business-focused (skip the daily affirmations about boss attire), and above all
else, being willing to share the negative as well.
Timing is everything. Financials just came out and
the division missed revenue by 20 percent, but you’ve got "Talk to boss" in your
day planner? Don’t be a sucker. Kick your FranklinCovey binder across the room and
live to fight another day.
You might hold on to the feedback for a month looking
for the right time. That’s OK. Deliver it when the time is right. Be sensitive to
the weather report that is your boss’s mood.
Don’t throw someone else under the bus. When coaching
for improvement to the boss as an HR pro, own your observation. Don’t say, "Johnny
mentioned that you had an anger problem in the meeting". By putting your observations
on someone else, the boss wants to go tackle Johnny, not listen to you about the
issue. If you’ve done a good job with positive feedback, your boss will listen to
you when you need help from her, even regarding her own actions.
What if the boss still wants the name of a complainer?
If you have a solid relationship with her, you’ll have to give the name, but only
after you’ve provided the necessary context and the rundown of the feedback topic,
and received her buy-in.
Have the boss’s back once in awhile. As with the
need for positive feedback, you’ve got to be there to take a bullet for the boss
once in a while, or at least identify a sniper for her before you both go into a
dicey meeting. If the boss knows you’ve acted like a Secret Service agent when needed,
she’ll listen when you have something to say on the coaching front.
Think of yourself as the boss’s personal AWACS plane.
If providing some context for a political situation in the office might help her
stay out of the ditch, you’ll build credibility that can be cashed in later.
And the most important factor to consider when giving
negative feedback to your boss:
You’re not judging her; you’re her agent. No one
likes to feel judged when getting negative feedback from a subordinate. But everyone
likes to have an agent looking out for their corporate image. That’s why you’re
going to have the boss’s back, so that you can lead coaching moments with something
like the following: "Susan, you know I’m out there making it happen, but at the
same time, I’m looking out for you. That’s why I have to make sure you understand
that you shouldn’t have fired that coordinator on the spot in front of 25 people.
Here’s how I think you should fix it so you’re not hurt by this long term."
Be the
Gladys Kravitz of the office, and the boss will
hate you. Be the boss’s personal corporate-image agent, and you’ve got a chance
to be heard and maybe, just maybe, get improvement in the area you need, when you
need it.
Here’s a final note on the role of an upscale HR pro
in today’s organization. (And when I say "upscale," I mean that you have the personality
and political skills to handle something in the right way. It has nothing to do
with where you live or what car you drive.) Lots of people won’t challenge the boss
or provide feedback under any circumstance. When things get crazy or a little strange,
there’s just one individual all those people think could actually handle coaching
the boss.
That person is you, the HR pro. When everyone is looking
around but afraid to say something, that’s when your boss needs you the most. So
advance the cause of upscale HR and do it, but start prepping for the need now by
following the points listed above.
It’s not easy, but both you and the boss will be glad
you did.
Workforce Management Online, November 2008 -- Register Now!
Kris Dunn is vice president of human resources for SourceMedical in
Birmingham, Alabama. His blog is www.hrcapitalist.com. To comment, e-mail
editors@workforce.com.
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