s Coca-Cola sets out to develop its next generation of executive talent, the
international soft-drink maker isn’t just relying on courses and seminars. Instead,
participants will also learn by doing.
A select group of high-potential leadership candidates from
various business functions and countries will soon begin working on a newly formed
corporate task force that will spend four to five months tackling a list of "big
thorny problems" facing the company, according to Cynthia McCague, senior vice president
and human resources director.
"We believe the vast majority of learning experiences come
from doing," McCague explains.
Coca-Cola has picked up on what human resources consultants
and academics say is a training tool with powerful, if underutilized, potential.
Cross-functional corporate task forces and project teams, they say, are good for
more than just accomplishing business goals. Such teams can also provide an invaluable
training and development experience for high-potential candidates by compelling
them to apply their functional expertise at the strategic level and develop big-picture
problem-solving skills.
Experts say that assigning up-and-coming talent to task forces
is less expensive than sending them to outside leadership courses, and candidates
can learn more by working on a company’s real-life business problems than they would
from case studies or role-playing. To make task force assignments most effective
as a development tool, companies should offer coaching and debriefing to ensure
that the right lessons are reinforced. They also may want to use internal and external
surveys to evaluate leadership candidates’ performance and future potential.
"Some companies let development happen haphazardly, but the
smart ones are focused," explains John Sullivan, a human resources consultant and
San Francisco State University management professor. "They’re looking at you and
saying, ‘You’re in the succession planning, but you’re not going to get good at
baseball by watching. We need to get you in the game.’ Task forces are a way to
do that."
That’s why Prudential, IBM, General Electric and other forward-thinking
companies have been using task forces as a development tool for years, according
to Jim Walker, a La Jolla, California-based consultant and founder of the Human
Resource Planning Society.
"I really believe in it as a tool for leadership development,"
Walker says. "If you’ve got a business task that needs to be done, why not get some
developmental value out of it also? It’s better than sending them off to a workshop
at Harvard or someplace, and it’s cheaper too.
"Ironically, we try to simulate reality in executive training
programs by introducing case studies and doing role-playing exercises. Why not just
give people the chance to work on a real task with measurable outcomes? That’s the
way to build up new strengths and shore up your weaknesses."
What makes work-based learning effective is that the projects
are real and they matter to the organization, says Peter Cappelli, director of the
Center for Human Resources at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of
Business.
"People learn from each other in task forces," he says. "It’s
a way of passing along the tacit knowledge of how things actually get done in the
organization, as opposed to the abstractions that you might get in a formal training
program."
Task forces are a way to prepare leadership candidates for
the fluid, multi-dimensional structure that big organizations increasingly will
adopt in the future, says Ed Lawler, director of the Center for Effective Organizations
at the University of Southern California and a professor at the university’s Marshall
School of Business.
"More and more companies are aligning people for functional
skills, but also for geography or product line or customer base, so a person might
have multiple reporting matrixes," he explains. "In that environment, you’re putting
a premium on the ability to listen to other people and build from their ideas, on
the ability to capture input from multiple people and synthesize that into a product
that fits the group’s view. Task forces teach you to do that."
Beyond that, he notes: "Companies form task forces because
they need to adapt to change in their environment, and to do that it’s necessary
to break out of the traditional, less-responsible structure. Working on a task force
is a chance to learn about managing change, and that’s something for which companies
will have an increasing need."
Using task forces as a development tool may often require
human resources executives to overcome institutional resistance—particularly from
line managers who may be more worried about solving a business problem than they
are about developing future talent.
"The managers are likely to say, ‘I don’t care about growing
people, particularly for some other part of the organization,’ " Cappelli says.
"Their view is, ‘Let’s get this done right, by the experts.’ "
Those issues can be resolved, experts say, by putting the
neophytes on a task force under seasoned leadership. Steve Gross, a global compensation
leader for Mercer Consulting, says every task force should have a sponsor, a senior
executive who can observe its work from the outside and offer guidance to the team’s
leader. Walker says it sometimes may be useful to bring in an outside consultant
to guide the process, though he advises companies not to lean too heavily upon their
expertise.
"Too often, project teams turn into basically a vehicle for
supporting outside consultants’ work," he says. "It’s OK to tap their expertise,
but you want the potential leaders to be doing the heavy lifting themselves."
Before a task force is convened, experts recommend writing
a charter that describes the business purpose and the developmental goal, as well
as the expected time commitment and duration. The latter details are crucial, since
in most instances a participant will be working on the task force in addition to
his or her regular responsibilities.
"Four to six months is good, because after that people generally
start to peter out," Walker advises. "But in the case of merger-integration task
forces, those generally last up to 18 months."
The selection of task force members should come next. Cappelli
advises companies to have a specific goal for each participant, outlining what they
should learn from the experience. Other experts say it’s vital to strike a balance
between the task force’s twin objectives and to choose people who have some knowledge
of the subject as well as a potentially useful skill set—in addition to needing
a leadership development opportunity.
"It’s great that you’re going to get a chance to learn," Gross
says. "But at some point you also need to get something done."
Gross recommends taking particular care in picking the task
force’s leader.
"It can be a developmental experience for that person too,"
he says. "But it’s crucial for him or her to have at least some prior leadership
experience. The person has to know how to run a meeting, how to gather feedback,
how to set ground rules for preparation and hold other people accountable."
Another important part of making a task force work as a development
tool is for the leader and/or sponsor to help each team member define his or her
role.
"Otherwise, there’s a risk that a person may just become an
observer," Gross warns. "You need to actively observe, but you also need to contribute,
because most of the learning will come from an apprentice model—you learn, you do,
you get feedback, you learn some more."
The learning experience is also enhanced by providing plenty
of background content on the task force’s subject for members to absorb.
"If you’re on a task force to develop a new pay plan, you
should be reading up about pay plans," Gross says. "If it’s a new venture, you need
to learn everything that you can about it."
University of Michigan professor and author Dave Ulrich agrees.
"People need to learn the context and theory behind a task," he says. "That way,
the ideas can be applied later to another setting."
In evaluating the performance of a task force as a learning
tool, it’s crucial to look not just at the group’s success at achieving its mission,
but also at how well individual members are performing. Walker says this can be
accomplished by doing external and internal evaluations.
"You should survey the people that the task force interacts
with, especially those who are reviewing their data," he says. "But you should also
survey the members to see how they perceive each other, and how well they think
others perform in terms of teamwork, consensus building and sharing of information.
You want to see improvement in those areas, because the task force takes people
out of their old hierarchical setting, their well-defined job, and gives them a
chance to blossom a bit."
It’s important that the learning experience continue after
the task force assignment is over.
"You need to have some coaching or debriefing afterward, to
make sure that people learn what you want them to learn," Cappelli says. "You need
to get them to think through the experience. If things worked, why did they work?
If they were screwed up, why did things get screwed up?"
Ulrich agrees. "Without the reflection," he says, "tasks may
be done, but learning does not occur."
Workforce Management Online, May 2007 -- Register Now!