The dedicated, consistent, tenacious pursuit of winning through people and culture.
The changes you are making today to your workforce need to be strategic, not reactionary, with an eye to the future. Times are tough, but there are opportunities to reevaluate your organizational structure, make changes that align to both your short- and long-term goals, and position for the recovery that is on its way. For the next two weeks, I am offering a blog series based on 25 years of extensive HR, talent management and staffing experience all grounded in the foundation as an ex-athlete to give you a roadmap to position you to win.
DEFEAT THE DOWNTURN AND WIN THE RECOVERY
- Part 1: Become Talent Centric – Not Activity Based
The purpose of this series is to explore a tangible and deliberate approach to assessing, driving, engaging, developing and surrounding your winning employees with a set of winning strategies in a winning culture.
The first step in the process is to take a step back and assess your current workforce and how you are managing in today’s realities. The pressure to produce often results in leaders making the mistake of defaulting to an activity-based strategy (i.e. micromanagement) pushing for more phone calls, more contacts, more requests, more meetings, more More, MORE! In a market like today, the reality is there may be few job or sales orders to secure because they simply…don’t…exist.
Your employees are already scared – don’t make them more scared. Everyone knows sales are down – don’t make the employees responsible for sales that are unattainable. And stop stalking your clients.
I have seen this many times during recessions where managers rely heavily on the activities that historically generate sales. Managers think, “This worked in the past, so we just need to do more of it.” But these are strange times. Obviously, sales and revenue generating productivity is of top importance, but focusing predominantly on sales when demand has diminished or dried-up simply frustrates clients and, in turn, frustrates employees. Being told to do more or try harder is exhausting and exacerbating to a talented person who knows that effort isn’t the only answer. And you are at risk of permanently damaging your culture.
So what do you do? You need to make changes that reflect the marketplace and ease the burden. You need to change the way you manage/lead/coach to help your employees adapt the way they do their job (which we will explore more in later blogs). And you most likely need to reduce your costs by de-hiring and re-tuning some of your existing workforce with the near and long-term future in mind that poises you for recovery.
This is the time to examine your current employees and determine who you want to bet on for the future. Many companies have grown rapidly and increased hiring in the recent thriving economy. Now is the time to take a step back and use a process to assess those hiring choices. You may have to make difficult decisions to get to the core winning team, but those choices can present you with opportunities to make your human resources more aligned with your company goals and operational strategies. If you can develop a process for unemotionally evaluating your talent, choosing who stays, aligning with those colleagues and creating a support system that reassures them while increasing loyalty and dedication, you will be better positioned in the future.
The Xtra Point*
"Every winning team understands that each game is different and prepares their game plan to reflect those challenges. They asses the talent, adjust schemes that best fit skills, and relentlessly make adjustments that puts them in the best position to win that game on that particular day. Today is a different game than a couple months ago. Don’t miss the chance to win because you don’t adapt your team to the current challenges."*Author Rich Thompson is a former professional placekicker and successful human resources executive. He offers the Xtra Point at the end of each Relentless HR blog with a sports example from his own personal experience with the University of Wisconsin and Green Bay Packers that parallels his business teachings.