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​

Every team is made up of a group of individuals. The concept of team by definition means that each employee is not a duplication of only one type of person, but of different individuals with complementary skills that are united in some way. If you compose your team correctly, you end up with a mix of top performers in different areas who come together as a strong unit. The result should be a “whole that is greater than the sum of its parts”.

I find when people are hiring employees or revamping a team, the process is to find the best people. While I would sound crazy to tell anyone not to hire the best people, I would expand the term “best” to include that you are hiring who is “best for your team.”  Have diversity in your team and have at least one team member that meets the following criteria:

The Xtra Point*

"When a new head coach takes over for a team, it is not unusual to see the entire coaching staff change over to a new one. When Coach Barry Alvarez took over the Wisconsin football program, he completely replaced every coach except for one: Scott Seeliger. Coach Seeliger had been a part of the team for a number of years and served under the three previous head coaches at Wisconsin. He was a hometown guy who had grown up in Madison. He was a typical Wisconsinite that could give knowledge that Coach Alvarez was missing on the culture, the state and could provide some continuity from the previous coaching staff. He was someone who could offer his perspective in a respectful way that reflected the lessons learned of the past and help provide direction for the future."
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Rich Thompson
CEO
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*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.