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3 Reasons Why We All Need to Make Time for Coaching

3 Reasons Why We All Need to Make Time for Coaching

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Reasons Why We All Need Coaching

People get the most benefits from a coach if they speak to them regularly, throughout their careers. Sometimes it’s just the act of setting up a coaching session that helps – it’s a reminder that having a job and working with a team can be challenging. And that taking a step back is perfectly acceptable.

Why we all need to make time for coaching.

We’ve all been there. A frustrating email comes through at work. We fire off a reply that probably isn’t the most reasonable way to respond. And then, inevitably, regret it later.

In an ‘always-on’ working world, where being run off your feet has somehow come to mean being important, our thinking time has been squeezed to the point of being non-existent. Colleagues annoy us; we snap. Big changes happen; we have a quick moan in the kitchen while the kettle boils. We don’t get on with our boss; we hand in our notice and leave.

But what if we had the time to think through our workplace stresses? To talk, constructively, about what we’d like to get out of a situation? To plan our responses – and our future – rationally, instead of being led by emotions?

This is exactly what having a coach gives you. An opportunity to stop, to think, to find a way to be a better colleague, and the best version of ourselves.

The chance to pause

So what does coaching actually offer that a quick chat by the water cooler wouldn’t? These are the main benefits, in my experience of both talking to professional coaches myself, and setting up sessions for other people:

1. There’s no judgement

Speak to anyone else within your company – including someone from HR – and they’ll have their own vested interest in what you’re saying. A coach, on the other hand, won’t know the people you’re talking about and can act as a safe, impartial sounding board.

You can get everything off your chest, tell them your wildest ambitions to take over the company, talk through the stuff you wish you’d done differently – and then leave feeling lighter, clearer and happier. (Ready to respond calmly when that email arrives.)

2. It’s all about you

Should I apply for that promotion? How can I tell my team this big piece of news? Why am I finding it hard to manage some colleagues and not others? Training and development sessions are all very well, but they often end up being too generic to make a real difference to everyone.

With a coach, you can dig deeper. You can spend a whole session talking about that one email, if it’s what you need. And the more you see them, the more they’ll get to know you and your exact situation. Meaning everything they say back will be tailored and (truly) helpful.

3. It’s constructive

Coaches don’t just listen; they actively listen. They hear everything you tell them, then they play it back to you and help you find a way forward. They shine a light on situations in ways you wouldn’t have thought of. They ask questions you might not want to be asked. They help you think about things logically, carefully and with an eye to the bigger picture. They can turn even the rantiest of rants into a rational and reasonable action plan for tomorrow.

Reasons Why We All Need Coaching

Making it regular

Coaching sessions aren’t just for the ‘bad’ times, either. In fact, people get the most benefits from a coach if they speak to them regularly, throughout their careers. Sometimes it’s just the act of setting up a coaching session that helps – it’s a reminder that having a job and working with a team can be challenging. And that taking a step back is perfectly acceptable.

That’s all very well, you might be thinking. But what if you don’t have the money to pay for everyone in your company to leave the office once a week? What if it all seems like too much of a faff to set up?

We can help. Having seen first-hand the benefits of coaching a few years ago when our company went through some big changes, we wanted to find a way for more people in more companies to speak to someone regularly. So we designed and built Performance Coaching.

Learn more about LHH’s Performance Coaching

Source: ezra

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Change Management Coaching People Development

Being A Good Manager During Times Of Uncertainty

Being A Good Manager During Times Of Uncertainty

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Being A Good Manager During Times Of Uncertainty

How can organizations help leaders care for themselves so they can care and support others? How to make them good manager during times of uncertainty? Many organizations are extolling the virtues of coaching as the frontline support for leaders at all levels of an organization. Coaching was obviously a hallmark of successful organizations before COVID-19. However, many leaders are finding that coaching is particularly helpful when faced with profound uncertainty.

In the face of extreme uncertainty triggered by a global pandemic, millions of people around the world responded in a most bizarre way: they hoarded toilet paper.

It was an incredible phenomenon: consumers of different cultures, languages and socio-economic profiles united by a single act of desperation.

But why toilet paper? Months after panicky shoppers stripped the shelves of grocery markets around the globe, it’s still not entirely clear why this commodity was subject to so much hoarding.

Some have theorized that the trend began at one or two stores and – fed by stories from traditional news organizations and social media – it and the panic behind it spread. Some of the earliest stories – including a February incident where armed thieves stole hundreds of rolls from a truck making a delivery to a Hong Kong grocery store – added fuel to the fire. Let’s face it – it’s hard to read a story like that and not rush out to pick up a few extra rolls for yourself. 

Others have suggested that the rush to buy toilet paper was related to our need to gain some control over the uncertainty that came with the pandemic. Or, as an online survey of shoppers across Europe and North America put it: “People who feel more threatened by the pandemic stockpile more toilet paper.”

 During Times Of Uncertainty

It is scenarios like this that underline the fact that the uncertainty about COVID-19 – how we catch it, who will catch it and when it will cease to be a threat – can be as consequential as the actual virus.

For business organizations, that presents a special challenge. Uncertainty has served as a significant challenge for companies for years. So much so that responded to uncertainty has become its own school of thought.

The evolution of uncertainty management strategies.

Hardly anyone mentions the name Dale Brashers in the same sentence as “global pandemic.” But as we continue to struggle under the persistent ravages of COVID-19, you can bet that will change.

A professor of communication at the University of Illinois, Brashers is the author of Uncertainty Management Theory (UMT), which suggests that while many people struggle in scenarios where doubt and ambiguity are the order of the day, uncertainty in and of itself does not have to be a negative. It is, Brasher theorized, neither positive nor negative, but rather a reality that we can choose to confront or ignore.

“Understanding various types of uncertainty enhances our ability to describe and explain its influences on behaviours and to develop strategies for improving people’s lives,” Brashers wrote in 2001.

Brashers was not the first person to try and differentiate between types of uncertainty. In the 1920s, American economist Frank Knight wrote Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit, an examination of the impact of uncertainty on businesses and profitability.

Knight argued that there were two types of uncertainty: uncertainty risk (scenarios where we know the potential outcomes and odds of success or failure), and genuine uncertainty (where we cannot know the possible outcomes or their probabilities). Knight believed that business organizations that are unable to differentiate between calculable risk and true uncertainty are doomed to fail.

“When we act like everything is a risk, we greatly increase the chance of failure,” Knight wrote.  “However, the opposite can also be a problem: We act like everything is unknowable. Uncertainty often gets blamed for inaction.”

If you were to take Uncertainty Management Theory, add in a healthy dose of Knightian Uncertainty, what would you have? Although the variations are almost infinite, you’d likely be describing an organization that was built on agility.

An antidote for uncertainty

The concept of the agile organization was around long before COVID-19 changed our worlds. But in recent months, research has started to establish a clear connection between organizations that embrace agile business models – which emphasize intense collaboration, cross-functional teams, adaptive decision-making and continual improvement – and those rooted in more sluggish strategies.

A late June study from McKinsey looked at 25 companies across seven sectors that “have undergone or are currently undergoing an agile transformation.” The study found that business units that had fully adopted agile strategies before COVID-19 struck outperformed those that had not in nearly one-third of the companies studied.

“According to their self-assessments, almost all of their agile business units responded better than their nonagile units to the shocks associated with the COVID-19 pandemic by measures of customer satisfaction, employee engagement, or operational performance,” the study concluded.

The link between agile management and confronting uncertainty is fast becoming known in the business world. Another survey of 1,100 IT and business professionals found that a third of respondents were moving to adopt agile business practices in response to COVID-19.

If agile planning and management is one of the best antidotes to uncertainty, how can leaders help the people they lead deal with uncertainty?

The uncertainty challenge for leaders

There is no specific playbook for leading in a time of uncertainty. The best practices of accountable leadership – effective communication, resilience, calm under pressure, collaboration, emotional intelligence – are certainly applicable. But there is one thing that the most successful organizations almost always do to help ensure their leaders succeed in the face of uncertainty.

Leaders need to be supported by their organizations before they can help others.

Leading in a time of great uncertainty is a challenge for leaders because their first inclination will be to focus all of their efforts on meeting the needs of their employees. However, that leaves many leaders vulnerable to the same frustrations and anxieties that come with uncertainty. Like a passenger in a de-pressurizing airplane cabin, it’s important for leaders to put their own oxygen mask on first before they try to help others.

How can organizations help leaders care for themselves so they can care and support others? Many organizations are extolling the virtues of coaching as the frontline support for leaders at all levels of an organization.

Coaching was obviously a hallmark of successful organizations before COVID-19. However, many leaders are finding that coaching is particularly helpful when faced with profound uncertainty.

Mark Vergano, CEO of chemical giant Chemours, told The Wall Street Journal, that he had been working with a psychologist for five years to become more consistent, clear and confident. “Those have been my mantra as we deal with the global pandemic,” he told the WSJ.

It’s important to note as well that coaching can be even more effective when it is offered throughout an organization, and not just at the senior-most levels. Numerous studies indicate that well-coached employees are more engaged, more productive and less likely to be shaken by uncertainty. This is particularly important if an organization is attempting to adopt a more agile approach to its planning and decision making; coaches with a speciality in agile organizations can be invaluable in generating engagement and buy-in on cultural change.

When confronted with uncertainty, our greatest comfort can be found in one simple observation: Whether it’s coaching support for leaders, or the adoption of an agile mindset for decision making, the key strategies for success during a pandemic are, thankfully, the same strategies we need to thrive in a time when uncertainty is not the order of the day.

Those organizations that got a jump start on building a better leadership culture, and adopting agile management models, are proof that there is no better time to start preparing for uncertainty than now.

Categories
Career Transition, Outplacement and Mobility Change Management Organizational Development People Development

Reskilling and Upskilling the Workforce of the Future

Reskilling and Upskilling the Workforce of the Future

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Reskilling and Upskilling the Workforce

In the white-collar world, we’ve seen the rapid rise of specialized and technical skills that require almost constant upskilling and reskilling to keep pace with innovation. That means a lot more organizations are coming to the sudden realization that they need to change their approach to learning.

Kevin Gagan

It was a surprising – but not entirely unprecedented – reversal of fortune.

Jake Schwartz, the CEO of General Assembly, a leading provider of workplace learning solutions, had been pitching a reskilling program to the CHRO of a Fortune 500 company that employed thousands of people in markets all over the globe. 

Schwartz was pushing hard to get the CHRO to see the value of reskilling – training existing employees to fill future talent needs – without much luck. This company was entrenched in a very traditional talent strategy where firing and hiring new people was the order of the day.

Schwartz said he emphasized the benefits of reskilling and upskilling, but the CHRO would have none of it. He noted how reskilling was more cost efficient and how it preserved the employer’s brand while reducing the uncertainty of bringing on new and unproven talent.

At the end of the meeting, the two shook hands, and Schwartz left convinced that General Assembly would not be doing business with this company.

A few hours later, however, Schwartz got an email from the CHRO. 

“He told me that after our meeting, he went in and looked at his talent acquisition budget,” Schwartz recalled. “He told me, ‘I had no idea we were spending so much trying to hire new people. And how little we were spending to help our existing people fill our future needs.’”

As has been the case with many other sales calls, this CHRO thought about what he had heard, looked deeper into the numbers, and eventually wanted more information about reskilling. Schwartz said that most organizations need more than one conversation to convince them to transform their talent strategy.

“An increasing number of employers are coming to the same conclusion,” said Schwartz. “In the white-collar world, we’ve seen the rapid rise of specialized and technical skills that require almost constant upskilling and reskilling to keep pace with innovation. That means a lot more organizations are coming to the sudden realization that they need to change their approach to learning.”

That change has seen an increasing number of organizations change their entire mindset about learning.

Schwartz acknowledged that for a very long time, workplace learning was seen more as a perk to drive loyalty and engagement than as a tool of talent development. 

An organization might, for example, pay for a leader to get an MBA. That might not have had much of an impact on the talent pipeline, but it did build loyalty to the employer’s brand and possibly helped with the recruitment of other talent.

Reskilling and Upskilling the Workforce

Some organizations took a more direct approach to learning that involved creating their own educational institutions. Some of the world’s biggest and most iconic companies – GE, General Motors and AT&T for example created corporate campuses that were designed to train new employees and upskill existing ones. 

Schwartz said, however, that not every organization has the resources or the number of employees to make that a cost-effective option. There were also concerns about the return on investment that employers were getting for learning expenditures.

As the average tenure of an employee began to go down, so too did the appetite for investing in learning, Schwartz said. “It was really a chicken and egg scenario. As tenure dropped, employers began worrying about investing in someone who might leave them a few months later.”

These macro trends have driven down the average investment being made by employers in their employees, he said. Currently, American employers spend on average less than $1,000 per person on learning and development. Schwartz said that number reflects the general skepticism about the value of workplace learning.

Fortunately, two major trends have disrupted this pessimistic view.

First, many employers have realized that formal education is not necessarily a fix for current talent needs. Vocational and post-secondary education continues to run behind the leading edge of actual talent needs, Schwartz said. 

“Over the last 10 years, I think there is a growing awareness that the academic world has failed the business world,” Schwartz said. “Schools are just not producing the employees or talent needed by businesses today.”

The second disruptive change has to do with the assumptions that employers make about workplace learning.

Schwartz insisted that the concerns about tenure and ROI only make sense if you look at learning more as a perk than as a talent management strategy. Once you realize that learning is actually a pathway to meeting future talent needs, then the ROI equation turns on its ear.

As the CHRO at the Fortune 500 company came to realize, Schwartz said, when expenditures on upskilling or reskilling are assessed against recruitment and other talent acquisition costs, the learning equation changes.

This new view of learning has undoubtedly been aided by the global talent shortage. “In the past, it was easy for an employer to figure out when to fire and when to hire,” Schwartz said. “There was always talent out there looking for work. Now, it’s a lot harder to find the exact people you need. This is a problem made worse by the fact that most organizations are in some stage of digital transformation and are all trying to hire the same kind of people. That really shrinks the talent pool.”

Given the global talent shortage, Schwartz said that the truly successful organizations will be those that know how to squeeze all the value out of their existing employees before casting about the general talent market. 

“Organizations need to look at the future, maybe two or three years down the road, and try to figure out the kind of people they’re going to need to execute on their business plan. Learning is not a perk, it’s an important tool in your talent development tool belt.”

Source: lhh.com

Categories
Coaching People Development

How to Promote a Culture of Caring and Compassionate Leadership

How to Promote a Culture of Caring and Compassionate Leadership

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leadership development

Empathy and compassion are generally considered founding principles within the whole area of Emotional Intelligence and Psychological Safety, which are redefining the approach to leadership development that de-emphasizes technical skills and amplifies the so-called “soft skills.”

Alex Vincent, Ph.D., SVP, Global Teams Solutions

Your employees have been working at home for months, wrestling with wonky VPNs and navigating crowded home offices and bored children. While some have thrived in the new world of virtual work, others have struggled. With the pandemic still crippling the global economy and social justice protests shaking the foundation of our society, uncertainty is the order of the day.

In an environment like that, it’s not unusual for leaders to feel somewhat confounded about how to treat the people they lead. How do you keep your people motivated, engaged and focus on the business strategy while also acknowledging that many of them will be suffering under the strain of these current challenges?

Increasingly, those involved in forging the next generation of leadership development believe that skills like empathy and compassion are the keys to connecting to, and motivating, employees in troubled times.

Empathy and compassion are generally considered founding principles within the whole area of Emotional Intelligence and Psychological Safety, which are redefining the approach to leadership development that de-emphasizes technical skills and amplifies the so-called “soft skills.” It expands the role of leader to act more like a coach and sounding board. Although those are simple concepts, they represent daunting new demands on leaders.

That expansion of the role and responsibilities of leaders is more important now than ever because of the impact of multiple disruptors in work along with the threat from COVID-19 global pandemic, the accompanying economic lockdown and the powerful nature of the Black Lives Matter movement. All the changes and disruption is starting to take an enormous toll on everyone’s resilience and even mental health.

Data is emerging from jurisdictions around the world on declining mental health. In the United States, the non-partisan Kaiser Family Foundation has been tracking the mental health of Americans throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. The most recent data shows that more than 45 percent of Americans report that their mental health has suffered during the pandemic. The situation is more severe for those who were forced to shelter in place.

In Europe, public health officials have been sounding the alarm for months about a building mental health and substance abuse crisis that is accompanying the pandemic. Dr. Hans Kluge, director of the European branch of the World Health Organization, reported first in March his concerns about pandemic-related mental health challenges.

“Physical distancing and isolation measures, the closure of schools and workplaces are particularly challenging [for] us,” Dr. Kluge said. “It is absolutely natural for each of us to feel stress, anxiety, fear and loneliness during this time.”

It’s all related to what mental health professionals are now referring to as “deaths of despair,” fatalities caused by stressful economic or social conditions that drive higher incidences of drug and alcohol abuse, which may lead to suicide and overdose. “We may be in for a perfect storm of factors driving substance abuse rates higher than we have seen before,” Dr. Lloyd Sederer, former chief medical officer for New York State Office of Mental Health, wrote recently in Medscape Magazine. “The triple trouble of a pandemic, unemployment, and diminished personal and community supports.”

In this context, leaders need to be aware that every time they pick up the phone or assemble everyone for a team meeting on a video conferencing platform, they are tapping into growing reservoirs of stress and anxiety that at some level, must be acknowledged with empathy and compassion.

Some schools of leadership development thought—particularly those built on philosophies such as “positive psychology”—believe leaders need to avoid dwelling on the negatives and amplify the positives. And while that can be effective for motivating some employees—particularly those who are more resilient and less impacted by all of the disruptions—many of your team members may need an approach that will require empathy and compassion. This is really to develop a safe space for individuals to discuss what they are dealing with, professionally and personally, and how they are feeling about their situation. This will require deep listening combined with the ability to suspend judgment and refraining from providing advice.

Before emphasizing the positive aspects of our current situation, leaders need to demonstrate that they understand what stressed or worried employees are going through, and that it’s not unusual that they feel that way. 

It’s important to remember that mental health is still a deeply stigmatized topic in most workplaces. Prior to the pandemic, it was hard for most employees to admit that they were facing a mental health challenge. Research in this area has re-enforced the fear that even acknowledging depression or anxiety will undermine their career brand and limit their future opportunities.

For those employees who have been most affected by the multiple crises we’re facing, leaders must be able to communicate genuine empathy about their concerns, and compassion rather than judgment. There needs to be a sense that it’s okay to talk openly about fears and anxieties, while also acknowledging that others are going through the same situation.

Lamentably, empathy and compassion are skills that evade many leaders today. Most leaders have risen through the ranks of their organizations by demonstrating a grasp of technical knowledge. Rarely, if ever, are they assessed on whether they can relate to their employees on an emotional level. That is why so many leadership development experts are promoting the principles of Emotional Intelligence as the new standard for successful leaders.

Skills like empathy and compassion can be developed in most leaders but they can present as much larger challenges to leaders who have traditionally been satisfied to be judged on deliverables or meeting financial targets. 

Enhancing a leader’s capacity to cultivate empathy and compassion is an iterative process that must be approached over time. The following steps are essential in cultivating these important emotional skills:

Take stock. All leaders must be carefully assessed to determine current levels and potential for empathy and compassion. Every organization will have naturally empathetic and compassionate leaders. But there will also be leaders for whom these skills do not come naturally. Identify the size of your E&C gap.

Study up. Most progressive business leaders know that they must be constantly learning and improving themselves. Reading books on emotional intelligence, resilience and empathy-based leadership approaches can provide an essential base of knowledge on how to integrate E&C into daily leadership practices. 

Don’t go it alone. One of the most effective ways at building soft leadership skills is working with a coach who has experience in these areas. Coaching will not only help leaders confront their own shortcomings, but it can accelerate and help sustain the cultivation of empathy and compassion.

Leadership is still a role that requires toughness and resilience. Leaders must set high expectations for the people they lead and be willing to call out underperformance when necessary. But they must also know when someone needs understanding, care and support.

It may seem like a simple solution, but sometimes people need to know that it’s OK to feel whatever they’re feeling right now before they can start to feel good about the future.

Source: lhh.com

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Assessments & Analytics Career Transition, Outplacement and Mobility Change Management Coaching Organizational Development People Development Workforce Transformations

Workforce Transformations Insights June 2020

Workforce Transformations Insights – June 2020

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How The Pandemic Is Changing The Rules Of Talent Management

How The Pandemic Is Changing The Rules Of Talent Management

This is the moment to get your organization on the right side of that equation

What Does a Planful Approach Look Like?

The best executive transition plan will probably look a little bit different depending on the size and nature of the organization. However, the key best practices – transparency, collaboration, and support – will remain a constant. Organizations must engage with the executives in transition in an open and honest context. They must display a willingness to work together to come up with a transition plan that is fair to both the individual and the organization.

In the absence of crises, it’s easy to ignore things like succession planning and executive departure strategies. In our current environment, which is defined by volatility and uncertainty,

No organization has an excuse for not planning ahead.

Let’s get more details in the 8 topics below.

  1. How the Pandemic is Changing the Rules of Talent Management – Greg Simpson
  2. Leadership Shake-ups on the Horizon: How Prepared is Your Organization? – William (Bill) Brown
  3. The Good, the Bad and the Awkward: Tips for Making Video Calls Better – Sharon Patterson
  4. How to Promote a Culture of Caring and Compassionate Leadership – Alex Vincent, Ph. D
  5. Culture: The Catalyst for Transformation – Dr. Mary Clare Race
  6. Now is the Time to Start Prospecting for Great Talent – Helene Cavalli
  7. What Lies Ahead: Three Fundamental Changes to How We’ll Work Post-Pandemic – Dan Lett
  8. Leadership – Pandemic Style – Steve Harrison
LHH-Transformation-Insights-June-2020-Web_V2

Source: lhh.com

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Assessments & Analytics Career Transition, Outplacement and Mobility Change Management Coaching Organizational Development People Development Workforce Transformations

Workforce Transformations Insights April 2020

Workforce Transformations Insights April 2020

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Workforce Transformations Insights April 2020

Think about workforce transformations in a whole new way.

Welcome to Transformation Insights, a publication devoted to the latest thinking on what it takes to transform organisations.

The coronavirus pandemic is transforming the world forever, forcing us to rethink and reshape our businesses and our lives. As the result, many companies are transforming to adapt the new situation, but are they successful?

COVID-19 is accelerating business transformation. Before the pandemic, all kinds of organizations were pursuing business or workforce transformations to meet future challenges and opportunities. Unfortunately, many of these companies were taking a very long time to enact change. And even when they did, they were reluctant to go all in, leaving them in limbo: neither the same as they were nor different enough to really move into the future. Many organizations had acknowledged the need to “transform” but just hadn’t gotten around to it.

After the pandemic, we will see many more businesses fully embrace rapid,
urgent transformation. They are learning how to do this purely as a matter of survival. We have already seen this in some industries like hospitality and healthcare. Social distancing meant that many restaurants went from being fully booked to completely empty. Undeterred, many began re-tooling their operations to focus solely on pick-up or delivery service. They were aided signifcantly in this transformation by companies that provide meal delivery on demand. In order to protect patients seeking medical advice or treatment, healthcare systems are pushing people to telemedicine options to limit human-to-human contact. Patient trafc to telehealth services is surging. Telemedicine app Amwell experienced a 158% increase since the virus hit. The shift to telemedicine is poised to dramatically impact the healthcare industry, creating new opportunities. Other organizations in other sectors of the economy are being forced to adopt similar changes, and it will change the world of work forever.

“In today’s marketplace, organizations are discovering the need to turn their attention inward to find their future talent. Let us help you turn your workforce into a true force.”

We combined research insights with our expert knowledge to home in on five key areas of focus to ensure workforce transformation success.

  • Put HR in the Driver’s Seat
  • Honest Evaluation Ensures Ongoing Success
  • Let Leaders Lead
  • Don’t Leave Career Development in the Dark
  • Culture is Crucial
LHH_Transformation-Insights_Issue-No-8

source: lhh.com

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Assessments & Analytics Career Transition, Outplacement and Mobility Change Management Coaching Organizational Development People Development Workforce Transformations

Workforce Transformations Insights Jan 2020

Workforce Transformations Insights – Jan 2020

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Workforce Transformations Insights - Jan 2020

Stay informed with our perspective on workforce transformations trends, thought-provoking insights and expert analysis that help companies create opportunity.

Think about talent in a whole new way.

The new year will bring profound changes to the way we work. Companies who see change as an opportunity will need to adopt new approaches to talent management in order to actually seize the opportunities.

Ranjit de Sousa, LHH President

In this issue, we spoke to Ian Williamson, Dean of Victoria University Business School in New Zealand while we were at the World Business Forum in NYC. Ian talked about new ways to invest in and value employees. We also sat down with Simon Gibertoni, CEO at Clinique la Prairie, who shared the challenges he faces in exporting an experience vs. a product as his company expands globally. We dug into the strategies that successful companies employ to build the workforce of the future. What emerged were the top four trends in workforce transformation we expect to see in 2020.

The most successful companies will start viewing human capital as a renewable resource, rather than something that can be discarded and replaced on a whim, he said. Like an asset, Williamson said, labor is something that must be managed to be sustainable and to provide the greatest value possible.

Far too many employers are still trapped in a cycle of firing employees whose skills are no longer needed and then going out to hire people with new skills that will drive future growth, Williamson said.
The global skills shortage makes this traditional workforce strategy untenable, he added, because there just aren’t enough skilled workers to go
around. Williamson noted that by some estimates, global IT companies need more than 85 million skilled workers to fill immediate openings.

LHH_Transformation_Insights_JAN_2020

Source: lhh.com

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Career Transition, Outplacement and Mobility People Development

Not Everyone Wants to Be a Manager

Not Everyone Wants to Be a Manager

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Career success takes on many forms.

For some, it’s landing a management position. For others, it’s finding work-life balance or developing a very specialized expertise in one area. Still others like the variety lateral moves provide. Respect and acknowledge each employee’s definition of success, and keep individual contributors engaged. Whether they’re backroom, frontline, low or high profile, individual contributors are the backbone of an organization and, as such, should not be relegated to stagnation but valued and nurtured through customized development and growth opportunities.

Interested? see this article on latest employment trends!

Not-Everyone-Wants-to-Be-a-Manager

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Coaching Organizational Development People Development

Leaders from Within: Coaching Through Growth at Procore

Leaders from Within: Coaching Through Growth at Procore

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coaching through growth

Procore Technologies faced an enormous opportunity in 2014. This market leading provider of construction management software was experiencing rapid growth. Procore needed a revised management approach that could accommodate such expansion both in terms of business volume and professional staff.

Procore leadership, recognizing the opportunity to enhance staff collaboration, curiosity and capacity for personal growth, launched a pilot coaching program for a small group of leaders. This pilot ignited an unexpected appetite across the organization for more internal coaching opportunities. Soon, Procore brought in ICF-credentialed coaches to integrate a coaching program into the company culture to provide accessibility and scalability.

Since then, Procore’s coaching program has reached over half of its employees and is a powerful tool for acquiring and retaining talent, developing leaders and nurturing a world-class culture that values the whole employee.

As a result of Procore’s sustained commitment and innovative approach to coaching, the company earned the International Coaching Federation’s (ICF’s) top honor for organizations with strong coaching cultures: the 2019 ICF International Prism Award. ICF’s Prism Award program honors organizations that have achieved the highest standard of excellence in coaching programs that yield discernible and measurable positive impacts, meet rigorous professional standards, achieve key strategic goals, and shape organizational culture.

With two focused goals—accessibility and scaling—Procore created a robust coaching program that empowers every employee’s development and growth as the company continues to scale.

Accessibility to Reach Each Employee

To make coaching readily accessible, Procore set out to demystify coaching by offering many opportunities for employees to familiarize themselves with the program:

  • The organization offers a 90-minute, in-person workshop that introduced coaching. The workshop, “Framing Up Coaching,” introduces listening skills, powerful questions, leaning into curiosity and an understanding of presence and perspective. Being able to leverage these skills builds empathy, connection and work effectiveness.
  • In addition, one of Procore’s internal Executive Coaches speaks at each new employee orientation, explaining the program and its offerings. They also get a tiny taste of curiosity through a playful question game.
  • Combined with its team of internal Executive Coaches, Procore gives employees the opportunity to receive on-demand coaching from external, ICF-credentialed coach practitioners. Employees who utilize this service commit to weekly one-hour coaching sessions via webcam. They also can access this service anytime during business hours for spontaneous check-ins.
  • The Coaching Corner is a collaborative space that features articles written by internal Executive Coaches, as well as forums where people can share questions related to coaching.

Scaling to Build a Coaching Culture

To achieve scalability, Procore reinforces its coaching culture through leaders who embody a coaching approach. These leaders understand how to ask their team questions instead of giving them answers, apply active listening and help their team members navigate collectively toward a solution.

Creating coaching opportunities for the executive team is essential to building a coaching culture. “If [the C-suite is] not actively in coaching engagements, you can forget about having a successful coaching culture,” says ICF Professional Certified Coach Jeanne Smith, Procore’s coaching culture architect and the organization’s Prism Award nominating coach.

As much as 90% of Procore’s executive team participates in one-on-one coaching with ICF-credentialed external coach practitioners. These executives then bring their coaching leadership styles to their teams.

“Being a leader isn’t just being in a position of power,” says Procore’s senior director of real estate and facilities. “Being a leader is inspiring others and having them want to be on this journey with you.”

A Personalized Approach to Growth and Development

A high-quality work culture across the entire organization is a top priority at Procore. Coaching is a direct investment in maintaining and improving that culture. Employees are learning to lean into asking instead of telling in workplace conversations, creating a trusted environment that welcomes diverse points of view.

“This personal approach makes Procore unique,” Smith says. “The beauty of the work that we do as coaches is to develop the whole person. And as human beings we crave that one-on-one attention. When a company says, ‘I support that,’ the people of the organization feel seen and heard. This invites them to bring their best selves to their work, their teams and their clients.”

With an executive team that understands the impact of curiosity and strengths-based leadership, Procore is ready to tackle future coaching goals and continue to foster a healthy workplace culture organization-wide. Through its coaching program, Procore has built a workplace where every employee is valued and encouraged to grow.

Source: International Coaching Federation

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