Tuesday 29 December 2015

Engage Employees Part 3: Promote and Part


In the last post we discussed about “pay more and disengage”. Now, let us consider can we use promotion as a tool to engage employees?

Let us consider the following:

1. Promote and Disengage Employees:

A Communication and technology client during my consulting days positioned careers as a differentiator. While the company was growing at a rapid stride, it was easy to promote people and provide larger roles. As the growth slowed down, promotions led to change in designation and compensation without a material change in role. We observed that all those promoted without a role change demonstrated an increase in engagement for a year and then the engagement dipped even below the level of engagement before the promotion.

2. Promote beyond the level of Incompetence

This was more than a decade ago. One of my team members was very high performer and was a high potential. But we strongly felt that he was not ready for the next role. However, he threatened to resign and we did not want to lose him. We promoted him. In about a year’s time he resigned. When I called him to discuss the reasons, he said that he resigned because he was promoted. I insisted that he told me more. He said that a year ago he felt wanted by the firm, loved by the team members and respected by the clients. With the promotion the expectations from all the three stakeholders changed dramatically and he found it difficult to meet the new set of expectations. Therefore, he felt that none of the stakeholders respected him any longer. He felt he was in a fix as he could not request us to demote him. After that episode I preferred to lose people rather than promote them, as that would eventually lead to a loss in any case.

3. Promote and Sack People

As in example 1 above, another client promoted people leading to higher salaries and better designation, without a role change. This did not give people an opportunity to increase their value add to the organization. In turn, they did not add value to themselves. When the market stagnated as these employees did not add value concomitant to their hierarchy and the compensation they received they were the first ones to be asked to go. As they did not add value to themselves, they did not find an appropriate job in the market. They had to settle for less, impacting their self esteem.

So, those who thought that they can use promotion as a tool to engage and retain employees could be up for a rude shock. You may end up disengaging employees, exiting them and impacting their self esteem for a long time.

Even while they stay, they stay disengaged. They do not help the business.
Should you then not promote? You should definitely promote. Promotions should be based on:

1. Performance and Potential
2. Availability of a bigger role
3. Readiness for the role.

Such promotions will engage employees who are promoted and motivate others to strive harder. This would be good for people and good for business. Therefore, this would be sustainable, even if you lose a few in the bargain. 

If Pay and promotion should not be used as tools to engage and retain employees, should PMS be used as a tool to engage employees? Let us discuss next week.





Engage Employees Part 2: Pay More and Disengage Employees

We hear frequently, from business leaders as well as HR leaders, that we should pay more and we will be able to engage employees. Alternatively we can’t engage employees because we can’t pay enough.

Let us examine the following examples and situations:

1.      Pay More and Disengage employees: A multinational bank paid its employees significantly higher than its peers. But it failed to provide challenging work and consequently could not ensure development and growth.  The employees were disengaged. They could not get jobs with other banks as their compensation could not be matched. This resulted in a pool of frustrated employees who did not service customers well.  Eventually it translated into accelerated non performance of business leading to lack of challenging work and development. So golden hand cuffs created a vicious cycle.

2.      Pay Less and Engage Employees:  One of the largest software services companies in India is known to pay the lowest salary amongst its peers. It always had the lowest attrition and the highest engagement. While in the short run some of the peers did well, over a larger horizon it outperformed its peers.

3.      ESOP a Golden Hand cuff: A well known player in communication and technology had a serious challenge in engaging its leadership team. The CEO asked me if they were so disengaged and that too perennially, why they didn’t leave. The answer was staring at his face – how can they leave such hefty ESOPs and go?  A disengaged leadership team could be disruptive for business.

4.      Can’t afford to pay. So can’t Engage:  The research by almost all consulting firms show that the engagement went up in more than two thirds of the companies in 2008 and 2009, when companies could not pay well.  Employees did understand the predicament of employers and responded positively, wherever leadership was receptive and demonstrated care.

Does this mean we should pay less or we should not pay more? NO, please consider the following:

1.    1.  Pay Enough:Dan Pink says that while money or monetary rewards did not result in engagement or in high performance, pay enough to get the pay discussion off the table and help people to focus on performance.

2.     2. Pay More and Engage: One of the largest companies in social media pays the highest salary in the industry. The employees are highly engaged. However, they do not want people to join them for money. They want people to join them for freedom to innovate, empowerment and freedom to perform. They take care of their employees by providing best of the facilities at work, to the extent that the employees do not miss their homes.

3.  3. Pay as Per Promise: Organizations need to set expectations and pay as per promise. If the organization does not keep its promise it will surely disengage its employees.

4. 4. Pay Fairly:Organizations must ensure fairness in compensation both internally and externally. Within the organization compensation should be fairly paid based on performance of an individual and her contribution to organization’s success. Both the performance management and the compensation management should be as transparent as possible. If we have a robust performance management system driven by business, as discussed in one of the earlier posts, it would be easy to be fair and transparent.  In the absence of organizational transparency grapevine takes over.

In a socially connected world, the compensation should be benchmarked with companies from where the organization hires talent and with the companies to whom it loses talent. This should also be transparent to the extent possible.  Transparency will ensure that people understand the fact that they are paid well and in line with the organizational promise, which will minimize the impact of misguidance by social network. 

5.     5. Take Recourse to Total Rewards: The software company that paid less and retained and engaged employees in the example above, ensured that they took good care of their employees and avoided retrenching them during down turn. The total perceived rewards, therefore, were higher than those due to higher salary paid by competitors.

Therefore, payenough, pay fairly and migrate to total rewards. And yes, fulfil your promise. This will ensure that you do not disengage employees. 

However, you will have to do very different things to ensure engagement. We will discuss how to engage various subsets of employees in subsequent posts over the next few weeks.




                              

Sunday 20 December 2015

Engage Employees Part 1: Why engage employees? Just stay focussed on business.

I have been seeing significant discussion on employee engagement and the futility of it. I completely agree with all those who think we should not engage employees and instead stay focussed on business.

I recall meeting the Managing Director of a large cement manufacturing company during my consulting days, who told me that cement was produced by kilns and not people. He told me that investing in employee engagement was good for businesses where factor of production was  people- typically service industry. I told him that I completely agreed with him and requested him to educate me if he had patented kilns that his competitors did not have access to. I further asked him if that was the reason- his company was making huge profits while the others were not. He went on to explain to me that the kilns were manufactured by four companies in the world and all the cement manufacturers had similar kilns. He further explained that kilns ran on their own for 300 days and at that level of production plants made a loss while at 345 days of production plants became highly profitable. On asking him if all the plants of his company were operating at 345 days, he answered in the negative. When I wanted to know the difference between high performing plants compared to others, he told me it was people. He further said that while they hired people with similar qualifications and experience, the motivation levels and passion, especially of plant leadership team, made the big difference. Needless to say that he went ahead with a program to engage employees, including leaders.  The employee engagement program was a result of MD’s focus on business and to ensure consistent and sustained plant performance.

Clearly, there has to be a business reason to engage employees. We should remember that hr is owned by business and not by HR. Therefore any intervention that does not address business issues will not stick.

As we discussed in earlier posts, PMS is a business tool and differentiation is key to high performing organization. At the same time this could generate significant heat and friction between the employees and leaders; and leaders and the board representing the shareholders interest. This calls for some cushioning effect to convert the friction into passion and motivation which will help sustain high performance over a long time. Employee engagement provides the cushioning effect.

There is enough debate on whether business performance is correlated with employee engagement or which one is a lead factor and which one is a lag factor. But there is enough research and experience to demonstrate that engagement is a lead factor and performance is a lag factor.

If a bottleneck in business can be identified, quantifying the business benefit of employee engagement becomes easier.


A word of caution: Engagement without strong performance management could lead to a country club culture. Engagement does not mean keeping employees happy, it means keeping employees motivated and passionate about work. 

Saturday 12 December 2015

Business and HR Part 2: Never have a PMS process for people

Performance Management System or PMS is believed to be an HR process to evaluate people’s performance in order to reward people, decide on increments, variable pay and promotions.  Therefore,  line managers see it as additional work.  One hears a usual rhetoric, “Should I do my business or should I spend time on completing PMS on the HRMS or discuss performance with team”. I would strongly suggest that line managers should not waste time if PMS is for people.  They should stay focused on business. 


However, imagine a situation where an organization employs 5000 people.  Can a CEO do everything to achieve his Objectives?  Or can the ten people in the leadership team do everything to achieve their or CEO’s objectives?  On the contrary while the leadership can provide direction, the real work is done by 4500 people at the bottom of the pyramid – salesmen, production engineer, maintenance engineer, bank teller etc.  Unless their objectives are aligned with objectives of the CEO, CEO cannot deliver on the expectations of shareholder.

A.      How does an organization align the entire organization with the objective of a CEO?

PMS is the tool to align the organization with the objectives of the CEO.  Therefore PMS is primarily a business tool and it may also provide inputs for various HR processes.


B.  How does business leadership effectively use PMS to help CEO deliver on his objective?

1.       Own: Business leadership should own and drive PMS process.
2.       Cascade: While everyone knows the importance of cascading the CEO objective through PMS, it is usually executed well in sales driven organizations.  The other businesses struggle quite a lot to effectively cascade the objectives.
3.       Helping people deliver:  Having set the goals, aligned with organization, line managers have to constantly help their team members deliver by:

                                                         i.            Providing Constant feedback
                                                       ii.            Coaching them on course correction
                                                     iii.            Demonstrating how to execute, where needed

Obviously this is again something line managers, who know their job, can do the best.


C.      What should HR do in the PMS process?

1.       Custodial Service: HR should provide the custodial service to line managers by program managing the process. In addition, it should be the eyes and ears of leaders to ensure their objectives are met.

2.       Capability Building of people managers:
HR should focus on capability building of people managers to help:
                                                               i.      Cascade the objectives seamlessly
                                                             ii.      Coach their team
                                                           iii.      Provide constructive feedback
                                                           iv.      Train team through demonstration

D.      What is their in PMS process for people?

Primarily a PMS process helps people to deliver on organization objectives, which in turn helps people, learn and grow.  The learning is based on what they do, manager’s feedback and his coaching and guidance.  This is the biggest source of learning for people.

By the way, PMS also provides input for:
1.       Learning and development
2.       Compensation
3.       Career Growth through lateral and vertical opportunities
So PMS is the mother of all HR processes. But PMS itself is a business process.



Most PMS processes that fail are people centric and do not deliver business results. Therefore business managers are not interested. In the bargain people do not learn and grow. The input that such a PMS process provides to all the other HR processes is not rich enough, making all the HR processes redundant from business perspective.

Wednesday 9 December 2015

Business and HR Part 1: Is "Corporate Socialism" killing businesses?

Most Indian organizations and foreign companies operating in India could have done better than what they are doing. There are many reasons for suboptimal performance of organizations, across business, Government and NGOs. These are lack of appropriate capabilities, lack of training and development, lack of leadership, improper risk assessment, inappropriate strategy or business model. Different companies are plagued with some or a combination of these issues. All of us know that even if strategy or business model is slightly defective or if the risk was not properly assessed, the key to success is excellent execution. However, most companies demonstrate lack of excellence in execution. What is the root cause?


The primary reason for lack of excellence in execution is "Socialism at Work", which cuts across most companies in almost all sectors in Asia and especially in India. If the organizations reward the high performer and low performer similarly, what is the incentive to perform? Even worse, the organizations do not give differential treatment to performers, in terms of opportunities, resources and recognition and appreciation.
What should companies do to enhance performance?
DIFFERENTIATE through:
1. A very transparent PMS process with quantified goals.
2. Capability of managers to call a spade a spade. 
3. Leaders own differentiation of performance and drive it though the year.
3. Very high differentiation in variable pay and increments between high and average performers.
4. The developmental and growth opportunities for the high performers, which should be distinct from those available to average performers.
5. Superior resources to high performers in order to help them be more productive and effective. This would ultimately help business perform better.
In Government sector the option to differentiate is limited. Therefore motivation  to perform is limited.
Some of the public sector companies, especially banks, have used differentiated opportunities and resources as key drivers to motivate high performers and help them deliver better. These organizations have excelled compared to their peer group. Their ability to influence or effect differentiation in compensation was limited.
In Private Sector all the levers are available. But the will to create differentiation is lacking in most organization. The challenge becomes bigger when CEOs do not want to differentiate, little realising that this will hamper the business performance and consequently their own performance, and may be survival. 
In an environment of Corporate Socialism, high performers are frustrated and leave for greener pastures. This leaves the well rewarded mediocre talent behind, resulting in a mediocre organization and mediocre business performance.
Leaders have to choose between socialism and high performing businesses.