Best Practices in Talent Management: How the World's Leading Corporations Manage, Develop, and Retain Top Talent
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Praise for BEST PRACTICES in TALENT MANAGEMENT
"This book includes the most up-to-date thinking, tools, models, instruments and case studies necessary to identify, lead, and manage talent within your organization and with a focus on results. It provides it all—from thought leadership to real-world practice."
PATRICK CARMICHAEL
HEAD OF TALENT MANAGEMENT, REFINING, MARKETING, AND INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONS, SAUDI ARAMCO
"This is a superb compendium of stories that give the reader a peek behind the curtains of top notch organizations who have wrestled with current issues of talent management. Their lessons learned are vital for leaders and practitioners who want a very valuable heads up."
BEVERLY KAYE
FOUNDER/CEO: CAREER SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL AND CO-AUTHOR, LOVE 'EM OR LOSE 'EM
"This is a must read for organization leaders and HR practitioners who cope with the today's most critical business challenge—talent management. This book provides a vast amount of thought provoking ideals, tools, and models, for building and implementing talent management strategies. I highly recommend it!"
DALE HALM
ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM MANAGER, ARIZONA PUBLIC SERVICE
"If you are responsible for planning and implementing an effective talent and succession management strategy in your organization, this book provides the case study examples you are looking for."
DORIS SIMS
AUTHOR, BUILDING TOMORROW'S TALENT
"A must read for all managers who wish to implement a best practice talent management program within their organization"
FARIBORZ GHADAR WILLIAM A. SCHREYER PROFESSOR OF GLOBAL MANAGEMENT, POLICIES AND PLANNING SENIOR ADVISOR AND DISTINGUISHED SENIOR SCHOLAR CENTER FOR STRATEGIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS FOUNDING DIRECTOR CENTER FOR GLOBAL BUSINESS STUDIES
Marshall Goldsmith
Dr. Marshall Goldsmith is routinely recognized as one of the top ten Most-Influential Business Thinkers in the World. He is the author or editor of 35 books, which have sold over two million copies, been translated into 30 languages and become bestsellers in 12 countries. Among his major bestsellers include: WHAT GOT YOU HERE WON’T GET YOU THERE, TRIGGERS, and MOJO.
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Best Practices in Talent Management - Marshall Goldsmith
CHAPTER 1
AVON PRODUCTS, INC.
MARC EFFRON
A leadership development and talent turnaround system designed for executives that leverage 360-degree feedback, a leadership skill/competency model, and individual development planning.
Introduction
A Success-Driven Challenge
The Turnaround
The Talent Challenge
Execute on the What,
Differentiate with How
From Opaque to Transparent
The Avon 360
Broad-Based Transparency
From Complex to Simple
Performance Management
Engagement Survey
From Egalitarian to Differentiated
Communication to Leadership Teams
A Few Big Bets
Tools and Processes
From Episodic to Disciplined
From Emotional to Factual
From Meaningless to Consequential
The Results of a Talent Turnaround
Measuring the Talent Turnaround’s Success
INTRODUCTION
In early 2006, Avon Products, Inc., a global consumer products company focused on the economic empowerment of women around the world, began the most radical restructuring process in its 120-year history. Driving this effort was the belief that Avon could sustain its historically strong financial performance while building the foundation for a larger, more globally integrated organization. The proposed changes would affect every aspect of the organization and would demand an approach to finding, building, and engaging talent that differed from anything tried before.
A SUCCESS-DRIVEN CHALLENGE
Avon Products is a 122-year-old company originally founded by David H. McConnell—a door-to-door book seller who distributed free samples of perfume as an incentive to his customers. He soon discovered that customers were more interested in samples of his rose oil perfumes than in his books and so, in 1886, he founded the California Perfume Company. Renamed Avon Products in 1939, the organization steadily grew to become a leader in the direct selling of cosmetics, fragrances, and skin care products.
By 2005, Avon was an $8 billion company that had achieved a 10 percent cumulative annual growth rate (CAGR) in revenue and a 25 percent CAGR in operating profit from 2000 through 2004. A global company, Avon operated in more than forty countries and received more than 70 percent of its earnings from outside the United States. By all typical financial metrics, Avon was a very successful company.
However, as the company entered 2006 it found itself challenged by flattening revenues and declining operating profits. While the situation had many contributing causes, one underlying issue was that Avon had grown faster than portions of its infrastructure and talent could support. As with many growing organizations, the structures, people, and processes that were right for a $5 billion company weren’t necessarily a good fit for a $10 billion company.
THE TURNAROUND
Faced with these challenges, CEO Andrea Jung and her executive team launched a fundamental restructuring of the organization in January 2006. Some of the larger changes announced included:
Moving from a Regional to a Matrix Structure: Geographic regions that had operated with significant latitude were now matrixed with global business functions, including Marketing and Supply Chain.
Delayering: A systematic, six-month process was started to take the organization from fifteen layers of management to eight, including a compensation and benefit reduction of up to 25 percent.
Significant Investment in Executive Talent: Of the CEO’s fourteen direct reports, six key roles were replaced externally from 2004 to 2006, including the CFO, head of North America, head of Latin America, and the leaders of Human Resources, Marketing, and Strategy. Five of her other direct reports were in new roles.
New Capabilities Were Created: A major effort to source Brand Management, Marketing Analytics, and Supply Chain capabilities was launched, which brought hundreds of new leaders into Avon.
THE TALENT CHALLENGE
As the turnaround was launched, numerous gaps existed in Avon’s existing talent and in its ability to identify and produce talent. While some of those gaps were due to missing or poorly functioning talent processes, an underlying weakness seemed to lie in the overall approach to managing talent and talent practices.
After reviewing Avon’s existing talent practices, the talent management group (TM) identified six overriding weaknesses that hurt their effectiveness. They found that existing talent practices were
Opaque: Neither managers nor Associates knew how existing talent practices (that is, performance management, succession planning) worked or what they were intended to do. To the average employee, these processes were a black box.
Egalitarian: While the Avon culture reinforced treating every Associate well, this behavior had morphed into treating every Associate in the same way. High performers weren’t enjoying a fundamentally different work experience and low performers weren’t being managed effectively.
Complex: The performance management form was ten pages long, and the succession planning process required a full-time employee just to manage the data and assemble thick black binders of information for twice-yearly reviews. Complexity existed without commensurate value, and the effectiveness rate of the talent practices was low.
Episodic: Employee surveys, talent reviews, development planning, and succession planning, when done at all, were done at a frequency determined by individual managers around the world.
Emotional: Decisions on talent movement, promotions, and other key talent activities were often influenced as much by individual knowledge and emotion as by objective facts.
Meaningless: No talent practice had teeth.
HR couldn’t answer the most basic question a manager might ask about talent practices—What will happen to me if I don’t do this?
EXECUTE ON THE WHAT,
DIFFERENTIATE WITH HOW
Our TM group found ourselves in a difficult situation. Fundamental changes were needed in every talent practice, and the practices had to be changed and implemented in time to support the turnaround. This meant that the practices had to be quick to build, easy to use, and, most of all, effective.
Taking our guidance from the Top Companies for Leaders study (Effron, Greenslade, & Salob, 2005) and the philosophies of executive coach Marshall Goldsmith (2006), we decided to build our talent practices with two key guiding principles.
Execute on the what.
The Top Companies for Leaders study found that simple, well-executed talent practices dominated at companies that consistently produced great earnings and great leaders. We similarly believed that fundamental talent practices (that is, performance management or succession planning) would deliver the expected results if they were consistently and flawlessly executed. We decided to build talent practices that were easy to implement and a talent management structure that would ensure they were consistently and flawlessly implemented. More importantly, we decided to . . .
Differentiate on how.
While disciplined execution could create a strong foundation for success, the six adjectives that described Avon’s current processes were largely responsible for their failure. We drew inspiration from Marshall Goldsmith’s revolutionary recreation of the executive coaching process. He had taken a staid, academic/therapy model for improving leaders and turned it into a simple but powerful process that was proven effective in changing leaders’ behaviors.
With those two guiding principles in place, we began a 180-degree transformation of Avon’s talent practices.
FROM OPAQUE TO TRANSPARENT
One of the most simple and powerful changes was to bring as much transparency as possible to every talent practice. TM designed new practices and redesigned existing ones using total transparency as the starting point. Transparency was only removed when confidentiality concerns outweighed the benefits of sharing information. The change in Avon’s 360 assessment process was a telling example.
The Avon 360
Avon’s 360-degree assessment process was hardly a model of transparency when the turnaround began. When the new TM leader arrived at Avon, he asked for copies of each VP’s 360-degree assessment, with the goal of better understanding any common behavioral strengths and weaknesses. He was told by the 360 administrator in his group that he was not allowed to see them. The TM leader explained that his intent wasn’t to take any action on an individual VP, simply to learn more about his clients. He was again told no
—that confidentiality prevented their disclosure.
While the administrator was correct in withholding the information (the participants had been promised 100 percent confidentiality), the fact that the most critical behavioral information about top leaders was not visible to the TM leader (or anyone else) had to change. A new, much simpler 360 was designed and implemented that explicitly stated that proper managerial and leadership behaviors were critical for a leader’s success at Avon. Citing that level of importance, the disclosure to all participants and respondents stated that the 360 information could be shown to the participant’s manager, HR leader, regional talent leader, and anyone else the Avon’s HR team decided was critical to the participant’s development. It also stated that the behavioral information could be considered when making decisions about talent moves, including promotions or project assignments.
Helping to make this transition to transparency easier, the new 360 assessment and report differed from typical tools that rate the participant on proficiency in various areas. The Avon 360 borrowed heavily from the feed-forward
principles of Marshall Goldsmith¹ and showed the participant which behaviors participants wanted to see more of, or less of, going forward. Without the potential stigma of having others seeing you rated as a bad
manager, openly sharing 360 findings quickly evaporated as an issue.
Broad-Based Transparency
Transparency was woven into every talent process or program in a variety of ways. Examples would include:
Career Development Plans: To provide Associates with more transparency about how to succeed at Avon, the HR team developed The Deal.
The Deal was a simple description of what was required to have a successful career at Avon, and what parts the Associate and Avon needed to play (see Figure 1.1). The Deal made clear that every Associate had to deliver results, display proper leadership behaviors, know our unique business, and take advantage of development experiences if they hoped to move forward in the organization.
Development Courses: Avon acknowledged the unspoken but obvious fact about participating in leadership or functional training courses—of course you’re being observed! We believed it was important for participants to understand that we were investing in their future and that monitoring that investment was critical. The larger investment that we made, the more explicitly we made the disclosure. For our Accelerated Development Process (a two-year high-potential development process offered to the top 10 percent of VPs), we let them know that they were now on Broadway.
The lights would be hotter and the critics would be less forgiving. They knew that we would help each of them to be a great actor, but that their successes and failures would be more public and have greater consequences.
Performance Reviews: Switching from a 3-point scale to a 5-point scale provided additional clarity to participants about their actual progress, as did clarifying the scale definitions. Associates were informed about what performance conversations their managers should be having with them and when. The recommended distribution of ratings across the scale was widely communicated.
c01x01FIGURE 1.1. Talent Investment Matrix
FROM COMPLEX TO SIMPLE
One of the most important changes made in Avon’s talent practices was the radical simplification of every process. We believed that traditional talent processes would work (that is, grow better talent, faster) if they were effectively executed. However, we understood from our experience and a plethora of research (Hunter, Schmidt, & Judiesch, 1990) that most talent practices were very complex without that complexity adding any significant value. This level of complexity caused managers to avoid using those tools, and so talent wasn’t grown at the pace or quality that companies required.
We committed ourselves to radically simplifying every talent process and ensuring that any complexity in those processes was balanced by an equal amount of value (as perceived by managers). Making this work was easier than we had anticipated. As the TM team designed each process, we would start literally with a blank sheet of paper and an open mind. We would set aside our hard-earned knowledge about the right
way to design these processes and instead ask ourselves these questions:
What is the fundamental business benefit that this talent process is trying to achieve?
What is the simplest possible way to achieve that benefit?
Can we add value to the process that would make it easier for managers to make smarter people decisions?
Using just those three questions, it was amazing how many steps and bells and whistles
fell away from the existing processes. The two examples below provide helpful illustration.
Performance Management
Aligning Associates with the turnaround goals of the business and ensuring they were fairly evaluated was at the foundation of the business turnaround. As we entered the turnaround, the company had a complex ten-page performance management form with understandably low participation rates. Many Associates had not had a performance review in three, four, or even five years. It would have been impossible to align Associates with the vital few turnaround goals using that tool and