Overview of The Workforce Focus Category: 222 Baldrige Award Winning Quality
Overview of The Workforce Focus Category: 222 Baldrige Award Winning Quality
Overview of The Workforce Focus Category: 222 Baldrige Award Winning Quality
10
Interpreting the Criteria for
Workforce Focus (5)
222 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
over the last few years. Evidence of teams, empowerment, and other trappings of
TQM
programs of the past is certainly no longer a requirement, but may still be a plus if
an
organization finds these approaches effective.
The pages that follow include detailed explanations of how to interpret the
individual
Areas to Address and questions in this category. As before, the information on the
overall
item is found in a shadowed box and the explanation of the Areas to Address
appears
in another box below that. In some cases, there is a separate explanation of
individual
subpoints [e.g., 5.2a(1)] when this is the best way of presenting the material.
Following
each explanation of the Areas to Address and subpoints, there is a list of indicators
of
what the examiners might expect to see when evaluating your response to this Area
to
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 223
WORKFORCE
list of benefits and services that might have made sense 25 years ago. As the
employee
population has changed, we want to see that the programs and services have
changed to
meet the needs of the population. Government organizations Ive worked with
actually
tend to do a better job in this area than many big corporations.
I would answer this question by presenting a list of programs and initiatives that
have
been designed or tailored to different groups of employees in your organization. You
might want to refer the reader back to the overview, wherein you describe the
composition
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 225
of your employee population. The examiner might have forgotten that your
workforce is
32 percent Asian, for example. If there are unique features about your efforts in this
area,
or if your programs have been benchmarked by other organizations, you should
definitely
discuss this. What will impress the examiners is the creativity of your approaches,
and how
far they go in making employees feel comfortable in the work environment.
Gestures that
look like a token effort could be viewed as a cop-out.
opinions or ideas. It is important that your answer focuses more on ways leaders
listen
than talk. Typical approaches like an employee newsletter and meetings listening to
managers drone on using PowerPoint is likely to end up with a low score.
5.1a. (2) HOW do you foster an organizational culture conducive to HIGH
PERFORMANCE and a motivated WORKFORCE to accomplish the following:
cooperation, EFFECTIVE communication, and skill sharing within and across
work units, operating units, and locations, as appropriate
EFFECTIVE information flow and two-way communication with supervisors and
managers
individual goal setting, EMPOWERMENT, and initiative
INNOVATIONin the work environment
the ability to benefit from the diverse ideas, cultures, and thinking of your
WORKFORCE
The third bullet asks about approaches for setting individual goals, and for
empowering
employees at various levels to initiate improvements when necessary. For example,
two-time
Baldrige winner Ritz Carlton has a policy that says If you hear about a problem or
notice it,
you are responsible for solving it, regardless of your job. This means that if a
groundskeeper
hears about a problem in the restaurant, he will follow up with the appropriate
personnel
in the restaurant to see that the problem is resolved and that the guest is happy.
Innovation is something most organizations claim to value, but most only reward it
when innovation is successful. Most great innovations are the result of many
failures.
In fact, one company I work with believes in rewarding failures because failures
indicate
risk taking, and with each failure a lesson is learned. Explain how your
organizational
culture rewards innovation and creativity, even when it does not directly contribute
to
the bottom line. The final bullet in this area to address asks about how the culture of
your organization really rewards diversity and has mechanisms for encouraging
diverse
ideas and thinking. As with innovation, diversity is something most organizations
claim
to value, but in reality, they value people who look, think, and act like senior
leaders.
A well-known high-tech firm hires only Ivy-league graduates and almost everyone in
the
workforce is under 35 years old. Other organizations have a very diverse workforce,
but
dont have good systems for capturing a diversity of ideas and different ways of
thinking.
Many school systems, for example have not changed much in 50 years, and those in
the field sometimes have a hard time thinking out of the traditional education
model.
Bringing in people from outside of your own industry can be a great way of
introducing
new thinking in an organization.
management system. Ive seen some good features and creative approaches, but
each
program also had its share of flaws.
One innovative approach that has been developed in the federal government is the
system
being used today at the Department of Energys Savannah River facility. Terry
Frizzell
and Brent Armstrong convinced the office of personnel management to let them
pilot
a system that does not have numerical ratings or grades. Inflation had caused
almost
everyone at the site to receive the highest ratings over the years, so the ratings had
become fairly meaningless. The new system is a pass/fail rating. The emphasis in
the new
program is on feedback and development, rather than on assigning a rating. The
forms
5.1a(3) HOW does your WORKFORCE PERFORMANCE management system support
HIGH-PERFORMANCE WORK and WORKFORCE ENGAGEMENT? HOW does your
WORKFORCE PERFORMANCE management system consider WORKFORCE
compensation, reward, recognition, and incentive practices? H OW does your
WORKFORCE PERFORMANCE management system reinforce a CUSTOMER and
business focus and achievement of your ACTION PLANS?
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 229
associated with the new approach are also much simplified, so managers and
supervisors
at the site are providing positive feedback.
An approach that has become popular in human resource circles over the last few
years
is 360 degree appraisals. In other words, employee performance is assessed by his
or
her peers, customers, boss, and perhaps suppliers. While this seems like an
interesting
idea, most systems that Ive reviewed have three to five times more meetings and
forms
to fill out than traditional appraisal systems, and the ratings are no more valid. As
one employee I talked to explained: It was inaccurate when only my boss
subjectively
graded my performance based on her memory. Now I have five people who get to
make a
subjective judgment about me and my performance and give me a rating.
The point here is that newer approaches are not necessarily better. You need to
describe
your performance planning and appraisal system, and stress why and how your
approach
is effective and better than what the examiners might find in a typical company. You
would
probably get more points from some examiners for not having a performance
management
system than keeping one that adds no value. If you use different approaches for
different
levels of employees and managers, you need to point out those distinctions in your
answer.
A high-performance work system includes mechanisms for rewarding the desired
behavior and results from employees. One of the big disconnects in many
companies is
compensation systems that dont reward anything except sticking around for
another year,
or that exclusively reward short-term financial results.
Many organizations claim to be committed to quality and customer satisfaction, but
they
compensate employees based upon seniority, level, or job function. Few of the
companies
that have performance-based pay plans base the pay that employees receive upon
quality.
Performance-based pay is most often based upon sales, profits, and other financial
measures. Some past Baldrige applicants have explained that theyve implemented
a
gainsharing plan as a way of promoting improved quality. However, gainsharing in
many
cases is nothing more than profit sharing.
Based upon my own experience consulting with large companies, the ideal situation
is
to have a large percentage of all employees compensation upon individual and
group
performance against quality goals and standards. Many organizations have bonus
programs for executives and upper management, but not for other levels of
employees.
Three criteria are important in assessing the compensation systems in a company.
First, a portion of employees compensation should be based upon the degree to
which
230 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
individual and group performance goals have been met. The second criterion is that
all
levels and categories of employees should participate in performance-based
compensation
programs. Third and last, a large enough percentage of income should be based
upon
quality results to make a difference in motivating employees. Allowing employees
who
earn an average of $30,000 to earn an annual bonus of up to $500 for exceeding
their
goals is not going to do much to motivate them.
Your task in this section is to convince the examiners that your compensation plan
drives
performance excellence from teams and individual employees. Many former
Baldrige
winners have very traditional compensation systems. The new criteria ask for
evidence
of a compensation program that rewards performance that is critical to organization
performance. For example, the key business drivers and performance measures and
goals
that you discussed in sections 2 and 4 might be the foundation of your
compensation or
bonus plan. In some leading edge companies, all employees earn a bonus, and that
bonus
is based upon achieving a balance between all of their measures on their own
scorecards.
For example, at Federal Express, employee bonuses are based on how well you
satisfy
internal and/or external customers (Service), how well you satisfy your employees
or
teammates/peers (People), and how well you achieve or control financial results
(Profit).
All employees from the CEO to the package sorter are on this bonus plan, and it
keeps
everyone focused on their three priorities.
Another aspect of your high-performance work system that is evaluated here is how
you recognize employees in nonfinancial ways. Everyone likes money, but
motivating
employees and influencing their behavior through compensation alone is very
limiting.
Nonfinancial recognition is probably more important and more powerful if it is done
right. Some of the important factors that will be assessed regarding your approach
to
recognition are:
How much of it do you do?
How well have you analyzed the needs and preferences of employees in designing
recognition programs?
How much creativity has been put into recognition programs to make them
interesting and
fun for employees?
To what extent are the behaviors and accomplishments that are recognized
consistent with
organizational values, goals, and key performance measures?
Most companies and organizations pay very little attention to employee recognition,
other than a few unimaginative, mostly useless, programs like Employee of the
Month.
No imagination is put into the effort, very few employees receive any kind of
recognition,
and the items and privileges that are given out for recognition are often perceived
by
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 231
employees as insulting or at best small thank yous. Certificates, hats, T-shirts, and
coffee
cups may not be too rewarding if you and your team just saved the company
$15,000.
Future Baldrige winners will need to put a great deal of emphasis on the approaches
they
use to motivate and recognize individuals and teams of employees. Companies like
1997
winner 3M Dental Products and 1998 winner Solar Turbines put a great deal of effort
into
recognizing employees.
The most important factor in a successful recognition program is to have senior
management that believes in the importance of recognition and positive
reinforcement,
and is willing to make this a priority that does not get delegated down to an HR
clerk
who updates the employee-of-the-month bulletin board once a month. Your
approach to
recognition should also be consistent with your organizational structure and job
design.
If you have organized your organization around teams, for example, you wouldnt
want all
of your recognition to be based on individual performance.
Noncontingent recognition, such as periodic parties or celebrations that everyone
attends
regardless of their performance, may help build morale, but it is not relevant here.
Write
about things you do to boost overall morale in section 5.3, not here.
The first three bullets in this area to address ask about how you determine training
and
development needs for your workforce. A thorough training needs analysis includes
feedback from employees and managers and other members of the workforce on
what
topics or types of training and development they most need for the future. It is
important
that organizations regularly assess training and development needs to make sure
that
their offerings are in synch with what people want and need. However, what they
want and
5.1b. Workforce and Leader Development
(1) HOW does your Workforce development and LEARNING system address
the following:
needs and desires for LEARNING and development identified by your
WORKFORCE, including supervisors and managers
your CORE COMPETENCIES, STRATEGIC CHALLENGES, and
accomplishment of your ACTIONPLANS,both short-termand long-term
organizational PERFORMANCE improvement, technological change, and
INNOVATION
what they need are often quite different. Engineers and technical employees may
ask for
lots of technical training, but what they really need is more training on softer topics
like
leadership or interpersonal skills. Employees also sometimes ask for training that is
not
really linked to the organizations goals, but links to their personal goals.
Consequently,
the majority of your training needs should be based on an analysis of gaps in
down. The problem Ive seen in many organizations is that no one bothers to consult
this
234 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
documentation when it might help them perform better. Often retiring managers
and
others end up being hired back as consultants because the less experienced people
cant
do what they can as well or as quickly. The answer is to begin passing on this
knowledge
and skill early on via mentoring programs or other similar approaches so that by the
time
the senior employee leaves, the junior employee is ready to take over the reins.
The final bullet in this question asks about how the organization reinforces use of
the
knowledge and skills acquired in training back on the job. Few organizations
effectively
follow up on the training they do to make sure it is being applied on the job.
Employees
often report learning new tools or techniques in training and are told by their bosses
to
do things the old way and to forget what they learned in training. A lack of
systematic
follow-up and positive reinforcement is the number one reason why training of any
sort
fails to change behavior or improve organizational performance. As much or more
money and effort needs to be spent on what happens after the course or workshop
as is
spent preparing and conducting the training. For example, a major aerospace
company
I worked with evaluates individual leaders strengths and weaknesses by surveying
subordinates before their boss attends leadership training. Then 3-6 months after
the
leadership program is completed, the same survey is conducted to see if the boss
has
improved. Individual coaching sessions are held with each leader to help them apply
what
they learned in class back on the job. By using such an approach, the company has
had
great success with the leadership program actually making people better managers.
Evidence that training is linked to the company vision and corresponding a ction
plans.
Breadth and depth of types of training identified are appropriate for the
organization.
Competencies needed to achieve the strategic plan are well addressed in training
plan.
An effective balance exists in allocating resources to short-term needs such as
new
hire training and longer-term training needs such as development of employees or
leadership training.
This is a whole new set of questions for 2007 that go into great depth in asking how
you develop leaders in your organization. Most leadership development programs
Ive reviewed are a colossal waste of time, as far as providing skills and knowledge
that really make attendees better bosses. Participants learn about the latest trendy
management book, listen to some guest speakers, complete some pop-psychology
assessment tool like Myers-Briggs or a clone, engage in some team building events
and
complete a team business case study. In the end, everyone has a good time, worked
hard
and most feel like they really learned a lot. Fast forward a few weeks back on the job
and
nothing has changed. If Jim was bad at listening before the leadership program, hes
still
5.1b(2) HOW does your development and LEARNING system for leaders address the
following:
development of personal leadership attributes
development of organizational knowledge
a poor listener. If Kathy was a micro manager before the training, chances are she
still
micro-manages her people. In short, most leadership programs are an expensive
waste of
time and money that really do little to make people better leaders.
What you need to do in answering this series of questions is to convince examiners
that your approach is different and that it really works to make better bosses. The
first
thing you should talk about is how you identified the training needs upon which
your
leadership program is based. The best needs analyses are done by studying your
master
performers or great leaders and identifying how their competencies or skills are
different
than more typical or mediocre leaders. This sort of gap analysis makes sure you do
not
waste time teaching basics that everyone already knows or that will not make them
a
better manager. Other inputs to the leadership needs analysis should be the
strategic
plan of the organization that outlines challenges, and the companys core
competencies.
The program should also address business ethics in general and specific topics
germane
to your industry and your organization. The program should also teach leaders
which
attributes needed to be selected, and which ones can be trained. There are great
many
leadership competencies or attributes that are not really trainable. For example, a
recent
client identified mechanical comprehension as a leadership trait important for
supervisors
and managers. Another one identified verbal communication skills. It is much easier
to
find people who already possess many of the traits needed to be a successful leader
in
your organization than to try to teach people who may never be proficient, no
matter how
much training they receive.
This question is actually quite prescriptive in suggesting that your leadership
development
programs should include training on personal leadership attributes, organizational
knowledge, ethics, performance improvement, and specific topics derived from your
strategic plan. While this is a fairly generic list of topics that might go into a
leadership
program, there are many others that are not listed that could be even more
important.
Aside from the content, the last bullet in this question asks about the variety of
approaches used to develop good leaders in your organization. The most effective
programs include all of the approaches listed in this bullet, whereas the least
effective
programs are simply a 2-4 day classroom workshops. Often the best way of learning
to
become a great leader is to work for one.
The organization separates leadership attributes and c ompetencies that are not
really
trainable, but are part of the selection/promotion process.
Leadership development is tailored to different levels and types of leaders rather
than a onesizefits-all approach.
The program covers personal leadership attributes, organizational knowledge,
products/services, ethics, and new knowledge/skills needed to accomplish strategic
plan
goals/objectives.
The approach to leadership development is varied and comprehensive, including
classroom
training, external educational programs, coaching/mentoring, and work
assignments.
Leaders are held accountable for deploying the knowledge/skills acquired in the
leadership
programs on the job.
The organization follows up on the leadership development programs to make
sure that
skills acquired are being used.
Follow-up coaching is provided to individual leaders as necessary.
Leadership development programs are modified and improved as needs dictate.
This question also asks how you evaluate the effectiveness of your education and
training.
This education and training should be evaluated on four dimensions:
Reaction
Learning
Behavior change
Results
Reaction data are the most common and are collected via questionnaires or surveys
filled
out by participants at the end of a class. The typical questionnaire asks the
participants
to rate the course, the instructor, the content, and the relevancy of the material on
a
five-point scale, and includes a few open-ended questions.
The second education/training evaluation dimension is learning. This is another
index
that provides data on the effectiveness of the training delivery. This set of data
should
not simply report what the trainees/participants thought of the courses, but rather
5.1b(3) HOW do you evaluate the EFFECTIVENESS of your WORKFORCE and leader
development and LEARNING systems?
238 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
should indicate whether or not employees have mastered the material covered.
Testing
is the only appropriate means of measuring learning in an education/training
program.
Many large organizations do no testing in any of their courses, and hence have no
data
to demonstrate that participants learned any of the material. Testing does not have
to consist of a paper-and-pencil, multiple-choice test. In any course in which skills
are
taught, performance tests are much better than written tests. A performance test
might be
a case study, a simulation, a role play, a demonstration, or any other situation
where the
trainee must demonstrate that he/she has mastered the skills taught in the course.
Tests
should be developed based upon the objectives of the courses, and should simulate
how
the trainees will use the skills in the job environment.
The third dimension of training/education evaluation is behavior change. This
dimension
considers whether trainees behavior on the job has changed as a result of the
training/education they received. Many large and small organizations do not have
data
on behavior change. This type of data, however, is even more important than data
on
what was learned. If skills learned in training are not used on the job, performance
will
not improve, and the money and time spent on the training will have been wasted.
The
degree to which employees apply and use the knowledge and skills they have
learned in
training is usually a direct result of the strategies employed in doing follow-up
coaching
and reinforcement. Data on behavior change are often collected via follow-up
surveys
of the trainees, their bosses, and their peers. An even more objective way of
gathering
such data is a measurement or audit of the actual products of peoples behaviors
and/or
behavior changes. For example, an auditor might count the number of correctly
prepared
control charts posted in offices and work areas, or the number of quality
improvement
project reports that have been completed according to the criteria outlined in the
training.
A
combination
of
process
(behavior)
and
output
(accomplishments/products)
measures will earn high marks from the Baldrige examiners in this area.
The final type of evaluation data that should be collected on training/education
programs and courses is data on quality results. Employees might like the course,
master
the tests, and apply the skills on the job, but results may not improve. The major
reason
an organization invests in training and education is to produce better results from
its
employees performance. If courses on quality improvement tools and techniques
dont
result in improved quality, something is wrong. The examiners want to see that you
identify and measure key dimensions of performance that will be impacted by each
course
in your education/training curriculum. You should compare performance results data
both before and after the training to see whether the training has made any
difference.
Of course, various other activities occurring in the organization will also impact
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 239
Evaluation methods are deployed across all types o f education and training.
Data on trainee reactions or satisfaction levels with courses are collected.
Learning or mastery of material is tested in courses designed to teach specific
knowledge
and skills.
Where appropriate, employee use of skills learned in training on the job is
measured.
This question has been reworked a number of times in a number of ways, and now
asks
about career development and succession planning. What is important about a
career
5.1b(4) HOW do you manage EFFECTIVE career progression for your entire
WORKFORCE? HOW do you accomplish EFFECTIVE succession planning for
management and leadership positions?
N4. Your organization may have unique considerations relative to workforce
development, learning, and career progression. If this is the case, your
response to 5.1b should include how you address these considerations.
240 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
development system is that there are career ladders for both managers and for
those not
wishing to be managers. Many organizations also have a technical career ladder,
but the
levels of compensation for professionals are often below those for an equivalent
rung
on a management ladder. This inequality often causes individuals to seek
management
positions when they would be happier and more successful in an individual
contributor
position. Deployment is also a major factor assessed in this question. Career ladders
often
exist for a small minority of employees. The question suggests that career
development is
important for all parts of your workforce, even some individual who may not be
employees.
This final question in 5.1.b also asks about succession planning for leaders and
managers.
It is surprising how many large and otherwise successful organizations dont do this.
It
must be human nature not to want to plan for death, retirement, and turnover. We
want
to pretend these things dont happen so we wont have to do the unpleasant task of
planning for them. Successful organizations have succession plans for all of their
leaders,
not just the big boss and her direct reports. It is important that several candidates
are
identified for each position, even though they may be at different levels of
readiness.
The succession planning process should also be linked in with the training needs
analysis
process as well as individual development plans.
A career path exists for all categories and types of employees a nd members of
the workforce.
Technical and other career ladders exist for individuals who do not wish to
become managers.
Rungs on nonmanagement career ladders are equivalent to those on
management ladders
in compensation and status.
Employees are aware of the career ladder system and believe it is fairly
administered.
There are explicit and objective criteria or standards for advancing from one rung
to
another on career ladders.
Leadership ethics and behavior consistent with organizational values are assessed
for
upward moves on the management ladder.
Standards or criteria for moving up from one rung to another are based on solid
evidence of
job requirements rather than being set arbitrarily.
Succession plans exist for all senior leaders and mid managers.
Plans are kept up to date each year.
Succession plans are linked to strategic plans, training needs analyses,
performance
appraisal and individual development plans.
Several candidates are identified as possible replacements for each leader, even
thought they
may be at different stages of readiness.
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 241
A recent trend is to not even do a full survey, but to ask only one question: On a
scale
of 1-10 to what extent would you rate our organization as a great place to work?
See my
latest book: Beyond the Balanced Scorecard (Productivity Press, 2007) for more on
the
dangers of singular infrequent measures like this. What the examiners are looking
for
is that you have multiple ways of measuring employee satisfaction and
engagement, and
that measurement is done frequently to detect trends and drops in performance
before
too much time passes. A table or chart might be a good way to summarize your
measures
of workforce engagement. The table might list the metrics, and include columns for
Purpose Frequency and Data Collection Method. If you used such a chart or
table
you could also reference the appropriate chart in section 7 that includes
performance
data on the measure. If you measure both engagement and satisfaction make sure
to indicate which measures relate to which factor, and that data are presented on
all
measures in section 7 of the application.
5.1c. Assessment of WORKFORCE ENGAGEMENT
(1) HOW do you assess WORKFORCE ENGAGEMENT? What formal and
informal assessment methods and MEASURES do you use to determine
WORKFORCE ENGAGEMENT and WORKFORCE satisfaction? How do these
methods and MEASURES differ across WORKFORCE groups and SEGMENTS?
HOWdo you use other INDICATORS, such as WORKFORCE retention,
absenteeism, grievances, safety, and PRODUCTIVITY to assess and improve
WORKFORCE ENGAGEMENT?
242 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
This question asks what you do with the data on employee engagement and
satisfaction.
Often it goes into a black hole, never to be seen again until they dust of the survey
for
the next year. What the examiners are looking for is evidence of correlations
between
measures of employee engagement and other key outcome measures like sales,
profits,
quality, productivity, or other factors. Enough research has been conducted that
shows
links between a disengaged workforce and poor performance on basic
outcome/business
measures, but it would be important to demonstrate any links your own
organization has
discovered. For example, I worked with one major corporation that found that no
further
5.1c(2) HOW do you relate assessment findings to KEY business RESULTS reported
in Category 7 to identify opportunities for improvement in both WORKFORCE
ENGAGEMENT and business RESULTS?
N5. Identifying improvement opportunities (5.1c[2]) might draw on your
workforce-focused results presented in Item 7.4 and might involve addressing
workforce-related problems based on their impact on your business results
reported in response to other Category 7 Items.
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 243
CAPACITY
needs,
You might also explain what external variables you monitor on an ongoing basis that
could have a bearing on your future workload and mix of work. Factors might
include
politics, funding, economic factors, competition, consumer trends, news
stories/press,
regulations/laws, and the prices for raw materials used in your organization.
After explaining your approach for determining future workload and for monitoring
the factors that impact your predictions, you need to explain how you evaluate your
own capabilities and capacity. Identify the specific factors that are assessed as well
as
the methods used to conduct the assessments. The analysis should go beyond
simply
identifying how many people are needed in a given job category for an upcoming
project
or assignment, but also look at the levels of expertise needed within specific skill
areas.
For example, not just identifying that you will need 12 welders and 28 pipe fitters
for a job,
but that of those 12 welders, 2 need to be master welders and able to weld
underwater,
6 need to be experienced on this type of project, and no more than 2 of them can
have
less that 5 years experience or be classified as a level 4.
Following an explanation of how you determine knowledge and skill needs for future
workload, explain how you determine how many people you need. For example, a
military
organization I worked with knows that out of a 40 hour week, only about 22 hours of
that
time is actually productive. The rest of the time is allocated to breaks, waiting,
going to
the bathroom, getting interrupted, attending to administrative requirements, and
going
to training. When doing workforce capacity planning they figure that each person is
only
productive about 50% of the time. This type of data will ensure that your capacity
plans
are realistic.
This crucial question should have been included in this section years ago. The
caliber of
people an organization hires is one of the most important determinants of its
success.
In fact, Ritz-Carlton Hotels, a former Baldrige winner, regards their recruitment and
selection process to be their most closely guarded corporate secret. Competing
hotel
chains swear that Ritz has a machine that creates new employees! They cant
understand
how Ritz finds so many employees that are all perfectly groomed, with impeccable
appearance and manners. You need to start your answer to this question by listing
the
generic traits or competencies that you look for in employees. Maintaining a
consistent
corporate culture depends on your ability to hire people with the same sets of
values.
Characteristics such as values or work ethic are not trainable.
Some organizations have some unique requirements and unique ways of assessing
potential new employees. Southwest Airlines believes that its employees must have
a
good sense of humor if they are to fit into the corporate culture. This is especially
true
of customer-contact employees. They assess for this dimension by having each
candidate
get up in front of the selection committee and tell three jokes. While they dont have
an applause meter, they do grade candidates on their sense of humor. A generic list
of
employee competencies that you assess in potential new hires will not earn you a
lot
of points.
Another important point to make in this section is the different approaches you use
to evaluate potential new employees. Some organizations test to see if the
candidate
is breathing and thats about it, whereas others put candidates through rigorous
tests
5.2.a(2) HOW do you recruit, hire, place, and retain new employees? H OW do
you ensure that your WORKFORCE represents the diverse ideas, cultures, and
thinking of your hiring community?
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 247
and assessments before they hire them. I worked for a small consulting firm that put
me through a grueling assessment process before I was hired. After being
interviewed
individually by everyone in the officeas well as a few group interviewsand
spending
a day being tested by a psychologist, I had to work a week for them for free to see
how
I would perform with clients in actual work situations.
Another point that needs to be addressed here is your approach for ensuring the
diversity of your communities is reflected in your selection practices. In a desire to
maintain a unified culture, many organizations hire people that all look and think
like
them. The key is to balance diversity with a need for common values and
personality
traits. One company that does this better than any Ive seen is agricultural giant
Cargill
of Minneapolis. I have worked with Cargill employees all over the world and from
all different cultures. Yet, they all have the same values and ethics. Cargill is often
benchmarked for its ethics and corporate culture and its wonderful job of balancing
diversity with common values.
specific time, or even come in at all, if they can get their work done from home, or
at the
local park. The key to making such a program work is having an excellent scorecard
or set
of performance measures for each employee. The approach seems to be working for
Best
Buy, since turnover has dropped significantly (between 52 and 90%), and
productivity
is up an average of 35 in one year! Of course, some consultants had to come up
with
an acronym for this new approach so they can start selling it to others. The
approach,
pioneered by a group of passionate employees at Best Buy is called ROWE: ResultsOnly
Work Environment.
Business Week and other national magazines have presented feature or cover
stories
recently on the changing nature of jobs and work. In case you havent noticed, the
traditional job, office, and organizational structures are disappearing. IBM
eliminated
several floors of offices in its 590 Madison Avenue building in New York City by
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 249
eliminating offices for salespeople and others. IBMers are given laptop computers,
cellular phones, and told to spend work time at customer locations or at home. If
they
need an office, they can rent one for the day at IBMs facilities, plug in a phone and
computer, and go to work. When employees complained that they missed the
personal
touches of their own office, IBM scanned pictures of their husbands, wives, kids, and
even
dogs into their laptop computers to take with them wherever they go. Desert
Hospital
in Palm Springs, California, has practically eliminated separate departments such as
radiology. Employees work on cross-functional teams to provide a variety of
different
services to patients. Examples like these can be found all over America in all
different
industries. These are exactly the types of things that will earn you a good score in
5.1.
The first part of your answer to this Area to Address should explain how you have
designed
jobs and work flow. This explanation should refer back to and build upon the
explanation
of your organizational structure that appeared in section 1.1. Begin by explaining
your
approach to job and work design. Expand upon this explanation with examples of
how
jobs and work have changed over the years. This information will help examiners
assess
the degree of deployment. Keep in mind that if you have an innovative approach to
design
of jobs for your salespeople, but salespeople only make up seven percent of your
workforce,
you may still end up with a fairly low score because of a lack of deployment.
It is important that you explain how job designs make it easier for employees to
contribute
to improving the organization. Empowerment is not specifically asked for in the
criteria
this year, but it is still hidden in there. Self-directed work teams that are given
authority to
monitor their own performance are not a requirement, but are an approach that
would
likely earn you some positive comments from the examiners. If you still form teams
to
work on problems or projects, this is not necessarily a negative. Problem-solving
teams
and cross-functional teams do serve a purpose. Baldrige is asking that you go
beyond
simply adding some teams to traditional jobs and work methods. Although the
Baldrige
criteria for 2007 are much less prescriptive than they used to be, they still promote
concepts like:
Teamwork
Empowerment
Flexibility
Employee involvement
Question 5.2a(3) asks how your approach to jobs and work design encourages
employees
to contribute ideas for improving the company, and how you have empowered
employees
or given them more authority than they had in the past. With traditional
departments
250 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
and jobs, employees are often more concerned with their own departments needs
than
the needs of their customers. Departments that should work together and talk to
each
other often dont. Hopefully, your approach to jobs, departments, and the
assignment of
tasks eliminates these barriers and makes it easy and necessary for employees to
talk and
work together. Organizing work around key processes is one way some companies
Ive
seen help encourage this communication and teamwork.
In order to get a high score for this Area to Address, you also need to show how your
approaches to job and work design have been evaluated and improved over the last
few
years. Explain the factors that are used to measure effectiveness, describe your
evaluation
methodology, and tell the examiners what you have changed or improved over the
last
few years based on this analysis. If the measures that you use to evaluate job
designs and
organizational structure are not tied back to overall performance measures, this will
end
up hurting your score. Having a lot of empowerment or teamwork is not how to get
a good
score. You need to show the link between approaches like self-directed teams and
flexible
job designs and business results like profits, productivity, and customer satisfaction.
This is a new question for 2007 and is a good addition. At first glance it may look
similar
to the questions in 5.1b that ask about determining of training needs, but this
question
has a different focus. It is basically asking how well prepared are you for a disaster,
like a
major downturn in business or the economy. The airline business was hit hard by
911 and
an increase in fuel prices and had to lay off thousands of workers. The auto industry
has
always had its ups and downs, but is now experiencing financial problems due to
pension
and health insurance costs for current and retired employees. Even schools
experience
ups and downs in enrollments and budgets that they must deal with.
Up and down cycles invariably occur in almost every field. What this question is
asking
is how well prepared is your organization to weather the storm. A practice used by
many
5.2a(4) HOW do you prepare your WORKFORCE for changing CAPABILITY and
CAPACITY needs? HOW do you manage your WORKFORCE, its needs, and your needs
to ensure continuity, to prevent WORKFORCE reductions, and to minimize the
impact of WORKFORCE reductions, if they do become necessary?
N2. Workforce capability and capacity should consider not only current needs
but also future requirements based on your strategic objectives and
action plans reported in Category 2.
N3. Preparing your workforce for changing capability and capacity needs
(5.2a[4]) might include training, education, frequent communication,
considerations of workforce employment and employability, career
counseling, and outplacement and other services.
252 BALDRIGE AWARD WINNING QUALITY
organizations today is to staff up with contract workers when times are good, and
let them
go when things slow down. This eliminates the need to do lay-offs and continue
paying
for idle employees. While great in theory, the approach has a couple of drawbacks.
First of
all, the IRS has been cracking down on contract workers for the last 10 years or so,
since
it also reduced the amount of taxes and social security employers have to pay.
These
individuals are really employees that have a boss and show up for work each day to
do the
same thing, but the company does not pay social security or benefits, and can let
them
go with virtually no notice. Many new firms have cropped up in recent years that do
the
contracting and provide the people, often taking a 100 to 200% markup on the rates
they
pay the people. A second problem with a contract workforce is that these individual
are
often treated like second class citizens. They seem like employees, do the same
work as
employees, have the same types of workspaces and tools, but are not employees
and dont
get the same security and benefits as employees.
Along with having a contingent workforce, another factor that you might address
here
is how you prepare people for changes in workload or the nature of the work. For
example, an aircraft service company I worked with has all employees trained to do
at
least one other job, so they can move people around when one part of the business
is
slow and another part is busy. Another company I worked with had a no lay-offs
policy.
When business goes slow, everyone goes on reduced hours and reduced pay,
including
executives. These are just some ideas of good practices. You need to explain your
organizations approach and perhaps refer to some of your result charts that
demonstrate
your ability to maintain high levels of employee engagement/satisfaction during up
and
down business cycles.
Evidence of a comprehensive plan for dealing w ith ups and downs in workload.
Degree to which the plan for dealing with ups and downs in business is ethical
and fair to
all members of the workforce.
Degree of innovation/creativity demonstrated by approach.
Deployment of the approach for dealing with ups and downs in workload across all
locations and units in the organization.
Evidence that the approach has worked where it has been implemented.
Workforce feedback regarding approach for dealing with ups and downs in
workload.
Legality of approach.
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 253
Having a proactive approach to preventing safety problems would tend to earn you
a very
good score from examiners. If your approach is characterized by safety audits
conducted
a few times a year, some safety training, and a few posters placed throughout the
facility,
you will probably end up with a very low score. Meeting OSHA or other regulatory
requirements will also not earn you many points. You have no choice but to do this.
Baldrige is looking for organizations that go way beyond minimum requirements.
The criteria in 5.2b(1) asks about how health, safety, and ergonomics (human
factors,
engineering) are improved. The approach you use to achieve good performance in
these
areas is the same as the approach you employ to achieve good results in other
areas,
such as quality or customer satisfaction. You need to identify good measures of
health,
safety, and ergonomics, benchmark other organizations to identify world-class
levels of
performance, set stretch goals or targets based on benchmarks, assign resources,
and
improve processes to achieve excellent levels of performance on these measures.
Also, 5.2b(1) asks for specific information on your safety/health measures and goals
or
targets. This information is probably best presented in a chart that lists measures
along
the left side, followed by annual targets and longer-term targets or goals. As I
mentioned
earlier, what is important is that all of your measures are not defect-detection
oriented.
You need to have a good mix of prevention-based measures and detection-based
measures.
A good prevention-based measure is not the number of safety training programs
conducted or posters put up on the wall, either. The frequency with which you
collect data
on safety, health, and ergonomic factors is also important. To have a preventionbased
approach, you need to collect data more often than once every few months.
Measures of employee health need to be preventive as well. Tracking employee
health
problems or sickness and absenteeism/sick leave by themselves are detectionoriented
measures. You need to be careful with preventive measures to ensure that you drive
the
right behavior. One organization that had an on-site gym/health club used to
measure
the percentage of employees who used the gym, and the average amount of time
spent
in the gym per employee. Many used the gym as a social activity, however. Theyd
go to
the gym, do 10 minutes on the StairMaster, do a couple of sit-ups, and spend 45
minutes
talking with coworkers, or sitting at the juice bar reading the newspaper. After
realizing
that hours spent in the gym was not a good measure, the company started
measuring
cardiovascular fitness, body fat percentage, blood pressure, and other healthrelated
factors that were really important in maintaining employee health.
A forward-thinking company in Michigan and South Carolina has an excellent
approach
for encouraging employees to get healthier, and for measuring their progress. Each
year,
Interpreting the Criteria for Workforce Focus (5) 255
Benchmarking and other comparative information are used to set stretch goals for
safety performance.
Specific goals and targets have been set for all measures of employee safety.
How employees feel about the degree to which the company promotes health and
safety.
Evidence of process changes and improvements that will promote better
employee
safety performance.
Evidence of a preventive approach to employee health, safety, and ergonomics.
Level of attention given to safety and employee well-being by senior
management.
Evidence that the company goes way beyond regulatory requirements in this area
and strives
to be a role model for others.
Frequency with which data are collected on health and safety issues.
Levels of resources devoted to health and safety efforts compared to companies
of similar size
in the same industry.
Scope and breadth of improvements made in ergonomics.
Programs the company has in place to promote the health of their employees
(e.g., weight loss,
smoking cessation programs, health club, smoke-free environment, etc.).
Existence of a systematic process for analyzing the causes of accidents when they
do occur.
Evidence that employee health and safety initiatives are tailored to different
cultures,
locations, and employee groups if appropriate.
Almost all companies do something in this area. What the examiners are looking for
is
the breadth and depth of the special services you provide to employees, and the
degree
to which these services have been tailored to the special needs of the organizations
employees. For example, in an organization populated largely by women, child care
might be an appropriate and appreciated special service. In a situation in which an
Most organizations approach this area either by offering what other companies offer
in the way of employee services, or waiting until a problem occurs and then
developing
a program to deal with the problem (e.g., drugs or alcohol). If, however, you take a
proactive/preventive approach to employee assistance, this will be noticed more by
the
examiners. If you can demonstrate that you offer more than your competitors do in
the
area of employee services, this too will be of interest to examiners. Your response
might
consist of a table that lists all employee assistance programs on the left side of the
page,
and the name of your organization and a few of its competitors along the top. A
matrix,
like the one that follows, then could be created to illustrate which employee
assistance
programs you offer, as compared to your competition.
What is important in this section is that you get creative in offering programs and
services that meet the real needs of your workforce. These serve to attract potential
employees to your organization. For example, a software development firm offers
free
coffee for employees. Another firm has an on-site dry cleaner and hair salon that
both
offer discounted prices. MBNA, the credit card giant, has a separate department
that
plans for funerals for relatives of employees. MBNAs bereavement department does
all
the arrangements and pays most of the bills associated with the funeral so as to
relieve
employee stress. This program does a lot to build loyalty from employees because
the
company helped them through a very difficult time. MBNA also has a department
that
plans marriages and honeymoons for employees. If two employees get married to
each
other (which happens a lot when most of your workforce is under 30), they receive
additional time off for the honeymoon.
EMPLOYEE ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
Your Organization Competitor A Competitor B
Child Care X X
Home Financing Assistance X X
Health Club Membership X
Weight Control Program X
Stop Smoking Program X
Drug/Alcohol Program X
Discount Symphony Tickets X
Annual Family Picnic X X X
Counseling X X
Outplacement Assistance X X
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