|
|
Talent
Management
What is it? Why now?
May,
2006
Josh
Bersin , Principal |
|
"Talent Management" has become one
of the most important buzzwords in Corporate HR and Training
today. In this article we will explain the history,
principles, and processes of talent management and help readers
understand our research agenda in this important area.
From Personnel to Strategic HR to Talent
Management
To understand why Talent Management has become so important,
we must first look at the evolution of corporate HR:
Stage 1: Personnel Department:
In the 1970s and 1980s the business function which was responsible
for people was called "The Personnel Department."
The role of this group was to hire people, pay them, and make
sure they had the necessary benefits. The systems which
grew up to support this function were batch payroll systems.
In this role, the personnel department was a well understood
business function.
Stage 2: Strategic HR:
In the 1980s and 1990s organizations realized that the HR
function was in fact more important - and the concepts of
"Strategic HR" emerged. During this period
organizations realized that the VP of HR had a much larger
role: recruiting the right people, training them, helping
the business design job roles and organization structures
(organization design), develop "total compensation"
packages which include benefits, stock options and bonuses,
and serving as a central point of communication for employee
health and happiness.
The "Head of Personnel" became the "VP of HR"
and had a much more important role in business strategy and
execution. The systems which were built up to support
this new role include recuiting and applicant tracking (ATS),
portals, total compensation systems, and learning management
systems. In this role, the HR department now became
more than a business function: it is a business
partner, reaching out to support lines of business.

Stage 3: Talent Management:
We are now entering a new era: the emergence of "Talent
Management." While strategic HR continues
to be a major focus, HR and L&D organizations are now
focused on a new set of strategic issues:
-
How can we make our recruiting process more
efficient and effective by using "competency-based"
recruiting instead of sorting through resumes, one at
a time?
-
How can we better develop managers and leaders
to reinforce culture, instill values, and create a sustainable
"leadership pipeline?"
-
How do we quickly identify competency gaps
so we can deliver training, e-learning, or development
programs to fill these gaps? How can we use
these gaps to hire just the right people?
-
How do we manage people in a consistent and
measurable way so that everyone is aligned, held accountable,
and paid fairly?
-
How do we identify high performers and successors
to key positions throughout the organization to make sure
we have a highly flexible, responsive organization?
- How do we provide learning that is relevant, flexible,
convenient, and timely?
These new, more challenging problems require new processes
and systems. They require tigher integration between
the different HR silos -- and direct integration into line
of business management processes. Today organizations
are starting to buy, build, and stitch together performance
management systems, succession planning systems, and competency
management systems. The HR function is becoming integrated
with the business in a real-time fashion.
Best-practice examples of companies embarking on
these processes include Aetna, Capgemini, Eastman Chemical,
Kimberly-Clark, PitneyBowes, SCI, Seagate, Steelcase,
Textron, and more. You can read about these companies'
talent and performance management initiatives in Performance
Management 2006. |
Defining the Talent Management Process
Organizations are made up of people: people creating
value through proven business processes, innovation, customer
service, sales, and many other important activities.
As an organization strives to meet its business goals, it
must make sure that it has a continuous and integrated process
for recruiting, training, managing, supporting, and compensating
these people. The following chart shows the complete
process:
1. Workforce Planning:
Integrated with the business plan, this process establishes
workforce plans, hiring plans, compensation budgets, and hiring
targets for the year.
2. Recruiting:
Through an integrated process of recruiting, assessment, evaluation,
and hiring the business brings people into the organization.
3. Onboarding:
The organization must train and enable employees to become
productive and integrated into the company more quickly.
4. Performance
Management:
by using the business plan, the organization establishes
processes to measure and manage employees. This is
a complex process in itself, which we describe in detail
in our new research Performance
Management 2006.
5. Training and
Performance Support: of course this is a critically
important function. Here we provide learning and development
programs to all levels of the organization. As we
describe in the Death of the Corporate
University, this function itself is evolving into a continuous
support function.
6. Succession Planning:
as the organization evolves and changes, there is a continuous
need to move people into new positions. Succession
planning, a very important function, enables managers
and individuals to identify the right candidates for
a position. This function also must be aligned with
the business plan to understand and meet requirements
for key positions 3-5 years out. While this is often
a process reserved for managers and executives, it is
more commonly applied across the organization.
7. Compensation
and Benefits: clearly this is an integral part
of people management. Here organizations try to tie
the compensation plan directly to performance management
so that compensation, incentives, and benefits align with
business goals and business execution.
8. Critical Skills
Gap Analysis: this is a process we identify
as an important, often overlooked function in many industries
and organizations. While often done on a project basis,
it can be "business-critical." For example,
today industries like the Federal Government, Utilities, Telecommunications,
and Energy are facing large populations which are retiring.
How do you identify the roles, individuals, and competencies
which are leaving? What should you do to fill these
gaps? We call this "critical talent management"
and many organizations are going through this now.
In the center of this process are important
definitions and data: job roles, job descriptions, competency
models, and learning content.
How do you Develop and Implement
a Talent Management Strategy?
As I describe above, Talent Management is a
natural evolution of HR. It is a series of business
processes -- not a "product" or "solution"
you can buy.
Organizations we speak to are focused on
different elements -- driven by their maturity and the urgent
business problems they face today. While a few mature
organizations have dealt with most of the processes above,
most organizations focus on several of the key elements
and build an integrated approach over time.
Additionally, Talent Management is a "forward-looking"
function. Not only should talent management improve
your organization's flexibility and performance, it should
give you the information and tools to plan for growth, change,
acquisitions, and critical new product and service initiatives.
A few critical issues we have identified in
our research:
1. Talent Management requires
integration and communication between existing HR-L&D
functions.
Training can no longer be "left on an
island." As we detail in our workshops, the
L&D
organization must align much more closely with the performance
management and recruitment process. Training
programs should be developed and updated to continuously
address problems which surface in the performance management
process. New hires which are hired because of certain
competencies should see a set of training offerings which
complement and reinforce these competencies. Compensation
program should naturally tie to the performance management
process.
2. Competency management, a mis-understood
and difficult part of training and HR, has become critical.
The job descriptions, roles, and competencies used for
performance management are shared by L&D, recruiting,
and succession planning. There are many techniques
for effective use of competencies - many are described
in our performance management systems research. A
simple best-practice is for your organization to have a
small set of consistent, easy-to-understand competencies
which can be applied across the organization.
3. Software solutions are maturing.
Despite vendor claims, there is no complete "talent management"
software solution yet. Vendors
each offer different elements of this solution. To
solve urgent problems, most companies today buy standalone
systems: standalone learning management systems,
standalone standalone performance
management systems, standalone recruiting and standalone
compensation systems. As the market matures and companies
press harder for integration, vendors will create more
integrated solutions.
Even if you do find an integrated toolset which
manages multiple talent processes, the biggest challenges
in implementation are integrating you own business processes.
Our keynote new research report, Performance
Management 2006, details the state
of this industry and provides detailed analysis of the top
20 performance and talent management systems providers.
What does this mean to your
Organization?
Talent Management is a powerful and important
trend across HR and L&D. It changes the way you
are organized, how you use technology, how your resources
are allocated, and how you measure what you do. If
you are a training manager, director, or CLO, talent management
will impact your role. You may be asked to integrate
your learning programs with the company's performance management
initiative.
Many organizations have a new job: The
VP of Talent Management. This
role typically includes Learning & Development, Performance
and Competency Management, and Succession Planning fucntions. We
believe that this integrated "HRD"
function is an important evolution in the way HR organizations
are run.
What does this mean
to your HR-IT Strategy?
Talent Management will also impact your systems
strategy: For example, do you want a stand-alone LMS
or should your LMS be integrated with the company's performance
management systems? What systems integration are
the most important? How do you use competency models
to tie learning to performance management? What "suite"
products are mature enough for your particular organization's
needs?
The role of HRIT has also become much more
complex. It is no longer possible to focus on HRIS
systems alone - HRIT must understand learning technology,
competency management technology, portal technology, and
the integration of these different applications. In
many organizations LMS systems, for example, are not managed
by HRIT. Over time we believe the role of HRIT will
be more strategic than ever.
How can you learn more?
One of the best ways to learn more about this important
area is to read our keynote new research report: Performance
Management 2006. This
report, the culmination of almost 18 months of research
in this area, will help you understand best practices, trends,
and vendor solutions in performance and talent management
and give you valuable insights on processes, systems and
strategies.
We are actively involved in vendor research, best-practices
research, and case studies. If you have questions or
a best-practice case study to share, please contact us.
Key
Research to Help you Understand This Area
You can purchase these studies individually or join our research
membership program. By becoming a research member
you have access to all our research for an entire year plus
much more. 100% of all purchases can be applied toward
an annual research subscription in the first 30 days.
For more information, please call Mike Cooke at (561) 939-6345.
Would you like to participate in one of our research studies?
There are many benefits to being part of one of our research studies. If you have an innovative or highly effective approach to training, content development, blended learning, performance management, competency management, leadership development, succession planning, HR systems, or measurement, we'd like to talk to you. For more information on being part of our ongoing research studies, click here.
|
 |
|
| |
Home |
About Us |
Team |
Services |
Product Development |
Product Marketing |
Industry Research |
Corporate Implementations |
Benchmarking Studies |
Corporate Workshops |
Clients and Projects |
Client List |
Current Projects |
Ground Breaking Research |
Blended Learning |
Content Development |
The 10 Key Applications |
Learning Management Systems |
Analytics & Measurement |
News and Events |
Recent Articles |
Recent Presentations |
Contact Us |
Newsletters
Please note: any articles, charts, graphs, methodologies, tables, and whitepapers on this site are copyright and property of Bersin & Associates. You are welcome to link to these resources but distribution, reprinting, copying, or duplication of these articles or any part thereof is prohibited without permission. What Works™ and related names such as Blended Learning: What Works™ are registered trademarks of Bersin & Associates.
Copyright © 2006 Bersin & Associates. All rights reserved. What Works™ and related names such as Blended Learning: What Works™ are registered trademarks of Bersin & Associates. |
|
|
|