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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

6 Steps for Hiring the Best Every Time

Over the past 5-plus years, I’ve been involved in hundreds of searches, worked with few dozens of hiring managers, trained 50 to 100 recruiters, and worked closely with dozens of major companies. Following are some of the common threads among the best techniques, processes, and tools that I have seen and used.

Collectively they add up to a business process for hiring top people. While Performance-based Hiring provides a simplified high-level summary of these, it’s in the details and execution that will ultimately determine your personal success.

Following are the six core aspects of hiring top talent. A couple of key themes stand out. First, offer and recruit the best people based on career growth if you want to attract the best on a consistent basis. Second, allow people to just look and explore, rather than require them to apply for a job. This prevents them from opting out before you even see them.

If you can address these two issues, you are well on your way to hiring top people every time.

Six Steps for Hiring the Best People Every Time

  1. Offer WOW! Jobs. Traditional job descriptions listing skills, qualifications, and experience are not marketing tools or predictors of job success. These lists must be diminished in importance. In their place, job descriptions must emphasize what the person will do, learn, and become. As part of this, clearly describe the impact the person can make. From a marketing standpoint, don’t use internal, non-descriptive titles. “Not-for Profit CEO – Back to the Future” was a title we used to find the head of a major charity. In the ad, we described the five-year impact the person would have on the inner city. For bank tellers to fill a mid-day shift we added the tagline “Are You a Desperate Housewife?”

  2. Make it about careers, not compensation. The ad copy must clearly emphasize the challenges in the job, the impact the person can make on the company, and some of the growth opportunities. For example, “Help us launch a new Blue Tooth line” is far more compelling than “Must have five years of product marketing experience.” When recruiters first contact candidates – whether they’re active or passive – the emphasis must clearly be on getting the candidate to evaluate your opportunities as career moves, not just as another job for more money or one closer to home. This will help ease the negotiating process and minimize the threat of counter-offers and competitive offers.

  3. Implement an early-bird sourcing strategy. It’s a Web 2.0 world and this means a complete understanding of search engine marketing techniques. Part of this is writing compelling jobs ads that are easily found. From a more advanced perspective, recognize that top performers don’t enter the job-hunting market ready to hunt and peck for a job that matches their skills and experience. Instead, they tip-toe into the market, first contacting former associates and doing some top-down industry and company research. If this is fruitless, they then expand their search efforts through aggressive networking and Googling for jobs. Sourcing programs need to target these early entrants by positioning ads in the right places and proactively expanding employee referral programs to ensure that the best people contact your employees first.

  4. Provide candidates multiple opportunities to “just look” rather than buy. Most company hiring processes and career websites are designed based on the premise that candidates are ready to apply for a specific job. This is a flawed premise. The best people, especially the early entrants, are just looking and comparing options. To accommodate these people, recruiters must not push the process too fast, managers must be willing to talk or meet with candidates on an exploratory basis, and career websites need to allow candidates to chat with a recruiter in real time and look at groups of jobs, rather than specific requisitions.

  5. Make the interview your secret weapon. Here’s something that will shock you - the primary purpose of the interview is to recruit the candidate, not assess competency! However, done properly you’ll more accurately assess candidate competency and motivation than ever before, but this is a secondary effect. Part of this means using the interview to look for voids and gaps in the candidate’s background, with the expectation that your job will fulfill them. For example, if the candidate hasn’t managed as large a team, or handled a comparable project, or had the exposure your job provides, these voids become learning opportunities and more important than compensation as reasons to accept your position. Obviously, if the gaps are too big, the candidate is unqualified for the job, and if the gaps aren’t sufficient, the job isn’t a worthy move.

  6. Use a multi-factor decision tool to negotiate the offer, fight off the competition and prevent counter-offers. Recruiting is not something done at the end of the interview, it starts with first contact. Part of this is suggesting to the candidate on first contact that she should evaluate your opportunity as a career move. During the interview this is reinforced by presenting voids in the candidate’s background as potential learning experiences. While it’s important for companies to judge candidates across multiple factors, it’s equally important for candidates to evaluate different job opportunities across multiple factors as well. Some of these include learning, growth opportunities, compensation, quality of the hiring manager and the team, job match, visibility, cultural fit and work/life balance. This can be formalized by sending the candidate a multi-factor decision form comparing your job with all others he’s considering, including his current position. As long as your job represents a positive long term career move, your job will often win out without compensation being the dominant criteria.

Of course, there are more steps to the process than what’s mentioned here. Regardless, the key to making the end-to-end process work is to step back and understand the unique needs of top performers. This high-level view also allows the integration between the steps to be designed into the process at the beginning rather than as after-thoughts.

While converting the hiring process into a scalable business process is no easy task, it’s not nearly as hard as implementing any major companywide business initiative. If hiring the best is a company’s number-one strategic objective, then nothing is more important.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

IT attrition seen receding, thanks to slowdown in US

J Padmapriya & P P Thimmaya BANGALORE

The Economic Times.


LOWER attrition has come out as a silver lining for IT companies as they battle recessionary clouds in US markets and an uncertain business environment. Large companies may have been able to arrest attrition by 0.5% to even 2%, in some cases, in the first quarter in the backdrop of an overall depressed recruitment scene.
Employees are getting fewer job calls from headhunters and increments are projected to be ebbing, resulting in lower bargaining power. Besides, companies are being extremely choosy in recruiting numbers in a view to lower operating costs and sport a slimmer bench. Recruitment agencies say, just like water finds its level, perhaps expectations on salaries would be more realistic now besides discouraging the practice of job-hopping.

For most of the large IT services major like TCS, Infosys, Wipro and Satyam attrition rates are hovering somewhere between 11-20%. But anything beyond 25% reveals a danger signal. According to Angel Broking IT analyst Harit Shah, “There has been a general declining trend in attrition for most large companies. Steps like clear career paths have proved to be attractive retention techniques.”

Large companies are also believed to be insisting on signing bonds and taking deposits from rookie engineers to ensure that their huge training spending does not come to naught because of attrition. Most companies have to put their baseline engineers through three to six months of training to make them industryready. So, for that period, these employees do not enter the billable mode. These steps may have contained job-hopping and frequent changes at the fresher levels, an analyst said.

Says Satyam head (HR) S V Krishnan, the company may be able to see a decline of 0.5% in attrition numbers in the first quarter of FY09.

Typically, attrition is also lower during the first two quarters and peaks in third quarter as employees largely tend to factor in their increment levels before deciding on new offers.

The third quarter is also when campus engineers start joining IT companies in large numbers.Now, there has been a consensus that the salary hikes during this fiscal would in the range of 8-13% unlike the previous level of 10-17%.

The pressure on companies in retaining their employees is the highest when there is higher demand for offshoring and outsourcing. By and large, the smaller and medium companies pay a premium to get people from the large firms.

Though, companies have found that the largest movement of people is in the work experience of one to five years and attrition rate stabilises after that period. At the same time, they are not expecting any major drop in attrition rates as there is still a strong demand for experienced professionals.

As IT companies sneeze, staffing firms catch cold

Shruti Sabharwal & Anirvan Ghosh
BANGALORE

The Economic Times.


IF THE IT/ITeS companies are feeling the heat of the US recession, recruitment companies that service a key need of the sector, appear more than scorched.

Though the severity of the impact has been mainly felt by companies that are involved in entry-level staffing, with some noting a whopping 60% fall in earnings, those that do mid-level staffing are fearing the worst in the days to come.

“The earnings for recruitment consultants have definitely slumped over last six months. The impact on earning from key accounts has dropped up to 60% with further impacts coming on the pricing front,” said TeamLease Services Permanent Staffing VP Sampath Shetty.

“For some individual consultants, the income is down to zero,” he added. This, he says, is the case with those who had all their clients in sectors that have borne the brunt of the recession. Working on a very low client base, some consultants have seen their incomes being almost wiped out.

Typically, a small recruitment firm with 10-15 people and working in entry-level staffing earns around Rs 15 lakh per month where employees work on a lowfixed, high-commission salary.

A 60% fall on such a base could, in some cases, even be life threatening. For every placement at the entry level, the consultant gets an average commission of 8% of the total annual income of the person placed.

That’s not all. IT companies are trying to make their money stretch more as they look for higher value from recruitment agencies. “With the metrics for hiring moving away from quantity to quality with prescribed non-negotiable cost to company for candidates, these expectations are marginalising the recruitment companies’ productivity and pushing for more value adds at similar pricing,” Mr Shetty added. Reports suggest that last fiscal, India’s top six IT companies added 89,868 people. This year, the numbers look bleaker as the companies battle global conditions like an intensifying US recession, ever increasing oil prices and double digit inflation at home.

While some other major recruitment companies say that the impact has not been that large, they are, nevertheless, expecting the growth rate to be much lower than last year.

Of course, they are also keeping their fingers crossed, hoping the crisis will blow over soon. “Companies will not grow at 30-40% like they did last year and getting new businesses will be tougher. Though right now we are not facing such a big problem since we work with mostly senior level executives, if things go on like this till October, it will be a serious challenge,” said ABC Consultants business development leader Yogesh Sehgal.

But there is another reason why times are tough even for those who place people at higher echelons. “At the senior level it is becoming tougher to find people who are willing to move, unlike before. These employees are in a comfortable position with perks like ESOPs and they do not want to take chances now,” said Mr GC Jayapraksh, principal consultant of Stanton Chase.

In fact, this is a serious issue that recruitment companies are battling. The recent market conditions have put brakes on people movements to some extent. While most do not want to take risks, others have become very choosy while shifting.

Freshers from B-Schools are now more willing than before to join smaller companies, while senior executives are becoming more cautious.

Experts say that IT companies that were hiring through a host of recruitment agencies are now likely to consolidate their hiring through a few key recruitment consultants.

That simply means that the recruitment industry as a whole is likely to see a shake out as some companies fall by the side and others are swallowed by bigger players. “This kind of consolidation is sure to happen over the next three months or so,” Mr Shetty said.

In such a scenario, says Mr Jayaprakash, home grown consultants are likely to sell out as a lot of M&A activity happens either when companies are doing very well or very badly.

Tech staffing consultancies brace for tough days

Shruti Sabharwal & Anirvan Ghosh
BANGALORE

IF IT/ITES companies are feeling the heat of the US slowdown, recruitment companies for the sector appear more than scorched. Though the severity of the impact has been mainly felt by companies in entry-level staffing with some seeing a whopping 60% fall in earnings, mid-level staffing firms are fearing the worst in the days to come.

“Earnings for recruitment consultants have definitely slumped over the last six months. The impact on earning from key accounts has dropped by 60% with further impacts on the pricing front,” said TeamLease Services’ vice-president of permanent staffing, Sampath Shetty. “For some individual consultants, the income is down to zero,” he added. This, he says, is the case with those who had all their clients in sectors that have borne the brunt of the recession. Working on a very low client base, some consultants have seen their incomes almost wiped out.

Typically, a small firm with 10-15 people and working in entry-level staffing earns around Rs 15 lakh per month where employees work on a low-fixed, high-commission salary. A 60% fall on such a base could, in some cases, even be life threatening.

For every placement, the consultant gets an average commission of 8% of the total annual income of the person placed. Entry-level salaries in the ITeS sector range from Rs 1-2 lakh. That’s not all. IT companies are trying to make their money stretch more as they look for higher value from recruitment agencies. “With the metrics for hiring moving away from quantity to quality with prescribed non-negotiable cost to company for candidates, these expectations are marginalising the recruitment companies’ productivity and pushing for more value adds at similar pricing,” Mr Shetty added.

Essar appoints Michael Foley as CEO,East Africa

1 Jul, 2008, 1704 hrs IST, PTI, Economics Times

 

MUMBAI: Essar Communications Holdings (ECHL), today said that it has appointed Michael P Foley as CEO-East Africa and he would have overall responsibility for the group's telecom investments and operations in the region.

Foley will oversee the roll-out and launch of Econet Wireless Kenya, a press release issued here stated.
Foley brings on board commercial and management experience gained from a number of leading telcos in Canada, East Europe, the Middle-East, Tanzania and Nigeria.

Earlier in the year, ECHL had acquired a 49 pc stake in Econet Wireless
International (EWI) by subscribing to fresh capital in the company.

Essar will actively participate with EWI in the network roll-out of Econet Wireless Kenya. Econet Wireless Kenya has also announced three senior leadership appointments, the release said.

These are Shailendra Khare as the Chief Technical Officer, Philip Mudimu as Project Director (East Africa) and Anna Othoro as Marketing Director.

Khare has over 20 years of technical experience with the last 13 years in the cellular network domain while Mudimu is a veteran of Econet and has played an instrumental role in steering the economy through the last five years.

Othoro has extensive experience in commercial management (sales and marketing) spanning over 11 years having held various senior management positions at both local and international level with GlaxoSmithkline Consumer Healthcare Limited and also as Managing Director of Celtel Kenya Limited.

 

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Building Your 'I Care' Brand During the Gas Price Surge

Corporations around the world are missing an opportunity both to help their employees during their economic struggles and to build their employment brand image as an employer that cares. The foundation of this opportunity is the current surge in gas prices and other economic factors that are heavily impacting almost every corporation’s workforce.

It’s almost impossible to pick up a newspaper or magazine and not read about the economic conditions that are putting a strain on almost everyone’s budget and way of life.

Rather than ignoring it or hoping it will go away, look upon it as a chance to “turn lemons into lemonade” and to further strengthen your employment brand image.

It has been common for corporations to offer benefits to their employees to ease their commutes or to help save the environment. However, the recent dramatic rise in gas prices provides corporations with an opportunity to really amp up their offerings, and to demonstrate to those they wish to attract and retain that the organization “cares” about them.

In fact, one study by Dr. Wayne Hochwarter, of Florida State University, found that high gas prices led to more stress on the job, thus impacting employee performance. In his research, Dr. Hochwarter found that one-third of the employees surveyed said they would quit their job for a comparable one closer to home.

Research by outplacement consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas found that 34% of employers had potential candidates who turned down jobs because of long commutes and added nearly 8% of employers report turnover caused by high transportation costs.

Acting now provides an opportunity to build your employment brand because the combined topics of gas prices, food prices, and the mortgage crisis are hot in the media. As a result, any bold action by a corporation is likely not just to be viewed positively by employees and potential applicants but also by those covering consumer confidence and spending in the media.

Efforts by employers to help workers cope with these economic factors will likely be written up in the press and in business publications. Not only would you be helping your workers, but you will also be building employee loyalty while getting free PR to further strengthen your employment brand image. It’s an opportunity that won’t last long, so it shouldn’t be missed.

Many firms have already been recognized for excellence in these areas, including Google, Intel, Oracle, Microsoft, Cisco, Nike, and HP. There are many actions to consider, and I’ve separated the various options into broad categories below.

Promoting Drive-Less Options

The first group of options is relatively cheap, but they can have a significant impact on the amount of money your employees need to pay in commute costs. 12 “drive-less” options include:

  1. Compressed workweek options. Offer schedules that allow commuters to reduce the number of days they come in to work. A 4-day, 10-hour workweek is the most popular, but some professions also use 3-day, 12-hour weeks. The key is to not just offer these programs, but to encourage individual managers to allow their employees to actually take advantage of them.  If coverage is an issue, consider allowing employees to alternate on/off alternative schedules.
  2. Work at home. A related option is to allow employees to choose on their own to work one or more days at home. In addition to saving commute costs, firms like Best Buy have found that telecommuting can generate up to a 35% increase in employee productivity, and research by the Gartner Group found up to a 40% improvement. Allowing employees to take periodic “planning” or innovation days where they spend their time thinking and planning for the future can also be an effective option. Benchmark firms in this area include Best Buy, Sun, IBM, Agilent, and HP.
  3. Satellite offices. By establishing satellite offices closer to where employees live, firms can offer opportunities for employees to use restricted computer and communications networks that cannot be accessed remotely while reducing the mileage employees drive to and from work. Employees that need to use company equipment (but do not necessarily need to meet with coworkers) can decide on which days they will work from these remote corporate locations. Microsoft’s touchdown space is an excellent example of this practice; however, Sun is the benchmark firm in this area, locating offices on all major access routes into major metropolitan areas.
  4. Bike/walk to work. This can both improve health (reducing benefit costs) and help employees save on gas. Companies can facilitate this practice by offering maps that highlight the flattest and quickest routes. They can also help by providing relaxed dress codes that allow employees to wear athletic clothes, as well as providing bike storage space and showers for their peddling employees. Walk to work or walk to mass transit location programs can have similar positive impacts.
  5. Make all-day meetings remote. Rather than requiring everyone to commute to all-day meetings, use conference calls and Web-based tools to allow some workers to attend meetings from home. These options can also save airline travel costs. HP and Cisco are the benchmark leaders in this area.
  6. On-site services. Dry cleaning, concierge, flowers, and take-out food can reduce the need for employees to run errands during lunch and after work. Also, consider vendor-provided gas-saving services like engine tune-ups and tire inflation. Google is a leader in this area.
  7. Offer online training. This can save on travel costs. Also, consider offering university classes on-site, so that your employees can improve themselves without the increased costs associated with driving to a local university.
  8. Reduce lunchtime and snack travel. For firms with few on-site lunch options, consider inviting lunch wagons that can sit in the parking lot. Other options include providing box lunches and snacks on site, as well as menus from local restaurants that deliver, shifting the cost of ordering out to the food provider.
  9. Increase company car usage. Firms can help their employees reduce their personal gas costs by liberalizing or expanding the number of opportunities for employees to use company cars.
  10. Job transfers. In organizations with many outlets (like retail), reduce employee gas usage by offering a one-time option to facilitate transfers to locations closer to the employee’s home. Consider offering internal “save on gas” job fairs where workers can meet with managers from other locations to see if relocation is a viable option that provides mutual benefits.
  11. Shift the organization’s start time. In congested areas, starting your commute an hour earlier or later can result in significant gas savings as a result of fewer backups and less congestion.
  12. Live close to work facilitation. Firms can offer services or work with local Realtors in order to make it easy for their employees to find apartments and housing close to the workplace. The leading firm in this area is Facebook, which offers an astonishing $700 per month salary supplement for employees who live within a mile of their headquarters. University Hospitals in Cleveland is also a benchmark organization.

Share the Commute

  • Coordinate shared commuting. Firms can help their employees to both save on gas and tolls by facilitating employee carpools, van pools, or a company shuttle. In many large cities, tax breaks encourage corporate van-pooling programs.  An additional benefit is the reduced need for employee parking.  Microsoft, Yahoo, and HP are benchmark firms. Also, offer a company-sponsored shuttle bus from transit stations close to work or from strategic locations.
  • Coordinate schedules. More individuals would share rides if they could share similar schedules with individuals who live close to them. This option requires you to work with individual managers to ensure that they make commuting part of their scheduling decision criteria.

Facilitate Opportunities for Cheaper Gas

  • Negotiate group discounts. Because corporations with many employees have significant buying power, work with local fuel suppliers and individual gas stations to negotiate volume discounts for employees who use targeted stations. Incidentally, try similar options for bulk food items to help employees deal with the rising cost of food.
  • Buy “company” gas. Some organizations have their own fueling facilities and these firms might be able to find a way to offer that gas to employees. By buying “gas futures,” firms can successfully hedge against future price increases (i.e., Southwest Airlines has successfully done this for its aviation fuel).
  • Allow employees access to “fleet” stations. Some firms utilize gas stations that provide gasoline for fleet cars. Negotiate with their vendors to identify opportunities where employees can get gas at these low-priced fleet stations.
  • Negotiate “buy” options. Use the company’s volume buying power to help negotiate lower-cost deals with vendors that allow your employees to lease or buy more gas-efficient vehicles. Vehicles might include scooters, electric segues, bikes, and compact or hybrid cars. (Note: there federal and in some cases state tax advantages associated with purchasing hybrid cars.)
  • Subsidize mass transit. Offer subsidies to individuals who use mass transit. Some government agencies provide tax advantages to firms that facilitate the use of mass transit (others provide penalties to those that don’t).

Increase Manager and Employee Participation

Corporations can take specific steps to encourage both individual managers and employees to participate in gas-saving options:

  • Measure and reward managers. Recognize those who are “commute cost” friendly; conduct an employee survey to identify the best.
  • Executive participation. Have the CEO and senior executives actively participate in company programs (i.e., participating in car pools, biking to work, or occasionally driving the company shuttle).
  • Gas incentives. Provide gas cards as incentives and rewards for top-performing employees and managers.

Miscellaneous Options

  • Conduct a survey and ask employees what they think you should be doing.
  • Benchmark other firms to see what else is possible.
  • Allow compacts, hybrids, and scooters to park closer to the building to send a message that you care about the environment.
  • Help them sell their gas-guzzler car or subsidize the purchase of fuel-efficient vehicles.
  • Add saving gas as a criterion for selecting new facility sites.
  • Consider reducing nepotism restrictions so that family members can work together and thus, commute together.

Provide Employees with Opportunities to Earn More Money

Because rising costs are essentially lowering your employees’ “real” standard of living, provide your employees with more opportunities to earn more money during these tough economic times:

  • Opportunity for overtime. Encourage managers to develop more opportunities for employees to work overtime to help them offset the rising cost of living.
  • Pay for performance. Offer increased opportunities for performance-based pay. Although giving employees “more money” is always a high-cost item, if any additional pay is based strictly on improved performance, both firms and employees can come out ahead.
  • Increase mileage allowance. The IRS has recently recognized a higher cost of gasoline by increasing the amount of reimbursement that it allows per mile traveled. Companies can help their employees by not waiting and increasing their mileage allotment immediately.
  • COLA. A final option to consider is offering your employees periodic cost-of-living adjustments. Sometimes this is necessary in order to decrease your employees’ need to look for a second job (or even a job at another firm) in order to meet their family needs.

Final Thoughts

As you can see, there are many options available to corporations. For the best impact, implement a comprehensive program with many elements. Not only will this approach have a larger impact on employees, but it also increases the odds of your effort receiving positive exposure.

How to Manage Your Team in a Downturn (and Come Out on Top)

Layoffs have truncated staff; cost-cutting measures are threatening projects, and morale is in the toilet. From the manager’s perspective, getting the most out of employees in this kind of environment can seem like a Sisyphean task. In fact, it’s a perfect opportunity to rejigger processes and fix what’s broken — and managers are uniquely positioned to do just that. Here’s how being candid with your employees, rewarding them in creative ways, and enlisting them to help make hard decisions can not only keep your team motivated but pull your company out of its slump.

Set the Tone

Goal: Lower the anxiety level in the office by being candid about the challenges — and opportunities — ahead.

It’s easy to blame the economy for all the reasons a company is suffering: Customers are cutting back on their expenses, advertisers are trimming their budgets, and stock prices are sliding. These problems may, in fact, be attributable in part to the downturn, but going with the “It’s the economy, stupid” defense sends a subtle but potentially dangerous message to employees: It implies that the situation is totally out of the company's hands and left in large part to fate. This is exactly the kind of attitude that raises anxiety levels in the office and disrupts employees’ focus on the problem at hand: turning business around.

“Have the confidence to not completely blame the economy,” says Stanford business professor Bob Sutton. “If employees believe that leadership can break things, they’ll believe that leadership can fix things, too.”

Don’t just rely on the CEO’s message. An e-mail from the top explaining why the company is in the red can’t tell employees much, which means mid-level managers need to be the interpreters. Speak to employees in small groups and be as candid as possible about where the company stands. This is also a good time to suss out any rumors. “Organize quick events to ask what people have heard and to answer any questions they have,” says Dave Logan, a senior partner at Los Angeles-based consulting firm Culture Sync.

Open the books. Giving employees the numbers behind company performance clarifies where the business needs to change and how their jobs connect to the bigger picture. But be warned: “If you’re going to be transparent, take the necessary time to teach employees about how the business works,” says Rich Armstrong, general manager of the Great Game of Business, a coaching firm that teaches open-book management. He advises managers to start with what employees probably already understand, like operational numbers, and then connect the dots with how those numbers increase gross margin and generate cash flow. Above all, keep finance jargon to a minimum.

Focus on the future. There’s no need to sugarcoat it: Pulling the company through the downturn isn’t going to be easy, but emphasizing the challenge can have its benefits. “It’s a great time for [your employees] to realize that they can play a role in discovering opportunities for the company,” says Vince Thompson, a former manager at AOL and author of the book Ignited.

Hot Tip

The You in Team

If a company is going to stay resilient, the staff’s collective commitment and collaboration are essential. In this environment, simply making an effort to be more visible and available to employees can spark productivity and bring the team together.

For example, if you normally work within the confines of a walled office while your team toils away in the cube farm, grab your laptop and set up shop in a cubicle near them — even if it’s only a couple of times a week. Start showing up to the smaller meetings that you usually skip, or rearrange your travel schedule to cut down how much time you spend out of the office. In short, don’t wait for employees to take advantage of an open-door policy. Go to them first, and ask how their work is going. This isn’t about micromanaging — it’s about knowing firsthand what they need.

Enlist the Team to Fix What’s Broken

Goal: Motivate employees and find out how and where the business needs to change.

Traditionally, the top execs decide the strategy and let it trickle down. The problem with this tactic is that it rarely makes the emotional case needed to mobilize employees around a common goal, says Paul Bromfield, a principal at Katzenbach Partners, which has advised companies like Aetna, Credit Suisse, and Pfizer. “This is about problem-solving and discipline, and that’s where employees come in,” he says. “Companies should be harnessing employees in the effort to identify where to cut costs and how.”

Not only will utilizing workers’ expertise make them more invested in the company’s success, it also gives management a more honest look at what’s not working. Senior leadership tends to focus on just one area of cost-cutting, Bromfield says, like products, headcount, or moving operations off-shore. Employees, on the other hand, can use their collective wisdom to eliminate clumsy (and costly) procedures across divisions.

Here are four guidelines for involving staff in the process:

1. Identify key influencers. “If you’re really going to mobilize people, you can’t do it from the top,” Bromfield says. Find the key employees who hold sway in their departments and get them to embrace and spread the change effort. These are the people who know how things really work (not just the way they’re supposed to work) and have a way of bringing together the right people to get things done.

2. Let teams do the problem solving. Form groups around the influencers and motivate (rather than mandate) employees to identify what’s slowing down business. Often the best place to start is to look for processes and bureaucracies that annoy the team. Set a basic timeframe to achieve cost savings, but let each group work at its own pace.

3. Make it a conversation. Schedule brown-bag lunches or other informal venues to talk to employees about their findings and where they might be hitting roadblocks. In the early 1990s, Bromfield’s former client Texas Commerce Bank held focus groups with thousands of its employees to find out what procedures most frustrated bankers and customers. Using the feedback, the company nearly doubled its $50 million cost-savings goal.

4. Follow through. Many cost-savings programs fail because management implements the initiative only halfway or lets inefficiencies creep back after meeting short-term goals, which won’t sit well with employees. Adopt the changes wholesale or not at all.

Big Idea

Keep Top Performers Moving

In an ideal world, the upside of a downturn is that recruiting qualified employees becomes easier. With more candidates in the job market, now could be the time to find new talent if your company has the resources to continue hiring. But managers shouldn’t forget about the top performers already on staff, say Monster executives Steve Pogorzelski, Dr. Jesse Harriott, and Doug Hardy, authors of a recent paper on how companies should invest in employees when business slows down.

When the economy’s bad, it’s easy to think that employees are grateful to have jobs at all. But layoffs and budget cuts may cause good workers to look for better opportunities. Give them a reason to stay by making room for them to keep advancing their careers. “Keep critical talent moving — not necessarily up, but growing in experience, responsibility, money, or other tangible and intangible ways,” say the authors of the study. If promotions or raises aren’t possible, give good workers the chance to make a lateral move or to take on a struggling department.

Get Back to the Work That Matters

Goal: Make sure your team is tuned in to growth opportunities.

The problem with a downturn is that while cost cutting is absolutely necessary, it can make everyone gun-shy about pursuing new initiatives and opportunities for investment. However, if your department, and in turn the company, is going to emerge from the slump in a competitive position, there are a few key investments you can’t afford not to fight for now:

Customers

Learn about the customers of your weakest competitors, writes Michael Roberto, a blogger for Harvard Business Publishing and management professor at Bryant University. While competitors are busy shoring up their relationships with large, established clients, it could be the perfect time to swoop in and court their smaller customers.

Research and Development

Take a cue from Apple’s Steve Jobs. When asked by Fortune magazine recently about Apple’s strategy for the downturn, Jobs pointed to how the company survived the 2001 tech bust by upping its R&D budget. “It worked, and that’s exactly what we’ll do this time,” he told the magazine.

Separate the value-added activities from the wheel-spinning exercises, Thompson suggests in Ignited. Instead of giving up on new projects in a downturn, shift focus so that the team is investing time in identifying and prioritizing the projects that will generate the most benefit for the company. Even if the final product will have to wait until more resources are available, doing the legwork now means the product will go to market faster when the time is right — and employees will stay engaged in the meantime.

Vendors/Partners

“There are two ways to run a business,” says Fred Mossler, senior vice president of merchandising for online shoe retailer Zappos, “adversarily or as a partnership.” Considering that the company relies on about 1,500 partners to provide its customers with a diverse selection of shoes, Zappos has chosen the latter option. To that end, the company built an extranet, so that every partner can see how its brand is performing. “They get to see everything our buyers see,” Mossler says. “This way we have about 1,500 other sets of eyes looking at our business and helping to improve it.”

Case Study

How Zappos Survived the Tech Bust

The idea for Zappos was born in 1999, when the economy was booming. But the shoe retailer still was unprofitable and struggling to grow revenue two years later, when the recession hit. “It was impossible for us to get any additional funding,” Mossler says. To make matters worse, the company was learning that its original business plan, which made Zappos a middleman, wasn’t working as planned: Vendors didn’t always have every shoe in stock, and customers — who sometimes had to wait weeks for their orders to arrive — often ended up with the wrong orders.

Though the times might have called for belt-tightening, the company had to make a couple of very expensive decisions, both of which put long-term strategy before short-term cost cutting. First, management realized that it needed total control over the merchandise in order to give the best customer service — a decision that meant sacrificing 25 percent of company revenue. Second, to make sure customers knew exactly what they were getting, the company hired photographers to take pictures of every pair of shoes it stocked. The site now has photos of its more than 3 million items, mostly shoes, from up to eight different angles. “Most companies look at customer service as an expense, but we look at it as a long-term investment,” says Mossler. The moves paid off: Less than 10 years after its founding, Zappos is on track to bring in more than $1 billion in sales this year.

Acknowledge and Reward Deserving Employees

Goal: Recognize achievement, even if resources are scarce.

Employee bonuses and raises are among some of the first expenses that upper management cuts during a downturn. But even if extra compensation isn’t in the budget, that doesn’t excuse managers from rewarding employees. “Lack of recognition — both financially and verbally — is one of the things that does the most damage,” says David Sirota, founder of the management-consulting firm Sirota Survey Intelligence. “I worked with an investment bank some years back where bankers were earning bonuses from $100,000 to $1 million a year,” he says. “You know what they complained about? They didn’t know if the chairman thought they were actually doing a good job, because he never spoke to them about it.”

Video: Giving Effective Praise.

One easy, no-cost way of recognizing valuable employees is to improve their quality of life. “The best reward you can give people is autonomy over how they spend their time,” says Jody Thompson, a former Best Buy human resources manager who, along with Cali Ressler, helped create the company’s Results-Only Work Environment program. That means giving employees your trust and the flexibility to work at home (or wherever suits them) whenever they want to — without any judgments. This gives workers more control over their time, and sometimes even a little extra cash. Sun Microsystems has found that employees who worked an average of 2.5 days at home each week saved $1,700 a year in gas and vehicle wear-and-tear.

Danger! Danger! Danger!

Save Rewards for the Worthy

Keeping your employees engaged doesn’t mean rewarding them just for doing their jobs. The most effective rewards are significant but well deserved. Libby Sartain became head of Yahoo’s human resources department in 2001, just as the company received a hard knock from the dot-com bust. She decided that instead of quietly giving large bonuses to overachievers, which wasn’t providing much bang for the buck, Yahoo needed to regularly single out the top 15 to 20 stellar individuals and teams — not only to reward them, but to help the rest of the company understand what made these employees outstanding.

The following year, the company gave its first Superstar Awards. Candidates were nominated by their peers for significant achievements and awarded cash prizes ranging from $5,000 to $50,000. The Yahoo Superstar Awards program is now in its seventh year and has honored employees for contributions like creating the Panama advertising system, inventing a way to advertise on instant messages, and fixing a troublesome accounting problem. “This isn’t egalitarian, this is a meritocracy,” Sartain says, acknowledging that some managers resisted the idea at first. “When people saw the winners, they understood why they won, and it took hold and became part of the culture.”

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Are the consultancies going to shut down soon because the corporate companies are buying the job portals???

I wont say that the consultancies would typically shutdown, but yes I would also be lying if I am saying that "the good 'ol days would come back". Business in the RPO industry is hit a big time and it's going bad to worst.

Surviving in such a market by any RPO consulting company would demand a drastic mutation in its DNA, viz. the services.

If you're question would have been, "Would all the job placement telecalling units that had mushroomed up in the industry in past 2 years be shut down?"

My answer would be a BIG.... OBVIOUS... YES!

The real time RPO or HRO consulting companies would adapt in it's ways to source CV's and create a fresh Data pool. Though major chunk of business would be lost with the job portals being acquired. But that would be compensated with other consulting services like assessments and training.

In short I can simply say that the life cycle of the industry has started again. This time it's more evolved and challenging. ;)

Regards,
Viral Thaker

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