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Archive for the ‘Recruiting’ Category

Recruiting, Acquiring and KEEPING upper echelon employees begins with…

In branding, Business Advice, business coaching, Employee Management, employees, employer, Marketing Ideas, PR, Recruiting, social marketing on August 30, 2011 at 10:37 am

Most companies are striving to get the best employees and keep them as they know this is integral to their success and growth. Competition is steep as the number of “A Players” seems to be dwindling by the day. The consolation? Not many have mastered this art, so making an effort goes a long way!

As usual, let’s start at the beginning…

How do you attract “A players” in the first place?

One of the most innovative and effective ways is by creating interesting and fun videos to tempt great employees and leaders to your company. I have seen this succefully done by companies like Zappos and MindVakkey, it has the top employees coming to them to apply and vy for positions!

But how do we accomplish this for our company when it isn’t young and hip or when we don’t have a fun business because  we sell widgets!

IF your perspective is open and willing, then you can accomplish the goal of painting a picture that is appealing for prospective employees. NOW, let me preface this with this admonition, IF your company only paints the picture as being a good, fair and fun company to work for but it is riddled with a different culture totally, then even if you are successful in recruiting top employees, they will shortly find out the reality and move on to a company that better suits them. SOOOO, this is only the first step to having an employee team of  upper echelon employees.

Alright, so now back tot he video idea…

ANY subject can be fun and interesting if you have the right perspective. You may not have this perspective, so you might want to hire someone to make this or even better, delegate it to some of your employees. Ah! Here’s an idea: Have a contest for different departments to make each a video for recruiting. They can talk about how it is to work there or about events that you hold, whatever. But, then you can have a viewing party and vote for the best video. Make a day out of it!

Don’t believe ANY subject can be funny? Would you think it is possible to be funny when delivering the “speech” all airlines must give before takeoff, “There are four exits…” etc.?

Thin again. Check out this video by Virgin Airlines. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyygn8HFTCo&NR=1

Have a recruiting video already? Post a link here, we would love to see it and learn from your example.

To your continued success,

C

 

 

Your Laziest Employees’ Impact on the Rest of the Employee Team… is WORSE Than You Think!

In Business Advice, business coaching, Employee Management, employees, employer, Health Care Practice, Recruiting, Retail Stores, Retailer on June 30, 2011 at 10:03 am

In a study of 158 students, a test was designed to see how conscientious and motivated they were, and then they were sorted into 33 teams.

Each team was given a case study to work on, and was told that each team member would receive the same grade based on how well they did.

Benjamin Walker, a PhD candidate at the University of New South Wales’ Australian School of Business, found that “the person who contributes the least has a huge impact. Even if the rest of the team is pulling their weight, they won’t be able to compensate for that member.”  That single lazy person ended up with the most responsibility for team failure or success.

What about irresponsible people? Do they have the same affect? No, Walker ran tests to see if recklessness affected team performance, but found that the group mentality overrode the few impulsive people–in a way that it couldn’t do with lazy folks.

So, will you allow a lazy person to erode everyone else’s potential success?

Or will you step forward to make a small change that could drastically affect the entire company’s success?

C

How to know how your employees REALY feel about you:

In Business Advice, business coaching, Employee Management, employees, employer, Health Care Practice, Recruiting, Retail Stores, Retailer on June 28, 2011 at 3:02 pm

They WILL NOT tell you! Probably EVER! Even on exit interviews, people do not tell the truth as they generally are worried about getting a good referral from the company. Hence, the question is raised “How DO you know?”

Bnet has FOUR signs to read in order to find out:

How do you know what they really think? Very rarely will people tell you directly. So you have to be adept at reading their behavior–and your own. Here are four signs:

1. They often argue with you

This is a good sign. People do not argue if they don’t care. Workplace arguments are healthy because it means people are invested in outcomes.

If you haven’t had an underling push back in the last week, then you have staffers who are under-invested. They don’t care. You’ve ticked them off. They have decided that you aren’t worth their time.

The best thing you can do to remedy this situation is to show people you care about their opinion. How? By thanking them for their suggestions, admitting you’re wrong and changing your path. Do it now, before it’s too late and no one is ever willing to tell you you’re wrong.

2. You haven’t had to apologize in a while
If you don’t say you’re sorry once a week at work, then you’re not honest about your mistakes. And people are sick of it. You shouldn’t wait until some epic mistake–you’ve run over a child or poisoned a stray cat–until you apologize. Apologize for the for small, everyday mistakes as well. It’s a sign of respect and caring to say you’re sorry. Which is why you can be pretty sure your employees hate you if you don’t apologize regularly.

Start now to fix things. But remember that body language and tone matters. You can’t fake an apology and make it matter. A fake apology actually aggravates the situation.

So manage in your heart, first, to honestly believe you should have done better. And whatever you do, don’t say, “I’m sorry but–”  An apology doesn’t have a follow-up clause. It doesn’t have a summation.

The most powerful thing to say after “I’m sorry”? Nothing.

3. You’re good at the details

Guess what? Management is not about details; it’s about people. You have to love people to be a good manager and trust those people to be good with details because they are conscientious, capable people who care about their work. If you are caring about details more than people, then you are treating people as if they are not capable, and then, of course, they will perform that way.

It’s easy to be incompetent when that’s what the boss expects. But look out, because
people who perform poorly feel bad about their work. And if they feel bad about their work, they probably resent you for that.

So here’s a suggestion: Trust people. Put faith in them. Manage people in a way that allows them to take care of details. If you don’t like how they manage details, fire them. But it does no one good for you to do the details for the people you manage.

4. You think you can be a better manager

If you think you could improve, you’re probably right. If you think you’re doing just fine, you’re probably wrong.  This research comes from Tiziana Casciarofrom Rotman School of Management. Casciaro says that people who are focused on improving a given trait at work can almost always make good progress.

Also, if you think you can improve, you display the type of optimism that is contagious. Because optimism (and pessimism) are contagious and the manager sets the tone for the team. An optimistic team will like you even if you’re having a bad day – or month. A pessimistic team will think you stink, even if you’ve been putting in a decent performance as a manager for years. Perception of your team is what matters. But maybe you already know that.

If you do, you’re probably already a manager people like.

7 Ways You Make Your Employees Miserable

In Business Advice, business coaching, Employee Management, employees, employer, Health Care Practice, Recruiting on June 23, 2011 at 3:35 pm

7 Ways You Make Your Employees Miserable!
Employees should be motivated to perform by their managers, not in spite of their managers. As we discussed in 10 Things That Good Bosses Do, a good manager provides employees with:

* Direction, tools, and training they need to do their job effectively.
* A challenging, engaging, and rewarding work environment.
* Freedom from management politics and other assorted BS.

Notice there’s nothing in there that reads, “Make everyone’s job harder by acting like a self-important, egotistical, micromanaging control freak.” That’s because that’s not what good managers do. That’s what dysfunctional managers do.

It’s not even a rare occurrence. In my management and consulting experience, it’s entirely too common. And here’s the thing that’s going to @#!*% off a lot of people. It’s really common in the middle management ranks.

That’s because, unlike senior executives, middle managers haven’t yet “arrived,” so proving themselves is first and foremost on their minds and they’re not always sensitive to who they step on in the process of getting there. In other words, their own needs and wants come ahead of the group.

I know that sounds harsh, but who among you is beyond the need for improvement? That’s right, nobody. And guess what? If getting ahead and “making it” is your top priority, you’ll get there a lot faster by taking your job and your responsibility seriously. And that means not doing these:

7 Ways Managers Make Employee’s Jobs Harder:

1. Give cryptic or incomplete direction and expect people to read your mind. You’re in a hurry because your time is so important – more important than anyone else’s – which of course gives you a license to tell people half of what they need to know and then beat them up when they guess wrong on the rest.
2. Stay in your comfort zone and don’t push the envelope. When you sign up for high-risk and high-visibility projects or stick your neck out for your group, it clears the way for all your people to grow and shine with everyone watching. High priority stuff gets attention, resources, and raises, too.
3. Control or limit information flow. “Always go through me,” “don’t cc him,” “you don’t have a need to know that,” “You’ll find out when I think it’s time” – classic micromanaging and controlling behavior that reduces employee effectiveness.
4. Let your employees take the heat when you should be accountable. This is inexcusable for the simple reason that your people are your responsibility. When they succeed, it reflects well on you. And when they fail or screw up, that should reflect poorly on you. You were hired and you’re paid to be held accountable, not to be scarce when management is beating up on your people.
5. Be a coward when it comes to delivering bad news and criticism. One of the most challenging but important management functions is to spend time explaining and teaching people how they can improve and delivering bad news that affects them. I know nobody wants to be the “bad guy,” but when you’re tough and straightforward, you’re actually being the “good guy.”
6. Ask for stuff people have already given you. This is a classic sign of dysfunctional management. What you’re really saying is that, because you’re so much more valuable than everyone else, it’s more productive for them to do something twice than for you to look for it once. What a load of crap.
7. Let everyone walk all over you. If you’re a wimpy doormat, then more assertive and aggressive peers will more effectively sell their ideas and get budget and resources for their programs and people. If you don’t fight for your people, it’s all downhill – not just for you, for everyone in your group.

From Bnet: read more here  http://ow.ly/5p5hy

Why employees don’t care what they need! Instead give them what they demand…

In Business Advice, business coaching, employees, employer, Health Care Practice, Recruiting, Retail Stores, Retailer on September 29, 2010 at 7:19 am

Seth Godin wrote a post today about how to sell and market what people demand and tells you NOT to try to sell what people need. I think it is applicable to managing employees:

Needs don’t always lead to demand

One of the accepted holy grails of building an organization is that you should fill a need. Fill people’s needs, they say, and the rest will take care of itself.

But… someone might know that they need to lose some weight, but what they demand is potato chips.

Someone might know that they need to be more concerned about the world, but what they demand is another fake reality show.

As my friend Tricia taught me, this is brought into sharp relief when doing social enterprise in the developing world. There are things that people vitally need… and yet providing it is no guarantee you’ll find demand.

Please don’t tell get confused by what the market needs. That’s something you decided, not them.

If you want to help people lose weight, you need to sell them something they demand, like belonging or convenience, not lecture them about what they need.

So, how can you apply this to managing employees?

You may as the employer feel you know what is good for the employees, you may find yourself saying as I heard someone say yesterday “This is not just a lecture, but you really need to hear this…”.

Now, if you think that this is helping your productivity or morale or end results, you are wrong. It is not.

Instead, imagine for a moment that Seth is right, that people don’t care what they need, they only care about what they demand.

So, what are you employees demanding? They may not be saying it out loud or to you, so this may take some effort on your part, so go find out.

If you do not give employees what they demand, they will either work for you forever in a half-butt style or quit.

Employees generally demand to be treated with respect and honesty. Now, now, you are probably thinking “I treat everyone with respect and honesty!” Which you probably do, however what about the managers and co-workers?

MOST COMPANIES have someone in them that is a bully or rampaging personality who is not respectful or honest. However, they are excellent manipulators of the bosses, and they are the last to find out what is going on!

But, employees demand much more, especially these days! With companies vying for “the best place to work”, and companies follow the Zappos way, the gems of employees will be firmly planted there, with more joining their ranks everyday. Those that are left will be those that were not ethically or morally firm enough to be hired by these cultural companies.

How will you compete?

C

So, does managing HAVE to be this much work? Is it the employees that are the problem?

You want the best employees? The real question is do “A” players want to work for YOU? Recruiting in the New Economy

In Business Advice, business coaching, employees, employer, Health Care Practice, Marketing Ideas, Procedures Policies, Recruiting, Retail Stores, Retailer on September 22, 2010 at 12:41 pm

Employees have changed? New generations coming into the workforce are simply… different. Why?

Generations feel differing values are important, hence they will be moved to make decision, choose where to live, what to buy and where to work… differently.

Management has to change to meet this demand or they will lose the “A” players in their teams.

Recruiters also will have to change the way they recruit. And that starts with the company and how it presents itself to prospects. There was a great presentation given by Vishan Lakhani where he talks about the entire initiative theri company has ongoing to recruit the BEST employees throughout the WORLD!

How do you compete?

Check out how Netflix does it! Click on the box at the bottom left. It’s a click through presentation.

Think about how recruits view your company and the opportunity your company presents. it can and always should be a priority to improve this area!

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