Succession Management: Whose Eyes Are Focused on Talent?

By Michelle Malay Carter on November 7, 2007 

When it comes to spotting talent, perspective is everything.? Asking managers to choose and groom their own replacements is a misguided notion for a variety of reasons I’ve discussed in previous posts.? They simply don’t have enough distance on the situation. Rather, the manager-once-removed should be accountable for mentoring for long-term career development.? Why? They […]

Filed Under Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Succession Planning, Talent Management | Comments Off on Succession Management: Whose Eyes Are Focused on Talent?

Why is Succession So Badly Managed? A Globally-Thought-Provoking Subject

By Michelle Malay Carter on November 6, 2007 

I made a comment to a CEO succession post on Harvard Business School’s Working Knowledge entitled, Why is Succession So Badly Managed? My comment was no more?brilliant and certainly not as detail-rich as many I have posted here, but I have seen a substantial spike in global traffic driven by my comment.? Many of these […]

Filed Under Accountability, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Succession Planning, Talent Management | Comments Off on Why is Succession So Badly Managed? A Globally-Thought-Provoking Subject

Integrated Organization Design and Leadership Approach Seen as Frequently as a Ninja Parade

By Michelle Malay Carter on November 3, 2007 

Seventy nine percent?of your?employees called – they are disengaged and waiting for their executive leadership to take systems-level approach to organization design and managerial leadership. A science-based framework already exists, but it’s been about as visible as a ninja parade.? Why?? The pain of the “blame the employee” model is not yet greater than the […]

Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Succession Planning, Talent Management | Comments Off on Integrated Organization Design and Leadership Approach Seen as Frequently as a Ninja Parade

Talent Management Systems Drive Talent Hoarding Not Talent Promotion

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 31, 2007 

It?is not too much complex work that burns out employees, but rather too much unchallenging work that leaves employees cynical and opting for self-employment. Most Talent Management Systems are Designed to Hoard Talent, Not Promote It Unfortunately, when you are under employed but conscientious, most self-interested managers reward you, their diligent, go-to employee,?with more of […]

Filed Under Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Succession Planning, Talent Management | 1 Comment

Succession Planning’s Missing Link – Lunch with Your Boss’s Boss

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 30, 2007 

Institutionalizing lunch with the boss’s boss would be to talent management what the Chia Pet was to holiday gift exchanges – an annual, inexpensive, one-size-fits all way to get the job done. The difficulty in spotting high potentials is that?their managers quite frequently don’t like them which, in turn, steers the manager’s manager’s perception of […]

Filed Under Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Succession Planning, Talent Management | 1 Comment

Work Isn’t Stressful; Adapting Is

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 28, 2007 

Work is a psychological imperative for humans.? If we are all wired to work, why can?t organizations find or retain talent?? Workers themselves say they leave organizations due to stress, according to a study by Watson Wyatt. We are?boring our workers away! Is work inherently stressful?? No, boring work is inherently stressful, and two categories […]

Filed Under Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 1 Comment

Employees are Babies Throwing Tantrums Says HR, Their Benevolent Caretaker

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 26, 2007 

If there are any HR Professional readers in my audience, please fight with me on this one!? Say it isn’t so. On a post lamenting the fact the HR gets no respect, Karthik raised my blood pressure with the following comment on Gautam Ghosh’s management consulting blog (emphasis mine): “The employee is to be looked […]

Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 2 Comments

Will Executives Listen to their Employees via Towers Perrin?

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 24, 2007 

You’ve heard the phrase, living well is the best revenge?? I must say it does bring a smile to my face when organizations pay me, as an external consultant, several times what I was making as an internal consultant?to say the same things they reviled me for saying while working inside an organization. In that […]

Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | Comments Off on Will Executives Listen to their Employees via Towers Perrin?

Rethinking Accountability – Because the Hog Won’t Butcher Himself

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 23, 2007 

The?Nobel prize in economics was just awarded to a team that developed Mechanism Design, i.e. a design for arranging economic interactions so that when everyone behaves in a self-interested manner, the result is something we all like.? This includes the idea of Incentive Compatibility, i.e. the concept that way to get as close as possible […]

Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 1 Comment

Talent Management – Finding Our Way without a Map

By Michelle Malay Carter on October 20, 2007 

My family will be eating food on a toothpick for breakfast, lunch, and dinner this week, as no one showed at my party last night.? Could it have been the directions? It seems organizations are having the same issue with Talent Management.? Everyone wants to go there, but without a common language and total-systems model […]

Filed Under Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | Comments Off on Talent Management – Finding Our Way without a Map

← Previous PageNext Page →