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 […]
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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 […]
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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 […]
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Could You Hire This Man?
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 17, 2007
?Imagine?your luck.? Bill Gates has applied for the open project manager position within your division.?? During your interview, he?explains that he’s a little bored with the philanthropic life so he thought he’d head back into the corporate world.? Thrilled with your luck; you ask very?few questions before offering him the job.? You agree to a […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Talent Management | 1 Comment
Embedding Corporate Values into Operations Via Organization Design
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 16, 2007
I talked yesterday about how exceptional customer service flows from sound organization design.???Regardless of?well-articulated and well-intentioned corporate values statements, your face-to-customer staff are your values ambassadors.? Although “customer focus” is a frequently cited corporate value, executives admit they have no best practices for embedding corporate values into operations.? This?shows in the disconnect between what is […]
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Exceptional Customer Service Flows from Sound Organization Design
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 15, 2007
As you make your way through the world as a consumer, how often are you pleasantly surprised by the service you receive?? For me, I suspect it’s about 5% of the time.? What values do many face-to-customer systems telegraph? In spite of what a company’s corporate values proclaim, customers are an afterthought, if a thought […]
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What Values Does Your Talent Management System Telegraph?
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 14, 2007
Despite what the corporate values statement on your website says, your organization?s actions speak louder than your lofty words.? I have seen very few sane-making talent management systems.? How many talent management systems reflect the following value set??? Employees are inherently broken and must be motivated, bribed, and coerced into giving their best. Although our […]
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Looking for Leaders – No Personality Required
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 12, 2007
Leadership: the ability to set purpose or direction for others and then get them to move along in that direction with competence and full commitment –Elliott Jaques. Within organizations, leadership is an accountability of all managers. Leadership ability could fall into the hands of an intuitive, a senser, an extrovert, an introvert, a thinker, a […]
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We Don’t Work for Companies; We Work for Managers
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 11, 2007
?Managers trump companies,? states First, Break All the Rules. Company reputation aside, as far as employees are concerned, one bad manager spoils the job. Despite perks and generous benefits, an employee?s relationship with her immediate manager will determine how long she stays and how productive she is. What do we want from managers? (A recap […]
Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 2 Comments