An Employee Best Fit Model – The Capability Assessment Triangle
By Michelle Malay Carter on May 10, 2010
Best Fit Model – PeopleFit’s Capability Assessment Triangle How?do managers go about finding the best fit between employee and role?? Most look at resumes and use behavioral based interviewing, but these?items only get at what someone has already had a chance to do.? With research showing that 20 % of employees are underutilized, we a […]
Filed Under Employee Engagement, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 3 Comments
Talent Assessment – Easy Peasy?
By Michelle Malay Carter on May 6, 2010
It’s?easy to walk on water when you know where the rocks are.??? –? Gerry Kraines I’ve found that managers are highly capable of assessing the relative cognitive capability (by work level) of their employees when they are given a work levels framework. People Are Different, and It’s Not Just about Experience and Education If you […]
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Why You Shouldn’t Hire the Best and the Brightest Candidate
By Michelle Malay Carter on May 5, 2010
Instead of focusing on hiring the best and the brightest candidate that applies for your position, shouldn’t you focus on hiring the best match? The Dangers of Overhiring Focusing on hiring the brightest candidate can lead to overhiring, which, unless you are building bench for growth, creates drag in the system over time. Back to […]
Filed Under High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 10 Comments
Undercover Boss – Well-Meaning Window Dressing
By Michelle Malay Carter on March 1, 2010
I must admit I’m touched by the hearts of the CEOs who agree to go undercover to experience their organization on the ground floor.? They seem to geniunely care about the people, not just the publicity afforded to their organization by the show. Systems Drive Behavior However, in the end, their righting single incidents or […]
Filed Under Accountability, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, High Potential, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 6 Comments
Add Time Spans to Your Resume to Reflect Your Requisite Level of Capability
By Michelle Malay Carter on January 16, 2010
I answered a question on a LinkedIn?Management Consulting?group from a person?inquiring about how to ensure you are being considered for roles at the right level.? Assuming you have been employed at full capacity in your previous work, adding a time element to your resume’s bullet points is one of the best ways to demonstrate your […]
Filed Under Felt Fair Compensation, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 2 Comments
Even Leaders Have Leaders – How Do We Sort Out Who Leads Whom?
By Michelle Malay Carter on December 15, 2009
Employees Crave True Leadership Employees?don’t begrudge being led.? They resent being asked to submit to the leadership of someone who doesn’t add value to their thinking.? Management Myth Busted Simply having?more experience does not automatically qualify someone to be a thought leader for anyone with less experience. Danger, Danger – Promotions by Tenure Many a […]
Filed Under Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 4 Comments
The Bright Side of the Underutilized (Overcapable) Employee
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 18, 2009
Today we will look at the positive behaviors a manager might observe in an employee that is underutilized, aka over capable of the work required of his role.? This post is number two in a series of four.? The series titles and links are listed below. ? Possible Negative Manifest Behaviors of an Underutilized Employee […]
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The Dark Side of the Underutilized Employee – Fire them or promote them?
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 13, 2009
What to Do About Attitude Problems One of my most popular articles is What To Do About Attitude Problems?? Promote them!? This article explores the negative behaviors a manager might experience not because an employee is unqualified for a job, but because she is cognitively overqualified.? As I’ve said before, high capability does not always […]
Filed Under Employee Engagement, High Potential, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | 3 Comments
Missed Opportunities to Rescue Dugard Linked to Poor Employee Screening or Poor Pay?
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 5, 2009
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, “State parole agents fell down on the job again and again during the 10 years they supervised sex offender Phillip Craig Garrido, failing to check out clues that could have led to alleged kidnap victim Jaycee Dugard.”? [emphasis mine] Parole Agent Work is Level Two Work If you follow […]
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Ford not only Survives, but Thrives? Was it Science-based Organization Design and Talent Assessment?
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 3, 2009
Good news for Ford Motor Company this week as it earned a third-quarter profit of almost $1 billion and expects to be “solidly profitable” in 2011 in its North American business.? Has Ford turned the financial corner? I was reminded last week at the Global Organization Design Society’s International Conference that Ford Motor Company worked […]
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