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The Total View Newsletter

 

 

 

 

February 18, 2009

Edited and Written by Ira S. Wolfe

Published by Success Performance Solutions. Major Sponsor,

2008 Best Places to Work In Pennsylvania

 

What's Inside this issue of The TotalView:

1.  Are CEOs selling out their most important assets?

2.  Perfect Labor Storm Warnings

3.  Top 10 CEO Challenges

4.  Leading Your Career

5.  Quotes from the Hire Authorities


1.  Are CEOs selling out their "most important assets?"

Each year, the Conference Board's CEO Challenge Survey asks hundreds of senior executives from around the world to identify and rate their most pressing concerns.  Finding qualified managers, managing talent and planning for succession have been placed on the back burner according to a new CEO survey.  Borrowing from the Alan Greenspan's now infamous description of "irrational exuberance," this current state of affairs might be defined as "irrational incompetence" when it comes to managing what these same CEOs used to refer as their companies' most important assets.

The list reveals several key findings - several indicating a serious case of short-sightedness and contradictions:


1.  With no control over a turbulent global economy, CEOs are focused on leading their companies' reaction to it. That's a good thing. They see their most important job as effectively executing strategy in the context of today's global marketplace chaos. What boils to the top is this:  does that management team that got them into this mean have the capability to get them out?  Weren't these same people executing the strategy before?  Or were they so focused on execution that they neglected to keep their eyes and ears open to what was going on around them and ahead of them. And that leads me to my second finding.

2. The crisis has led CEOs to focus on "bread and butter" survival issues, while longer-term challenges, especially in talent management, are deemphasized. Talent management can't take a back-seat.  It's the engine that will drive the strategy.  To execute effectively, these CEOs see speed, flexibility, and adaptability to change as more important than ever; it ascends to 3rd place from 7th. The number who rate speed, flexibility, adaptability to change as being one of their greatest concerns almost doubles. 

 

But unless execution is completely automated, doesn't its effectiveness depend upon the individual and collective ability of people  to deal with the complexity, adapt quickly to changes, and recognize and anticipate accurately the outcomes of subtle trends. So how can a business back-burner talent management when its very future is predicated upon having the only the best and brightest find a way out of this mess?

It's apparently easier than one might expect.

Finding qualified managerial talent, which placed among the Top 10 challenges two years running (2007 and 2008 July/August), fell eight places and out of the Top 10 altogether in the October survey. Only two of 20 people-related challenges rise in ranking: employee efficiency and the cost of employee healthcare benefits-both of which are direct bottom-line contributors. But employee efficiency is related to something I've been harping on for years.  When the complexity deepens, the pace quickens, and the future is uncertain, the talent that got a business to where it is may not be the right talent to get it where it wants to go. 

The crisis is amplifying a de-emphasis on people issues, potentially worsening what economic conditions had already put into play. In today's even looser labor market, CEOs appear assured that talent will be there when, how, and if they need it. That's a mistake of apocalyptic proportions. 

The crisis has already demonstrated without a doubt that the talent supply to understand, no less lead us out of this mess, is scarce. When this crisis is finally defused, the talent pool will be older.  Management might back-burner talent management but it can't stall aging.

Skill gaps are also getting worse.  Funding for training and development has been slashed.  Schools are scrambling to meet budgets but cutting programs, teachers and services. At the same time, the demand for more and better skills increases.

You just can't bookmark talent management and expect in a year or two to go back and pick up where you left off.  The quantity of job seekers may be larger but the quality of the talent isn't and won't be.

It just goes to show that all the rhetoric about getting the right people on the bus was just that - rhetoric.  The route has been diverted but the same team is driving.  While the destination may still be realistic, the path to get there isn't.  While hiring and succession planning initiatives may be become temporarily secondary to keeping the lights on, the organization will soon run out of energy if current talent isn't up and ready for the journey.
Assessing the capability, potential, and resiliency of the current workforce - and especially senior management - to both weather the storm and anticipate a successful recovery is absolutely necessary.

But it is apparent from my daily interactions with managers and employees and the implosion of so many businesses that short-sightedness is epidemic and its long term negative consequences may be fatal.  
 
Post comments to this column at Perfect Labor Storm blog.

 


2.  Perfect Labor Storm Warnings   Perfect Labor Storm 2.0 Book

Subscribe to the Perfect Labor Storm 2.0 blog and receive skilled worker shortage updates like this:

Health care costs related to obesity are rivaled by productivity costs in their impact. In the U.S. alone it is estimated that obesity is associated with 39 million lost work days; 239 million restricted-activity days; 90 million bed days; and 63 million physician visits per year.  Read more at PLS blog.

 

Learn more about workforce trends. Purchase the NEW Perfect Labor Storm 2.0 books (soft and hard cover versions) at PerfectLaborStorm.com.

New Perfect Labor Storm videos added. Watch now!


3.  Top 10 Challenges for CEOs

Each year, the Conference Board's CEO Challenge Survey asks hundreds of senior executives from around the world to identify and rate their most pressing concerns.

Following are some key results of the Conference Board's CEO Challenge Survey: (Note: Numbers in parentheses show July/August 2008 rankings compared to those in the fall 2008).

1.  Excellence in execution (1)
2.  Consistent execution of strategy by top management (3)
3.  Speed, flexibility, adaptability to change (7)
4.  Global economic performance (16)
5.  Global risk, including liquidity, volatility, and credit risk (11)
6.  Sustained and stead top-line growth (2)
7.  Customer loyalty/retention (5)
8.  Improving productivity (9)
9.  Business confidence (34)
10. Profit growth (4)
  

 

Source: Conference Board Challenge Survey


4. Leading Your Career

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5. Quotes from Hire Authorities

"To go against the dominant thinking of your friends, of most of the people you see every day, is perhaps the most difficult act of heroism you can perform."
 
Theodore H. White  


Permission is granted to consultants, managers, business owners and HR professionals to reproduce content from this newsletter for your internal publications, or to distribute copies to your workforce, on the condition that you reproduce the credits and contact information as follows: "Reprinted with permission from Ira S Wolfe and Success Performance Solutions. Copyright 2008 Ira S Wolfe."  We also hope you will forward the newsletter in its entirety and recommend to others that they subscribe.


Ira S. Wolfe Copyright 2009 - All Rights Reserved. Reprints and other distribution by permission only.