Posts Tagged ‘SAP’
Broaden Your Talent Pool – Lessons from “Undercover Boss”
Posted by: grandma in Employee Development, Employee Engagement, Leadership, Performance Management, Succession Planning, Talent Management on February 8th, 2010
There is an excellent CBS reality series on TV right now called, “Undercover Boss.” Executives from Waste Management and 7-Eleven go undercover and pretend to be entry-level employees. They experience what the front-line employee experiences.
Too often I encounter companies that completely ignore the hourly or salary non-exempt employee in the field when it comes to leadership development. (See previous post) This is easily discovered in the systems they own to enable this process. Companies don’t acquire software for the entire employee population. Sadly, and this really is the true divider, those employees with ready access to the internet get included. This is not a legitimate trigger.
The evolution of Talent Management has not evolved to every employee. This conundrum is often encountered in retail, manufacturing, oil and gas, hospitality and utilities where there is large percentage of skill workers. Most of the workgroups are out in the field, detached from corporate. High-turnover compounds the issue because companies are disinterested to go through the pain of measuring someone who is likely to leave within a year.
– How does a roustabout in an oil field get recognized as a high-potential when no one is looking at him?
– How does the retail employee get recognized when no one measures her?
– How about the hotel clerk who performs exceptionally high for the competencies required for the position?
Joe DePinto, CEO of 7-Eleven, encountered a high-potential first hand in Igor Finkler, a midnight fresh food delivery driver in Lewisville, TX. DePinto recognizes him for his energy, positivity, and enthusiasm – he wants more people like Igor working for 7-Eleven. (See the video here)
So how do you measure the potential of an employee like Igor? This is where I think the ERP vendors like SAP and Oracle have major advantages. They have way more touch-points into an employee than a niche talent vendor through core HR, portal, and self-service pages. Since they own the core HR system, they have the largest window from which to measure an employee. Having access to the internet shouldn’t be the gateway into the talent pool. You certainly shouldn’t have to send the CEO undercover to find a high-potential. I hope this series will open executive eyes to the potential of someone in these ranks.
