Looking for a dynamic HR role? Stay away from the entrepreneurial tech sector. January 1, 2012
In a recent survey of HR graduate students, the technology sector rated among the most coveted destinations to ply their trade. It is viewed as a world of innovative people, technologies and approaches where progressive talent management, OB/OD and related HR work awaits.
The Cry to Replace RIM's CEOs – A Truly Dumb Idea October 13, 2011
Leaving aside the recent service outages, the shellacking of RIM in the press is a tad surreal to behold. For the few Luddites not familiar with the firm, Research in Motion is the successful Canadian smart phone pioneer with revenues of $20bb per year, no debt and cash in the bank. They manufacture products that remain popular around the world and continue to boast technological innovations unmatched by any competitor. Their most recently launched smart phone devices have been well reviewed and appear to be selling well. And though the company's first version of its new tablet, the Playbook, has room for improvement, it is a promising piece of technology.
Context: When Companies Confuse Start-up Experience for Start-up Experience October 7, 2011
I had the occasion this week to chat with an entrepreneur still licking his wounds from a stalled startup venture. His tale is a reminder of how easily companies misunderstand organizational context when hiring. For startups, such a misunderstanding can be fatal.
The CEO Hiring Practices at HP October 3, 2011
The press tells us that Hewlett Packard is the largest technology company in the world with revenues of $126bb. Impressive as those numbers may appear, they do not seem to impress HP's Board of Directors. You see they do not believe that any of the firm's 324,600 employees are capable of leading it. Not one person. Not this year or last year when CEO changes were made. In fact they were apparently not capable six years ago or even eleven years ago when CEO changes were also made. But before summarily indicting the firm's succession planning/leadership development programs, it is useful to consider the track record of the external candidates who were considered better choices than the firm's internal candidates. This analysis decidedly shifts the spotlight to the competence of Hewlett Packard's Board of Directors.
The Folly of Believing What You Read September 19, 2011
Some time ago we posted a blog titled ‘So you REALLY want to be a CEO?' which looked at the human costs of climbing the upper rungs of the management ladder. The blog was based on a series of articles immediately following the ‘resignation' of Pfizer CEO Jeff Kindler. All of these articles presented a cautionary tale of life in the fast lane, the long hours, the extensive global travel, and the shareholder pressures that accompany an uncooperative stock price. They also spoke poignantly of the physical and emotional toll that such unrelenting pressure took on the Pfizer CEO who eventually resigned in order to attend to his family and health. As it turns out however, much of this narrative may not have been true
Before sending us your resume (and then getting frustrated with us) ask who we work for July 25, 2011
A friend of mine is a trustee in bankruptcy. As his title suggests, he and his firm serves those contemplating the ‘cleansing' process of personal bankruptcy. Potential customers compare service providers, select one, and then pay the chosen firm a fee to initiate and manage the ensuing process on their behalf. However, as soon as the relief-seeking customer signs on the dotted line, the trustee's allegiance shifts to the creditors for whom they then seek to maximize debt recovery. This shift in who works for whom must be a tad unsettling for people who already have a heap of problems and stress on their hands.
What Dating Services Can Teach Companies About Hiring June 1, 2011
Executive-level hiring is a decidedly aspirational endeavor. Organizations idealize their workplace cultures, select for attributes that will fit into those romanticized environments, and then immerse unsuspecting hires into their ice-cold reality of their works-in-progress.
How to Survive a Startup - by Jill Ram April 20, 2011
If you're an executive and you're thinking of joining a start-up, know what stage of a start-up to join. If the company is in its first year or so, don't expect to make significant changes. If you join after the company is somewhat established and mistakes have been made and learned from, you'll likely be more successful from the outset. If the founder has stepped aside, well, by then, the company is likely not considered a start-up anymore. It won't be functioning like a big company yet, and it won't have all the structure in place that it needs, but it will be run with more practicality and with less emotion. Timing is everything so choose it well.
Good News for the Old, Overqualified and Overlooked March 18, 2011
It is expected that a significant percentage of the baby boomer generation will drive right past the Freedom 55 highway exit. For many the goal of early retirement will have proven to be unattainable hype, while for others the ups and downs of working will appear more attractive than the prospects of working up and down the local lawn bowling leadership board.
Pressed for time? Blame those Benedictine Monks. February 24, 2011
It is among the principal reasons candidates tell us they are open to consider a change in employers. They are tethered to it, yet somehow it still flees. It is time, the most precious of resources, and for many harried executives they want some of it back. Though their relationship with time may be strained, it is worth pointing out that it was not always this way. In his fascinating book Time Wars, Jeremy Rifkin chronicles the evolution of our modern relationship with time. He points out that in traditional agrarian and pastoral cultures, time was a very naturalistic notion maintained in cyclical, repetitive, biological and even sacred terms. The ‘passing of time' was cued via the changing seasons, biological lifecycles and lunar patterns and thus, the cadence and tempo of those societies were finely tuned to the cyclical rhythms of their physical environments. As he states, "Our early ancestors coveted the circle, perceiving time as eternal return, a ceaseless repetition of an endless cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth". Since these cyclical rhythms could neither be accelerated, nor altered, the cadence of these societies' was natural and harmonious.

The Benefits of Knowing your Reputation

Reputations are built over time, easily damaged and difficult to mend. A great reputation yields an army of volunteers happy to speak glowingly on someone’s behalf. A poor reputation can sideline an executive forever. And while we may all long for sparkling reputations most of us have the odd performance smudge, strategic disagreement, business failure, cultural or job misalignment, or even misconduct that is mashed together with our victories to create the individuals we are. How do others see this amalgam that is you?

Many job-seeking executives try to contain or circumvent the whole issue of reputation. They spin their carefully scripted career tales, rationalize their employment comings and goings, and then direct potential employers to their coterie of references for corroboration. But many headhunters and employers discount hand-picked references and seek supplementary perspectives from unfiltered secondary sources. Some ignore the friends and family references altogether reasoning that they can find someone who knows someone who will give them the scoop on someone else. Executives often underestimate how this game of reputation-mining process works in the background to guide important hiring decisions. Even worse, many candidates go from first to worst because of it.

An individual’s reputation should align as closely as possible with their self-view. And the more self-aware the person the greater that likelihood. Individuals who can speak about their strengths and weaknesses, the business situations, jobs and companies in which they are most effective, and the corporate cultures and people with whom they work best are more likely to be viewed similarly on the outside. The same holds true for individuals who can acknowledge mistakes, lessons learned and can speak about how these will be applied going forward.

Many executives never venture down those roads of self-awareness. They take credit for all that was good in their previous jobs and deflect elsewhere all that was not. Job losses or business failures tend always to be attributable to market forces, lack of funding, product delays, dysfunctional boards of directors and on and on. While some executives execute this slight-of-hand trick, others raise cautionary flags sending potential employers to scramble to find alternative versions of the reality being presented to them.

A key link between self-awareness and reputation is feedback. Self-aware people tend to solicit feedback and use it to continually develop themselves. They know how they are viewed by others because they constantly ask. Soliciting feedback, as any senior executive will tell you, requires diligence as forthrightness decreases with as the power of the person soliciting it increases. It is absolutely critical however for personal development.

Unemployed executives should deliberately sample their reputations, both as protection against nasty surprises and as part of a normal process of taking stock. Such gauging can be done with limited awkwardness. For example, individuals can be asked for advice on the type of roles and companies they believe best suits the unemployed executive. The same applies for the types of situations they believe should be avoided. Feedback should be solicited carefully, but with a genuine desire to understand and learn. Each comment is a window how others see the unemployed executive. They should be taken seriously for these same people may well be asked by others and discretion can never be assumed.

Reputation matters. Executives should know what theirs is and ensure that it aligns with how they see themselves. Misalignment is food for thought and a wonderful starting point for self-improvement.