Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Reducing New Hire Failure: Hiring for Attitude


“46% of newly hired employees will fail within 18 months, 
while only 19% will achieve unequivocal success.”

What an astonishing and distressing statement for any HR, L&D or corporate leader to read. This was in the opening stunner paragraph in Mark Murphy’s Leadership IQ white paper Hiring for Attitude: Research and Tools to Skyrocket your Success Rate. This white paper is well written, and Mark offers excellent statistical insights, which lead to positive solutions. First, look at these revealing stats from the Leadership IQ study:
      
 I. Study Results:     New Hire Success Factors  
Here are five areas distilled from the study data of 5247 interviews with
managers and the performance, personality and potential of new hires:       
·      Coachability (26%): The ability to accept and implement feedback from bosses, colleagues, customers and others.
·      Emotional Intelligence (23%): The ability to understand and manage one's own emotions, and accurately assess others' emotions.
·      Motivation (17%): Sufficient drive to achieve one's full potential and excel in the job.
·      Temperament (15%): Attitude and personality suited to the particular job and work environment.
·      Technical Competence (11%): Functional or technical skills required to do the job.

As is evident, coachability, emotional intelligence, motivation and temperament are more predictive of new hire success or failure than technical competence. The study also found that different interviewing strategies (e.g., behavioral, chronological, case study, etc.) had no significant difference in the failure rate. Those managers with the greatest success, however, emphasized interpersonal and motivational interview questions.                             

 II. Preventing New Hire Failure
Effective Interview Questions:
Leadership IQ recommends that managers focus interviewing on the first four factors above  
(coachability, emotional intelligence, motivation and temperament). Unfortunately, the most common interviewing approach centers on technical competence, which is easy to assess but is a “lousy predictor of whether a newly hired employee will succeed or fail”.
Two Quick Tests To Discover the Attitudes You Want:
Test #1: Finding Your High-Performer Attitudes
What are the distinguishing attitudinal characteristics that make these people such a joy to work with?
Examples of your responses might include:
·      They take ownership of problems
·      They’re highly collaborative
·      They aren’t afraid to make mistakes
·      They meet commitments
·      They’re empathetic towards customers’ and colleagues’ needs

Test #2: Finding Your Low-Performer Attitudes
What are the attitudes these folks have that make getting stuck in traffic on the way to work seem like a blessing?
Examples of your responses might include:
·      They always find the negative
·      They gossip
·      They respond to feedback with an argument
·      They only do the bare minimum expected of them
·      They get overwhelmed by multiple demands and priorities
·      They always find someone else to blame for their mistakes
·      They’re unwilling to leave their comfort zone

The financial costs for hiring failures can cost millions of dollars, even for small companies. Leadership IQ has done hiring managers and their companies a great service with this white paper. 

Coming soon from this white paper:  "The Perfect 4-Step Interview Question"
      






Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Google's LEARNING IN THE CLOUD




On February 9, I attended ASTD-San Francisco’s 2011 series "The Future is Now" Series: #2 - The Future of Leadership Training. In a brief two hours, I experienced an interactive session to learn about the future of leadership development. Julie Clow, Learning & Organizational Development Manager of Google (photo), gave a captivating and stimulating presentation by that got my creative learning wheels spinning. Let me start by describing the philosophical and practical differences Goggle University employs vis-a-vis the current, or shall I say, “traditional-eLearning-blended-learning” approach.

Google University calls their leadership program gLearning at Google (Learning in the "Cloud"): Foundations of Leadership & Teamwork. The reference to the “Cloud” (i.e. SaaS, PaaS and IaaS applications) immediately sets gLearning apart and is the heart and soul of the delivery mechanism for Google University. 

Below is a simple comparison of typical eLearning and Google’s learning in the Cloud approach:


Here is a bulleted summary of Google’s Foundations of Leadership & Teamwork (FLT) program:
Commitment:
  • Total = 19 hours
  • Self-paced work: ~3 hours/week for 4 weeks = 12 hours
  • Debrief sessions: 2-hour launch; three 1-hour weekly debrief sessions;
  • 2-hour conclusion = 7 hours
Program Length:
  • Content spread over four weeks, one module per week
Program Content:
  • Launch: Leadership@Google
  • Week 1: Self Awareness
  • Week 2: Self Management
  • Week 3: Teaming
  • Week 4 and Conclusion: Influence and Leading Up
Context:
  • Clear alignment of learning objectives with competencies/skill gaps;
  • Clear connection to "What's in it for me?"
Content:
  • Free off-the-shelf content (YouTube, EBSCO Business articles)
  • Internal content (Knols, Wikis, etc.)
  • High-quality leadership content (Assessments, PDI Ninth House courses)
Organization:
  • Build progression of content
  • Moving Knowledge Engine to pace activities to individual learners
Community:
  • Synchronous and asynchronous collaboration components to foster the exchange of ideas among participants
Testing/Assessment:
  • 360-degree behavioral assessments, eLearning quizzes, pre/post tests

Currently, the FLT program has completed two pilot programs; Julie Clow and the Google FLT group have carefully documented the results. The initial Pilot 1 achieved 83% completion and the next iteration Pilot 2 had 93% completion – great results demonstrating strong participant interest, motivation and professional growth. I am looking forward to seeing future iterations of Google's FLT program. I believe Learning in the Cloud is here to stay.


There are many more details about Google’s FLT Learning in the Cloud, which are not included in this blog. Information is available at http://bit.ly/glearning or add a comment to this blog post.







Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Empowered Learning - A Telecom Transformation


Tara Deakin, VP of Learning and Enablement, has shown cutting-edge success in changing the learning culture at Rogers Communication. Since she began in 2002, with a staff of ten (now 200), Deakin has racked up impressive gains in learning productivity and efficiency. One clear example is the new call center where new employee productivity is up from 40% to 80% of a tenured employee in 60 days instead the previous 180 days. This translates into a significant 10 percent cost reduction per developed training hour last year. That currently amounts to $59 per hour of training costs , and Tara is planning on another 10 percent reduction in the coming year. That is significant when you train 100,000 employees per year.

Empowerment of the employee has driven Deakin’s learning approach. The learning environment at Rogers has shifted from compliance (formalized) learning to reference (informal) learning. She seeks to position training and learning to enable the employee to become successful, something every employee wants. The shift is to informal, unstructured learning “driven by technology and social learning”.

Theses informal, personal and relevant learning activities are the core of what is Rogers Communications calls the R-Tube. While R-Tube still incorporates traditional e-learning, R-Tube breaks down the learning curriculum into smaller “nuggets”, which allow the learners consume on demand - without registration, without formal tracking or compliance activity. The result of this is that Rogers can see what courses and content are valuable and most relevant to the employees. This allows cost savings in course design and development. “By breaking the course apart, we were able to see the knowledge they were hungry for and what they needed to do their jobs,” Deakin says. R-Tube allows the learner to even generate their own content and teach others.

Tara Deakin has done a wonderful job of transforming Rogers Communication into a more efficient and productive learning organization. I look forward to seeing what advances she will make in her future onboarding, retail sales and call center roles.

Source:  Chief Learning Officer - January 2011