The Future of Feedback

An examination of the ways that the collection of employee feedback and the use of social media in the workplace affect employee retention and happiness for the June print issue of Talent Management magazine.

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The Future of Feedback

In an era of modern feedback, organizations that pay heed to employees’ voices and act on their concerns can almost guarantee improved retention.

As signs of a recovering economy emerge and greener pastures beckon, some talent pundits have predicted the long-awaited improvement will lead to a mass exodus of unhappy employees from jobs they’ve grudgingly performed for the last few years. Whether or not “The Great Recession” is followed by “The Great Walk-out” remains to be seen, but by updating the way employee feedback is gathered and — more importantly — acted on, companies have a powerful guard against turnover.

Many of the tried-and-true tools talent managers have been using to gather feedback are still useful, but this is the 21st century. And in this world, the ever-growing reach of technology has left no aspect of life untouched. Employee feedback is no exception, and the following is a guide to the newest tricks and philosophies available to gather, analyze and act on the employee voice.

Plot the Course

Direct feedback can be useful, but before companies draft lengthy annual questionnaires and create accounts with every social media channel, an overview of basic metrics is imperative. Sometimes, those numbers speak volumes — more so than any comments box.

“That is a key thing that we find, over and over again, is missing when it comes time to talk about the macro-level issues around employee dynamics,” said Trey Campbell, North American president of human resource services provider NorthgateArinso. Looking at these metrics is essential as an organization’s first stop when it comes to gathering feedback, he said.

“Before we can even move to the higher-end questions of what’s motivating them, how happy are they, are they an attrition risk, we have to get the basics down,” he said.

Campbell said NorthgateArinso begins its work with a company by first using the core data set from a system of record that all corporations share: payroll. “A foundational building block that we get into very quickly is: ‘Do you know where everyone is and what they do?’” Campbell said this question is increasingly difficult for some companies to answer as businesses grow more global.

Continue reading at Talent Management magazine online!

The Age of Agility


This was a case study for Talent Management magazine about the evolving ways employees at Unilever clock in for work. Originally published in the May, 2012 print edition of Talent Management magazine.

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Unilever’s flexible work model changed what it means to go to work. Leaders created a place that made employees’ lives better despite increasing pressure to be more productive.

A few years ago global consumer products corporation Unilever realized it needed to expand while cutting costs and carbon output. Now, Unilever employees can work whenever they like, wherever they like, as long as their work gets done.

Unilever calls this “agile working,” and it shifts the emphasis from time and attendance to specific targets and goals, creating a location-independent concept of work. “The idea was to really transform the culture around working at Unilever so the company could be more competitive as a global entity in a very competitive global marketplace,” said Chris Raia, vice president of organizational effectiveness and leader of the company’s agile working program.

But Unilever had to figure out how to unite a workforce spread across nearly every time zone in a way that was convenient for everyone. “Unilever’s business model is one where much of the innovation that the company brings to market is generated by global teams and then implemented in operating companies around the world,” Raia said.

Continue reading at Talent Management magazine online!

Neo flyers up 'til now

The following are all the flyers I've made for Neo events in the last year or so. I've really come to enjoy getting my Photoshop on with these. I think I had the most fun with the one for the holiday party. Fun fact: the Santa Claus in that is the same guy, Charles, as in the Blackout Wednesday poster. The Smiths/Cure one was probably the most difficult, but through that, I taught myself the snap tool, which was way worth it for future projects.




 




Photo credits: 
"Smith-o-Lantern" by Magpie-Moon
Santa Charles by Kelly Reardon
Santa and friend by BD Miller. Models: Charles Kedney and Peggy. 
I believe I took the photo of Kitty Zombie from his Facebook photos. 
Everything else is stock photography, probably from Corbis. 

Vendors: here today, maybe tomorrow

A Q&A with Gartner's James Holincheck about the human capital vendor landscape and how it's affected by technology for Talent Management magazine. This appeared in the April print edition of the magazine.

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Today’s turbulent vendor arena, with continuous merging and splitting of companies large and small, is driven by a rapid evolution of technology.

In the 21st century, technology touches all aspects of work as companies strive to find and leverage the next big thing. James Holincheck, managing vice president of research at Gartner, a technology research firm, shared his insights into what aspects of technology have the most impact on human capital management and the vendor community. Emerging technologies such as cloud computing and social networking are driving many larger vendors to tap the savvy and innovation of smaller start-ups that may have their ears closer to the ground.

What is the most important role of a human capital vendor from a talent manager’s perspective? 

Holincheck: Most human capital management vendors, of software at least, [provide] technology to help talent managers be more successful in managing talent. That’s the obvious thing. But some certainly do more than that. Some provide various different professional services that help those customers get more out of their investments in technology, or they partner with third parties that can help with that. A technology solution in and of itself is necessary but not necessarily sufficient to be a successful talent manager.

Continue reading at Talent Management magazine online!