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Are you aware of the decisive impact of
talent on your organisation’s success?
Have you devised a game plan to retain
your competitive advantage?
Did you know that despite fluctuating
unemployment rates, the competition to
source, hire and retain top notch candidates
has remained consistent and fierce across
most industries?
Finally, while every other aspect of business
is being easily replicated (products,
services and infrastructure) isn’t it amazing
to learn that talented people are the ONLY
lasting competitive advantage?
McKinsey’s study, which has appeared in
the McKinsey Quarterly (1998), focused on
77 large U.S. companies in various industries.
The team’s focus was on the human
resources department within each company
and what their talent-building philosophies,
practices, and challenges were. The team
also surveyed nearly 400 corporate offices
and 6,000 executives from the top ranks
of these companies. In addition, the group
conducted case studies of 20 companies
that were perceived to have considerable
talent. The study concluded that companies
are about to be engaged in a war for
senior executive talent that will remain a
defining characteristic of their competitive
landscape for decades to come. The report’s
even more troubling conclusion was that
“most companies are ill-prepared, and even
the best are vulnerable.”
This new age economy, with its attendant
paradigm shifts in relation to the
human capital, in terms of its acquisition,
utilisation, development and retention,
has placed a heavy demand on today’s
HR professionals. Today HR is expected
to identify potential talent and also comprehend,
conceptualise and implement relevant
strategies to contribute effectively to
achieve organisational objectives. Hence
a serious concern of every HR manager
in order to survive this ‘War for Talent’,
is to fight against a limited and diminishing
pool of qualified available candidates
to replace valuable employees when they
leave, dramatically underscoring the difficulty
to attract, motivate and retain the
best employees in an organisation. You will
find out more as we reveal our findings
from our interactions on the subject with
the country’s top HR people from some of
the best known and admired companies.
To analyse the reasons, we first need to
understand what “TALENT” means. People
have different views and definitions. According
to Leigh Branham, vice president,
consulting service at Right Management
Consultants and author of the book, “Keeping
People Who Keep You in Business”, a
talent is not rare and precious. Everyone
has talent – too many to possibly name
all. Talent is behavior; things we do more
easily than the next person. We speak of
“natural born talent” but those with a gift,
knack, ability or flair for something can refine
and develop that talent through experience.
Talent, however, cannot be taught.
As someone once said, “you can teach a
turkey to climb a tree, but it is easier to
hire a squirrel”.
Vice President, HR of Seagram, Mr. Gopi
Nambiar, says talent can be best described
as a combination of abilities and attitudes.
The real trick is to match the right motivated
talents to the right role, individually
and collectively, harnessing and harmonizing
this crucial attribute to achieve the
objectives of your company.
Today, companies have become fiercely
competitive when it comes to attracting
and retaining talent. According to Branham,
75 per cent of the senior executives
admit that employee retention is a major
concern today, the obvious reason being the
‘increasing rate of turnover’. This dynamically
changing and volatile demand-supply
equation with such erratic attrition trends
and cut throat competition has led organisations
to focus on mechanisms pertaining
to attracting and retaining talent. It is an
accepted truth that turnover will happen
and companies need to device a strategy to
curb unprecedented turnover from affecting
organisational success.
As the Director, HR (Asia) of Bausch &
Lomb, Mr. P.G. George declares, achieving
zero percent turnover is neither realistic
nor desirable. People tend to seek change
for a variety of reasons—more money, better
benefits, the appearance of a greener
pasture- and this has been a practice from
the very beginning. Then, what is it that
has really changed?

Despite intense competition being the
key to market development and success,
organisations have failed to identify some
of the major reasons which highlight why ‘good performers’ leave. In his study, Branham
clearly states that one major reason
why people leave their organisation is because
of the organisation’s failure to bring
about a correlation between pay and performance.
Human Resource experts in the
industry believe matching the right blend
of talent with the right job profile can lead
to superior performance.
This paradigm shift in the focus of
companies is a repercussion of our ground
breaking post liberalisation era.
Mr. George asserts, “liberalisation
brought a sharper focus on the criticality of
talent.” Mr. Johnson Damu, vice president
HR, GE Capital, drew attention to the ‘shift
in industry’ that took place as a result of
liberalisation. Initially the industry was very
stable and dominated by PSUs. However, post 1992-93, there was a shift from ‘manufacturing’
to ‘services’ which brought about
a change in the job market requirements.
Today, even a graduate has adequate job
opportunities and is more empowered in
his options towards charting a career path.
Talking of new upcoming areas in the service
sector, Mr. Damu gave us an insight
by citing the instance of the Call Centers.
This change has brought about the importance
of talent in the present scenario and
redefined the terminology. Earlier talent
was restricted to the skill-set that one possessed
but now it is a much wider term and
its meaning encompasses skills, abilities,
attitude and knowledge. The HR heads of
Seagram and GE Capital unanimously believed
that “talent” and “competency” can
be easily used interchangeably.

The present scenario with abundant
opportunities has triggered a wave of employees,
perpetually “on the move”, forever
seeking better opportunities whenever,
wherever and however they can. What is behind the restlessness of these hard to
keep employees? By focusing on productivity, organisations are realising that it is imperative
to hire employees who can do the
job and be successful at it. The organisation no longer wants to just hire to hire, in fact
they are striving to find the right people, bring them into the organisation and retain
their services. One of the critical functions of HR is a sound Human Resource Planning
through which they are able to project the
demand for human resource and thereafter formulate strategies for acquiring them. As
the leading HR heads of the country point out, the solution is not just about finding
the correct retention mechanisms , but it starts from the very beginning by devising
ways to acquire the right people for the
right jobs. Today’s hiring mistakes can be
tomorrow’s attrition.
Casey F. Thomas, principal, human resource
management BPO and Tony Jackson,
principal, employee pay and rewards leader
at Mellon Human Resources and Investor
Solutions have conducted surveys which
clearly show that attraction and retention
issues remain a crucial challenge.
For The Best Talent, Money Alone
Has Little Retention Value.
Great workplaces do not win employee
morale, confidence or loyalty by merely giving out fat pay packages. They do so
by striking the right balance between compensation
and performance management.
In most companies employees do not see
a direct correlation between their pay and
their performance. Due to dissatisfaction as
a result of poorly structured pay packages ,
many companies now seek respite by adopting
the ‘variable pay approach.’ Companies
like Apollo Tyres, Ranbaxy and Dabur have
successfully and tactfully implemented this
approach. In fact, variable pay at Ranbaxy
is about 60-70 per cent and
at the CEO level, it goes up
to 80 per cent of the compensation
package. (source:
a Business Today Survey,
September, 2003)
In the BT- Hewitt survey
(September, 2003) carried
out for the Best Employers
in India, the top most companies
(Procter & Gamble) in the survey
are those who have adopted retention
strategies such as performance recognition.
NTPC was rated third for their ‘performance
oriented culture’. Glaxo Smith Kline was
ranked fifth because of their ‘performance
driven results, comprehensive developmental
and learning programmes and direct
correlation between performance and career
progression’.
Another survey conducted by Mercer
Human Resource Consulting measuring
the return on total rewards further reiterates
the same by identifying that larger
companies (>10,000 employees) view ‘pay
for performance’ as a top priority. Attracting/
retaining the ‘right’ talent being one of the parameters for measuring return on total rewards indicates that this issue of attracting and retaining the right talent is
of outmost importance being backed by 85
per cent agreements.
Talented people want to be a part of
something they believe in and not just a
fat pay package. A culture of commitment
is the key to employee retention- a culture
that concentrates on vision, mission, values
and ambitious goals to attract and hold on
to talented people. This culture of commitment
can only set in if there are guiding
principles or core values that are of intrinsic
importance to those in the organisation. By sharing a common vision, companies can give their employees a sense of belonging- a ‘we feeling’. The greatest example of this
is Bausch & Lomb whose vision is “To be
No.1 in the eyes of the world” and each and
every employee at Bausch & Lomb is aware
of and identifies with the same.
IIPM Factored…
From our research, it is evident that
today’s war for talent is a direct result of the
desire of companies’ to
identify the key factor
which is essential
to keep people loyal
to the organisation.
Soaring pay packages
as a result of liberalisation
which brought
in competition from
multinational companies failed to recognise the fact that after
a certain point, money fails to be an effective
incentive.
There is also a direct correlation between
successful retention and tools of
motivation used by the employer. It is not
that companies do not recognise the need
to allure employees to motivate them for
better performance but what companies
often fail to identify is- “Are you giving
them what they want (status, value, self-esteem,
pride, job satisfaction, challenge and
mentoring)?” Because if you are not giving
something they want, then it’s sayonara!
One’s loyalty towards his/her organisation is based on his/her level of satisfaction
from their job. However, attrition tends to
take place due to dissatisfaction as a result
of ignorance of the `need hierarchy’ of the
employees while deciding their motivators.
Some reasons why good performers leave
are :
• No link between pay and performance
• They don’t perceive any growth or
advancement opportunities
• Their contributions are not recognized
or valued by the organisation
• They don’t get a chance to use their
natural talents
• They don’t perceive transparency in
the system
As Mr. Damu puts it, at GE they feel
that if there are no right systems, policies
or career growth, people do not feel the need to stay on. Hence, it has become extremely
important for companies to give its
employees the perfect environment to work
in. GE, for example, teaches ‘People Leadership’
from line managers to its executives.
They coach their employees the art of looking
after their subordinates. Their policies and programs are focused on improving
work environment and providing growth
opportunities for their employees.
Peter Capelli of the Wharton School
clearly expresses his changed view in the
Harvard Business Review that the old goal
of HR management — to minimise overall
employee turnover — needs to be replaced
by a new goal: to influence who leaves
and when. Today with the rise of a market
driven approach to retaining talent, companies
desperately need to resort to various
retention mechanisms such as compensation,
social ties, location and hiring. Capelli
also states the two mechanisms essential
for employee retention- job design and job
customisation.
Aggressive development strategies often
complement retention strategies in a big
way. Providing opportunities to the employee
for both professional and career
growth and giving due priority to this
important activity makes the company’s
IMAGE in the market for talent, attractive
and compelling. However, on the whole,
the basic question remains, “Why would
talented people want to work in your organisation?”
Organisations with superior
employee value propositions have a compelling
answer to this question.
A McKinsey study (1998) that analysed
77 companies from a variety of industries
to investigate talent problems,
suggests that ‘creating
a winning value
proposition means tailoring a company’s ‘brand’
and ‘products’- the jobs
it has to offer - to appeal
to the specific people it
wants to find and keep. It
also means paying what it
takes to attract and retain strong performers - the ‘price’. Reviewing the retention problems
against the perspective of enduring employee
value propositions about these three
dimensions, namely brand, products and
price helps to clarify the focus.
All retention strategies must be built
around a compelling, distinctive and exciting
employee value proposition. These
strategies may be diversified into three
distinct domains, i.e. cultural, transformational
and transactional.
Cultural dimensions as a tool to retain
talent zeroes in on functional, technical
and control aspects, while simultaneously
dealing with inspiration, emotion, energy, enthusiasm, collaboration and camaraderie,
openness and a sense of belonging. A
culture that is open, trusting, nurturing,
authentic as well as empowering tends to
attract and retain top talent. Transformational
strategies that impact retention are
mentoring, coaching, counseling, competency
and performance development
programmes, retraining, re-skilling, redeployment
and job rotation,
challenging assignments,
job enrichment
and above all, promoting
and propagating
a knowledge-building
and knowledge-sharing
culture. Transactional
Strategies for effective
retention include innovative,
dynamic and
competitive compensation
strategies, tailored welfare initiatives, social and community activities, workload
balancing, effective work-life integration,
reward and recognition, establishment of
good communication and feedback network
as well as anti poaching measures.
However, in order to be able to meaningfully
orchestrate and implement effective
retention strategies, the first step
should be to understand the scope of the
retention problem that is unique to one’s
organisation. Companies need to identify
their crucial target group, instrumental in
enhancing organisational success. It is a
paradox that the companies which invest
heavily in recruitment and development
and make a good job at that, are prone to
a greater risk of poaching. A sound sensing
and tracking system to assess the volume
and causes of attrition by performance level
is the key to conquering this talent war.
The ability to identify good performers,
who tend to leave for any job or management
related issues and timely intervention
to address these issues, could be
effective.
At the end of the day, creating and delivering
a great employee value proposition
is clearly the best way to retain good
people. Research shows that companies
which have recognised the need to give
priority to its people management-driven
strategies are the winners. In the midst of
this ‘war for talent’, most importantly, it is
only when an organisation is successfully
able to convey the message that it cares
for employees that retention becomes a
strategic advantege.
After all, business is a competitive endeavour
and the employee lasts only as long
as he is satisfied. Nobody owes anybody else a living.
(This research based article is compiled by
Rajlakshmi Saikia, IIPM Intelligence Unit)
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