Being clear about expectations and rewarding great work
Chuck Baren
Strategy and Architecture Program Manager, Enterprise Digital Core – Platforms
Part 4
HirexHire is Building a Great Company for Great People.
Parts 1-3 of this 6-Part blog series discussed why that is important, establishing a trusting environment, and how to ensure the future is mutually beneficial for all employees.?Read Parts 1-3 here. In Part 4, we discuss setting expectations and how to identify great work.
At HirexHire, we expect to consistently deliver great results for our clients and maintain that standard as we continue to grow. We know our employees want to do a great job. And common sense tells us that employees who do great work and are recognized and rewarded for their contributions will love where they work and stay for a long time (See Part 1 to read about why we believe that is critically important).?Everyone will win if we can help our employees do a great job and reward them accordingly. This is why we are clear about what great work looks like, how to recognize it, and why we reward employees who deliver it.??
Be clear about expectations
HirexHire clients expect us to deliver great results, so we ensure our employees know the expected standard of excellence. We clarify our expectations for work standards and behaviors, and we provide our employees with the required education, training, and mentoring to achieve these standards. Leaders who do not provide these clear expectations are unnecessarily putting their corporate goals at risk. They may as well cross their fingers and hope their clients will remain while their employees figure out how to do great work over time.
Unclear or inconsistent work expectations are counterproductive and often lead to larger problems. In addition to disappointing clients one of two things are likely to happen:
Some employees may figure out how to deliver great results on their own, but hope is not a good corporate strategy.
What great work looks like
HirexHire employees understand and are comfortable and flexible with their daily responsibilities. And just like in all growing companies, our employees are asked to help build out our operational infrastructure and, sometimes, to expand upon their client service role to ensure we deliver as expected. If we’re doing our jobs right, we’re properly setting this expectation with our new hires during our interview process.
When employees put in extra time and effort, or exhibit role flexibility, they deserve to be recognized. But this is expected in start-up environments and is not considered great work at HirexHire, so we acknowledge and thank employees when they demonstrate this commitment, but we do not call that great work.
To be sure we draw a distinction between great work and meeting expectations, we are clear about the difference.?This is how we define great work:
Defining great work has the added benefit of clarifying that working extended hours is not automatically great work. In fact, great people managers will be in tune with why employees have to put in extra time. Are they making mistakes that take extra time to correct, in which case more training and mentoring may be required? Are they prioritizing poorly, creating an unnecessary time crunch for the more important work? If that’s the case, better coaching and feedback are in order. Or is the employee doing a great job and prioritizing well but simply has too much to do? This scenario tells leadership where the team may be understaffed and help inform resource allocation decisions.
Rewarding employees for great work
We are building a great place for great people at HirexHire, and while we recognize the hard work of our employees, we know that we must reward great work if we want our people to love their jobs and stay with us for a long time.????
There are a few ways we reward great work, including:
Our clarity about expectations for our employees and how we define and reward great work is an important strategy for how we’re building HirexHire into a great place for great people.
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In Part 5 of this blog series, Chuck will discuss how HirexHire is nurturing a culture of continuous improvement on its quest to build a great place for great people. Follow HirexHire to receive each part as it is published.?
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About HirexHire
HirexHire ?(pronounced: hire by hire)?is a Chicago-based recruiting and talent consultancy that integrates with companies short-term to provide long-term talent solutions.?
We take a seat in our client’s everyday operations to understand their people, goals, gaps, and challenges. We then develop and implement the processes and technologies to execute a sustainable and scalable talent plan.
We partner with companies expecting or experiencing high growth, leading them to hire at scale or fill a critical role rapidly. We develop and execute creative strategies to carry out all aspects of the recruiting process: crafting job descriptions, building candidate pipelines, vetting candidates, conducting interviews, negotiating offers, and leading new hires to their first day on our client’s team.
HirexHire was founded in 2018 with an initial investment by founder and CEO Mike Durec. The firm found its first customers through Mike’s network in the Chicagoland startup community. Consistent success has led to a sterling reputation and steady growth. The company has more than doubled its number of customers, revenue, and employee base each year and is showing no signs of slowing down.
About Mike Durec
Founder and CEO
As Founder and CEO,?Mike Durec?partners with operating executives and investors to develop and implement processes and technologies to successfully attract and retain talent.
In his past work as a corporate recruiting leader in technology, Mike crafted and managed strategies to hire thousands of professionals across many functional areas worldwide. He has led hiring initiatives in the US, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, the UK, Germany, France, Australia, and India. Mike brings practical leadership experience and a legacy of success to every engagement.
HirexHire now operates with Mike’s proven approach, deploying empathy with candidates and hiring managers and advocating for the best interest of both parties. Mike emphasizes the two-way relationship between the employee and employer, resulting in long-term people placement and greater work-life satisfaction.
About Chuck Baren
Chief Operating Officer
Chuck Baren?has more than 20 years of experience working in professional services for SAAS providers, most of which was with Fieldglass, where he helped it grow from 20 employees and no revenue in 2000 through its $1 billion acquisition by SAP in 2014. He regularly received high marks for the level of employee engagement of his teams for which he prioritized people management and the need to attract and retain top talent by building a great place for them to work. By the time he left SAP Fieldglass, the professional services team he led had grown to approximately 200 employees.
Chuck wrote about his experience leading his growing team at Fieldglass through challenging periods of rapid growth in?Money Matters, Top Tips for Success, the Business Leaders Edition, volume 3. His chapter entitled “People Management is Key to Survival in a High Growth Environment” helped propel the book to Amazon Best Seller status in its first days of release.
Strategy and Architecture Program Manager, Enterprise Digital Core – Platforms
2 年Read the entire blog series here: https://hirexhire.com/culture-content