Can Resourcing ever get a seat at the    table?

Can Resourcing ever get a seat at the table?

Walking into 2022, I still hear our industry doubling down on itself, and wondering when the seat at the table will be offered, still debating whether resourcing really belongs in HR, thereby negating the offer of the seat at the metaphorical table.

Never has resourcing been more important to any organisation, large or small and like the People's Front of Judea we seem to regard minute points of difference as the reason to go our separate ways. At no point in my career has the spotlight, investment and interest been greater in and for Resourcing than now. Focusing on philosophical debates rather than getting the job done, squanders our opportunity. Below I will argue why HR is exactly the right place for Resourcing and why leaders need to embrace this for the sake of our businesses, candidates and frankly our careers.

This is probably the only time in my career where nearly all business is thinking about talent end to end in its purest sense. Attract, Retain, Train is a bit of a cliche but the penny has finally dropped for most businesses that you can't just recruit your way out of talent shortage or crunch. Notwithstanding how resourcing find routes to market, nurtures candidates and helps assess candidates is critical to success, but not in isolation. No business would ever separate its key supply chains. No organisation would ask Sales to stand alone and have Marketing report to say IT because its product is technical. It would be commercial suicide - The same god for people and talent.

If Resourcing were suddenly to report to Marketing as some would argue, a couple of questions arise. Who would get the lion's share of budget when push comes to a shove? Who is accountable for the success of hiring (people) ? Does recruiting just become a numbers game of get 'em in quick and fast with some glossy marketing? I suggest that managing people and owning a people strategy is very different to selling a product. There are factors at play that are not apparent in designing marketing strategies.

Today's challenges require more joined up thinking not less. How we harness internal talent and learning is critical to the success and longevity of organisations. Bersin's recent paper shows that the focus for organisations in the coming 2 years will be on the internal market place, upskilling and reskilling etc. Resourcing has huge skin in the game in the design and execution of these strategies. Being outside the tent is not an ideal place to be if we want to be part of solution.

HR in general has a role in assessing capability for roles and potential. If this data sits in disparate places, and we don't use the combined power in this data - the loser is the organisation as a whole. Let's lose the ego about how important one or other element is, but focus on the bigger prize and help the organisation reach its potential.

I have heard it argued that very few resourcing folk end up as HRD's - a flippant answer to the question is that no resourcing leaders have ever made it to Sales/Marketing Director, so lets get real. In larger organisations HR is a complex function encompassing a broad range of skills. In the past 15 years the role or Resourcing and the roles within it have become more diverse, interesting and complex. The need to use data to influence, the ability to automate low value tasks and measuring impact on the organisation is far greater than when I first entered the In house world 16 years ago. This is only a good thing for all concerned. My experience suggests that Resourcing is truly valued by the CHRO an the wider organisation if (this maybe a big if) we behave as if we belong.

Maybe the debates about where Resourcing sits is a function of insecurity rather than anything more material. HR is the only part of an organisation that has a truly helicopter view of the way things work. We have a privileged position of being able to see how all parts of the machine fit and work together (or not) and how to make it better. Splitting one area off, would just make us the Judean People's Front (splitters).


Jon Hull

Helping Notting Hill Genesis achieve its purpose through attract the best talent

3 年

Thanks Denise

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Denise Matthews

Careers & Executive Coach | I help you identify your Career clarity and confidently get the right result. CV & LinkedIn optimisation | Interview preparation | DISC qualified, ILM7 Coach,Firework Licensed Career Coach

3 年

This really hits a very important nail on the head - my frustration in resourcing was always about not being involved enough in the big strategy picture, instead getting details piecemeal when having full involvement would have meant my team and I could share market data and info about whether the plans were even feasible - and also talk about retention and talent strategy, or lets get creative and merge talent planning, talent mgt and resourcing. Things have improved in some enlightened organisations but all too often leaders resort to secrecy rather than being open with their resourcing team. I am proud to have had people in my teams over my 30 year career who I am confident would be amazing HRD's, but opening those doors is not easy - thanks for the post Jon Hull to keep the awareness and debate open.

Dave Vinton

VP People & Culture at bp

3 年

I have a slightly biased view as it fits my career path, but I think the profession adds significant value where it progresses to a wider inclusion of talent as a whole - build, buy, borrow and redeploy/retrain. Integrating the value offering across talent is critical if we are to answer business questions accurately and thoughtfully. Quite a bit of my thinking at the moment is around success metrics, as I think we can get glazed eyes in C-suite when we mention time-to-hire and cost-per-hire, which are very back office/cost reduction metrics. My view is the critical question to answer now is "Will we have the right talent in place to successfully compete in 3-5 years time?", so being able to thoughtfully answer these questions and prove it with data is going to be pretty critical for the mythical seat at the table.

Alison B.

Senior HR | People professional who leads with empathy and humanity, whilst maintaining commercial discipline #HR #People #EX #Talent #Recruitment #Resourcing #Engagement #Wellbeing #Learning #Comms #MHFA #HRNinja ??

3 年

Bravo Jon ?? This may be a tiresome topic, as our colleague states. However, it have never gone away and as you state, only now do we have the real opportunity to maximise on the current climate where key stakeholders are actually listening and finally recognise the contribution and possibilities. I believe the initial educational challenge starts with CPO/Exec HRD who ARE at that table, ensuring they understand the criticality and what a good Resourcing / Talent strategy and function looks like. Too many times have I experienced Senior HR professionals devaluing vs generalist and L&D which in turn is messaged out with negative influence to Exec. That’s a step closer to us actually having that seat. I HAVE seen the encouraging change in the last 12 months, helped by role model thought leaders such as yourself. *only you could bring MP to such a topic ??

Ritesh Kumar

Motivational speaker . Life coach. Founder & CEO - Valiance services Pvt Ltd.

3 年

Good afternoon sir/mam My team will help you in your hiring. So pls contact ?? to my team - 6209255915 Refrence - Ritesh kumar Team - Valiance Services pvt Ltd.

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