Employee Experience is NOT a Fad!
Debbie Radish-Respess
The Alignment Alchemist | Bridge the Gap Between Your People and Your Purpose | Consultant for High-Level CEOs and Executives
Talent Triage[1] – Employee Experience
Polling my business colleagues on LinkedIn always reveals interesting results.?There are polls that receive similar answers, while other questions or statements receive mixed responses.?
The intention of the “Talent Triage” series was to gauge the overall influence and impact your hiring managers have in your organization’s current talent acquisition process and retention initiatives.
I firmly believe that every leader in an organization owns some aspect of the employee life cycle.?However, every person within the company plays a significant role in the overall Employee Experience.
Consider poll Statement 2, which read: Realized that the requirements of the open position are shifting, but you're still using an old job description.
Response: A whopping 71% stated they often use the old job description, while 29% stated sometimes.
How is a job description tied to the employee experience??Glad you asked.
The Employee Experience starts with … the J.O.B.?Candidates typically apply to a company because of the job posting, which outlines the requirements. When these are wrong, the entire process gets off on the wrong foot as both the organization and the candidate are oftentimes expecting completely different outcomes.?
The Employee Experience is not a fad.?In a recent report, Josh Bersin noted that surface efforts to improve employee experience will backfire. Understanding your employee’s experience will help you know what’s working at your organization, and what’s holding you back from executing on your mission and vision.
Ask yourself:
Because salary and benefits, although important, do not drive commitment and dedication.
When an organization has a position’s skills defined accurately, candidates immediately know what is expected.?This improves the candidate pool and eventually, the employee experience. Because the organization cares enough to get it right on the front end!
There are tools out in the market that can help you design job descriptions.?And then there are comprehensive tools that not only help you design the job description, but also align the behaviors and attributes needed for someone to be successful in their role.
What are you using to drive your #hiringstrategy ??And is your hiring strategy aligned with the overall #peoplestrategy ??
I know what it’s like to hire the right person for the wrong position – or the wrong person in general.?As a former HR executive, I failed miserably when I hired my HR Director.?She lasted a total of 4 weeks.?Yes, 4 weeks. It doesn’t bode well for the leader of human resources to hire so poorly.?
Don’t let this happen to you, or any of your hiring managers.?
Let’s chat.
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Want to build the right culture with the right people??You can start by looking at your employee base, how you recruit, hire, onboard, and retain: click here to hire intentionally (click the “start for free” icon to get started).?
Employees already rock it and you’re ready to take your team to the next level? Click here to build (and grow) your team intentionally .
P.S. Book a?Complimentary Strategy Session?so we can get you moving in the right direction; click on my?Complimentary Strategy Session calendar link here ?and let’s book a time together so you can get started today!
P.P. S. With over three decades of professional experience in corporate operations and executive human resources, I am a proven results-driven leader. My expertise includes strategy, change management, talent management and organizational development, employee relations, and executive and leadership coaching. I am a highly effective communicator and team leader with demonstrated ability to build long-term relationships across internal and external customer environments built with integrity, confidence, authenticity, and trust.
Click here to download my?Trust Behaviors and Drivers Checklist which will help you determine exactly what behaviors and drivers of trust are present within you and your team.
[1] Over the last few weeks, I polled my LinkedIn colleagues with a few different statements, all referring to their people strategy.?The series was called “Talent Triage” and each poll provided a 1-5 rating to respond to that week’s statement: 1 never, 2 infrequently, 3 sometimes, 4 often, and 5 always.?