Talent Matters to All Stakeholders

Talent Matters to All Stakeholders

There is no question that talent matters to an organization’s success. Talent (workforce, people, competence, skills) has been the bailiwick for HR, captured in the maxim, “war for talent.” This talent emphasis has led to innumerable innovations in how firms bring people into the organization, move them through the organization, and appropriately move them out of the organization.

Today general managers and HR professionals need to help their organizations move beyond fighting the talent war to winning it. Winning talent wars requires creating great organizations, but it also requires a clarity about managing talent with a focus on outcomes that deliver value to the right recipients. For example, it is not enough to build on strengths, but individuals must use strengths to strengthen others. Measuring the amount of training or staffing is not enough; one must measure the impact of training or staffing on key organization outcomes.  Competencies matter to the extent that they affect key business outcomes. 

The primary stakeholders for talent outcomes have traditionally been inside the organization; investments in talent resulted in greater employee productivity and well-being as well as organization strategic success. Going forward, the value of talent will also come from how talent choices affect those outside the organization, not just inside. Let me suggest three emerging stakeholders to focus on in shifting talent from being primarily an internal activity to one that provides valued outcomes outside the organization.

Talent matters to boards of directors.

In a recent meeting of the National Academy of Corporate Directors conference, a group proposed that the compensation committee of the board be expanded and changed to become the talent, leadership, and culture committee. This committee would have a charter to evaluate not only the organization’s compensation practices but its processes around leadership, succession, talent review, culture, and talent risk management as well. A broader “talent” mandate at the board level signals its importance to business leaders throughout an organization.

Talent matters to customers.

In the past few years, we have argued that leaders are most effective when their behaviors reflect customer promises. When a firm brand translates to a leadership brand, leaders create more value for targeted customers as well as employees. The essence of a customer focus is that employee sentiment is a lead indicator of customer sentiment. We know that employee engagement (however measured) is a lead indicator of customer engagement. For example, customer net promoter scores are highly correlated with employee commitment scores. Employees should focus on delighting customers and developing the skills that customers value.

Talent matters to investors.

Many investors are increasingly looking to predict and capture long-term value from a company. To do so requires looking beyond financial results (e.g., earnings, EBIDTA) to intangibles (like strategy, brand, technology, and systems) and talent, leadership, and culture. In our research, we found that about 35 to 40 percent of a firm’s market value was tied to financial results; 30 to 35 percent was tied to intangibles (like strategy, brand, and supply chain); and 25 to 30 percent related to the quality of leadership (surrogate for talent). A higher quality of talent should reflect a greater investor confidence that an organization can deliver intangibles and consistently create financial results.

When we interviewed investors, they almost uniformly agreed that people matter and that talent management processes should affect their valuation of the firm. But even though they recognize the variance in market valuation due to talent, they often lack a rigorous way to understand and track talent. In the book Leadership Capital Index, we offer a framework and tool that investors and talent managers can use to measure the quality of an organization’s leadership. Talent managers need to prepare a simple but robust way to discuss talent with investors, and they can rely on the Leadership Capital Index to give investors confidence in the quality of leadership overall and of talent in particular. Using this index, one firm reports employee productivity and well-being indicators to investors; another reports succession data; and another is working to report the entire Leadership Capital Index. Talent managers might prepare presentations on talent for investors, which then might compose 10 to 15 percent of investor calls or road shows. This could also include preparing talent metrics as part of the investor calls or it might be working to help investors recognize the quality of leadership within the organization.

Talent Matters Conclusion

Quality of talent clearly impacts employee and organization outcomes. In some cases, unique individual talent (e.g., a scientist, a rainmaker, or an innovator) helps organizations succeed. But, looking ahead, talent will also impact stakeholders outside the organization including boards of directors, customers, and investors and must go beyond individual talent. When talent ideas and tools connect to these stakeholders, more value is created for the stakeholders and the organization.

Winning the war for talent isn't as simple as willing it to be. The RBL Group, of which I am a co-founder, aids individuals and organizations as they work towards better talent and better strategy. We have a development programs designed specifically for this called the Strategic HR Academy. Click here to download a free brochure.

Kayla Buckthorpe

Proprietor of The Herb Deli

7 年

I'm sure he did. if this is the Neil Roden that worked for LloydsBowmaker, prior to his lovely bank details.....then he is a pervert and rapistl Sorry Mrs Roden but it's true, I was still very young.

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Michèle Becker

Ver?nderung beginnt mit einem ersten Schritt. Lernen Sie, wie Ihnen Ihre St?rken und die Entwicklung einer Achtsamkeitpraxis Klarheit und Orientierung geben. Ich freuen mich auf Ihr Interesse und Ihre Anfrage!

7 年

Rosa Riera and the #futuremakers worth to read! Dave Ulrich I personally love you pointing out to ?use strengths to strengthen others“ Talking about the HOW I experience this with #wol there is so much more in it, let’s unlash the potential John Stepper Sabine Kluge Claudia Mayer

John Wallace

#helpinggoodpeoplewin

7 年

Dave Ulrich - interesting article and it makes absolute sense that effective talent management / engagement has a definite external benefit - no point in hiring retaining high capability if it didn't - it's the service profit chain. Simply put "satisfied people satisfy customers". What is food for thought is the question of how does talent strategy deal with the modern workforce. How does it cope with a dynamic in the workforce that is increasingly fluid? Buoyant economies, greater employee desire for flexibility and a young workforce that assumes they will regularly change jobs and companies - all factors that remove the notion that a workforce is a static thing, or even should be. A talent strategy that ignores this fluidity perpetuates the "war for talent". Perhaps, the problem is a different one to solve. How to embrace fluidity and build a talent plan that is internal / external / flexible?

Olatunde Onawale BSc, MBA, ACIPM

HR Business Partner at Skretting Nigeria (a Nutreco Company) part of SHV Holding N.V.

7 年

I fully agree with you that winning talent wars requires creating great organizations and its not enough to build on strengths but such individuals must use such strengths to strengthen others not to create an absolute form of enmity.

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