Why the Future Role of HR Needs to Emphasize “The Whole Self”

Why the Future Role of HR Needs to Emphasize “The Whole Self”

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You do your job, you get a paycheck. Right?

That’s always been the tacit agreement between employee and employer.

But the pandemic changed everything. The idea of lifetime employment with one company, or even one industry? Poof!?

Now, people want to have a purpose. They want to feel connected to a company’s mission. They want to have an impact.

Instead of thinking, “How will I contribute to this company for the next 20, 30, 40 years?” people are wondering, “How can I get the most out of this job?”

It’s no longer simply coming into work and punching a clock – it’s building their future.

During Tuesday’s livestream , I discussed HR’s role in that future and why creating agency and developing a whole self model is critical to successfully facilitating this shift.?

And it all starts with this truth:

An employee’s career belongs to them

I’ve talked about agency before – the belief that you have the power and ability to make decisions and take accountability for your actions.?

More and more, we’re seeing people exercise agency over their careers. They realize, “Hey, I’m no longer at the mercy of my company. They don’t get to decide my future – I do!”

When employees have agency, yes, they take responsibility for their career. But they also take responsibility for their role.

They understand how they can contribute to an organization in new and different ways. They can think beyond their job when they understand a company’s strategy and goals. They can be innovative and disruptive and take ownership when they have permission to commit their talents, skills, and passions.

This is exactly where things get tricky for HR. You hired someone for a specific role with very clear responsibilities. But everyone offers something unique and approaches things differently. How can you accommodate this diversity? And how does HR’s role shift in this age of employee agency???

Well, you need to develop:

A more nuanced relationship with employees

The traditional employee-employer relationship is history. It’s no longer about command and control or a complicated hierarchy.

It’s about collaboration. We need to ask: How do we account for the myriad ways people can contribute within the same role? How do we develop more agency so people take responsibility for their jobs and the outcomes? How can we ensure the best outcome for everyone?

It’s also about viewing training in a more holistic way. Training doesn’t necessarily have to be in a specific area, and it’s not limited to hard skills.?

We need to think about how we can encourage people to be more innovative, to lead, to work in a team. How do we train people to adapt to change? How do we think beyond the scope of the current job to encourage growth and development??

Finally, it’s about seeing each person as their whole self. How do we encourage and enable people to bring their full selves to work? How do we get curious about what’s going on in people’s lives, outside of work? And how do we create a safe space where they’re comfortable expressing their whole selves so we can tap into their entire skill set?

(Hint: This goes way beyond what’s on their resume! After all, how can one page accurately represent someone’s full self?! Their potential? Their skills and capabilities? Their side projects? Everything that transcends a list of companies and a job description?)

It’s about maximizing human potential. Yep, that’s a really tall order! But you can:

Strategically prepare for the future of HR

When it comes down to it, the future of HR requires a mindset shift: from viewing people as assets to seeing (and accepting!) their whole selves.?

If you’re ready to fundamentally change your relationship with employees , here are four powerful ways to initiate that transformation:

  1. Make room at the strategy table. How will HR be represented in the boardroom? How will they show up in C-suite meetings? How will they reframe their function and engage with employees differently? It’s important for HR to have a seat at the table, especially when the conversation revolves around a long-term strategy for moving the people function in a different direction.
  2. Understand employees’ aspirations. Here’s where the whole self model comes in. How does HR work with management to learn about each employee’s whole self? How do they partner with other departments to understand employees’ long-term aspirations? And how can they ensure the company leverages people’s strengths against the organization’s goals?
  3. Develop agency. Intentionally and strategically reinsert agency. Start by giving employees permission to bring up problems. Then, encourage them to brainstorm potential solutions so the team can recommend the best option. And then? Let your team make it happen! This takes time, but with the right team (and the right partners in HR!) your organization will be filled with people with the skill and agency to solve problems independently.?
  4. Acknowledge that a job isn’t forever. In their book The Alliance, my friends Reid Hoffman, Ben Casnocha, and Chris Yeh described starting a new job as signing up for a tour of duty. At the end of that tour, ask your employees: Do you want to continue in this role? Do you want to do something different? Do you want to leave the company? This is where the whole self model and creating agency converge: Give your employees the power to decide what their next step is –?and be willing to support them as they explore new opportunities.

The future of HR demands that we see employees as humans, not assets. We need to acknowledge that they want to contribute their strengths and skills to a company’s mission –?and helping them maximize their potential is critical to our success as leaders.

We need strategic relationships with HR and our employees to execute our strategy – but we also need balance! Join me in two weeks for a discussion about maintaining balance in the midst of personal and professional change. I’ll see you on Tuesday, March 29 at 9 am PT / 12 pm ET.

Your Turn

How are you transforming your HR department or the human function? What have you been doing differently over the past few years? What do you think still needs to change? I share an unusual practice I used when I ran Altimeter Group, and I’d love to hear what you think about the “future of people” function.

MIKELANGE GOUDE

Investments & Business Analyst | Entrepreneur

2 年

Great piece! I love it

Parissa Behnia

Advisor/Coach to change agents, disruptors & visionaries so they are seen with their intention, not “in tension” | Speaker of powerful truths to powerful leaders | Advisor/Coach to C Suite & Executives | Author | Speaker

2 年

Oof, this landed. A frequent conversation with my clients is the linkage between real team engagement and alignment with how "easy" it feels to work.

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Sean Sheppard

Managing Partner @ FifthRow (U+) | Serial Entrepreneur | VC | AI Powered Venture Builder | Global Innovation Leader — over $2B in Value Delivered

2 年

This is educative. It's a fresh new way to view employees and others working in our team. Seeing them as whole person with interest, skills and passions?and not just as asset. Indeed we cannot "own" human beings. Getting to acknowledge their full humanity can also give us the knowledge to enhance their productivity by focusing them on task they are more passionate about. Thank you for sharing!

Alice Myerhoff

Sales Strategy & Leadership | Revenue & Partnership Growth | International Business Development | Venture Capital & Social Impact Investor | Chief Member

2 年

In his book "C-Spark: CEO-led Workforce Education for the AGE of AND", our CEO Vivek Sharma writes in depth about how CEOs should be investing in their employees by supporting them in growing their careers through free education. This can make a huge difference for employees who couldn't afford to go to college or maybe had to quit without completing their degree. This can be a retention, recruiting and DEI strategy and absolutely works best with support from the whole C-Suite, not just HR. Definitely connects to the whole self when an employee's family can be transformed when a career trajectory shifts into a higher gear. Can you tell I'm excited about what we're doing and how it can change lives :-) ?

Johnson Magama

People and Culture Specialist| DEI Champion| Talent Strategist| CPO| People Analyst| Job Analyst|SMBA|MZIM

2 年

Love the insights Charlene Li . You bring forth a strong case for collaboration and how we can leverage on the talent diversity as well as the myriad shift of expectations from the employees.

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