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Chief Executives Do Not Trust HR To Manage Their Talent*
From
Management-Issues, 10 Oct, 2006 --------------------------------------------------------------------- As
the West's workforce demographic changes, managing and retaining senior
level talent is becoming an ever more important priority for CEOs. But
they don't trust HR and personnel to get it right. The
Towers Perrin survey of senior HR executives in Increasingly,
too, they were focusing on a core group of leaders, technical experts and
key contributors who could drive their business forward rather than
thinking of "talent" in terms of the whole workforce. But
there was a gap between what HR felt – that talent retention and
development was one of their most critical objectives – and what the
business felt HR could achieve. Few
CEOs, it emerged, believed their HR departments had the skills needed to
manage this emerging talent pool effectively. Groups
now considered to be "talent" included senior leadership,
employees at mid-level with leadership potential, key contributors or
technical experts and entry-level employees with leadership potential. Together,
these defined talent pools made up, on average, no more than 15 per cent
of the total workforce, said Towers Perrin. "As
businesses transform to drive top-line growth, we're seeing talent emerge
as a top strategic priority for CEOs and boards, as well as HR
executives," said Max Caldwell, a Towers Perrin principal and one of
the leaders of the firm's HR services business workforce effectiveness
practice. "Creating
a robust 'talent supply chain' that delivers the required number of
leaders and key contributors who possess the right mind-set and skills has
never been more important," he added. "However,
the HR function in many organisations is not yet delivering sufficient
value in this critical area," he warned. Organisations
were distinguishing between talent management as a set of practices and
programmes for a relatively small, if critical, segment, and workforce
management as a set of practices and programmes covering the entire
workforce. But
no more than half of 250 companies polled believed that HR had the skills
across a wide range of managerial support activities needed effectively to
deliver on the talent management role. More
than two-thirds said their HR department did not have the skills necessary
to measure employee engagement on an ongoing basis or to evaluate the
return on workforce-related investments. The
inability to capture and disseminate relevant data to managers was also
problematic, since companies had no quantitative foundation from which to
develop a talent management strategy and build and deploy meaningful
processes. "Many
of the larger and more forward-thinking organisations are creating a
special senior talent management position to focus specifically on the
organisation's talent strategy," noted "The
titles may differ, but these roles seek to integrate things like strategic
workforce planning, recruitment, leadership development and career
management, which had previously operated in silos," he added. *Reprinted
by permission of the editor
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