The folks at SaaS company brought up a list of top 100 HR influencers to follow on Twitter and I was fortunate to be ranked on with fellow HR friends from India along with Abhijit Bhaduri, Anand Pillai, Vivek Paranjpe, Achal Khanna, Yashwant Mahadik, Kavi Arasu
Showing posts with label Human resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Human resources. Show all posts
Nov 18, 2014
Jan 23, 2014
SAP's Human Potential and @Kruse's Employee Engagement list
So here are two lists I found myself listed in January 2014 to start off the year.
One was this blog post by SAP on the top 51 Human Potential Influencers
Another was author and speaker Kevin Kruse's list of Top 100 Employee Engagement experts online.
Go through the lists, you will discover a great list of people to follow on Twitter and blogs.
One was this blog post by SAP on the top 51 Human Potential Influencers
Another was author and speaker Kevin Kruse's list of Top 100 Employee Engagement experts online.
Go through the lists, you will discover a great list of people to follow on Twitter and blogs.
May 24, 2013
Employee Advocacy for #socbiz at @DachisGroup's #SBS2013
Yesterday at the Social Business Summit hosted by Dachis Group and Oracle in Mumbai, I presented (in a room full of Social Media Marketers!) the HR viewpoint of how employees are the key to success in social media and how organizations can leverage them. Also shared some things on what we are doing at Philips in India and our plan for the future.
You can view (and download) the presentation here:
Would also love your thoughts and comments
You can view (and download) the presentation here:
Would also love your thoughts and comments
Employee Advocacy for Social Business Success - Presentation at Dachis Group's Social Business Summit from Gautam Ghosh
Interestingly Dachis Group's Michael Jones presented a very interesting employee portal that leverages gamification to get employees to spread the word on social networks about the organization.
Here are some of the conversations that I had during the course of the day :)
Interestingly Dachis Group's Michael Jones presented a very interesting employee portal that leverages gamification to get employees to spread the word on social networks about the organization.
Here are some of the conversations that I had during the course of the day :)
Nov 8, 2012
Employer Branding, Recruiting in India and Social Media
A couple of days ago it was my pleasure to moderate a roundtable organized by LinkedIn India and People Matters on "Employer Branding" and how social media is impacting it.
There were about 20 HR and Recruiting leaders from Mumbai at the event, and my co-moderator was Irfan Abdulla, LinkedIn India's Director of Talent Solutions.
Irfan started off the event by showcasing the first India Recruiting Trends survey they had done, along with their annual global survey. Some interesting facts that emerged were:
There were about 20 HR and Recruiting leaders from Mumbai at the event, and my co-moderator was Irfan Abdulla, LinkedIn India's Director of Talent Solutions.
Irfan started off the event by showcasing the first India Recruiting Trends survey they had done, along with their annual global survey. Some interesting facts that emerged were:
- 53% of respondents said they would hire more
- 50% of respondents said they would have a budgetary growth in recruiting.
- The biggest obstacles to attracting top talent is (a) Competition (b) Compensation (c) Location (d) Lack of awareness/interest in employment brand
- Recruiting leaders are concerned that their competitors will (a) Invest in employer branding (b) Improve their referral program (c) Invest in new recruiting tools
- Top last landing trends were (a) Utilising social and professional networks (b) Boosting referral programs (c) Upgrading employer branding
- 81% agreed that employer brand has significant impact on ability to hire great talent and 90% companies are increasing or maintaining investment in their employer brand.
- India is ahead of the rest of the world when it comes to regularly measuring employer brand.
- Most organizations have defined an Employee Value Proposition, however very few measure their external brand.
- Most companies seem to be focusing on branding when it comes to B-School and Tech-Schools but very few seem to focus (or know) on employer branding for middle and senior levels
- Understanding of how sites like Glassdoor and discussions on Twitter are shaping employer brand was very low.
- About a quarter of the organizations in the room had some kind of social media policy.
Related articles
Sep 15, 2012
Social Media and HR at @SHRMIndia's #FirstPeople Conference
| Society for Human Resource Management (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
You can see the sessions here.
If you're going to be there, do connect with me :)
If you're not going to be there you can still ask the panel a question on the topic on SHRM India's Facebook page here.
Sep 4, 2012
There is no one way to do "Social" #socbiz
| A segment of a social network (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
However, many feel that getting an organization ready internally should be the first step to being a true "social business" I also indeed believed that. Social can scale only if employees are engaged and connected to each other and external stakeholders.
However, the reality in most organizations is that the budget of the external facing groups is much higher. Social there also shows more immediate benefits and benchmarking is easy (however can get misleading)
So if there is budget available and executive sponsorship then an organization should focus on getting internally ready and externally focused at the same time. However for the vast majority of organizations the "social competencies" would be learned by folks in marketing, sales, PR, customer support and then travel to the other parts of the organization.
This is not to advise HR and other people in organizations not to focus on social - far from it. But to recognize that once top management understands the value of social media they would expect that other groups then leverage the tools for their business ends.
However there are differences. Externally social media campaigns can be done again and again to get across to more and more customers/fans. However when launching a social initiative internally, it would need to be successful in a far smaller group and would need to be designed to succeed.
More thoughts on how to do that in the coming posts.
Aug 28, 2012
IBM acquires Kenexa to integrate HR into Social #socbiz #socialHR
| Image via CrunchBase |
As Alan writes:
It will be interesting to see how IBM combines (or at least integrates) Kenexa into the IBM Connections portfolio. By augmenting some of the core HR processes with social functions such as commenting, liking and tagging (in theory) employees should be able to discover the colleagues and content that can help them get their work done more effectively. They key here is that IBM will be focusing on use cases that help find the right people with the right skills at the right time, and then inserting them into a process to positively affect the outcome. I hope this goes beyond just creating static events in the activity stream, and instead IBM delivers integrated experiences where HR information can be directly embedded into places like Connections profiles and communities, and vice versa. On the Connections side, the development team has been working for more than two years on technologies such as OpenSocial to help with integration. Does/will Kenexa support OpenSocial or will integration be done at the API level? I expect the integration will be difficult, both from a technology standpoint and the internal IBM resources (people) needed to make it happen. Perhaps there are some good opportunities here for Business Partners to help create tools and fill in the gaps.Unlike Salesforce acquisition of Rypple and SAP acquisition of Successfactors, both IBM and Kenexa also have a substantial services offering. I see a huge opportunity for IBM's BPO business (IBM Daksh in India) leveraging Kenexa's RPO business.
Related articles
Aug 10, 2012
The search for India's emerging HR leaders - Are You In The List?
People Matters in partnership with NHRDN, DDI and Harvard Business Publishing has launched "Are you in the List?", a platform for emerging HR managers in the age group of 26 to 35 years.
Participants will undergo a 5 stage process over a period of six months, wherein they will be judged on various competencies by industry veterans to identify the ‘Future 25’ potential HR Leaders.
My fellow jury members are luminaries from the HR fraternity like P. Dwarakanath, N.S Rajan, Elango R, S.Y. Siddiqui, Dr. Aquil Busrai, Sonali Roy Chowdhury, Rajesh Rai, Gautam Chainani and others. Richard Wellins of DDI brings the global perspective to the jury.
Currently at Stage 1 in the competition, more than 300 HR have applied by sending answers to a small online questionnaire which asks them to share their experience and achievements in the field of HR.You can nominate deserving HR professionals until the 18th of August. And if you are an HR leader in the age group, then you can self-nominate yourself too.
This will be followed by screening 100 applicants in Stage 2 who will undergo the Leadership Insight Inventory test which will be a quick test to assess the candidates' leadership orientation.
Stage 3 will see further screening to arrive at 50 participants who then undergo Leadership Assessment, which is a situational test, asking candidates to solve case studies.
35 candidates move to Stage 4 which is a video round where the panel will judge the videos made by participants to answer a common question presented.
Finally these candidates will be interviewed personally by the jury across three cities - Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore to arrive at the final 25 who make it to the list.
These 25 will then be recognized in an awards ceremony and personal interviews will be featured in People Matters.
The winners also get access to free HBR webinars and management courses. NHRD as the community partner also will provide a platform to connect with veterans and develop skills to be a leader.
Sep 19, 2011
What Recruiting Needs to Learn from Social Media Marketing
I have long believed that HR and Marketing are different sides of the same coin - which have not learned much from each other :)
Where recruiting can learn from Social Media Marketing is to start building talent communities to engage in conversation with people interested in their firm. Take a look at the following diagram
In traditional recruiting the focus has been to chase the orange circle – and spam them. Even in the current model of “social recruiting” these remain the focus. However, in a talent community the organization actually focuses on first attracting the blue circle, and then identify the overlap in the two groups to focus on the people who are really relevant as well as pre-disposed positively towards the company. Hence the way an organization would build its Talent Community would be very similar to its Social Media Marketing efforts.
It would consist of
The prerequisites for making Talent Communities a success
Where recruiting can learn from Social Media Marketing is to start building talent communities to engage in conversation with people interested in their firm. Take a look at the following diagram
In traditional recruiting the focus has been to chase the orange circle – and spam them. Even in the current model of “social recruiting” these remain the focus. However, in a talent community the organization actually focuses on first attracting the blue circle, and then identify the overlap in the two groups to focus on the people who are really relevant as well as pre-disposed positively towards the company. Hence the way an organization would build its Talent Community would be very similar to its Social Media Marketing efforts.
It would consist of
- Identify and Attract – Organizations have two approaches to build this – firstly rely on their own databases to ask candidates to join their talent community. They can leverage email, careers website, twitter updates and Facebook page updates to do so. Then they can use campaigns on search advertising and social advertising to attract new talent to their community
- Content – Companies are publishing a lot of content, from blog posts, to Press Releases to video uploads, to tweets and job postings. On a talent community platform (that BraveNewTalent provides) it is possible to integrate all this content to present a wholistic view of the organization)
- Community Engagement and Facilitation – This would consist of building conversations between external talent and internal experts, answering questions of talent and triggering discussions.
- Development – The focus of the engagement should not be just to focus on the people in the talent community who have the skills, but to build the overall skill levels of all people in the talent community, by sharing resources with them as well as helping them learn from each other and from subject matter experts in the organization.
The prerequisites for making Talent Communities a success
- To really benefit from Talent Communities they have to be sponsored by the business leadership of the organization that is innovative and willing to be open and transparent.
- The role of recruitment needs to be focused on attraction of talent and building a relationship with them rather than being reactive and chasing candidates.
- The organization has got to be willing to lift the firewall and letting real employees connect with job-seekers without trying to control the conversation.
- A willingness to be vulnerable and deal with tough questions and not be defensive. If a company is willing to try these, they will move the conversation to things that really matter like the work, culture and nature of the job from the one large aspect that is currently the focus these days – the salary.
Related articles
- Some thoughts on Talent Communities (gautamblogs.com)
Sep 5, 2011
HR and that question again
On Twitter and on email I have had a couple of students of HR write to me, asking if they have done the correct thing by choosing to do a HR course/Specialization in their post-grad program.
Their doubts are fueled by their family members, and friends who tell them that career-wise HR is a dead-end job, how all employees hate it, that you never make enough money compared to other functions, etc. etc.
There are no easy answers to such questions.
My fundamental belief is that HR is one of the most impactful functions within an organizations. If done well, and if leveraged well (by progressive leaders) it can become the real competitive differentation between organizations.
However, it is easier said than done. And there are various reasons for that - here are the reasons:
Their doubts are fueled by their family members, and friends who tell them that career-wise HR is a dead-end job, how all employees hate it, that you never make enough money compared to other functions, etc. etc.
There are no easy answers to such questions.
My fundamental belief is that HR is one of the most impactful functions within an organizations. If done well, and if leveraged well (by progressive leaders) it can become the real competitive differentation between organizations.
However, it is easier said than done. And there are various reasons for that - here are the reasons:
- There are few organizations that understand the importance of HR - and therefore the vast majority of HR jobs that are available are clerical, administrative and mind-numbing
- Due to point 1. the much better talent choose to go to external facing roles like Sales or more strategic roles like Finance
- The quality of HR faculty in B Schools - with a few exceptions - is quite dismal. The quality of curriculum is worse, if its possible.
- The number of HR openings is low - because its a support function - and students think they would have a better chance of getting a job in Sales
All these factors contribute to a vicious cycle that needs to be broken, and it can be broken by two different approaches. The growth of the HR industry and a revamp in the understanding what HR means - as well as an innovative HR leader who will act as a role model.
Earlier post:
What do you think?
Labels:
Career,
HR Issues,
Human resources
May 9, 2011
Case for Enterprise Social Networking in Organizations
I contributed an article to the Citeman portal, which is one of India's leading management portals.
You can read it here Case for Corporate Social Networking, in short for employee engagement, communication, learning and building an open culture.
Comments welcome, here or there :)
You can read it here Case for Corporate Social Networking, in short for employee engagement, communication, learning and building an open culture.
Comments welcome, here or there :)
May 2, 2011
Two lists of Thought Leaders I am listed in
I thought I won't blog about these, because I don't think it's very modest to tell people when others consider you a "thought leader".
However, I realised that since you folks notice what I post, maybe you could leave a comment here saying I shouldn't deserve to be on these lists ;-)
First is the list of Social Intranet, Enterprise 2.0, Collaboration, Engagement, and HR Technology Experts compiled at the Social Workplace blog.
Then yesterday, blogger from Australia, KerrieAnne Christian put me in exalted company in company of today's thought leaders like Seth Godin, Malcolm Gladwell, Clay Shirky, David Gurteen and others.
I was really embarrassed and flattered to be considered by KerrieAnne to be considered in the same league as these others, but I really don't think I deserve to be on this list.
What do you think?
However, I realised that since you folks notice what I post, maybe you could leave a comment here saying I shouldn't deserve to be on these lists ;-)
First is the list of Social Intranet, Enterprise 2.0, Collaboration, Engagement, and HR Technology Experts compiled at the Social Workplace blog.
Then yesterday, blogger from Australia, KerrieAnne Christian put me in exalted company in company of today's thought leaders like Seth Godin, Malcolm Gladwell, Clay Shirky, David Gurteen and others.
I was really embarrassed and flattered to be considered by KerrieAnne to be considered in the same league as these others, but I really don't think I deserve to be on this list.
What do you think?
Mar 26, 2011
What is OD?
No, I am not referring to overdose (wipe that smile off, you :-)) but the art and science of Organization Development.
OD is often confused with Training, and sometimes with business strategy. For me, it's all about building the capability of the organization when changes are made to human systems (think of team reorganization, or to intra team issues) or to non-human systems that interact with human systems (structure, job design, people processes).
To understand OD you could read books like Process Consultation Revisited by Edgar Schein or you could head over to the new blog, Learn OD by Gurprriet Siingh, OD leader at a large Indian conglomerate.
The purpose of the blog is to help and educate young OD professionals or other HR professionals who want to get to understand what is Organization Development and what are the skills needed to be successful here. Take a look at some of the posts from the blog and I am sure there are lots more of such useful posts yet to come.
OD is often confused with Training, and sometimes with business strategy. For me, it's all about building the capability of the organization when changes are made to human systems (think of team reorganization, or to intra team issues) or to non-human systems that interact with human systems (structure, job design, people processes).
To understand OD you could read books like Process Consultation Revisited by Edgar Schein or you could head over to the new blog, Learn OD by Gurprriet Siingh, OD leader at a large Indian conglomerate.
The purpose of the blog is to help and educate young OD professionals or other HR professionals who want to get to understand what is Organization Development and what are the skills needed to be successful here. Take a look at some of the posts from the blog and I am sure there are lots more of such useful posts yet to come.
So go ahead. Learn. Connect.
Mar 20, 2011
Challenges and Trends for HR services
Some excerpts from the latest article we wrote. You can also see the presentation we made
Amplify’d from peoplematters.in
Challenges for clientsRead more at peoplematters.in
As business evolves, the role of HR will see a transformation towards becoming more business-oriented, and this will create varied challenges for client organizations in finding the right partner and engagement model to address their business needs. While there is systemic demand for HR services, client companies face a host of challenges in finding the right partners to
• Fragmented market - As a result of low entry barriers, lack of certification norms, huge business opportunity and decentralized decision-making process in the HR function, many service providers are entering this market, resulting in more confusion for the client organization in making the right choice.
• Inadequate information and absence of a central access point: While the service providers are many and come in all sizes, client organizations often face the issue in finding the right partner as there is virtually no central repository or information network where client organizations can find information about all service providers to assist in decision making.
• Absence of service providers’ credentials: The absence of credentials of the existing service providers add to the challenge. This is especially true for recruitment and technology segments where the buyer has no protection against unethical practices.
• Inability of service-providers to scale up to client organizations’ needs: The client organization faces a challenge in finding a partner that will be able to cope with their potential growth projections.
• Lack of India-centric frameworks - Most assessment tools, consulting frameworks, and HR services are borrowed from the west, leaving many loopholes while addressing the needs of organizations operating in India.
• No pricing standards and benchmarks: While client organizations’ focus is to ensure price advantage while partnering with service providers, there is no defined price catalogue that service providers follow. This has led few client organizations to focus on outcome-based payment where the fee charged is directly proportionate to the success of the intervention.
Challenges for service providers
If the players in the HR industry want to capitalize on their increasing role in driving client organization growth, they must reflect on how they can turn this opportunity into an exponential growth trajectory for themselves.
• Build on home-grown expertise to develop Indian frameworks – Service providers face an urgent need to invest in extensive R&D to build on expertise through home-grown solutions and frameworks that will address local challenges.
• Maintain talent caliber – As a result of increased number of projects, service providers have resorted to engaging fresh talent from the industry who are often much junior and are less experienced than the client representative themselves. This has resulted in a credibility gap in the eyes of the client organization.
• Create measures to calculate business impact - As HR in client organizations struggle to show the ROI of these interventions, service providers have to prepare themselves with appropriate metrics that can demonstrate real business impact either on the top line or the bottom line. This will meet the urgent need to establish a link between fee and desired outcome.
• Pricing pressures will build with increased market competitiveness – The increasing number of players entering this space will lead to market cannibalization and therefore impact pricing. For example, a larger strategy consulting firms will find itself competing with HR consulting firm for certain assignments or even take up executive search or leadership development projects, taking away business from the traditional executive search firms.
• Choose your game plan - As the industry evolves, service providers will need to choose between positioning themselves either as a one-window-service provider or a niche expert. Both will find a space in this growing market.
Trends that lie ahead
The dynamic nature of the HR industry makes it an industry to look out for. The challenges faced by client organizations and service providers will result in creative steps taken at both ends: The industry of HR will witness the following as we go along: :
• Phenomenal growth opportunity will see an explosion of players. This industry will see a growth of 3 to 4% of the country’s GDP growth rate, says E. Balaji, MD & CEO, Ma Foi Randstad. As a consequence, the market will see growth for current players and increasing entry of new players. The traditionally non-HR providers (such as communications and branding firms entering the employer branding or employee communication space) and investment are expected to flow in.
• The top-end of the segment (executive search, HR consulting, leadership development) and the low-end of the segment (HR outsourcing, RPO and process driven services) will grow at a towering rate. Companies will spend either on farming out the low-value work to partners (like increased outsourcing of transactional or operational work), or focus on increasing investment in high performers (using leadership consulting or executive coaching services). Hence all service providers will have to either capture the high-end or the low-end (or both) to continue growing.
• Consolidation is happening, mostly dominated by MNCs. The industry has grown over time through consolidations. Better technology, marketing muscle and benefits in terms of offering and outreach from being part of the larger player will continue to drive this trend.
• Increased focus on HR shared services and HR outsourcing. As HR moves towards a strategic role, its focus will shift from transactional to business partnership. There will be an increased focus in HR shared services and HR outsourcing as more and more organizations will look at centralizing the HR activities. “HR Shared Service Centre combined with single process outsourcing (in big conglomerate) e.g. payroll, compliances, benefits administration, or strategic HR with major processes being outsourced, are maturing as two alternatives,” shares Deepa Mohamed.
• New career avenues for professionals. The HR industry is fast getting recognized as an industry in its full right and will attract talent from other industries. Candidates from other industries within functions like sales, marketing and finance are eyeing this industry as an opportunity for faster growth.
It has been established that internal HR functions need the assistance of the service providers to be successful in their growth journey and remain relevant to their businesses. The novel and emerging needs of HR professionals is the raison d’etre of the HR industry. The industry is still at a maturing stage in India, and many service offerings are very new and will require more time to mature. Both client organizations and service providers will see a lot of churn in the coming years, sometimes competing for talent, sometimes arguing over fees charged, and sometimes even over their engagement objectives and working models. However, it is like a marriage. Both sides need each other to grow and be successful. Increasing conversations between both sides will help them to know each other’s needs and therefore grow the industry as a whole. Perhaps the solution lies with the creation of a HR industry body that will focus on training, certification and quality benchmarks, of this large and fast growing industry.
See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/bvhuq
Labels:
consulting,
Human resources,
india
Mar 19, 2011
The state of the HR industry -Consulting, Outsourcing & HRIS- in India
The latest issue of People Matters is focused on the state of the HR Industry in India.
You can read the cover story here (written by Ester Martinez, Rajlakshmi Saikia and yours truly)
There's a very valuable article by Dr. TV Rao -his views on HR Consulting - and his interview
Other interviews about the industry are by Consulting leaders NS Rajan of Ernst & Young , Dhruv Prakash of Korn Ferry and HR advisor Aquil Busrai
HR leaders like Krish Shankar (HR head of Airtel) talk about their expectations from the HR industry and changes required for HR professionals
Industry experts like Deepak Dhawan and Debu Mishra also share their thoughts on the nature of the industry
Current state of the HR industry from the service provider's side is by Pankaj Bansal , CEO of People Strong and E. Balaji of Ma Foi
There are a tonne of other content in the issue too. You can access them here
Hope you like the issue. Would love your feedback
You can read the cover story here (written by Ester Martinez, Rajlakshmi Saikia and yours truly)
There's a very valuable article by Dr. TV Rao -his views on HR Consulting - and his interview
Other interviews about the industry are by Consulting leaders NS Rajan of Ernst & Young , Dhruv Prakash of Korn Ferry and HR advisor Aquil Busrai
HR leaders like Krish Shankar (HR head of Airtel) talk about their expectations from the HR industry and changes required for HR professionals
Industry experts like Deepak Dhawan and Debu Mishra also share their thoughts on the nature of the industry
Current state of the HR industry from the service provider's side is by Pankaj Bansal , CEO of People Strong and E. Balaji of Ma Foi
There are a tonne of other content in the issue too. You can access them here
Hope you like the issue. Would love your feedback
Labels:
consulting,
future,
Human resources
Mar 17, 2011
SHRM urged by members to be transparent
I have blogged on the meta trends shaping culture and tools being developed that support the drive for transparency and desire for connectedness, changing leadership itself.
Here's one more example of this trend of transparency, and how tools are giving powers to people to act as a pressure group in a different kind of organization.
The leadership board of the Society of Human Resource Management in the US is being questioned by a group that is calling itself the SHRM members for Transparency, sharing their letter to the Board in a public place on the social web.
They've been getting media attention too, being featured on HREOnline, and TLNT. Recruiting thought leader Gerry Crispin also wrote a post on why he's part of the campaign.
We don't know yet if this will change things at SHRM in the US, but without doubt the tools have made it easier for the word to be got out and opposing viewpoints shared.
So are you ready for the new transparent organization? Or will you be forced to become one?
Here's one more example of this trend of transparency, and how tools are giving powers to people to act as a pressure group in a different kind of organization.
The leadership board of the Society of Human Resource Management in the US is being questioned by a group that is calling itself the SHRM members for Transparency, sharing their letter to the Board in a public place on the social web.
They've been getting media attention too, being featured on HREOnline, and TLNT. Recruiting thought leader Gerry Crispin also wrote a post on why he's part of the campaign.
We don't know yet if this will change things at SHRM in the US, but without doubt the tools have made it easier for the word to be got out and opposing viewpoints shared.
So are you ready for the new transparent organization? Or will you be forced to become one?
Dec 4, 2010
Should HR students read my blog?
I guess I write about unconventional things - which I have to admit "traditional HR" might find impractical, subversive or nonsensical. So I was surprised to find that this blog was listed as one of the 50 Resources for Students Attending Online Human Resource Management Schools
You can see it here
Personally, I think HR students shouldn't read my blog :-) They'll question their HR leaders too much then ;-)
You can see it here
Personally, I think HR students shouldn't read my blog :-) They'll question their HR leaders too much then ;-)
Labels:
Human resources
More on Social Media and Organizational Use
So last night I was invited to a party where there were lots of legendary Indian HR leaders. These were folks who probably collectively handle HR for some of India's biggest conglomerates, BPOs, HR Consulting firms.
The host introduced me to them as the "HR professional who knows most about web 2.0 in India" and the conversation soon turned to "oh, I always wanted to blog but I think it's a generational thing - I just can't get round to blogging or Tweeting"
Normally I smile politely (taking the compliment that I am "young" ;-) in my stride) but yesterday I decided to take a different track. So I said "No it's not a generational thing"
"What do you mean?"
"Well if Tom Peters (@tom_peters) in the US and Sivakumar Surampudi (@s_sivakumar) CEO of India's very own ITC ABD can Tweet and Blog - what's your excuse. And they're not exactly generation Y :-)"
And I quoted @rotkapchen who said in @marciamarcia's book that "Status updates are to the knowledge firms what the assembly lines are to manufacturing firms"
I then shared my view that soon organizational firewalls will melt away and the only way to manage in the coming age would be to nurture employees into becoming advocates for both your employer brand as well as your product brands.
Then I asked the folks if they had heard of Zappos - and when they said they hadn't - I told them that they should read the @zappos CEO's book - Delivering Happiness
( my review here) - in which he says "Culture is the brand - and the brand is the culture"
There is no greater call to HR leaders to be integral to the business than that!
The host introduced me to them as the "HR professional who knows most about web 2.0 in India" and the conversation soon turned to "oh, I always wanted to blog but I think it's a generational thing - I just can't get round to blogging or Tweeting"
Normally I smile politely (taking the compliment that I am "young" ;-) in my stride) but yesterday I decided to take a different track. So I said "No it's not a generational thing"
"What do you mean?"
"Well if Tom Peters (@tom_peters) in the US and Sivakumar Surampudi (@s_sivakumar) CEO of India's very own ITC ABD can Tweet and Blog - what's your excuse. And they're not exactly generation Y :-)"
And I quoted @rotkapchen who said in @marciamarcia's book that "Status updates are to the knowledge firms what the assembly lines are to manufacturing firms"
I then shared my view that soon organizational firewalls will melt away and the only way to manage in the coming age would be to nurture employees into becoming advocates for both your employer brand as well as your product brands.
Then I asked the folks if they had heard of Zappos - and when they said they hadn't - I told them that they should read the @zappos CEO's book - Delivering Happiness
There is no greater call to HR leaders to be integral to the business than that!
Nov 28, 2010
Why HR needs to leverage Enterprise 2.0
When someone asks me how HR can become more strategic (y'know - the same conversation we have been having since the 1990s) these days more and more I find myself thinking that HR should be joining and indeed leading the Enterprise 2.0 conversations.
I believed the same in the early 2000s when the KM conversation was going on - and found HR folks unwilling to engage and own that conversation - with the result that IT departments used a tool-centric approach and vendors marketed hyped up products in the guise of KM and most of the time it failed, with everyone having egg on their faces.
And as I believe Enterprise 2.0 (or social business) is going down the same path for most organizations.
Here are the reasons why I think HR should be a critical member - and lead the Enterprise 2.0 agenda:
I believed the same in the early 2000s when the KM conversation was going on - and found HR folks unwilling to engage and own that conversation - with the result that IT departments used a tool-centric approach and vendors marketed hyped up products in the guise of KM and most of the time it failed, with everyone having egg on their faces.
And as I believe Enterprise 2.0 (or social business) is going down the same path for most organizations.
Here are the reasons why I think HR should be a critical member - and lead the Enterprise 2.0 agenda:
- HR (in the sphere of OD) - has the critical skill to make such changes less painful and with a higher rate of success. Let's face it, change management seen from a tool vendor's point of view is just a "training program" and about process changes. Other business functions really don't have the change management understanding that OD practitioners have. That understanding can be channelised to make "social business" a reality - by thinking about the structural, process, emotional and personal aspects of change.
- Enterprise 2.0 is both about engaging people with other people (employees, partners, customers) as well as embedding that in the business processes. Typically, HR professionals don't get a chance to influence what happens in the business - but with E2.0 they can - and build their strategic impact. Holy grail, anyone?
- Enterprise 2.0 will soon be the platform of learning and people to people engagement in the organization and as such will have impact on all aspects of HR work - Recruitment, Employee Engagement, Learning and Development and unless HR leads the conversation it will find itself more and more redundant like IT departments are finding themselves.
Nov 19, 2010
The Top 25 HR Digital Influencers for 2010
The influencers project is part of a series that John Sumser is doing both at a personal level as well as with a digital algorithm. He already profiled me in the top 100 influencers in HR at number 60 after a long telephonic interview.
Here's what John has written about the list:
The HRExaminer Influence Project has two components. The digital research uses algorithms to discover and validate the influence of people who are actively engaged in online discussions of HR. The analog component of the project involves an interview process. We’re talking to 450 people in hour long interviews in order to identify the 100 most influential folks in HR in the real world.
The theory is that the two lists will start to blur over the next couple of years. It really is getting harder and harder to function in the HR industry without a vibrant public presence in social media. Every single person on our digital lists has a blog and a facebook account. Most use Twitter, LinkedIn and some other form of social tool.
Today, on what is more or less the first anniversary of the digital project, we’re releasing the 2010 version of the Top 25 influencers in HR. The change is dramatic. Many of the people who were prominent in our analysis a year ago have reduced their output, shifted their focus or changed their jobs. They fell off of the list, replaced by new voices with the ability to sustain routine publishing.
It’s been a blustery year in HR.
With the winds shifting towards measurable results and away from the legacy emphasis on process control, many people left the field and or changed jobs. The longer that cloud (or SaaS) technology is around, the less likely it is that HR folks will work in the trenches of administrivia.
The profession is changing.
So is the way people use social media. Last year’s Top 25 Influencers in HR were often early adopters who developed their audiences because they had proficiency with the technology. They may not have had quite as much substance as the new group.
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