Friday, November 29, 2019

How to Prove Youd Be a Great Remote Worker in a Job Interview

How to Prove Youd Be a Great Remote Worker in a Job InterviewHow to Prove Youd Be a Great Remote Worker in a Job Interview8When applying and interviewing for a remote job, it is easy to focus on the core requirements of the job and forget the remote aspect. However, employers are going to want at least some proof that youd be a great remote worker before they hire you. Below, weve got a few tips to help you out.Whether youre new to the remote work environment or an experienced digital nomad, it is important to communicate your remote work abilities. Even employers with extensive remote work management will leise worry about a persons ability to be a great remote worker. If you want to land the job, show up with proof that bedrngnis only are you perfect for the role, but youre the remote worker theyve been looking for all along.To prove youre a great remote worker, you should be prepared in the following ways1. Have home office pictures or give a virtual tour.When interviewing, youll either do so in person if you are local, or on a video or phone call. Take the initiative to show the hiring manager your established and functional remote home office. By having this information at hand or providing them an inside peek at your workspace, youll show that you have the necessary office space and equipment to be successful.2. Provide remote work references.For those with remote work experience, obtain references sharing information about how you previously operated in a work environment. Doing so will help to give qualifikation employers a real look into how you operate.For those with no remote work experience, it can be a bit tricky, but you can get creative. Rather than focus on references, think certifications. Do you have any tech certifications that will help support your ability to handle problems? Do you have any references that share your ability to work independently? Anything giving a strong character statement about working alone or your ability to handle is sues when they arise will support your case.3. Develop and share your backup plan.Any great remote worker will have a remote work backup plan just in case. Rather than waiting for your interviewerto ask, share your planwith them. Cover things such asWhat youll do during a power outageHow youll approach a loss of InternetSteps youll take if you have tech issuesWhat youll do when your house is not your own (house guests, etc.)If you plan on using coworking spacesWhen outlining your backup plan, remember to be specific. If you have a coffee shopdown the street with free Wi-Fi, mention it. While you dont have to give every tiny detail, the more information you provide and the more prepared you are, the more at ease the employer will be.4. Share real-life scenarios about your remote work experience.If youve worked remotely, great You should have a few experiences to share. If you havent, think about an example of anytime you did something remotely. Maybe it was helping to plan a wedding out of state or even coordinating vacation travel.No matter your remote work past, share experiences about things that were successful in your interactions. Also, feel free to share things that werent successful, and the lessons you learned.5. Be prompt and organized, and show initiative.One of the biggest fears when hiring remote employees is that they arent going to get the work done. As a remote worker, you have to prove this. During the interview, make a great first impression. Be prompt, if not slightly early to the interview. Make sure your equipment is working, and your office is quiet.Organization is also an area to consider. Make sure your background (if you are on video) is organized and ready for viewers. Dress appropriately for the interview, and make sure you have all of your documents and thoughts collected and organized.Its also a good time to show initiative, but not be pushy. Be willing to share your remote work backup plan even if the hiring party doesnt ask for it . Offer to give a tour of your office or share the photos. It also never hurts to offer them a trial of your remote work skills. Ask them for a task that you can complete remotely, and then do it with gusto and perfection.Being a great remote worker is more than simply getting the job done. It is about being a proactive communicator, being willing to take the initiative, andbeing organized and focused. When you provide an employer with examples of your successful remote experiences, you can show them firsthand that not only can you work remotely, but you can be highly successful in a remote environment.Interested in remote work opportunities? Check out the top 100 companies for remote jobs.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Strategic Planning for an HR Audience

Strategic Planning for an HR AudienceStrategic Planning for an HR AudienceStrategic Planning for an HR AudienceStrategic Planning for an HR Audience PDFNote Youll need Adobe Reader to view the PDF file above. Download Adobe Reader.Wednesday, January 18, 2012200PM-300PM EST (Eastern Standard Time)Few things have the potential to galvanize an organization as much as a bold future. Setting a strong strategic direction for yur organization is critical. Even your department and project kollektivs will benefit from focused planning. Unfortunately, people think that strategic planning expertise is solely the domain of highly specialized, external consultants who have to bring their special brand of mojo. Fortunately, there are tools and frameworks that are easy to use and follow and do leid require multiple PhDs to decipher.Listen to this webinar and learn ways toPresent an agile and scalable strategic planning frameworkProvide resources to contribute to a successful planning effortExplain techniques to successfully sustain the impact of your strategic planning processDemonstrateways tomake your meeting interactive and engagingHighlight five critical mistakes to avoidwould like to thank both Bill Treakoranversr and Laura Cohn for presenting for usPresented byBill Treaayar and Laura CohnGiant Leap Consultings Lead Strategic Planning TeamBill and Laura have mora than 1,000 hours of collective experience with strategic planning. Having worked with for-profit, non-profit, government agencies, academic institutions, and everything in between their experience has helped them to refine a highly effective planning process that helps organizations define their bold future. You can learn mora about them and Giant Leap Consulting at www.giantleapconsulting.com.Webinar Transcript Strategic Planning for an HR AudienceGood afternoon. Im Randi Alterman. Im the marketing director with Monster. Id like to thank you for joining us today for this exclusive webinar hosted by Intelligence . Todays webinar is titled Strategic Planning for an HR Audience. In this Intelligence webinar, were joined by Bill Treaayar and Laura Cohn. This webinar will showcase why platzdeckchenting a strong strategic direction for your organization is critical yet easy.Before we get started, I have a few housekeeping items to mention. The presentation and a copy of todays recording will be posted on hiring.monster.com within two to three days. We are recording this session. You click on the resources tab and go to HR events. All participants will receive an email with a direct link to todays material. For our Twitter fans, you can also follow us right now on the hashtag monsterlive.Intelligence provides insights to help HR professionals improve recruiting success, accelerate worker performance, and retain top talent. We analyze and collect data from over four million unique job searches that are performed on each and every day. We invite you to visit hiring.monster.com and read some of our other in-depth reports and analyses, all located under the Resources tab. There will be time after todays presentations for some questions and answers, and our meeting manager will help facilitate that QA. Please feel free at any time to type your questions into the available space during the event and well try to include them in the QA. Additionally, if you are getting your audio through the telephone, you will be placed on mute until the QA session begins.Well, now Id like to welcome todays speakers, Bill Treasurer and Laura Cohn. Bill Treasurer has led several webinars for us in the past, and is the originator of The New Leadership Practices, Courage Building, and the author of Courage Goes to Work, an internationally bestselling book about managerial courage. Bill is also the author of Courageous Leadership A Program for Using Courage to Transform the Workplace.Laura Cohn has worked for Bill for years to refine her approach to strategic planning and develop easy yet useful tools and techniques for teaching the sessions, engaging, and making them ultimately worthwhile and productive.In addition to working with numerous chapters, Bill and Laura have conducted strategic planning efforts for all sorts of organizations, including large organizations like the National Science Foundation, Walsh Construction, Bank of America Merchant Services, and Eldridge Electric, state non-profits like the Georgia Center for Child Advocacy and Enable America, and even a tech company whose work is so top secret, theyre notlage even going to tell us its name. Theyve also led strategic planning efforts for cutting-edge research efforts being conducted at many top universities. Their approach to planning work for all kinds of organizations and were pleased that theyre here today to share their insight and experience with all of us. And now lets turn the webinar over to you.Well, thank you so much. Thank you Randi, I really appreciate it. Its great to be with you again. Randi Alterm an has been very helpful in getting prepared for todays session. Weve been working with Randi, as well as Lisa Davis at Monster.com, for quite some time to make sure that we could put on a session that welches ultimately useful to the over 800 of you that have registered for todays webinar from all around the world. And I want to thank you all for being here. It really gives me a sense that theres a strong desire out there to do strategic planning right. Maybe it grows out of some frustration that you had in doing strategic planning sessions in the past, or maybe it just grows out of your desires to do strategic planning now, so that you get a solid sense of the future or at least through the next couple of years for your own HR Department and organization.One frequent complaint that you probably have heard before or certainly youve read about, when it comes to HR, is sometimes that HR isnt strategic enough. And sometimes, theyre not at the table because they dont speak the strategi c language. So one of the goals of todays session will be to really give some strategic thought about how to do strategic planning to increase our credibility within the organizations that we serve.There are a lot of approaches to strategic planning. Many of you on the webinar have attended strategic planning sessions, perhaps led strategic planning sessions, and we have been introduced to different approaches and such. Were not saying that our approach is the best approach that ever was, were saying that our approach is useful and its practical, and its born out of our real work that we do with clients every day from large and small organizations profit and non-profit.So were bringing to you our methodology as practitioners of strategic planning to create a courageous future. In fact, Im calling in today from Asheville, North Carolina. I happen to be the motherboard chair of Leadership Asheville, a small non-profit here at Asheville, and Im using the framework tomorrow as the chai rrolle of that organization. Im not conducting it as a facilitator but usually with the board itself so that we develop a solid strategic plan for the future as well.Youre going to get a lot of tips. This is going to be jam-packed with information. I also want you to know that if you want additional tips after the webinar, please go to giantleapconsulting.com, sign up for our newsletter, and youll get five additional strategic planning tips that will be coming to you over five weeks. Ill remind you again at the end of the webinar for that. Weve also saved time at the end of the webinar for QA because we definitely want to hear from you and answer whatever questions that youve got. With that, because weve got a really tight agenda and were going to move at a very fast clip, Im going to turn it over to Laura Cohn, whos going to introduce us to the agenda.Thanks Bill. I just want to review with everyone what our planned agenda is for today. Bill, this was a great welcome and we have an introduction that what were hoping to cover, but also we want to spend a little time talking about whats the value of planning in the first place. We know that people have limited time and limited resources. So what is the value that planning can bring to your department or your organization? Were going to also take a walk through the framework that we use at Giant Leap to organize the science so that theres really strong correlation between everything from the big picture down to the specific actions that youre going to be taking. Were going to take some time to walk you through that and get you familiar with the framework.Throughout the session, were also going to be providing you with some facilitation kits that we have learned throughout our years of doing strategic planning efforts that we developed and refined, that we find help us to keep it interactive and engaging for participants. Weve identified five mistakes that youll find a lot of people make regarding strategic plann ing effort. Were going to identify those mistakes and then provide you advice and tips on how you can avoid making those mistakes yourself. So thats our plan for todays agenda.We actually have our first poll question for you. We had a few polling questions throughout the day that were going to open up in to you. The first one is on a scale of one to five, one being very boring and five means very engaging, how boring has past strategic planning meeting firms that you attended? Were going to give you 15 to 20 seconds to get your answer in, as you consider past strategic planning efforts that you may have been involved in. And think about how either boring or how engaging by working with them. As we wait for those poll results to come in, we often use this question as a way to kick-start strategic planning meetings because, frankly, it adds a little levity to the process. And we recognize that often people find strategic planning to be a difficult and sometimes boring and tedious proc ess.One of the ways that we try to set people up to demonstrate that Giant Leap approach is about being engaging and invested in the process enjoying your time together, and enjoying the planning process so much of the value that comes from that. So if we look at the results, about 55 percent half of you gave it about mid-range, you gave it a three, and it being somewhat boring and then some of you are below that. And Im happy to landsee that some of you have got involved in strategic training meetings that you really found to be effective and engaging as well. Do you have something you want to add to this?What I would add is that part of our own the reason that we have put together an engaging strategic planning framework, is based on our own frustrations being participants in strategic planning sessions. Im a person who bore very easily, so we mix it up with a blended learning approach to de-boringize the strategic planning process so that its engaging. At the end of the day, you want peoples full focus and attention, and if theyre checking out because its a mundane process with simply throwing a bunch of halfwit slides for example or throwing a bunch of research at them but not enough time for dialogue, then youre not going to get their full engagement, full attention, and good ideas. We try to de-boringize our presence wherever we can.All right. Why would a courage-building company be doing strategic planning? Its a good question. We think its because it takes courage to set a bold direction. Strategic planning done right can affect all aspects of your organization. Think outside of HR right now and strategic planning is done in your own organization if its done, and it can impact the need to change. You come up with strategic initiatives, it means that a new change direction might come forward which may dictate new leadership behaviors, some of which dont exist within the company as it exist today. And you might have to hire in from outside or train f rom within the company. Its disruptive from a behavioral stand point. It can cascade through the organization, requiring a culture change to get you to the future youre trying to get to, it might require a different set of core competencies and frankly a different set of value that could impact the entire organization.It takes a lot of courage to be willing to release yourself from the past build on the past in order to create a bold engaging future that everybody wants to grab hold to. This is true at the organizational level, but its also true within the HR department or function itself. To be able to create a bold direction that ties to the rest of the organizations mission, and inspires everyone to want to come to work every day takes courage. Plans, Winston Churchill said, are worthless.Its not the plan that matters, planning is everything. Churchill said, Plans are worthless. Planning is everything. What he meant by that is its not the document that is going to be birthed ou t of the strategic planning process thats important. Its not perfectionizing the deliverable. Whats matters fruchtwein is getting your kollektiv together, circling up, grappling through hard issues together, making tough decisions together, and ultimately coming to agreement and alignment as to what is the HR department functions are all about, and do we communicate that with consistency to other people in the organization so that we can create a clear picture of the value that we deliver to the rest of the organization through HR. Ill let Laura pick up this idea.One of the ways that we really found that clients that weve worked with in the past, when theyre creating a strategic planning process and they look back on the time in an bewerbungsinterview theyve invested in, they recognize that it was a wonderful and meaningful time for them to come together. So they can come to alignment about their purpose and their important goals. For example, one of the organizations we have worked with is the National Science Foundation. Theres a little research center at Michigan State University and its called the Beacon Center. It is a group of scientific researchers from across from different from Chemistry and Physics and Biology, to the social sciences of Sociology and Anthropology, and even Engineers and Mathematicians.There are people that are coming from across differences at that time, as well as different Universities. They are the members of research centers at their universities, and received the funding for their research and for their project. The first time they were actually all together in the same room to hash through what they want to achieve through their five years together. Listen, Bill and I and some of our colleagues went to join them during their strategic planning effort. And for them it was a really fruitful opportunity to really convey and discuss what theyre hoping to achieve, and what they can all bring from their differences at that time and through their different expertise, how they can make a meaningful impact in their school. So, the Beacon Center and many of the other organizations we worked through the years, we have found that the opportunity that comes through alignment has been a wonderful outcome of the strategic planning.One of the first mistakes we want to identify and discuss with you is that we find that a lot of times, when people are going through a specific planning process, theyre not including enough voices, enough perspectives when theyre developing the plan. They may think that the only people who need to be involved in the strategic planning process are those who are in executive leadership or perhaps just the CEO levels, or just the head of the department with just a few key advisors. They dont involve a variety of voices, and what we find with that is that their plans can get a little stagnant, a little cold. They also dont have all the valuable information that they need to be truly applicable a nd useful when it comes to implementation.So, we encourage you to avoid this first mistake by doing some work to bring in additional perspectives to your process. Some of the things that we do are conducting pre-session interviews with key stakeholders, so these are either done in person or over the phone. They take one hour or so and theyre confidential conversations so we have the time to really dive in to a variety of questions that fit into the purpose and the goals and opportunities that are facing that organization.Another tool you can use is an erreichbar survey. There are so many good ones that are very easy to use and free to low cost that reference another great resource to take advantage of. We often also do online surveys of other stakeholders to help get additional information and an insight into the strategic planning process. Here, we even have a few examples of some of the interview questions we use when were conducting those one-on-one conversations. Well ask questi ons like on a scale of one to four, how well do you think you understand the mission of your organization? We ask them to describe the mission in their own words, and to tell us how well they think their organization is advancing toward the mission. So these are some examples of how you can get some qualitative as well as quantitative results in this process, so that you can gather information and insights to share with the group during the process.For some sample survey questions, these are some that Im using with a client that Im working with right now, and we use the abbreviation for their department. In this survey, were asking people who are alumni of this organization to dream big and tell some ideas about what they would like to see the department do in the coming years, and then also to reflect on how well the department prepared them or how they could improve their academic training. These are some different questions that you can use but you can make your own rather to b ring in additional perspectives and voices into the training process.Its very important to do that as well. We worked with one organization in Chicago that happens to be the second largest landowner in the United States after the US government. The CIO had brought us in to do a strategic planning process. To include additional perspectives, we suggested in the agenda early on, to actually bring the department heads that the CIO was responsible for building systems for into the session and every time individually. And then his team would asked them questions and those people would communicate what they were pleased with the IT department about and what they would like to see stronger. Its basically bringing the customers in that case of IT, you can do the same thing with HR to invite a few dignitaries within the organization who HR serve to get their perspective, honestly, candidly, forthrightly and if you can sit there without defensiveness and actually hear the feedback it becom es good grounding for the rest of the strategic planning process as you go through it.I want to introduce you right now to the framework that we use, and this is an easy-to-apply framework. You dont have to bring in highfalutin, high paid consultant from the outside to do this yourself. The first thing that we cover is the mission. We suggest that the mission that you have be the organization mission as youre going through the HR planning process, and that you come in under the mission level and go to the goals and then cascade through the rest of the process which Ill describe. That said, it is also okay to develop your own mission of the HR function as long as it closely connects to the organizations mission. The mission, of course, is the collective reason for being articulated for internal and external audiences. The organizations mission tends to be communicating to external audiences but the HR function youd want to communicate to internal audiences, especially for your own te am.And then we move to goals. ur goals are those areas that we need to make progress in if we are to successfully accomplish our mission. For an HR function, three or four goals would be enough, beyond five would definitely be too many, and well drill down in each one of these in just a moment. Then we have something that we call Optimal Outcomes, this connect to a different distinct goal area. If you take one of your goals, you flesh it out by saying, If we were to already have made progress in this area, optimally, what would we expect to see?What would be the optimal outcome to be that we hope to achieve in this particular goal area? Once we get our optimal outcome, we have to have ways to hold ourselves accountable. So its not enough to have qualitative references and anecdotal evidence, we need actual hard measures that show that were making impact towards those goals that were trying to aim for. So we select units of measures, those are the yardsticks with which were trying to gauge project progress, and then we have to select specific targets on those measures. We have to then put together the targets for the next year or so in the short term, or the next three years in the long term with which were trying to pursue. And then finally, we want to come together with the best task action that will move the needle on those specific targets so that we can gauge the progress were making towards the optimal outcome, which connects to the goal, which connects to the mission.All of it ties together. The idea being that by the time that you distill the actual actions that are going to take place within the HR function, connect it to given people pursuing those given actions, there should be a tight logic chain as to why youre doing the action in the first place. So it brings coherency to all the different actions that are going on within the HR to function, should be connecting to a goal that ultimately connects to the mission. Because otherwise, its not mission critical, and its extraneous, and its probably getting in the way of your effectiveness as the HR department.Whenever were going through this framework, we move down a chain of how. Once we go through the goal and we say, Okay, suppose our goal is that we want to increase the professionalism of our staff. Then we ask ourselves, Okay, if thats our goal, how do we do that? Well, what are we trying to get done in the optimal outcomes? And then we identify what those are, and then we say, Okay, then how will we do that? Well, lets measure it and we say, How do we do that? Well, weve got to put together these actions that will allow us to do it. So we follow a chain of how on the way down. But then when we get to the action if we at some point in time say, Now, wait a minute, why were we doing this action? Oh yeah, why we were doing that is because its connected to this smart target. Yeah, but, why do we have that smart target in place? Oh, because its connected to this optimal outcome w ere trying to achieve. Oh yeah, and why are we trying to get that optimal outcome? Because it connects to this goal. So, we go why? on the way up and we go how? on the way down.We have the next poll question for me to complete now. Bill mentioned, traditionally, strategic planning efforts are done at an organizational level but also theres a need to do them at a department level such as within an HR department or even at a project level. If youre interested in organizational level strategic planning, department level, project team level, or if youre just interested in learning more. Well leave the question open for 15 to 20 seconds also for you to respond to. We think its very valid to view strategic planning at the department or even the project level. We certainly worked with clients who have done that work before. The importance is to of course remember that the plan of the department or the project team should still be in alignment with the organizations overall direction. You d ont want to just go off in a new direction that doesnt support the purpose of the overall organization. For example, if your organization has a specific profit goal, HR may contribute to that by focusing on minimizing employee turnover and increasing retention. Or if your organization has a specific sales goal, HR may contribute to that by evaluating if they have the people on their sales team that are needed to achieve that goal, or how to recruit the people who are needed.Here, were hearing that the majority of you are just interested in learning more and that there are a fairly even split of you who are interested in learning more for the organization or the department level, and a few of you for the project team. Welcome to everyone and we hope that the information here will apply to all of your interests and will be a helpful resource to you. Im going to turn it back over to Bill so that he can tell us a little bit more about the mission models with strategic planning.The missi on is our collective reasons for being, to articulate it for external audiences typically, at the organizational level and internal audiences, if youre developing it at the HR level within the department. Were going to quickly do another poll here to see how well the people in your organization understand the mission. Ill let Laura key this up and then shell tell you about how we go about mission crafting.Great. Thanks, Tom. Another poll question for you on a scale of one to five, where one means not at all and five means completely, how well do you think that people you work with understand the mission of your organization? Its about how well the people you work with understand the mission rather than you yourself. We just want to point out that distinction in the question. This is another example of a question that we often use in our pre-strategic planning interview process. We use it sometimes on the one-on-one interview, as well as in the online survey. Well give you a few mor e minutes or a few more seconds to record your response to this poll. Lets see how your colleagues understand the mission how well your colleagues understand the mission, and then were going to get into a little more about one of the techniques we use to help an organization or even a department go through the process of crafting their mission. Because then, when were doing a session, theyre typically down and we dont have the luxury of spending two full days having a mission crafting question. We try to use an economy process.Here, well see your responses. On a scale of one to five where one was not at all and five completely, we see a fairly even distribution between the levels of two, three, and four. I would have to say that I feel like you guys are more generous than a lot of the other people that we talk to. Often when we talk to people about their impressions of how well their colleagues understand the mission, we have a lot more responses in the one, two, or three category than we do the four or the five. We find that people often give their own sound of the job, so that if we asked you how well you understand the mission, sometimes people tend to make their own understanding higher than their colleagues. So this is just another way another example of how you can get some interesting information to use and inform your strategy.Now well look at one of the techniques we use for the development of a mission bewertung. We often use a process that we call the Elevator Speech and then maybe youre familiar with it this is a common practice. But also its used to talk about how people can articulate what theyre good at, what their expertise is, or something that theyre hoping to gain or achieve in your own professional career or individual lives. We focus it more on getting people to use this as an opportunity to describe the mission of their organization or the purpose of their department.So the instructions that we give are that we want everyone at their t able to individually sit down and consider if you are on an elevator and you got on bottom floor and you were going to the 30th floor and somebody on the elevator looked over and saw your name tag or perhaps the logo of your organization on something that you were wearing and said, Tell me more about who that is and what you do there what would you say to them? If you just had to stand in an elevator ride to describe the work of your organization, what would you tell them? So we give them the prompts to consider of what they say should clarify what the organization does, it should speak to the unique contributions that the organization makes into the marketplace. Also, hopefully, a person wants to learn more about the organization. It should have something that leaves a hook and a little sticky, it resonates with the person for some reason.We give people these question prompts and we give them just a few minutes to consider their answers, and then we ask people to stand up and to wa lk around the room, find somebody to speak to, and each person is given a minute to talk to their partner, and in the time of that minute give their elevator speech. The first person who gives their elevator speech, you tell them to stop, the other person in the pair gives their elevator speech and then you tell them to rotate again and still find somebody else to speak too. It gets people up and out of their seats, moving around the room, and certainly increases the energy in the room. It gives people an opportunity to practice what they say several times. Thats to also hear what other people are saying and start identifying what resonates with them. We find that this is often a really valuable tool to tee up for progress of articulating a mission statement, especially if its going through a refining process.This is Bill. The other thing we often find is that were all communicating about what we do differently, and it often illustrates the lack of alignment and the need for us to c ome to greater clarity in communicating what were all about. We very often do this in the beginning of a session, typically within the first hour, to tee up the mission statement to underscore the importance of doing it because the lack of alignment becomes very clear.Absolutely. Thanks for adding that, Bill. The second mistake that we wanted to identify is that we find so often that people spend the time and the energy to develop a strategic plan for them to actually implement it. The second mistake to avoid is not using the plan that you create. Earlier on in our work with Giant Leap and meeting strategic planning sessions, where I have a client who called us up and said, We really enjoyed the strategic planning process you led us through before. Were ready for you to come back. We need to update this. Were ready for you to come back and help us through that process. Of course we would be curious and we would ask, How did the first plan work for you? And they would say, Well, hold on just a minute, and walk over to their bookcase and pull the plan off the bookshelf, and blow the dust off of it, pat the dust off of it, and say, Well, we never really used it but it was a really good process.We agree that the planning process is very important, but we think that the implementation of the plan is also a really valuable resource and you shouldnt avoid that. How to avoid this mistake is to ensure that someone has the responsibility for completing and distributing the actual plan after the strategic planning session. Somebody needs to have the responsibility of taking on the move, all of the ideas, all of the decisions, and condensing it into one document thats distributed to everyone who needs it so that there can be a common document to work off of.And then we find a really valuable way that some clients have incorporated the strategic plan into their work is to incorporate contributions to strategic initiatives and to the performance review process of employees during the annual review time. So if employees are successfully contributing to our success in strategic initiative that needs to be recognized and praised, and if theyre not, then it also has to be recognized and addressed. Weve found those two meaningful ways to avoid the mistake of not ever implementing the strategic plan that youve worked so hard to develop.Well share with you another way to sustain the plan to ensure to implement this later on as well. So weve talked about mission a little bit, now were going to move into goals, and typically this is where you would drop in. You would probably drop in under the organizations mission to start the development of the HR departments strategic plan, and it would start with the goals. Goals are high level areas that if we are able to accomplish these four or five things, we will have successfully achieved that mission. These are high level goals that were pursuing. Optimal outcomes are many visions, if you will, for each one of the g oals. Now, Im going to drill down here to explain this concept a little bit more, moving onto the next slide.Heres some examples of goal areas, if you move back up, these are examples of goal areas that HR as a function could consider. And you would have your own bullets in your own organization based on the nomenclature that you use within your HR department. But typically recruiting would its own area. Performance management and appraisal would be its own area, it could also include compensation. Compliance, EEOC, and legal would be its own area. Development, leadership development, staff development would be its own area. Managing talent throughout the organization might be its own area. But you would have to decide within your own HR function what are the areas that would make most sense. The key here though is to make it manageable. Do not put 50 different areas that youre going to be having goals for I would say 5 or less beyond 5 is too many.Let me give an example, lets move to the next slide. One goal area might be staff development. You could broaden it to organizational development and talk about the entire training function for example but lets just think about your own staff for a minute so the HR function. One goal under staff development, a goal might be stated in a goal statement and this is what wed like you to create for each one of these goals to come up with a single sentence that defines what youre trying to do in that goal area. For example, if your goal area was staff development, your goal might be to proactively educate and develop our HR staff so that everyone demonstrates a high degree of skill and professionalism. In other words, we have a broad reputation within the organization that were really skilled and really professional. Thats a worthwhile goal statement for staff development.Underneath this, I want to show you in real life how a goal statement might look. One of our clients is a top-secret company that we cannot te ll you much about. Its in the technology arena. We developed a strategic planning process for them. To give you an idea, its such specialized talent that to hire one person in one of their technology roles takes on average an application process of a 150 people before they hone in on the right talent to be able to hire them for their highly skilled, highly specialized technology company that is a civilian company that deals with the defense department.They had a number of goal areas three that they have are client relationships to sell their very unique secret product to the government. Another goal area that they have was technology because they have to be on the cutting edge of technology. But the other is that they have these folks that are basically white hat hackers that have to work with management discipline. So you have this very independent-minded person but they have to have management rigor and discipline in place, so they take the goal area of employees. They recognize t hat they want to create a great place to work.The employee goal statement that they came up with in a single sentence to identify what they are trying to do relative to the employee ego, is we become the premier employer for exceptionally talented technical professionals who are passionate about their mission. That last part was just a key as having technical people, they needed patriots working for this company. Because if they had hired white hat hackers, they had to be sure that their independent people who can work with technical savvy in their blue jeans in remote location and still be so patriotic to the government that they would never be turncoat, if you will. Thats about as much information that I could share without putting myself in jeopardy, but I wanted to give a sense of what a goal statement looks like for a given goal area.Now, back to the example of your own HR department. If we said that our staff development goal was to proactively educate and demonstrate our staf f that everybody has a high degree of skill and professionalism to develop our staff, then one optimal outcome to gauge whether we done this or not in other words if were doing this staff development goal we really have well educated, highly developed staff, theyre known for their professionalism and skills throughout the company what would we expect to see optimally? We call this an Optimal Outcome.One optimal outcome, among others, might be that the HR Department starts receiving positive, unsolicited feedback from the other departments in business units about our exemplary professionalism. In other words, we start to get a broad reputation within the company as upholding professionalism and high skilled people. So theres now logic and connection as to what were trying to achieve. Were going to share with you a couple of real-life examples of other optimum outcomes. Im turning it back to Laura.These are a few examples of optimal outcomes that other clients we worked with have developed. Another organization or another center that was working in the technology sales client innovation. They had a specific goal around knowledge transfer, which is innovations with other institutions and companies are shared. You might have a leadership and management goals that can work theres one organization who really wanted to emphasize collaboration and training across the organization. There have been a situation there where they were really starting to get stressed in separate silos of expertise and werent cross-pollinating ideas. They really wanted to change on making a culture shift in that area. Thats what they were trying to achieve with our optimal outcome.Another organization we worked with has an outreach optimal outcome, where they envisioned that they would infuse a greater public awareness about how adults can help protect their local waterways. It really focused in on their mission, but it was a way that they were going to be able to assess if they were bei ng successful in their outreach efforts.Another process tip that we use in the development of goal statements as well as optimal outcome, sometimes it helps to advance the process if a few key members of the organization get together to pre-craft goal statements. We use the pre-workshop interviews and survey times to help develop those, and then we also use a process of five-finger voting to ratify this pre-crafted goal statements, they all just quickly describe that process. If you imagine five fingers on your hand, what we tell people is that in a moment, were going to ask them to vote on a goal statement thats before them. And using their hands, theyre going to show how strongly they agree with the statement. If they put their hand up and theyve got five fingers up, they think its perfect.They think its perfectly stated, dead-on, and good to go. If they give a four, it means that they think its really well stated, there might be one thing that they would change if they could, but they think its really good its a strong A. If they give a three, its more of a B. So they can live with it, its not perfect, there are some things that they would change but they can live with it. If they only give two fingers during this voting process, it means that they cant live with it. There are more things that have to be changed that are correct, and it really needs to go back to the drawing board. And number one means they absolutely cannot live with it. It is not accurate at all and it really needs to be strongly revised. Thats one of the tips, or one of the processes we also use during the planning process to accelerate it.For optimal outcomes, we often use the quality track that you can now see on your screen. One group, for example, might develop the larger audience of people who are in the room into smaller groups to work on different goal areas to identify optimal outcomes within a goal area. If a sub team has developed the optimal outcome for one goal area to pursu e development, they will come back and direct their ideas to the rest of the groups. And we ask the room to use these questions as a quality check to see if the optimal outcome is stated as a result, if its an indicator of growth towards the goal, and if these are really the critical components that are key to that goal area.We have another mistake that we find that people sometimes make with the strategic planning process and its that also people want to jump straight to action. So often this happens when they together in the room to begin with strategic planning process, people want to jump straight to action. The problem with that is that if you get right to action, you dont have any idea if everyones on the same with that, you honestly dont know if people are in alignment around the purpose and the direction of the organization. So we encourage people to we tell people to avoid that mistake by spending time just to find the big picture. Thats why we think its so critical to spen d the time that it takes to really come into alignment around the mission and the purpose of your organization to identify your important goal area, to create those goal statements, and also to identify what the optimal outcomes are for each goal area. Following this process really garners a higher quality of result when you start with the big picture and work down into action, eventually.Another way that you can avoid it is you want to be sure that youve explained the how and the why. If you remember the slide that Bill showed us earlier with the arrow pointing down and the arrow pointing up, that helps us to remember the how and the why were going to take every action. It does really matter that you got to start with that big picture first. I think Bill is going to tell us a little more now about how we can measure and assess our impact and assess our success in the training process.Its important to make sure that theres some accountability towards getting the goals of this strate gic plan done. We feel that its very important to have measures of impact. There are two related agenda chunks that we go through as we talk about this, and the first is units of measure. We need to identify what is the unit of measure. For example, we could say employee engagement that is a unit of measure. And then we could say, How would we measure that? We could measure it by an employee satisfaction or employee engagement survey, and then we say, If thats the unit of measure, employee engagement is measured by an employee engagement survey, where on that measurement would we like to be?We want to make sure that when we put together measures that they are SMART, youve heard this acronym before, and Ill show you very quickly. SMART target is of course our Specific, Measurable, have to be Achievable, they should be Realistic, and they should Time-bound, that it should have some deadline element to it. Heres just a few examples of SMART targets, we do them in every session. These a re just two small example. Supposed that 75% of facilitators report being engaged in power and productive on an annual survey to be administered by the 1st of December. This gives you the exact number that youre trying to achieve, and in this case its about facilitator engagement, empowerment, and productivity, based on a survey. So now you know the deadline and you know the exact target of what youre trying to achieve, in this case 75% engagement.Heres another example. Increase the number of new strategic initiatives emerging from the staff planning session by 25% as measured by the annual review. So we want to make sure that each one of our staff members is attached to its strategic initiative and we would say, We want to make sure that new initiatives being spawned from our staff, increase by 25% by the end of the year as measured by the annual survey. Thats just a couple of examples. Back to our own HR examples, we talked about staff development practically engage and develop o ur staff so that everybody demonstrate professionalism our optimal outcome which the HR department receives unsolicited feedback about our professionalism. Units of measure here might be that the unit of that measure could be that we get positive, unsolicited accolade from other departments and business units. Our unit of measure is unsolicited accolades. The SMART target might be, we get two positive unsolicited accolades per quarter for our department and one accolade per team member per year. Now were taking that optimal outcome in enhancing our reputation as professional, because it connects to our staff goal of having highly skilled professional people, and we put a measurable target to it.And this brings us to the fourth mistake that we find organizations make with planning. Theres often a lack of linkage between the goals, the targets, and the actions. The way you can avoid this mistake is some simple things one is just to post the outcome on the wall so that everyone can se e whats being contributed. For gearing a training process, a goal testament being created as optimal outcomes for being identified, a smart targets were being set, write them on a clip chart or on some vorlages and post them on the walls around the room so that people can see the output of the team. It makes it easier to conduct quality checks, to be sure theres tight linkages. You can really use those quality checks to keep things accountable, and you can always test to see if this SMART target connect to an optimal outcome, and does this optimal outcome serve a goal statement. You always want to be sure the work that youre setting up for yourself is going to be of service of achieving the goals that you want, that you set for yourself.Great. Now we get to the final part of the framework and that is action items. Those are the concrete steps at the brass tack level. When we break it down and get tactical, what are we going to do and who is going to do it by when? Keep in mind thoug h, this action that we always showcase with our participants, strategic activity is always superimposed on full work schedules. The reality is youre going to burst new to-dos on top of people who already have a full inbox and a full list of to-dos that theyre already working. When we get to the action level and its time to raise peoples hands as to whos going to do what, sometimes theres a little hesitancy.Heres an example of an actual action item as it relates to the goal that weve been working with as an example for the HR department. Remember, we said we wanted to proactively educate and develop our staff so that everybody demonstrates a high degree of skill and professionalism. We said that our optimal outcome would be that we have a broad reputation as evidenced by unsolicited feedback that we get within the company about our professionalism. We said a unit of measure might be that we get these unsolicited accolades from other departments and business units. We put a SMART targ et of two unsolicited accolades per quarter for the team and one accolade per team member per year. So now we say, Okay, great, then how are we going to make sure that we get these accolades based on our professionalism? The action would be to send an internal survey to the department and business unit executives to understand how they define professionalism. So it goes back to the these are your stakeholders, theyre the ones who are going to determine whether you look professional in their eyes, and you could simply ask them on a questionnaire, What would cost you to give us an unsolicited accolade at the end of the year based on the HR departments professionalism? Now we get to actual actions that we would develop a survey whos going to own that? Whos going to distribute the survey? Whos going to tally the results? When are they going to get it done by, et cetera? We can move to brass tack action to move the needle on our ability to become professional. Back to Laura.We have two t echniques that were going to share with you that we use during the action item portion of our strategic planning session. The first you see is a template, and this is the exact template that we used at Giant Leap that you see on the screen now. As you can see, there are areas on this template to write in the goal area that it connects to which optimal outcome it serves, which SMART target its synergy? in direct service to you, and then plenty of space to write in your action items, and then two really important squares on this are the point of contact or the point.These are the people who are going to be accountable for getting the action items done, or to make sure its done by somebody else as well as the due date. These are another easy ways to infuse accountability into your process, because somebodys going to have to step up and get this done.These templates are one thing that we use and then something else we use is called Dot Voting. If you would imagine, if you had perhaps fo ur goal statement because our four goal areas put in your strategic plan, at the end of the day on one wall you could have four columns one for each goal area that have action coming down in each of those areas. If you got four goal areas, what we review is the process is if you would give everyone in the room four round colors they could draw. And we would ask them to use one dot in each of the goal areas and decide which actions they think is most critical to achieve first. This is how to give the leadership an idea of what the people in the room see as critical actions that needs to be taken.It doesnt mean that those are going to necessarily be the first things done and it doesnt mean that actions goals without any sticky dots wont be a success, but it is just another interactive way to give the people in the room to speak to what they see as priority areas. And then what you see here, it illustrates that it adds some color, it adds some color to the room and to the process. Thi s is from a recent art exhibition in New Zealand. There was a white room and it gave kids the chance to decorate the room however they wanted and this is the end result. Its another interactive process that you can use to make the training process engaging for people.The fifth and final mistake you want to identify for you to avoid is a lack of accountability, which I spoke to some referring to the action template. Ways that you can avoid the fifth mistake are to appoint overseers. People who are going to help to be responsible to make sure everythings completed in a proper and timely way. To use the template such as the action item template, to be sure that everything on that template is filled in and that every action has somebody whos going to be responsible for getting it done or seeing that its done as well as a payday that theyre going to be held accountable to.We also encourage people to use momentum meetings and these can be held in whatever speed is appropriate for the orga nization, but it could be quarterly or something of that nature. And its an opportunity to come together, to pull out the strategic plan, and to track progress made. Our key allows time for the conversation to occur? Key actions being done that need to occur? That information has come in that might inform some revisions for the plan that we put together? Have we experienced some successes? Are we hitting SMART targets, are we now below them? What does that mean to us? And what we often find with these momentum meetings, is that when people see them on their calendar and in the two weeks or so before those momentum meetings, a flurry of work will be done on the strategic initiative. Because they know that theyre going to have to be there in front of their peers, and theyre going to be held accountable.We really have found momentum meetings to be a really successful way to infuse accountability into the process. Also, we really think its important to celebrate success thats going to h elp encourage people to keep going when it gets tough to really celebrate the successes you achieve as well.Were going to open it up to questions here. I do want to remind you, if youd like Five Additional Strategic Planning Tips, if you go to giantleapconsulting.com, signup for our newsletter within the next 48 hours, youll get these five tips over the course of the next five weeks. And with that, lets turn it over to Randi, if you could open up the questions for us.Yes, I will. We dont have that much time at the end. First, I just want to say thanks to Bill and Laura for once again sharing your insight and knowledge with everyone today. I think we just have time for one or two really quick questions. The first one, Ill just take them from ones that I have typed in here. The first one that we got during the presentation was we always start with a strategy but go off by mid-year, how can we get senior management to stick to the strategy we set?This is a point of contention and frus tration for Giant Leap Consulting when we started our business ten years ago, and thats why we developed this idea of momentum meetings. We now weave it into our contracts. We say, Look, one month after you develop your strategic plan, were going to reconvene re-validate that these are the right measures and then quarterly throughout the year, youre going to bring us in again as an accountability vehicle instead of trying to do that yourself. We find that the momentum meetings are a great way, and we have a vested interest as an outside consultant, because we want to be able to continue to work with the organization. So theres this mutual accountability. I would say momentum meetings are a really good way to do that.Let me just take one more question, and the questions was How do you modify the strategy of a small business? I dont even know if you need to, Bill, but I thought Id ask. Did that question go through? Does the strategy need to be modified depending on the business size?W e use it with our own business. We have a business that weve got 12 people, which offers consulting. I think that it scales very well. The only difference that I would say if you have a small team, or a small department, or a small business, is that your mission may be much more focused and less grandiose. Your mission is not going to be to see the world, but your mission is going to be much more narrow. Its also possible that you only have three goals and thats very, very legitimate. I would say its basically taking the framework and shrinking it down to the size of your organization, not feeling obliged to the grandiose and make it work for you. If you need to pull out one of these agenda items in the framework, you can feel free to do so. Just make sure that you retain the accountability. At the end of the day you want to make sure youve got actions with action owners, but it should be connected to something youre trying to achieve at a higher level with a broader measurement if you will a broader needle. I think it scales quite well between small departments or big functions. We have used it with small non-profits, small organizations like our own and big giant ones.I think were hitting the top of the hour, just because we have so little time for questions. I just want to tell the participants on the call, if they would like to send a question into intelligencemonster.com, well make sure we get them to Bill and Laura and they can answer you directly. Our apologies that we ran out of time but right now I would like to thank Bill and Laura for sharing their expertise with us and conclude our event. A recording of this event, as well as the presentation materials will be available shortly on our hiring site hiring.monster.com, located under the resource tab. Again, everyone will get an email with a direct link to todays materials. Thanks so much everyone for joining us. Join us again on February 22nd for an exclusive webinar titled Employee Communications V ersion 2012. Everyone have a wonderful day. Thank you.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Top 10 Jobs Most New College Graduates Should Avoid

Top 10 Jobs Most New College Graduates Should AvoidTop 10 Jobs Most New College Graduates Should AvoidIf you are a prospective or recent college graduate, you have a plethora of options to consider for jobs after graduation. However, there are some pitfalls to avoid along the path to choosing a satisfying first job.Here are the top ten jobs or employment situations to avoid Top 10 Jobs Most New College Graduates Should Avoid 1. Think twice before signing on with a family run organization. This type of small employer may be dominated by a few family members who allocate the best jobs to people in their immediate family or social circle. You are likely to find that, despite excellent performance, there are few opportunities for advancement to mora responsible and lucrative roles. 2. Beware of jobs labeled as marketing that actually are commission ausverkauf positions.Companies know that many new graduates are attracted to marketing as a career but are much less comfortable with sal es. Make sure that you have a clear picture of the actual job duties involved with your target job before devoting your time, energy and money to interviewing for vaguely worded marketing positions. Contact the employer and ask for clarification about the position and if they wont furnish any details, steer clear. Generally, the more money and time an employer will be investing in you as a new hire, the more legitimate the job. With pure commission jobs there is often a revolving door, you will need to produce right away or be let go, and the employer suffers few consequences. 3. Watch out for companies with network marketing schemes that promise to bring you quick riches.For example, you might be asked to buy a set of cutlery to demonstrate to people you know with sales pitches and be encouraged to recruit other salespeople to work under you for a cut of their action. Known as a pyramid sales model, these types of positions are lucrative for few people.Only a very small percentage of graduates will be comfortable reaching out to all their contacts with a sales pitch, and the likelihood of recruiting and managing a realistically successful sales force is at least an extremely long shot, if not an impossibility. 4. One way to learn how an employer treats their new hires is to investigate how well they retain staff over time.Be extremely careful about joining an organization with high turnover, particularly in the role you are targeting.High turnover is usually an indication that employees are not treated well and/or it is difficult for them to achieve success in their jobs as constructed. Ask recruiters how many graduates were hired two years ago and how many are still with the firm. Before accepting an offer, speak with other young employees and inquire about working conditions, opportunities for advancement and their estimation of retention rates. 5. Unless you are a uniquely gifted and lucky individual, avoid online trading positions.These jobs are alluring to candidates intrigued by the excitement of the stock market. However, you will be asked to put up some of your own capital and to pay for a securities license.Most graduates should learn the basics by working in more traditional roles with a reputable investment firm before risking their own money. 6. Every job comes with a boss. Spend as much time appraising the suitability of your first supervisor as you do with the appeal of the job itself. A first boss who is autocratic, distant, uncommunicative or overly critical can be difficult for a new graduate. Pose open-ended questions to other individuals who report to your prospective supervisor. Ask them to describe the supervisors management style and strengths as a leader. Listen carefully to what they say and notice how they respond non-verbally. 7. It can be a big mistake for a graduate to choose a company which offers products or services which dont inspire them.In order to be successful in most jobs, you will need to master a b road spectrum of information about the products or services which are featured by your employer. Choosing a biotechnology company if science makes your eyes glaze over is a recipe for failure. Target companies or non-profit organizations whose focus is in line with your curiosity and passions. Also avoid organizations whose values clash with yours.For example, if you are seriously committed to green causes, it might not be comfortable for you to work for a major polluter. 8. Watch out for employers who are in decline.Make sure your target employer is not losing market share, experiencing declining revenue/funding and/or emphasizing outmoded products or services. Organizations with shaky financials will usually end up cutting staff, and you might be caught up in the belastung hired first fired syndrome. Heres how to check out a company. 9. Be careful about taking on a job which is in an undesirable location for you.Geographic flexibility certainly is an asset for new graduates since you can consider opportunities in a wide range of locations.This approach will work well for you unless you have strong reasons for being in a certain area or type of location. So if the cultural attractions of a large city in the Northeastern section of the country are vitally important to you, think twice before accepting a job in rural Iowa.Likewise, if you have a long-standing romantic relationship which is central to your life, carefully consider whether a work location would make even weekend visits difficult. 10. It can be a mistake for a new graduate to accept a position which has a steep learning curve if solid mechanisms for training are not in place.Always inquire how an employer expects you to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to excel in the job and make sure the learning process is suitable given your style.Ask employees hired in the past three years how they were supported as they learned their job. Some employers will have structured, formal training programs w hile others will emphasize learning on the job. On the job training can work if new employees have access to veteran performers and mentors for assistance as they have questions and learn their role.