JWI 520 Strayer University Week 8 Employee Development Experience Essay - Business Finance
Describe your best experience in terms of employee development and explain why it was so effective. Then describe your worst experience in terms of employee development and explain why it was so unproductive.https://www.hrdive.com/news/managing-and-measuring-workplace-culture/513998/
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JWI 520
People Management
Week Eight | Lecture One
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LEARNING BY DOING: THE KEY TO
SUCCESSFUL PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
!
We said in the previous lecture that the opportunity to develop
professional and leadership skills is among the most important of all
organizational rewards. In fact, countless studies have found that when
college seniors and MBA students are asked what is most important to
them as they weigh their post-graduation alternatives, the most frequent
response, even more than high compensation, is the opportunity for
professional growth.
With this in mind, consider the responses to a series of questions asked
of managers who attended executive-education programs at the
University of Michigan. The author of this lecture asked the participants
to write a brief description of the most significant
developmental experience in their professional careers. They were then
asked several questions about what they had written. Here are two of the
questions, along with the managers’ responses:
1. “Did you describe a formal course, conference, or
program?” (Typically, only two to three people out of each
class of 45 said yes.)
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2. “Did your organization deliberately provide this experience for
reasons of professional development?” (Typically, between five to
eight people out of 45 said yes.)
Based on these studies and many others (Ready, 1994), it is clear that the
most powerful professional- and leadership-development typically
occurs not through academic training or company-initiated professional
development programs, but rather through what is variously labeled
action learning, on-the-job learning, or learning by
doing.
The upshot: Managers who design and thoughtfully assign people to jobs
that are rich in “job content” can substantially increase the motivation of
their team members, and also provide them with abundant
opportunities for professional development.
By any name, the old saw is true: Experience really is the best teacher.
Or, as the old Chinese proverb goes:
Tell me and I’ll forget.
Show me and I may remember.
Involve me and I’ll understand.
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GIVING PEOPLE THE OPPORTUNITY TO
LEARN BY DOING
In the previous lecture we identified a number of job content
rewards, including such things as:
• Recognition
• Responsibility
• Autonomy
• Performance feedback
• Opportunities to participate in decision making
• Important, interesting, and challenging work
• The opportunity to develop professional and leadership skills
To provide employees with distinct opportunities in each of these areas
would be impossible in practice. Fortunately, some organizational
experiences are so robust that they simultaneously provide employees
with numerous examples of enriching job content. Examples include
participating in new business initiatives, moving from a line to a staff
role, and taking on a position with profit-and-loss responsibilities
(McCall, Lombardo, & Morrison, 1988).
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Even when someone’s basic job remains the same, significant
opportunities for professional growth often present themselves to
organizations that are looking for them. Introducing a new product, for
example, or implementing a new recruitment or performance program,
or launching a new corporate initiative can all provide rich
developmental opportunities.
Permitting employees to interact directly with customers can also have a
dramatic effect. For example, as part of GE’s Six Sigma initiative (which
you will read much more about in a subsequent course), Jack Welch
created an “at the customer, for the customer” program, whereby GE
employees were transferred to a customer’s office for four to six months,
to work on the customer’s problems and priorities.
REDUCING THE NUMBER OF
ORGANIZATIONAL LEVELS
A particularly powerful way to increase people’s responsibility,
challenge, autonomy, and participation in decision-making, without
changing their basic job, is to reduce the number of levels in the
organizational chart, also known as flattening the organization.
This is what Jack Welch did when he was GE’s CEO. Upset at the
number of sign-offs required before actions could be taken, and
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frustrated at the slow response times resulting from the numerous
organizational layers that separated senior executives from customers,
Welch decreed that there should be no more than five layers between
him and junior workers. (Keep in mind that at the time, GE had more
than 300,000 full-time employees.)
Since they could no longer indulge their penchant for vertical
hierarchies, managers were forced to organize horizontally. As a result,
spans of control in GE increased dramatically. Many managers found
that they had 25 to 30 people reporting to them.
Welch’s view of effective leadership stood in sharp contrast with
prevailing wisdom, which dictated that the optimal span of control
should not exceed eight to ten people, lest managers be stretched
beyond their ability to direct and control.
When warned of these supposedly adverse consequences, Welch replied:
“The overstretched executive is the best executive, because he doesn’t
have time to meddle.” His point was that GE managers at all levels
needed to be giving people more autonomy and responsibility, and
greater authority to make their own decisions.
GE developed a number of classes to help its executives and managers
become comfortable and effective in their dramatically less hierarchical
company. To give a feel for what GE’s managers were taught, the
following is a brief sample:
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1. When someone comes to you for a signature or approval, you must
count the number of people who have already signed off. If the
number is greater than two (meaning that at least three people
think it’s a good idea), you must ask yourself, “Why am I signing
this? What value am I adding?”
2. When someone comes to you for a signature or approval, you must
ask yourself, “Why is this person coming to me?” If the answer is
that you have information she doesn’t have, you must ask yourself,
“What keeps me from making that information available to her,
and then letting her make that decision?”
3. When someone comes to you for a signature or approval, you must
ask yourself, “When was the last time I reversed one of these?” If
the answer is “almost never,” again you must ask yourself, “Why
am I signing this? What value am I adding?”
POPCORN STANDS
GE provides another powerful example of learning by doing through
the use of what Jack Welch labeled “popcorn stands” (Kerr, Landauer,
& Lelon, 2008). In nearly all companies, most of the revenue comes
from a small percentage of divisions or businesses. Its sometimes
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referred to as the “80-20 rule,” a wide-ranging law of business dictating,
for instance, that 80\% of profits come from 20\% of activities.
Naturally, experienced A players must be assigned to run the business
units that generate most of the money. In the other units, also known as
the popcorn stands, high potentials who are unproven and have less
experience can develop their skills, experiment with new strategies and
business models, and perfect their leadership styles.
If they fail, their failure causes little damage to the company. If they
succeed, they can be moved to another popcorn stand that provides a
different kind of leadership challenge—transitioning from a nonunion
to a union business, for example, or from a short-cycle to a long-cycle
business.
The underlying rationale is that the best way to develop leaders is to let
them lead something, and the best way to assess someone’s leadership
potential is to scrutinize them closely as they carry out their duties. GE
benefited from acquiring extensive knowledge of the strengths and
developmental needs of its rising stars, as it observed their responses to a
variety of stretch assignments and challenging situations. The company
learned how its potential future leaders handles success, and reacted to
adversity, in settings where failure wasn’t costly.
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As a result of such experiences, both the company and the managers
being developed came to discover what they were good at, and what they
liked to do.
GE isn’t the only company that grooms potential leaders by putting
them in charge of relatively unimportant businesses and then promoting
them if they perform well. What makes GE unusual is the thoroughness
and self-consciousness with which it carries out the developmental
process—from the systematic identification of experiences each manager
has already had or needs to acquire, to the use of evaluation and
feedback mechanisms to assure that both the manager and GE get the
most out of the assignment. Unlike most of the University of Michigan
participants mentioned above, GE managers’ most significant
developmental experiences are almost never by accident.
Before closing this lecture, one additional question needs to be answered:
Does an organization have to be as large as GE to provide developmental
experiences like the ones we have been talking about?
The answer is no. For one thing, while it’s true that smaller companies
have fewer popcorn stands, they also have fewer people who need to be
developed. Also, it isn’t necessary for all the developmental
opportunities to be located within your own organization. Remember
what we said earlier about GE’s “at the customer, for the customer”
initiative. Suppliers who allowed managers to work in their offices often
provided an excellent environment to develop new skills.
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It is not by coincidence that, as a result of GE’s restructuring, its
utilization of popcorn stands, and its use of a wide variety of other
programs, GE was ranked No. 1 in the world for leadership
development during most of Jack Welch’s second decade at the helm of
GE. It also became the No. 1 poaching ground for managerial talent, as
numerous other companies sought to acquire leaders who had learned
their trade in GE.
!
!
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REFERENCES
The last section was adapted from Kerr, S., Landauer, S., & Lelon,
E. (2008). Maximizing the value of leadership development:
key questions (and some answers). In Burke, R., & Cooper, C.
(eds.), Building more effective organizations (pp. 127-159).
Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.
McCall, M., Lombardo, M., & Morrison, A. (1988). The lessons of
experience: how successful executives develop on the job.
Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.
Ready, D. (1994). Champions of change (pp. 26-28). International
Consortium for Executive Development Research.
- Page 11 -
!
JWI 520
People Management
Week Eight | Lecture Two
- Page 1 -
MOTIVATING PEOPLE
!
When we introduced the subject of candor in the first JWMI course, we
noted that the culture of many organizations tends to discourage people
from being candid. In a similar way, the norms and practices that
surround most performance reviews and feedback processes reduce the
likelihood that the information conveyed will be honest.
In this lecture, we focus on how to encourage managers to give useful,
candid performance feedback to their peers and employees.
Let’s start this lecture with two questions:
• In most organizations, who gets more money—high performers or
low performers?
• In most organizations, who gets more performance feedback—
high performers or low performers?
If you’re like most people, you replied that high performers get more
money, and low performers get more performance feedback. And you’d
be right.
It shouldn’t be that way, however. Here’s why.
According to the dictionary, a reward is anything that increases the
probability of a future response. By that definition, money is a great
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and highly motivating reward. If you offer your people cash for doing
something, you increase the chances that they’ll do it. By the same token,
then, performance feedback is also a great reward. If you give your
people incisive and productive guidance, you increase the chances that
people will behave more productively in the future.
We make this point because most organizations don’t think about
money and feedback in the same way.
In fact, many HR managers refer to their organization’s package of
motivational tools as reward and recognition systems—the
implication being that reward is shorthand for financial
compensation, and recognition refers to plaques, awards, and other lessimportant touchy-feely stuff that makes people feel warm and fuzzy
inside.
We suggest another approach. When it comes to motivating people,
think of incentives as comprising some combination of financial and
nonfinancial rewards. Both have their place and, used properly, both
have the potential to exert a powerful impact on employee performance.
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THE ADVANTAGES OF FINANCIAL
REWARDS
It goes without saying that money is among the most powerful of all
rewards—and therefore an almost universally effective way to motivate
people. Money is uniquely attractive, in that no one refuses it, no one
returns it, and most people—even people who already have more money
than they can possibly spend—will go to great lengths to get more.
Another distinctive aspect of money is that it doesn’t saturate. Offering
too much of most things, even things people really like, will trigger
negative results. Providing workers with more autonomy, for example,
often improves morale and productivity, but at some point can lead to
role ambiguity and confusion. Too much job responsibility and
challenge can give an employee an ulcer. As for large quantities of
critical, candid feedback—well, we don’t suggest you try that on anyone
you like for more than an hour straight.
Money, by contrast, is invariably received with considerable enthusiasm.
The reason is that money satisfies people on many different levels. You
may have heard of Maslow’s classic theory of human motivation, which
organized human needs into a hierarchy (1954).
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The most basic needs, Maslow posited, are physiological, such as food,
water, and shelter. If these are lacking, obtaining them takes precedence
over everything else. If physiological needs are met, Level 2, safety needs,
then become paramount. Once people feel
secure, Level 3, social needs—friendship, belonging, acceptance, giving
and receiving love—become dominant as people become preoccupied
with the question: “What do others think of me?”
Level 4 in Maslow’s hierarchy are ego needs. At this level, with all of your
physiological, safety, and social needs met, adequacy, achievement,
strength, and freedom become important. The central question defining
an individual becomes “What do I think of me?”
The fifth and highest level in Maslow’s hierarchy is self-actualization—
the need to realize your full potential and strive toward becoming
everything you are capable of.
Financial rewards pack a punch because they have value to people on
every level of the hierarchy. Money makes physiological and security
needs evaporate. At the social level, money isn’t everything, of
course, but in American culture and many others, it sure goes a long
way toward ensuring cultural acceptance and entree.
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At Level 4, the importance of money begins to recede, but it remains a
key factor to people—of whom there seem to be many—whose ego and
self-esteem depend upon their wealth and income. Only at Level 5 does
money tend to become irrelevant.
THE PROBLEMS WITH FINANCIAL
REWARDS
We could expound on a number of additional advantages
of financial rewards, but you probably don’t need further convincing
about money’s effectiveness as a motivator. Thus, let’s turn our attention
to some of the problems associated with using money to motivate
people.
The most obvious of these—indeed, one you may have already noticed
in your life—is that it isn’t always available. There’s no point in trying to
spend money if you haven’t got it, and most organizations today haven’t
got it, or at least, haven’t got enough of it to attract, motivate, and retain
everyone who is deserving.
Another problem with financial rewards is that even when they are
available, they are essentially commodities. That is, because they aren’t
distinctive, it’s easy for another organization to match them. So if your
team members are working for you just for the money, they will leave
when someone offers them more of it. And eventually, someone is likely
to offer more. Not to everyone on your team, of course, just to your best
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best performers—the people you can least afford to lose.
A third problem with financial rewards is that they tend to be difficult
to administer, for reasons that we’ll get to soon. But first let’s look at
the power of nonfinancial rewards.
MOTIVATING WITHOUT MONEY
Nonfinancial rewards fall into two categories. Prestige rewards are
designed to increase people’s stature, be it inside the company or out.
Examples are plentiful: job titles; direct access to top leadership; and
the size, location, and amenities of one’s office, to name just a few.
(Additional material on this and other topics covered in this lecture
can be found in the book Reward Systems [Kerr, 2009].)
Far more powerful and sustainable are job content rewards, which
increase the satisfaction an employee derives from his work. It’s as the
old saying goes: If you want a person to do a good job, give him a good
job to do. Performance feedback is a job content reward. So are
recognition, responsibility, challenge, and autonomy, as well as
the opportunity to participate in decision-making, and to work on
important and interesting tasks.
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An especially important nonfinancial reward is the opportunity to
develop your professional and leadership skills. You will read much
more about leadership development in the lecture that follows this one.
Unfortunately, job-content rewards are typically not thought of as
rewards—indeed, they are often not thought about at all.
We said earlier that financial rewards can be difficult to administer. The
opposite is true of job-content rewards, which makes it all the more
unfortunate that they are so often overlooked or underutilized.
Now, what do we mean by easy or difficult to administer? Let’s look at
some of the factors involved in using awards to motivate people—and
then compare the effectiveness of financial and nonfinancial rewards in
these areas.
Availability
We’ve noted that an essential property of any reward is that an
adequate supply of it must exist, and that money is often unavailable.
Job-content rewards, on the other hand, are always available, because as
a leader you create your own supply. You can give performance
feedback to someone, then give it to someone else. You can give the
members of your team opportunities to participate in decision making
on Monday, then give them more opportunities on Tuesday. You dont
have to go looking for funds from your budget or permission from your
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boss. You’re limited only by your imagination.
Ironically, because people are so used to thinking that value comes from
scarcity, the ready availability of job-content rewards may be one reason
why managers don’t use them enough. For example, if the managers in
your company were told tomorrow that they could only give candid,
constructive performance feedback to three of their people, they might
give some serious thought about how to get the most benefit from this
suddenly scarce resource. But because there is no such limitation, many
managers don’t give candid, constructive feedback to anyone.
Timeliness
Ideally, rewards should be received soon after a reward-worthy action
occurs. Employees who must wait a long time to be rewarded may
conclude that, by the time the reward is due, either they won’t be there,
or the ...
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