Managing Talent

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Managing Talent Page 23

by Marion Devine


  developing markets see emerging markets

  development opportunities 106–107

  Devonshire, Simon 133–134

  Dey, Rajeeb 83, 134–135

  digital skills 9

  discrimination 13, 60

  diversity 13, 25, 56–62

  Driver, Steve 39–40

  DuPont 113

  Dury, Stephen 53, 129–130, 140

  E

  The Economist 34, 56

  Economist Intelligence Unit, the 61

  ecosystems (of talent) 31, 136–139, 176–177, 181

  see also portfolio careers

  education system 7, 10–11

  Egon Zehnder 65

  Elance 34–35

  Elop, Stephen 47

  emerging markets

  attracting and retaining talent 120

  employee mobility 69–70

  local hires 71

  talent implications 2, 25, 169

  employability 11

  employee stock options 91, 115–116

  employee value proposition (EVP) 68, 99, 175

  employer branding 34

  Enternships.com 83, 134–135

  entrepreneurial aspirations 22–23, 132–133, 135–136

  see also intrapreneurs

  Ernst & Young 60–61

  ethnic diversity 13, 25

  Europe

  IPros 138–139

  skills shortages 2–3

  women’s working hours 105

  workforce demographics 12

  European Centre for Vocational

  Training 8

  Evans, Richard 98, 110, 178

  executive education programmes 158–159

  see also MBA qualifications

  expatriate packages 150

  expectations

  of generation Y 80–82, 100, 170

  misalignment 172–173

  F

  feedback 157

  Google 143–145

  importance for generation Y 56, 96

  financial rewards 89, 91, 115–116

  financial sector 34

  flexible labour supply 34–35

  flexible working arrangements 105–106

  Fourie, Cornel 90, 97

  France, skills shortages 7

  freedom 95–98, 128–129

  freelance specialists 34

  Frontier Communications 88

  G

  gap analysis (talent-based) 30–31

  generation labels 77

  generation X 77

  generation Y

  career planning 98–104

  characteristics and priorities 76–80

  desire to innovate 92

  expectations 80–82

  managing 100, 170

  financial rewards 89, 91

  freedom and autonomy 95–98

  job advancement and promotion 83–85

  research focus 75–76

  work challenges 89–93

  work–life balance 93–95

  Germany

  retention of older workers 12

  skills shortages 7

  Getty Images 95

  GIB (Gulf International Bank) 89–90, 97–98, 177

  GlaxoSmithKline 125

  global operating skills 10

  global skills index 7

  globalisation and demand for advanced skills 11–12

  glocalisation 10

  Google

  assessment and feedback 143–145

  career planning 100, 103–104

  coaching 98

  crowd sourcing 177

  culture-led approach 21–22, 121–122

  leadership traits 143–145

  work challenges 90–91

  governance and accountability 32

  graduate entry schemes 14, 175

  Gulf International Bank (GIB) 89–90

  Olam International 38–39

  programme design 49–50, 84

  retention 81–82

  graduates

  employability 11

  MBA recruitment 49–50, 93–94

  promotion expectations 83–84

  shortfall in numbers 10–11

  work considerations 89

  see also generation Y

  Grant, Janaky 37

  greatest generation 77

  Gulf International Bank (GIB) 89–90, 97–98, 177

  H

  Hall, Ross 125, 131

  Hays 3, 6–8, 120

  head of talent 27, 43, 46, 50

  see also HR function

  Heidrick & Struggles 26–27, 41, 48, 62

  Hill, Jan 33

  Hinshaw, Karen 56

  homogeny 21, 48, 56, 169

  Hornsey, Liane 21–22, 98, 100, 104, 121, 143–145

  HR function

  confidence in talent management strategy 19

  demonstrating value 33

  expertise and skills required 44–45

  head of talent role 27, 43, 46, 50

  Olam International 39

  operating level 28, 181

  process emphasis 48–49

  talent brokering 35, 43, 99, 166, 176

  Human Capital Institute 35

  I

  IBM 70

  Ibragimov, Sanjar 113

  IMD 84, 107

  Immelt, Jeff 10

  independent professionals 138–139

  India, tertiary education 11

  Ingham, Jon 75, 99

  innovation 92–93, 116–117

  INSEAD 49–50, 151–152

  Institute of Leadership and Management (ILM) 80–82, 83, 89, 93, 95–96, 108

  interaction work 10

  internal politics 88, 122

  International Association of

  Outsourcing Professionals 35

  international experience 69–70

  see also job rotation

  International Institute for Labour Studies 11

  internships 83, 134–135, 152–153

  interpersonal skills 9–10

  intrapreneurs 23, 128–132

  IPros 138–139

  IRS (online research firm) 156

  IT specialists 34

  Italy, retention of older workers 12

  J

  job advancement

  mentoring role 109

  rate of 83–89, 100

  unconscious bias 87

  job rotation 15, 103–104, 149–150

  see also international experience

  job vacancies 6

  Joerres, Jeffrey A. 3

  Joseph, Shalini 141–142

  Julius, Diane 148

  K

  Kauffman Foundation 135

  Khurana, Neeha 161

  knowledge-based skills 9, 34–35

  Korn/Ferry International 92–93

  L

  labour market 6

  labour turnover since 2008

  financial crisis 3

  Lake Research Partners 135

  Lambert, Sir Richard 146

  Lau, Simon 66

  Lawson, Emily

  career planning 91–92, 102

  culture and values 115, 137

  effectiveness of talent management strategies 19, 63–64

  employee value proposition (EVP) 68

  generation Y 77

  leadership traits 65, 68

  talent ecosystems 127, 137

  unconscious bias in selection and promotion 87–88

  leadership traits 64–65, 143–145

  Lecoq, Claire 84–85, 94

  Leighton, Patricia 138–139

  leveraging talent 50, 68–73

  Levine, Tim 129, 132–133, 137–138

  loyalty 94–95, 172

  M

  M&C Saatchi 122

  management consultancies 137–138

  ManpowerGroup 2–3, 5–6

  Mars 43, 49–50, 63, 69

  MBA qualifications 150–152

  MBA recruitment 49–50, 93–94

  McKinsey & Company

  career planning 102 />
  defining talent requirements 63–64, 65

  ecosystem (of talent) 137

  effectiveness of talent management strategies 19

  flexible working arrangements 105–106

  HR status and capability 28

  leadership traits 68

  war for talent 1, 163

  women in management 60, 85–86, 88, 95

  McKinsey Global Institute 10

  measurement of talent management effectiveness 31–33

  mentoring 108–109, 117, 148

  Merck 21

  middle-management 97–98

  migrant labour 7–8

  millennials see generation Y mobility, employee

  increasing trend 2

  within organisations 50, 68–73, 149–150

  overcoming lack of 31

  women 95

  motivation

  challenging work 89–93

  financial rewards 89, 91, 115–116

  freedom and autonomy 95–98, 128–129

  rapid job advancement 83–89, 100

  work–life balance 93–95

  N

  Naukri.com 115–116

  net generation see generation Y Network Rail 17–18

  networking 147–148

  Newton-Smith, Rain 88–89, 141, 146–147, 148, 154

  nine-box grid 14, 17, 18

  Nokia 46–47

  Nooyi, Indra

  CEO role 42–43, 118–119

  diversity 56–57

  generation Y 75–76, 78

  importance of talent management 1, 163

  PepsiCorps (secondment programme) 154

  women 75–76

  O

  Oberoi, Hitesh 116

  ODesk 34–35

  Olam International 37–40, 41, 51–52, 119–120, 176

  Olsen, Eric 41, 48

  online (labour) marketplaces 34–35

  opportunism 145–147

  organisation size

  promotion opportunities 88–89

  and talent management use 16

  organisational culture 112–115

  identifying 158

  importance of 170–171, 181

  Olam International 37

  outsourcing of knowledge-based activities 35

  Oxford Economics 6–8, 9

  P

  Pearman, Ian 67, 113–114, 147–148, 157–159

  Pearson 125, 131

  PepsiCo

  career planning 110, 150

  diversity 56–57

  organisational culture 118–119

  PepsiCorps (secondment programme) 154

  succession planning 42–43

  talent blocking 98

  talent management approach 176, 178

  performance management assessment 14, 17, 143

  data collection 36

  Google 143–145

  importance of 35–36

  spiky performance 65

  periphery workers 23, 128, 173

  Pew Research Center 12–13, 79, 81

  politics, internal 88, 122

  portfolio careers 173

  see also ecosystems (of talent)

  potential

  identification 14, 17, 20–21, 29

  measurement 17, 143–145

  nine-box grid 18

  Price, Mark 4

  PriceWaterhouseCoopers 69

  process-led approach 73–74, 164–167

  dangers 48–49

  need to consider the bigger picture 46–48

  Procter & Gamble 71–73

  project leadership opportunities 159–160

  promotion

  mentoring role 109

  rate of 83–89, 100

  unconscious bias 87

  psychological drive 159

  psychometric testing 5

  R

  Randstad 5, 44, 68, 103, 124

  recruitment 31, 33–34

  age discrimination 13

  psychometric testing 5

  talent management processes 48

  Relume 92

  remote working 34

  research focus 75–76

  retention

  older workers 12

  reasons for departures 97

  talent 23

  use of sabbaticals 156

  see also ecosystems (of talent)

  retirement, delayed 12–13, 54–55

  reverse innovation 10

  reverse mentoring 57–59

  reward packages 89, 91, 115–116

  risk taking 145–147, 160

  Robert Half International 83, 89, 93

  Roychowdhury, Sonali 73

  Russia, graduate employability 11

  S

  sabbaticals 155–157

  Sandford, Fiona 93, 96–97

  Santander UK 52–53, 106–107, 129–130, 134, 140

  Schramm, Carl 135–136

  Schwarzer, Sandra 49–50, 84, 94–95, 101–102, 151–152

  secondments 154–155

  selection decisions, bias in 87–88

  self-confidence 159

  senior management

  ambition to become 157

  diversity 61

  role with talent pipeline 15, 41–43, 161, 181

  sex discrimination 60

  shareholders’ concern with succession planning 15

  Shimada, Norika 159–160

  Shiseido 159–160

  silent generation 77

  Silva, Christine 109

  Sinetar, Marsha 128

  Singapore, overseas recruitment programme 2

  skill inflation 9–10

  skills

  requirements 8–10, 38, 62–65

  shortage reasons 4–8

  Smith, Aaron 136

  Smith, David 27, 49

  Smith, Phil 59–60

  Snow, Becky

  business strategy alignment with talent management 22

  developmental role of line managers 97

  HR role 43, 46, 50

  process-led warning 49–50

  talent management at Mars 63, 69

  social-media-based skills 9, 34

  specialist workers 16–17, 162, 175

  spiky performance 65

  spin-off enterprises 129

  see also business incubation schemes

  sponsorship 15, 109–110, 161

  Standard Chartered 66

  Stanford, Michael 107

  star employees 16

  start-up businesses 129–134

  strategic review 28–29

  succession planning 15, 30, 173

  PepsiCo 42–43

  Procter & Gamble 72

  see also career mapping

  Sudhakar, Budaraju 67, 116–117

  Sullivan, John 91

  support networks 147–148

  T

  talent

  definition 1, 16–17, 51

  see also talent profiles

  missed groups 22–23, 127

  psychological drive 159

  shortages 2–3

  options to address 31, 33–36, 53–54, 62

  reasons for 4–8, 163–164

  under-utilised 30–31

  talent exchanges 34–35

  talent management

  alignment with business plans 19, 63–64, 166–169, 180

  assumptions 20–23

  changing approaches 174–180

  confidence in 19, 25–27

  culture-led approaches 21–22, 115–117

  integration with corporate responsibility 119–122

  leadership endorsement 118–119

  transparency 122–126

  guiding principles 180–181

  organisation-wide policies and processes 36

  process-led approach 73–74, 164–167

  dangers 48–49

  need to consider the bigger picture 46–48

  responsibility and accountability 27, 32, 40–41, 180, 181

  specialists 16–17, 162, 175

  strategies 14–18

&nb
sp; devising 28–31

  measuring effectiveness 18–20, 31–33

  in times of rapid change 168–169

  tailored approaches 174–180

  traditional focus 17, 173–174

  talent mismatches 6–8

  talent pipelines 15, 35–36

  talent pools 16–18, 35

  global 168

  managing diverse pools 173–177, 179–180

  Olam International 38–39

  transparency problems 122–126

  widening 50, 51–62, 174–175

  talent profiles 16–17, 50, 62–68, 169–170, 180

  talent review 29–31, 102–103

  Tan, Tingwei 153

  Tarnowski, Lucian 78–79, 112–115

  Tata Chemicals 67, 116–117

  technology

  demand for advanced skills 11–12

  generation Y 79

  opportunities 165

  Telefónica Europe 133–134

  temporary workers 34–35

  tertiary education 10–11

  TMP Worldwide 113

  Tomorrow’s Company 62

  Torres, Roselinde 49, 64

  Towers Watson 9

  transaction work 10

  transparency 122–126

  trust 94–95, 147

  U

  UK (United Kingdom)

  age discrimination 13

  CIPD/Hays 2013 Resourcing and Talent Planning survey 3

  IPros 138

  recruitment processes 5

  skills shortages 7–8

  talent management approaches 15–16

  uncertainty 9, 66–67

  unemployment 6, 13, 164

  Unilever 25–26, 149–150, 161

  United States

  changing job types 10

  ethnic diversity 13

  generation Y 76

  graduate shortfall 11

  reasons for talent shortage 4–5

  retention of older workers 12

  skills shortages 2, 8

  women as breadwinners 105

  workforce demographics 12–13

  V

  values, cultural 112–115

  identifying 158

  importance of 170–171, 181

  Olam International 37

  Verghese, Sunny George 41, 119–120

  vetting (of candidates) 5

  W

  wage pressure 4, 6

  Ward, Heather 66

  Wayra Academy 133–134

  Welch, Jack 86

  Wells Fargo 54–56

  Wilderotter, Maggie 88

  Willner, Robin 70

  women

  career opportunities 102

  pioneering spirit 92–93

  promotion 85–89

  representation in management roles 86

  research focus 75–76

  retention 91–92

  sponsorship 109–110

  work–life balance 95

  see also flexible working arrangements

  work–life balance 93–95

  workforce, demographic trends 11–13, 53–56, 164

  World Economic Forum (WEF)

  research and reports 2, 11, 12, 54

  Young Global Leaders 83, 146

  Y

  Yahoo! Hotjobs 83, 89, 93

  Young Invincibles 135–136

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