management development: easy as abc
By
Steve Murphy
Senior Consultant
An organization’s ability to learn, and translate that learning into
action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage.”
“The team with the best players wins.”
Jack Welch
Jack
Welch is regarded as one of the best business leaders of our
generation. His obsession with shareholder value drove General
Electric to increase productivity and efficiency, which resulted in
a 3000%-plus increase in market value during his tenure. However,
during the Welch years, GE was known as much for producing corporate
leaders as it was for producing light bulbs. While most of us will
never run an organization as big as GE, many of the day-to-day
challenges are the same. Management development is one of those
challenges.
A Google search
on “management development strategies” returns about 42 million
hits. Go into any major book retailer and there will be lots of
books dedicated to the topic. Walk into virtually any company today
and you will most likely find that the senior managers are familiar
with the latest management practices, read the latest “must read”
management books, and have adopted the latest management strategies.
Yet, effective management development is still the Holy Grail for
many. Why?
Since it
appears that the success/failure conundrum is not due to a lack of
information on management development, one can extrapolate that
execution is the critical success factor. Execution is directly
related to talent. Ergo, it can be argued that talent is the key
differentiator.
Companies that
find, hire, and promote only the most talented people available
while removing chronic under-performers typically win. Successful
organizations go so far as to make talent selection/management
development a top corporate priority.
Many corporate
initiatives fail because decision-making responsibilities are given
to under-skilled or under-talented managers and they end up making
bad decisions. Conversely, the most competent managers are able to
drive improvements in productivity, innovation, quality, customer
service, and so forth.
Now let me
state that talent is not the only success driver, but it is an
essential one. The biggest mistake senior managers can make is
trying to “manage their way” to success with low performers on the
team. They must constantly work to upgrade the team with high
performers. I bet Jack Welch would argue that it is the primary
deliverable for senior managers.
An analysis of
GE’s development approach, as well as that of some of Nolan’s most
successful clients, reveals some common practices in the area of
talent development. These practices can be summarized in the
following five steps:
-
Force-rank the managers
(and employees) based on objective criteria. The top 10% are the
A players, the next 25% the B players, and the rest (65%) the C
players. The objective is to proactively identify A players and
retain them.
-
Use stringent selection methods
to minimize hiring mistakes. Detailed job descriptions, job
analysis, and comprehensive chronological interviews are
critical components of an effective assessment process.
-
Improve the existing talent pool
by providing employees with detailed, individualized development
plans.
-
Redeploy C players
into roles better suited to their skill set. In many cases, this
will allow the low performers to excel and become A and B
players.
-
Require subordinate managers
to adopt the development approach.
It is important to
note that this approach starts at the top and permeates the entire
organization. It is also not a once-a-year exercise. In order to
maximize the value of the approach, it must be an ongoing, dynamic
management activity.