Human Resources - Summer 2020 (Vol 25: No 4) - Diversity and Inclusion

Page 4

FROM THE HRNZ CHIEF EXECUTIVE

Top of mind... Nick McKissack is Chief Executive of HRNZ. Nick is passionate about people development and sharing the success of members and organisations leading the HR profession in New Zealand.

I

’m embarrassed to admit that I once employed an HR manager who actually didn’t possess some of the basic HR capability that you would expect in any HR generalist. I witnessed errors such as introducing bespoke and ambiguous terms and conditions into employment offers, failing to protect employee information and inaccurate advice to managers on employee relations problems. The costs of mistakes in essential HR practice can be significant. Unravelling variations to people’s employment terms, working with people mismatched to a position and dealing with personal grievances arising from unmet expectations all have a people and financial cost.

had achieved Chartered Membership of HRNZ. To get Chartered with HRNZ, you have to tick all the boxes of fundamental HR capability. If you’re the recruiting manager for an HR role, HRNZ is basically doing half the job for you – collecting the evidence, doing the interview and checking the referees. What’s more, to stay Chartered, you have to complete the ongoing professional development that ensures you keep your knowledge up to date. Of course, Chartered Members aren’t just capable of doing the basics, they’ll have shown a high level of competency over a range of areas and committed to a code of practice for HR professionals.

I had no one to blame but myself. On paper, this person had plenty of generalist HR experience, and I’d assumed they had dealt with all the basic HR policies and practices. But there it is, the curse of assumption. When I thought about this afterwards, I wondered what sort of process I should have followed to avoid those costly mistakes. Clearly, I needed a much deeper dive into that CV during the initial interviewing process to unpick that technical HR capability suggested by the various roles the person had held – to be fair to myself, I did use a recruitment agency for this appointment!

It’s been heartening to see an increasing number of members get involved in the Chartered Membership accreditation process. As the number of Chartered Members continues to rise, we’ll start to see employers include this in the requirements for serious HR roles in New Zealand.

In truth, if I had my time over again, I would simply ask for someone who

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HUMAN RESOURCES

SUMMER 2020

The HRNZ professional development framework is broader than just our Chartered Member accreditation. HRNZ’s framework includes a code of practice for HR professionals, a competency framework, professional accreditation, a process for managing continuing professional development and our eLearning platform. We’ve also recently

created a self-assessment tool so members can assess their capability in relation to the HRNZ framework and decide what they need to do to get accredited at either Emerging Professional or Chartered level. The framework lets our members manage their professional development right through their HR career. The investment our members are making in getting Chartered right now will put them in good stead in any future recruiting situations they might face. I only wish the HRNZ Chartered Membership process had been in place 10 years ago.

Nick McKissack Chief Executive HRNZ nick.mckissack@hrnz.org.nz


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Articles inside

Purple shirt takes the guesswork out of design recruitment

1min
page 48

Am I Managing? Upholding the paradox

2min
page 46

Research Update: What skills and knowledge do our HR professionals of the future need?

4min
pages 44-45

Wellbeing: Migrant workers within the hotel industry and some simple suggestions to help their wellbeing

5min
pages 42-43

PD Spotlight: Thinking is the ultimate human resource

5min
pages 40-41

Diversity & Inclusion: The forgotten twenty per cent

9min
pages 36-39

Regional Roundup: Auckland

2min
page 35

Leadership: Want better output?

3min
page 34

Insights: What's the difference that makes the difference?

6min
pages 32-33

Immigration Law Update: Employers of migrant workers – buckle in for a ride!

4min
pages 30-31

Transforming diversity and inclusion through technology

4min
pages 28-29

Community Profile: The Cookie Project

2min
page 26

L&D: Enabling or unhelpful: What can we learn?

5min
pages 24-25

Employment Law: The role of positive discrimination in achieving equality

5min
pages 22-23

HR Chats with Te Radar - must watch podcasts

9min
pages 18-21

Workplace Inclusion: the COVID-19 impact

9min
pages 14-17

HRNZ Member Profile: Sussan Ockwell

3min
page 13

Recruitment: What is your recruitment strategy in a skills shortage with closed borders?

2min
page 12

Diversity & Inclusion: Sense of Belonging

9min
pages 8-11

News Roundup

3min
pages 6-7

From the editor

1min
page 5

Top of Mind

2min
page 4
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