March 2022 HR Professionals Magazine

Page 10

Businesses must evolve in these challenging times, and HR—the profession and the people—is where innovation MUST happen. THE HUMAN IN HUMAN RESOURCES A crisis is a pressure test of imagination. Some companies go into the bunker, planning to simply weather difficult times by protecting the status quo—play it safe, keep your head down. And then there are the visionaries, the leaders and organizations that look at the challenges emerging from a crisis as an opportunity to innovate. Big problems require outsized thinking and nimble responses, which can lead to extraordinary outcomes. CEOs have to understand these reactions, have to listen, be aware, be focused on what they can do. Can they be more accessible in a crisis? Can they communicate more effectively? There are things you can control. What you can do is assure your workers that you are doing everything possible to provide stability amid the uncertainty.

do that: provide a platform where people can share ideas; be willing to hear the hard truths while pressure-testing those ideas, and willing to go through the process and return with a refined idea – that’s living ideation. Achieving the desired degree of challenge and innovation in your corporate culture starts with a process of self-reflection. Pressure-test yourself. What have I done to implement this culture? You have to look inside for answers.

REINVENTING, NOT RETREATING

THE HUMAN CORE OF INNOVATION

Innovation is everywhere, even in places that might seem too big or too old to change. If you look at IBM, an iconic legacy brand headquartered in the town of Armonk, New York, not Silicon Valley, you’ll see how they evolved from a hardware business into a service-industry goliath.

You might not think of innovation as something that happens regularly in HR. But it does, and it should. Working with the C-suite and leadership, there are three areas where HR can innovate and test those innovations: the work, the worker, and the workplace. We define a worker, whether it’s a gig worker or a fifty-year employee. This is where the muscle behind innovation lives—people.

Innovation is not only necessary to emerge from a crisis, but also the investment in ideas is critical in confronting one. Amid IBM’s transition, it was still all about people. And it was all about the profession. There was no other way for IBM to innovate, to evolve and ultimately survive, except through people and a leader who had been part of its “Think” culture and carried that model into a bright future.

But there is a price to pay if your People Managers are miscast and out of sync with your culture of innovation. The cost of turnover? About $223 billion over a five-year period, according to SHRM’s research. Core values innovators have in common include: • Curiosity and a natural ability to question the status quo • Risk-taking and a willingness to learn from failure • Openness—organizations with strong silos tend to be less innovative. • Patience, tenacity, and the sense of giving an idea a chance to grow. • Trust, underpinning the other values. CREATING A CHALLENGE CULTURE You have to create the environment for innovation. In my estimation, there are really three things that illustrate what it means to 10

www.HRProfessionalsMagazine.com

LEADERSHIP LESSON HR is often viewed as a cost center with limited business acumen. Whether we have called for automating HR functions or putting them in areas overseen by others, HR continues to sit as an untapped human engine for the organization. Specifically, we have seen during recent reset moments that HR is the true home of innovation within the modern organization. This is because HR leaders now have the responsibility to offer the kind of employee experience that attracts and retains top talent. More still, HR is now the driver of the innovative employee experience, with customized levels of employment and a broad array of potential work settings. Your CHRO has become the primary cog in maximizing operational efficiency and driving talent acquisition for new business lines. This has never been the case until today. For this reason, you as a leader should engage HR with ingenuity and innovation as the primary objective. Businesses must evolve in these challenging times, and HR— the profession and the people— is where innovation MUST happen. Here are some key questions to consider making part of your reset repertoire: • Do I actually care about new ideas?

SAME IDEAS, DIFFERENT PACKAGES

• Do the new ideas have to be mine?

What’s your first move to make innovation a priority? It all starts with everyone buying into the greater vision and establishing the right culture. If people don’t feel like innovation would be well received, they’ll play it safe. If your compensation plan doesn’t reward people who take risks—even new ideas that don’t work out—then guess what? You’re just treading in the same-old, same-old waters.

• Do I see connectivity where others don’t?

The most forward-thinking CEOs and the most effective CHROs: they’re the ones who, at a time of crisis, will look at the challenge in front of them and the competition around them, and approach the problem from a different angle. Leaders must reflect on their own ideas surrounding innovation. It’s just helpful to stop every once in a while and ask yourself whether you’re fully engaged in what innovation means.

• Do I have the right people for innovation? Why do I keep getting the same talent ideas in a different package? • Do I hire tinkerers? • Where does innovation really live in my organization? • What does innovation contribute to our reset moments and vice versa? • Do I have the right CHRO for unlocking innovation potential? Adapted from Chapter 2 of Reset: A Leader’s Guide to Work in an Age of Upheaval (PublicAffairs), by Johnny C. Taylor, Jr., President and CEO of the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Priceless Background Screening Advice . . . Straight from the Experts

5min
pages 45-46

As Staffing Shortages Continue, Retention of Frontline Workers is Vital

4min
page 40

Is Your Workplace Safe and Healthy Enough to Retain and Attract New Talent?

7min
pages 42-43

White Paper: Employee Communications Best Practices

2min
page 41

Meeting Training Objectives in the New World Order of 2022

5min
pages 38-39

University of Illinois School of Labor & Employment Relations

1min
page 34

Who Has Your Employee Data?

5min
page 22

Rainey Kizer Littler

2min
page 33

Bass Berry & Sims

4min
page 32

Kentucky Class and Collective Action Update

5min
page 26

President Biden’s EEOC Steps Up Lawsuits

5min
page 36

2022 New Compliance Considerations Keep Popping Up

5min
page 24

Hybrid Working Models: What is Right for Your Business?

5min
pages 20-21

SHRM Workplace Policy

0
page 7

The Gold Standard for Professional Development

0
page 17

March note from the editor

1min
page 4

Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Law and Practice Handbook

1min
page 16

Book Look: Cultivating Culture: 101 Ways to Foster Engagement in 15 Minutes or Less by Brad Federman

4min
pages 14-15

March Excerpt from SHRM CEO Johnny C. Taylor, Jr.’s New Book, RESET

4min
page 10

Best Practices for Proactively Managing Workplace Issues and Minimizing the Risk of Employment-Related Litigation

7min
pages 18-19

A Better Future Build on Value-Based Leadership

3min
page 8
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.