ECI® Blog

Do you ever wish you had more hours in the day?

August 8th, 2011 by The ECI Team

Last week, I was catching up with a former colleague who works in a thinly-stretched Human Resources department.  She was telling me that her days are scattered with questions like “We need this candidate, report, etc., ASAP!”, or “I can’t stand working with John, can we fire him?”, and of course, “I have a question about this line on my paycheck…”.  While she has strategic goals and projects on her plate, such as developing Competencies, she has trouble finding time to work on them because of the day-to-day interruptions.  My former colleague wants to be an HR “superhero”, but ends up needing to push off her strategic work until she has “more time”.  Unfortunately for her, and most HR people that I speak with, there is never more time.

Reflecting on her work, she shared her ideas of how she could have pushed the organization forward in the past year.  She could have saved the organization both time and money through selection and development projects that she already knows her company needs.  However, before she could get to more strategic changes, she would get bogged down in day-to-day competing priorities, such as corporate objectives, regional objectives, and HR questions.

We’ve all had the experience that as one crisis or project is coming to a close, there’s always a couple more cropping up.  As a result, the good ideas, the long-term project, or the employees’ developmental needs sometimes get pushed to the back burner, or are jammed into a one-day meeting.  My friend loves working at an agile and hard-driving company, but she confided that she rarely has the ability to sit down and focus on projects due to her workload.  As with most of us, she has to do more than ever but with less support, and is already working 10+ hour days and on her Blackberry after work.

How do you balance your workload?  One of the things that ECI specializes in is doing the “heavy lifting” on Talent Management projects and initiatives.  By developing flexible/custom Talent Management tools and systems, we allow our clients to manage their day-to-day responsibilities, while we work on projects in the background.  This allows for a best-of-both-worlds scenario, where our clients can make an impact with new Talent Management strategies, while still managing the everyday priorities.

Don’t Underestimate the Impact of Organizational Culture

July 25th, 2011 by The ECI Team

Rupert Murdoch recently claimed that he should not be held accountable for the actions of some of his employees. This stems from allegations that one of his organizations was responsible for practicing unethical behaviors. As a well respected and highly competitive businessman, some have said that the organizational culture that he created promoted unethical behaviors. Research has shown that leaders play an integral role in the development of organizational culture. As such, the role of organizational culture cannot be underestimated in the workplace.

Organizational culture can be defined as the shared beliefs, values, perceptions and expectations of individuals within an organization. For example, the manner of communication, normative behaviors and policies are just a few aspects of organizational culture. More important than the definition, however, are the outcomes of culture. Organizational culture has been linked to financial performance, employee satisfaction and customer satisfaction. Furthermore, culture is associated with innovation, creativity and has been strongly tied to organizational behavior.

One of the many examples of success stemming from a highly innovative organizational culture is Southwest Airlines. Over the past few decades, they have been able to remain profitable in a competitive industry primarily due to their emphasis on developing their organizational culture.

Therefore, it is critical that management periodically examine the consequences of the culture that is being infused into the organization. Bear in mind that this does not mean a measurement of the organizational culture must be taken, but rather an active fostering of development and ensures it matches the overall values and mission of the organization.

Also to note, there is no “right” or “wrong” culture. Rather, the industry, organizational climate and desired outcomes can shape the culture.  When the culture is aligned with organizational values, this sets a firm and proper foundation on which success can be built. Organizational culture can be portrayed in many different ways. What are some of the ways organizational culture is demonstrated in your company?

What is the only company asset, that doesn’t depreciate?

July 15th, 2011 by The ECI Team

Your high-performing people!  Hiring low performers impacts the whole organization, whether it’s a manager or a high performer’s time fixing mistakes, constant hand-holding to grasp the role and responsibilities, or something as drastic as losing customers through a botched job.

If you have low performers in need of development, the ECI Behavioral Insight® can provide targeted areas of development against traits that are linked to success in that role.   ECI can also help teams perform better together by understanding each other’s style.  Further, we can help you ensure that employees are maximizing their potential through individual and team development, 360° feedback tools and/or custom Competency Assessment centers.  Moreover, as your company grows or as marketplaces change, job descriptions and core competencies can shift, leaving employees without a clear direction and vision to work towards.  ECI has the experience and ability to help your organization by developing updated core competencies and job descriptions which align to the organization’s new goals and culture.   After all, ensuring your employees understand their roles and how to grow within your company helps protect your most important asset from turnover, poor job fit, burnout, and low performance!

ECI's Foundation Study v. Google's Project Oxygen to Identify High Performers

March 16th, 2011 by The ECI Team

One of our associates passed along this New York Times article about Google’s Project Oxygen to me earlier this week.  Google wanted to identify the factors associated with high performing managers.   Being the experts they are with data analysis, they sliced and diced all of their performance review ratings and other anecdotal information to identify the behaviors that are unique to their best managers. They were surprised to find that technical skills are not what enables good managers to make the list.

I liked this article because it more or less confirms what we have been doing in our research for the past 15 years.  Our business, ECI, founded in 1996, is built upon the identification of high performance behaviors in a variety of environments and roles using statistical analysis of performance metrics. Like Google, we have found that this type of data analysis yields a valid and reliable formulation of the root cause for success.

But since we have been focusing all of our attention on identifying high performance behaviors within organizations, here are our best practices that Google’s analysts might want to consider on the next round of Oxygen studies:

  1. It is not sufficient to screen for key words in performance reviews and anecdotal information. While that practice might put you in the ballpark, it won’t get you to your seat. There is too much variance and inconsistency in prose type performance reviews. If you really study a block of performance reviews, you find that most managers are not appropriately trained in giving objective, actionable feedback, nor are they consistently assigning ratings to performers.  This inconsistency of ratings across the review process skews the data.
  2. Use force rank against a Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale to identify quartiles of performance for your overall population.  The overall ratings assigned in the standard performance review process cannot be relied upon to indicate who is the better manager. In our studies, we find that in 60% of companies, ratings are assigned for some other purpose than to evaluate actual performance levels. These include attempting to norm a population to a bell curve for compensation purposes, feeling that someone deserves a raise and having to justify this with the performance rating, and favoritism by the manager for the most politically savvy performers on the team.
  3. Use multiple measures to confirm or overturn the presence of key high performance behaviors.  ECI’s rule is that if you identify a factor in one segment of the study, you must verify its presence in another segment in order to consider it applicable to the model.
  4. Use valid and reliable metrics, such as indices, personality assessments, and other proven tools to identify core performance behaviors and behavioral preferences. If you incorporate a couple valid and reliable metrics in the study process, you can statistically compare the findings from these more rigorous tools to the less objective sources of data in your study to know with good certainty that you have proven a relationship to the high performance behaviors/factors you identify.
  5. Make sure you include results from job analysis within your study process.  By observing the work in context, using a standardized interview form designed to assess the work environment, and identifying differentiating performance factors using this process, the criteria you establish should  pass the muster of the EEOC, if you decide to use this model for selection or promotional purposes.
  6. Use professional statistical tools, such as SPSS, to confirm the validity around your model. When you put people into a room and say “does this look right to you?” or “how would you modify this finding?”, the only thing you are verifying is face validity. That is insufficient, in my estimation, to devise a management development program or another talent management process. You need the numbers to prove your model. Hopefully, the standard you achieve is at least a correlation significance of .70 against the ratings you used to identify your high performing population.
  7. Don’t forget to look at the entire population, not just the high performing group. If you only study the top performers, you don’t know if the factor you identified is present for everyone in the group or only high performers possess it. In our studies, for example, we find that all sales people within a large sales force have good self-confidence, can withstand rejection and are motivated to persuade others. While these factors are critical to selling success, the only thing we can say with certainty is that the original screening process used to hire the sales force is doing a good job of identifying these factors. These are the rudimentary factors associated with all successful sales forces; they are essential, but they do not help us to identify the additional factors needed for success in a specific company culture, marketplace or customer group. The unique factors are those that drive exceptional results, lower turnover, and higher job satisfaction.

Google did recognize that generalized industry principles and recommendations are not good enough to really drive their organization’s unique high performing manager behaviors. I commend them for that perspective. I would love to take a look at their data and make a couple of recommendations on how they might enhance the validity and reliability of their study process, however. That would surely be a wonderful conversation.

The Stay Survey

December 10th, 2010 by The ECI Team

I just saw a great presentation the other day on how to increase employee engagement and productivity.  One points that I took away from this presentation was the idea of a “Stay Interview”.  Most companies have an exit interview process that tries to understand why an employee is leaving the company.  I know many companies take the time to conduct these interviews, but I’m not sure how many organization actually use this information.

 

The premise of a “Stay interview”  is interesting, because it could help an organization to understand why people stay with their company.  This information could be used in many ways.  First, it could be used as a recruiting tool, to attract top talent, by telling them what current employees say about the role and/or company.  Next, it could be used to see which benefits your employees love and which ones aren’t as useful.  Finally, the information can be used to improve efficiency with in the position, by asking employees for their ideas to increase productivity.

 

Any way you look at the “Stay Interview” it makes sense for a business to try it.  It could have a dramatic effect on an organization, while being cost-effective and easy to use.  Here at ECI, we could actually take the “Stay interview” and put it into a survey  that employees take electronically.  Then we could use performance data to compare the responses of Top Performer against other performance groups to see what your best employee’s really value and how that compares to the others.

 

If you would like to learn more about ECI’s survey options please contact us!

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Employer Consultancy, Inc. is an Organizational Development consulting firm whose corporate mission is to help companies to do a successful pre employement assessment, and manage and develop top performers. They accomplish this by providing their customers with practical, customizable tools and systems, such their competency management systems, that promote higher levels of performance, productivity and profitability.