ECI® Blog

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!

Delayed Gratification

July 6th, 2011 by The ECI Team

In training for a Marathon, I have finally come to realize that there is no easy way to succeed.  We often have companies come to us looking for a “magic bullet” or “consulting voodoo” that will help instantly solve all of their talent management issues.  These issues are often caused by the company’s need for instant gratification.  For example, an organization will fly through the hiring process, and then expect a new hire to start performing right away, with minimal training or coaching. There seems to be more pressure than ever to drive results.  Even as the economy is recovering, it seems that people cannot achieve success quickly enough.   Sometimes, we see these quick fixes causing problems for the organization instead of long-term success.

On a personal note, I have attempted training for a marathon several times over the past few years.  I tried to take any short-cuts I could find.  I would scour the internet looking for the latest and greatest training supplements, exercises and routines.  Time and again I would try various training guides and exercises, only to injure myself and not be able to participate in the race.  However, this year, I have taken the long-term approach and found a training program that fits my needs and have had great results.  While my marathon is still two months away, I am right on track with my training.  And no injuries yet!

This training process has really taught me to take my time and put in the work on the front-end to achieve my goal.  The same principle applies in the business world.  Unfortunately, there is not a quick fix that can help you solve your people issues.  Every organization has people issues and some have more than others.  We have found you can add tools to help manage and develop employees, while establishing clear organization objectives and goals to minimize the negative impact to the business.

Companies can achieve outstanding results and increase employee productivity by taking the long-term approach. In fact, some of the most recognizable and trusted organizations in the world follow that future-focused thought process.  We have found that we can help our clients succeed by providing them with the tools and solutions that they need.  From there, they need to do the work, be consistent, and follow the process that leads to success.  If they try to push things too hard or veer off course, we can be there, like a good coach, to help them get back on track.  If you feel pressure pushing you to take short-cuts to get to your end goal, just remember the childhood parable of the Tortoise and the Hare – slow and steady wins the race!

What are some of the best success stories that you have heard?  How do you stay focused on long-term results while following a plan?

Targeted Talent Management Systems: An Investment or an Expense?

April 5th, 2011 by The ECI Team

Yes, there is a cost involved in hiring experts to create a targeted talent management strategy that is brought to life by tools and systems that focus on the critical skills and behaviors necessary for success.  It is interesting to me, how some people view certain spending as an expense whereas others will view it as an investment.

I would say that creating an organization specific talent management system is an investment, but I am biased because I have seen the value that it provides.   I would say that it costs more to not know if you have the right talent management process in place.  This rings true now more than ever.  Most companies are trying to achieve the same, or even greater results, with fewer people.  If you are trying to get more out of less, you better have the “right” people on board or it will never work.

That is why it is worth the investment to discover what skills and behaviors are necessary for success in your organization.  While others might try to “wing it” and end up replacing people that aren’t the right “fit”, you can significantly increase business results by having the “right” people.  On average, studies show that a new hire who doesn’t work out will cost you at least $60,000.  That doesn’t even take into account the possible business that you might have lost due to having the wrong person in the role.

At the end of the day, every company has to decide whether they want to invest in a targeted talent management system or whether they feel that it costs too much.  I would choose to invest, because it leads to greater business results and organizational efficiency.  Having a targeted talent management system is like having a great GPS system to hire and develop the best people.  With it, you can find exactly what you are looking for… without it, you may or may not find the “right” person.

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.

Are Pharmaceutical Reps Exempt or Non-Exempt?

March 2nd, 2011 by The ECI Team

A recent article in the news described the court case at Novartis where sales representatives were pressing for overtime, given the structure of their accountabilities.  This has been a topic we have reviewed a number of times for our clients and which rarely lands on the same recommendation.  Pharma companies generally pay on business results – marketshare,  marketshare change and sometimes number of scripts.  The job itself of the sales rep historically has been one of narrowly defined accountabilities, which are often assessed by reach and frequency metrics.

In those cases, the department of labor and the courts have an easy time classifying a role as non-exempt in status.  The rep is required to make an average 7 – 9 customer visits per day, to deliver two or more key product messages when the opportunity arises to speak with a physician or other professional, and then must ensure that sufficient samples are available for the prescriber to dole out product, based on patient needs.  Because of the heavy focus on measured tasking (even though it is difficult to directly link the use of the product to the message delivered by the rep), the job assessor tends to say that very little is left to the rep’s own choice and that the job is pretty clearly defined in the various systems used to monitor performance.  When the job is clearly defined and leaves little to the choice of the performer, then it is classified as a non-exempt position.  There are a lot more standards that are applied to make this classification, but at the end of the day, freedom of choice on what is done and levels of decision making are at the root of the classification.

Enter the legal department at the pharma company.  In the last couple of years, there has been a strong push in job descriptions to place language around independently developing strategy, establishing priorities for the territory in terms of selling activities, and establishing one’s own daily schedule.  Using the word professional to elevate the role of rep to business “owner”  who is accountable to develop key contacts and manage a broad range of relationships has been an attempt to elevate the expectations of the role.  Somehow, these added wordings don’t quite do enough to elevate the role to the exempt level, however.  The accountabilities are still the same – see the docs, deliver the message, influence drug of choice, and leverage the relationship to access other medical providers.

What is interesting to me is the fact that with the rapidly changing landscape of the healthcare environment, the addition of so much more complexity in healthcare providers, formulary positioning, specialty pharmacies, large IDNs, care provider networks and institutions has made the job of sales rep much more difficult.  Reps have to know the clinical and treatment aspects of their products better than most physicians.  They need to understand how to help the doctor use the product with patients whose access to the drug is limited by their medical coverage or geographic location and care networks.   I doubt that the old reach and frequency model would even work effectively today in many of these situations, outside of some less sophisticated marketplaces that are not as heavily impacted by managed care practices.

A new customer development model that has emerged requires the representative to assess all of the local conditions and to devise a strategy that best addresses these conditions, while aligning to company goals, the compliance and regulatory environment, and physician preferences.  This hardly looks like a non-exempt position when you increase the complexity of the work to this level and note the amount of variation in responsibilities and approach that will is needed to perform the role properly.  Given the amount of technical clinical knowledge needed, the in-depth strategy setting and innovation required to succeed and then the amount of collaboration and networking expected, measuring success is not a simple matter of measuring number of calls, delivering the approved marketing messages, and devising the most efficiency call route.

In recent visits to the field with our client’s reps, we have seen reps changing the treatment preferences of surgeons, helping to gain approval for treatment for non-formulary drugs by establishing pre-approval systems in physician offices, and a much higher presence of medical science liaisons providing targeted messaging to pave the way for treatment protocols into the future.  The level of work being done today, which is surely indicative of the future requirements of the position, is more consultative than it is selling work.  The further the role moves in the direction of consulting, where expertise and counsel are the primary services or products provided to customers, the more difficult it will be to classify rep jobs as non-exempt.

Interesting that this case was settled in the current marketplace in the manner that it was.  Pharma companies are going to need to redefine the rep’s accountabilities, given all the complexity their people are facing today, and to reposition the rep’s defined efforts from purveyors of product to business consultants.   And those reach and frequency models will need to fall by the wayside, too, since they really do not apply to what most high level sales reps are doing today.

I believe this is an indicator of more change coming in the pharmaceutical industry. We will be seeing different sales models, new ways of getting information out to the medical community, and providing value added processes to help offices gain access to treatments for patients.

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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.