SERIES: Part One of a
Two-Part Article
Should you invest in
developing the skill set of your human capital and have it
potentially leave you or not provide it with continual skill development and
have it remain?
As a tactical leader,
the answer is simple. Continually developing “Exportable Performance Players”
for your organization is the ingredient that spells success and profitability.
No matter which business one is in today, the continual need to refine and
fine-tune individuals’ core competency skill sets is a minimal must to be
relevant tomorrow.
Recognize the value of an individual to your business as an asset, much like
leading- edge technology, equipment, facilities and market share. People are
today’s most valuable asset.
Every player within your organizational diagram (whether identified from a
global perspective or within individual strategic business units, lines,
divisions, departments, areas, etc.) must be seen as an asset. They should be
viewed as having unique skill sets that may have specific application to what
they do, and these skill sets must also be observed for exportable application.
A tactical leader continually asks whether he or she has created an atmosphere
that is conducive for individuals to welcome, embrace and seek out ongoing
skill development (technical, non-technical, degreed or non-degreed,
certification or non-certification) that would then be exportable with them
should they need to make a career transition. Consider:
1.
Can an individual with
his or her present skill set make a horizontal move within your organization
and bring immediate value to their new team?
2.
Can an individual make
a vertical move within your organization and shepherd others to greatness with
his or her always relevant skill set?
How exportable are you
and those that you lead based upon unique skill sets, experience and
performance platforms?
As a tactical leader, you may need to work with other stakeholders within your
organization to create an atmosphere in which everyone becomes fanatical about
on-going and continuous skill set development. Consider whether your
organization has developed peak performers with exportable skills:
1.
Has the executive team
willingly embraces skill development initiatives and has defined career
development pathways for everyone?
2.
Has the rhetoric of
all influencers (management, unions, senior employees and new hires) moved from
excuses and nay-saying to outright endorsement and instances whereby everyone
welcomes and actively participates in on-going training?
3.
Has the union
leadership enthusiastically embraced any training opportunity to make any
member/employee more valuable (and thus, exportable) to his or her
functionality?
4.
Is the overall attitude
of employees to welcome and hold one another accountable to the use of new
skills for continually increased efficiencies in everything that is undertaken
within an organization?
A few years ago, a
study by the American Society for Training and Development revealed that the
amount of time organizations in America invested into training initiatives for
their human capital was less than two percent of the annual employee work time
each year. A true test for today’s tactical leader is to correctly and continually
provide the sequential skill improvement and enhancement necessary for each
individual to do two critical things:
1.
Become the very best
they can be (present tense and future) at the task for which an organization
has employed them.
2.
Attain their personal
goals, whether within your organization or onward toward another place in life.
Knowing whether or not
employees have truly relevant exportable skills can be answered by this
question: “If an employee on your present team were to leave you and go to
another business unit within your organization or to a new employer, and you
were that person now to consider hiring them, would that employee bring with
them truly cutting edge skills that could be immediately drawn upon to elevate
the level of performance of the new environment?”
A player performing at peak levels of effectiveness is a sign that a great
leader has invested daily, tactically and wisely into an individual. A player
that can take those skills and move onward, upward or outward and continue his
or her reign of success is an even greater testament of great leadership.
Who have you invested in?