Entering
a New Era of Talent
August
2008
I was
recently reminded of a Tom Peters video that was hot when I first
met him. It was provocatively titled Recession as Opportunity:
Smart Moves in Tough Times and catalogued six recession-beating
strategies for the early 1990s. Invest in service and quality improvement
was the main, and counterintuitive, advice from Tom for those troubled
times. Sadly, by my observation, few people took it, and we entered
a management dark age of right-sizing and business process re-engineering.
But
the times did move on, and we have entered the much-heralded era
of the knowledge worker, intellectually at least. We have accepted
that the best way to beat our competition is by winning the war
for talent, and we know that it is increasingly becoming a Brand
You world. We enjoy the services of the best-educated management
cadre that ever walked the earth. So, we are on course for a successful
business future. Right?
I bet
most of us would have answered "yes" until the earliest
rumblings of the coming credit crunch began to be heard last summer.
To pick out three particularly worrying announcements from recent
news, U.S. unemployment suddenly jumped 0.5% to 5.5% in May and
Ford Motor and UK insurance giant Norwich Union announced a round
of savage white collar job cuts. The context is getting tougher
for all of us, and our expensive Western workers are again paying
for our complacency with their jobs.
I remain
convinced that management thinking on the era of talent is sound.
Application and execution are quite another matter! Sure, there
is much more flexibility in terms and conditions of employment out
there: more people are working as freelancers, more people are taking
gap years and career breaks, more people are sharing jobs and working
flexible hours, hardly anyone goes to work "suited and booted"
these days, etc.
I can
also see that there is a lot of self-publicity going on, on networking
websites like Facebook and LinkedIn, and in the myriad blogs burgeoning
on the Web. People seem to love advertising a tailored version of
themselves to the world, and they are keen to post their opinions
on just about anything for widespread scrutiny and comment.
People
have eagerly grasped the personal and lifestyle opportunities of
the talent era, but I don't often see that same enthusiasm for the
other side of the coin, the task of staying in shape, in terms of
competency and capability, for ever more demanding requirements
at work. Too often, under-performance in this respect is blamed
on someone else's failure, be it a poor line manager, the human
resources department (heaven forbid), or the company at large. The
required degree of personal commitment to stay on top in the talent
era is all too often missing. That's my current experience, anyway.
So,
is there anything that's good about this current economic downturn?
Well, experience teaches us that facing up to a crisis is one of
the few things that will jolt us human beings into overcoming our
strong preference for doing what is comfortable and familiar, even
if we know it is not good for us!
Maybe
in these current tough times we'll see more people making smart
moves of their own. Maybe we'll start to see a shift in mindset
and a marked increase in the responsibility people take for their
own personal performance and development. That step-change in engagement
at work would herald a new era of talent, in the true meaning of
the term.
Richard
King
Managing Partner, Tom Peters Company!
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