How to Keep Your Best Executives

0 followers
0 Likes

From the Wall Street Journal | Oct 26, 2009


The key: Make it easier for them to leave








By ELIZABETH CRAIG, JOHN R. KIMBERLY AND PETER CHEESE


Determined
to retain your most talented executives? Well, here's some
counterintuitive advice: The best way to keep them from leaving is to
prepare them to do just that.


The Journal Report


See the complete
Business Insight
report.


In
tough economic times like these, retention becomes less of a priority
for many companies as they focus on more-immediate business concerns.
But companies that neglect this issue during a downturn may be in for a
nasty surprise just as things start looking up: Historically, there is
a significant increase in the number of executives leaving their
companies as market conditions improve and more job opportunities open
up.


 



That's
why it's crucial that companies get serious about retention now. And
that means giving executives opportunities to take on greater
responsibility, broaden their skills and cultivate a network of
relationships with their peers. These are the things that executives we
have surveyed consistently say they want most from their jobs.


Of course, executives want these opportunities largely because the
skills, experience and relationships they acquire make them more
valuable on the job market. So there is always the risk that a company
may invest in building its executives' talents only to see some of them
take those talents elsewhere.


But our research shows that executives intend to stay longest with
those companies that offer the greatest opportunities to enhance their
employability. On balance, a company will keep more talent by helping
its executives grow than it would by denying them these opportunities.
And as a bonus, its executives will be more valuable to the company
itself.


For Further Reading


See these related articles from MIT Sloan Management Review.



  • Strategies for Preventing a Knowledge-Loss Crisis


    By Salvatore Parise, Rob Cross and Thomas H. Davenport (Summer 2006)


    Departing employees leave with more than what they know; they also take
    with them critical knowledge about who they know. That information
    needs to be a part of any knowledge-retention strategy.

    http://sloanreview.mit.edu/x/47409

  • Using Corporate Social Responsibility to Win the War for Talent


    By C.B. Bhattacharya, Sankar Sen and Daniel Korschun (Winter 2008)


    New research indicates there are five steps that can help business
    leaders increase the effectiveness of corporate social responsibility
    as a lever for talent management.

    http://sloanreview.mit.edu/x/49215

  • Making People Decisions in the New Global Environment


    By Claudio Fernández-Aráoz (Fall 2007)


    Finding the right individuals to fill executive positions has never
    been easy, and the process is only getting more difficult with
    increased globalization.

    http://sloanreview.mit.edu/x/49109

  • How to Retain Talent in India


    By Elaine Appleton Grant (Fall 2008)


    Providing support, training and opportunities from day one is critical.


    http://sloanreview.mit.edu/x/50103

  • When 'Stars' Migrate, Do They Still Perform Like Stars?


    By Boris Groysberg, Lex Sant and Robin Abrahams (Fall 2008)


    As research on the National Football League reveals, sometimes the
    specific nature of a job determines whether a great performer at one
    company can replicate that performance at another.

    http://sloanreview.mit.edu/x/50112


Too
few companies understand this. We found wide discrepancies between what
executives want in the way of professional development and what their
companies are giving them. With that in mind, here's a look at how
companies can address that gap by providing the three types of
opportunities executives want most.


New Responsibilities

The executives we surveyed ranked
opportunities to work on challenging tasks and to take on more
responsibility higher than any other factor in career satisfaction.
Providing these opportunities not only helps a company retain
executives, but also helps the company identify and cultivate its next
generation of leaders. That is especially true in times of adversity,
like an economic downturn or a business turnaround, when executives
have more opportunity to make their mark than they would when the
business is thriving.



United Parcel Service
Inc. continually creates opportunities for employees to take on more
challenging tasks and greater responsibilities. John Saunders, the
company's vice president for human resources, says: "We don't view it
as, 'We hired you to do this particular job.' We view it as, 'This is
going to be a 30-year process.' "


UPS holds formal reviews with employees to discuss training
opportunities, special assignments to work on solving particular
problems, and other growth options. They discuss "things like what kind
of assignments they need to round them out in preparation for the next
promotion," says Peggy Gardner, director of customer communications.
"We talk about their skills, their career objectives and what they want
to do next," she says. "We figure out what we can do to help them
achieve their goals."


Broader Skills

In addition to developing their leadership
talents, executives want to increase their value by acquiring knowledge
of operations outside their areas of expertise, and by polishing
general business skills.



[RETENTION]


Consider the example of hotel giant Marriott International
Inc. In an industry notorious for its high turnover rate, Marriott is
exceptionally skilled at retaining managerial talent. One reason is a
program that exposes talented managers to business issues and
situations that prepare them to pursue promotions to general management
roles.


For example, a marketing executive with little experience in hotel
operations completed a training assignment in the operations division.
To help her get up to speed quickly, she was assigned both senior and
peer mentors. Moreover, she wasn't the only one who benefited from the
experience. During her assignment, she shared some of her marketing
knowledge with her colleagues in operations, by suggesting ways to
attract more customers, for example.


Companies can also profit from offering their executives training in
broad business skills like working well with others, understanding and
upholding ethical standards and communicating effectively.


Cultivating Relationships

Networking is important to
executives for several reasons. It establishes connections that might
be helpful down the road in finding a new position, increases their
visibility and lets them learn from their peers.


Networking can also help a company, not just by improving retention
but also by increasing understanding and collaboration among various
business units.


Good to Stay



  • The Goal: Retain your most talented executives.

  • The Paradox: To keep them, you need to give them what they want most-the skills and experience that make them attractive on the job market.

  • The Details: Executives crave opportunities to take on new responsibilities, learn new business skills and build more-extensive networks.


Consider
the investment bank profiled in the book "Driving Results Through
Social Networks," written by Rob Cross and Robert J. Thomas and
published this year. The authors found that the social networks of the
bank's senior vice presidents were different from those of its junior
vice presidents. The senior vice presidents had more-diverse
connections-to people "in different business units, with different
areas of expertise, and in different tenure groupings." The junior vice
presidents aspired to create this type of network, and it was in the
bank's best interest to help them.


The bank identified its high performers and held several events
throughout the year so that these individuals could connect and forge
more-productive personal networks. After a year, the retention rate of
this group was much higher than that for the investment bank as a
whole.


Companies that apply these lessons will be in a better position not
only to retain their most prized executives but also to attract new
talent as the economy recovers.



- Dr. Craig is research fellow at the Accenture
Institute for High Performance in Boston. Dr. Kimberly is a professor
of management at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Mr.
Cheese was until recently the managing director of Accenture's Talent
and Organization Performance consulting practice world-wide. They can
be reached at reports@wsj.com .

0 Replies
Reply
Subgroup Membership is required to post Replies
Join Better Jobs Faster now
Dan DeMaioNewton
over 15 years ago
0
Replies
0
Likes
0
Followers
464
Views
Liked By:
Suggested Posts
TopicRepliesLikesViewsParticipantsLast Reply
Treating Unsuccessful Applicants with Respect Isn't Just Polite: It’s Good for Business
Dan DeMaioNewton
over 8 years ago
00386
Dan DeMaioNewton
over 8 years ago
Tech Workers Get Choosy About Changing Jobs
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 9 years ago
00405
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 9 years ago
This Is How You Identify A-Players (In About 10 Minutes) During An Interview
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 9 years ago
00462
Dan DeMaioNewton
about 9 years ago