Entries from December 2008 ↓

Ralph Dise on WCPN “The Sound of Ideas”

The Revolving Door of Work: What to Do If You’re Headed Out and How to Get Back In

The job market these days may best be described as a revolving door… and you know those revolving doors – you can get squished if you’re not careful.

As the revolving door of employment turns, you’re either going out or coming in. Lots of people are rewriting their resumes and polishing their interview skills. What should you do as layoffs loom? And how do you jump back into the job market at 35, 55, or 75?

How to get through the revolving door of work…

What do you value most?

How you answer this question can make or break your organization’s ability to adapt to change in these very difficult times.

“What business are you in?”

“Has your business changed with the economic climate?”

“Are you adapting to change? Or are you unsure of your next step(s)?”

Adapting to change, i.e.—refining your corporate culture and aligning it with today’s economic imperatives—is one of the toughest jobs you’ll ever undertake. Yet it could possibly be the difference between weathering the downturn—or not; or between surviving and thriving.

Most companies have difficulties dealing with change because a company’s culture forms over a period of many years. Typically, the culture is defined by default, unintentionally, reflecting the leader’s management style. It is then reinforced as new people are hired, in part, because they fit the prevailing culture.

Over time everyone gets comfortable and resists change.

For your company to consider cultural change, something significant must occur. Perhaps you lose a key client (or several key clients), you restructure and have layoffs, or face bankruptcy.

You don’t have to wait for a crisis

By definition, a crisis would never occur if executives and managers were proactive about solving problems. Most crises can be avoided if you stay in tune with the changing environment.

In good times when you’re experiencing double digit growth, everything is easy. What happens when the pipeline of new business shrinks to almost nothing?

In tough times, we have an obligation to be proactive, to look at things we weren’t paying attention to before. If you haven’t done so recently, you should gather your management team, and ask the following questions:

1. Are your prevailing values out of sync with your current needs?
An honest appraisal of the values on display in your company will help you determine where you are and what’s required to meet your current needs.

2. Have you articulated the values and objectives your company requires now?
You’ve told everyone the company must now do more with less. But is it OK for managers and executives to challenge assumptions openly? Or do you put a premium on “being agreeable”? Will your company accept risk-taking if there is the promise of great reward? Or are you in survival mode and closed off to new ideas? Are you listening to your line managers and your customers for ideas that could help your company expand revenues, cut costs, or otherwise contribute to the bottom line? Henry Ford said: “We need all the brains we can get, and all the brains we can borrow.”

3. Do you seek out opportunities to celebrate the values that make your company a winner?
Are you recognizing and rewarding the people who are achieving greater results with fewer resources? How about those who bring in new accounts or increase business when everyone else is cutting back?

If you embrace and articulate values that are in tune with the economic climate, you’ll increase your organization’s capacity to adapt. You’ll be in a much better place for the uncertainty ahead.

The question is: “Do you want to be in control of, and define, your company’s values? Or do want to leave it to happenstance, and instead let them define you?”

Ralph A. Dise, Jr. is the President of Dise & Company, the Presiding Director of Lincolnshire International, and has worked in the field of Human Resources his entire career. You can contact Ralph directly at the Pro People Page on Diseco.com.

It’s an employer’s market. Or is it?

If you don’t know who you’re looking for, you’ll easily find him (or her)

The unemployment rate rose from 6.5 to 6.7 percent for the Month of November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics—the economy shed 533,000 jobs in one short month. That’s up 2% from the same time last year.

So, that must mean it’s an employer’s market. Or is it?

On first blush it seems like it is.

The law of supply and demand tells us “the more candidates you have to choose from, the greater the choice you’ll have among candidates, and it’ll be like shooting fish in a barrel.”

Unfortunately, recruiting is not so simple.

In a time of uncertainty, with lots of people on the job market, calculating what they’re going to do next, there are many people to choose from who are “almost-good enough” to take your company to the next level.

But “almost-good enough”–is that good enough?

After you factor in the expense of the search, their orientation and training, having to put up with sub-standard performance and results for a period of time, and if it doesn’t work out, the severance you have to pay the employee to leave, it all adds up.

Real costs plus opportunity/lost productivity costs.

For a six-figure salary executive, the average mis-hire runs in the millions of dollars.

When you’re in survival mode, can you really afford to make a mistake that costs millions of dollars?

Out of all the people out there looking for jobs, there is one out there that is perfect for you.

One who has all the skills you need. One who is a match for your corporate culture.

One who’s able to do more with less people and less money.

One who can do things better, faster, and cheaper.

The real “A” player.

The question is “How do you know how to find him or her?”

Are you going to wait for this person to knock on your door?

If you don’t know who you’re looking for, you’ll easily find him (or her).

There are many people out there who are almost good enough.

Getting the wrong one could be a costly mistake.

The original premise is correct. It is an employer’s market—the employer is in the driver’s seat.

But the job of finding the right person just got harder not easier.

Mark Gonska is Executive Vice President of Career Transition Services for Dise & Company. You can contact Mark directly at the People Page on Diseco.com

What’s your story?

The Role of Culture in Recruiting

Having a well-defined corporate culture, i.e., having a good story to tell, is by far the best way to help  you recruit and retain the people who can help your company achieve the success you are seeking.

Whenever I initiate a new  executive search, the first thing I always do is talk to several of the executives and managers get them to tell me their story by  asking them questions about their company:

  • Are you a learning organization? 
  • Are your contributions valued? 
  • Do you value teamwork? 
  • What’s it like to work here? Do you like it?
  • Are you proud to tell others who you work for? 
  • What do your associates think about working here? Are they psyched, engaged, excited by the challenges?
  • Do you have a system in place to evaluate new ideas from the people working “in the trenches”? 
  • What is your company’s reputation is in the marketplace? For collaboration? For innovation? For being productive? 
  • What “excites” you the most about coming to work?

And I get them to tell me the story of their company.

In my role as an executive recruiter, it’s very important to have a good story to tell. After all, the most sought-after candidates, the ones that every company is looking for, can afford to be choosy.

And if your company’s culture has room for improvement, or you don’t have a good story to tell, it makes it more of a challenge.

Unless the candidate we’re seeking is going to have a direct hand in improving the culture, they’re less likely to want to come work for you, or you’ll end up having to pay a premium to attract them.

So a less-than-desirable corporate culture is self-perpetuating.  You are unable to attract the people who can help you the most.

Fortunately, if you have a culture that’s broken, or needs help fixing, there are things you can do. And that’s an area where my company has some expertise.

I am glad to be working at Dise & Company where we are inspired by our leader, and encouraged to continually improve the way we do things, and the way we work together.

We have a learning organization, where I am treated with dignity and respect.

Even though we practice different disciplines of Human Resource Consulting (Corporate Outplacement, Executive Search, and Leadership Coaching), we work not in silos, but as a team.

We’re encouraged to engage in professional development, so I feel like I’m always learning something new, and continually improving.

The most exciting aspect of my work is to present opportunities to people –both employers and employees— that they never considered before, and to effect meaningful change that positively impacts the lives of so many.

And I find that personally and professionally rewarding—that’s what we do, that’s what I do—we make a difference.

That’s my story. What’s yours?

Susan Paley Zak is the Director of Executive Recruiting at Dise & Company. You can contact Susan directly at the People Page on Diseco.com.