Sunday, 29 September 2013

Building teams: Recruitment process. First part

In one of my previous posts, Processes and people, I talked about the importance of preparing managers to lead teams in a context where processes are sometimes considered more important. I suggested the way to deal with this situation was teaching managers to understand teams like another process, but adding their own value through communication, motivation and leadership.


We are starting with the first step, the recruitment. Definitely this is the most important stage in the development of a team because a manager needs the best team to achieve success. A lot of specialists studying successful retail companies say that all have something in common, the recruitment policies.
But what are the more usual problems or resistances within the Companies:
  • Some managers don’t realise the importance of doing a good recruitment process, during my experience I found some managers that though that it was a Human Resources problem, and although a H.R. department has to provide good appropriate profiles to the Company, I think that all the managers have to be involved in the process from the beginning.
  • The pressure to find a good candidate because of the Company´s needs can lead to make the wrong decision. It´s worth spending some time searching, and not hire the first interviewed candidate.
  • We don’t spend much time depending on the position, for example to search for a cashier or a shelf stacking assistant for a store is not the same than to search for a manager, we spend different times in everyone, and it is normal because of the responsibility  level of every position. But I was surprised with the extreme speed that some managers found the first positions, when I asked about those processes, normally I was answered with: “Don’t worry, anyone can do this work”. I think that this is our first mistake, not anyone can do that work.

How can we overcome these resistances? There are different ways a manager can take.

1. Before starting the process:
  • For every recruitment process try to work close with the H.R department, not only to present a requirement, you can go beyond: defining a strategy with them, asking for the profile, the competences that a Company requires for the position, looking for other alternatives like an internal promotion. If your company doesn’t have a H.R department, or it is your own company, the previous questions are valid for you.
  • The first thing you have to think is what the Company needs, it means that you have to give preference to the Company needs above yours, maybe it is something obvious, but how many managers turn down good profiles because they feel threatened and prefer to look for less prepared profiles.
  • Think about yourself, what are your strengths? And your weaknesses? For a manager it is very important to know himself and his own limitations, for example if I know I have difficulties to organize myself I will prefer candidates with a high organisation level. It could help me get a balance. Obviously it always depends on the situation, and it is important not to create a conflict with what the company requires. From the point of view of important experts in talent research, like Pilar Jericó, it is important to look for people different from the leader. It helps companies to rely on more diverse ideas to solve problems.

2. During the process

a) Prepare the interview

Before starting to interview the candidates, please note the following tips:
  • Study the position needs, when you review the job description you can see a list of technical skills and the knowledge that the position requires, but you have to think about the characteristics that you want the candidate to have and turn them into measurable behaviours. If you need a very commercial profile with a high level of customer service, you might wonder how people should behave in the job to evidence those qualities. You need someone to treat customers in the right way, for example if a customer asked for a product the person should stop what he is doing to focus in the client needs.
  • With this previous reflection you will know who you are looking for and you could ask for these behaviours.     
    • Review the resume carefully, paying attention in the next tips:
    • Check if it is clear and easy to read.
    • Review the applicant's work history and write down any gaps of time between jobs.
    • Analyse the frequency of changes of jobs.
    • Carefully examine the reasons why the candidate left his previous works.
    • Write down all the achievements that the candidate express in his/her resume, it will be useful for you, because you could focused in how he/she got them.
    • Determine the different responsibilities that the candidate had in his previous jobs. Don’t assume that a particular category means some particular responsibilities; it could be different in every company.
  • Prepare the interview doing a plan or guide, for me this is the most important part, a good preparation allows you to manage all the candidate information in a correct way. A precise preparation has to include things such as battery of questions about key areas, questions about personality and adaptation in the workplace and the information you can give about the position.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Monday, 8 July 2013

Be careful with what you say….and how you say it

“This store is not performing well!  You are not making the effort to sell more! The point of sale is a complete disaster and it hasn't been managed the proper way! You are losing your customer orientation! What are you going to do? I want solutions, now!” 

Yes I know, you must think that maybe I have just dramatized the situation, but believe me, I have witnessed feedbacks like this from some managers when they visited the stores. Why don’t we review another situation?

“I have been reviewing the figures, and the sales are far below the target, that is a 30% regarding the comparable period for the preceding year of sales, specifically they have been falling in frozen and fresh products, the point of sale has a worrying lack of product, I have accounted more than 15 missing sku´s….What is the problem with this issue? I am concerned about your customer   KPI´s. Customer traffic has been decreasing 10% in comparison with the same period the previous year, besides I received two complaints from our customers. I think you are losing your customer focus, it should not have happened, so we agree we have a problem and this store is underperforming, then how can we work to get solutions?”

In both stressing situations, a manager has the authority to express his own opinions about how the store is run, why it is not working properly and they are not achieving the goals. Which of them could be the best at driving the team to results and why?

We are always expressing opinions, it´s something normal and necessary; the problem is that we don’t realize that an opinion is different from a fact. I can say that John is 1’80 meters tall, it is a fact and I can add that John is a good man, it is an opinion, because maybe someone could think that John represents the evil himself, the difference is that in the first case I can take a measuring tape and easily demonstrate that fact, in the second situation, this issue is a bit more complicated.

Then if we know that, why are always confusing them? Why do we express an opinion as if it were a fact? “Anne didn't make a decision in the last meeting”, a fact, “She never makes decisions”, it is an opinion. Is it the same? How do we know that Anne is not making decisions in other situations? “The sales have fallen 30% in comparison with the same period the previous year”, another fact “You are not making the effort to sell more”. We don’t know what the problem is behind the drop in sales; maybe there are other factors and not a bad management. “The point of sale has a worrying lack of product, I have accounted more than 15 missing sku’s”, another fact. “The point of sale is a complete disaster and it hasn't been managed in the proper way”an opinion. Well, before stating this, we would need to check all the aisles, maybe we discover that somewhere the products are properly set, for example.

We are expressing opinions with each other every day, with ours bosses, colleagues, family, friends and we even give opinions about ourselves. How many times have we thought about things such as “I’m stupid” “I’m not able to do it”?

We are talking to each other all the time and our language is action because our own opinions affect the others, they show how we are and how we feel, they have the power to change our reality and to change the conditions that surround us, and we don’t realize it. Have you tried to confront and test your opinions before expressing them? When you do it, you will discover that you can’t prove them so easily.

Coming back to the example of the beginning, what would be your answer? What kind of opinions can help the team get the best result? The general ones that hurt them or the opinions based on facts and focused in the concrete problems? Both situations show opinions, but both have the power to build a different reality for your team.

What about you? Have you wondered what is the reality that you want to build in your company, in your personal life? We have to think about it.


Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Processes versus people




Recently, I was at a coaching training with 150 people and we were asked about our professions. I realized that hardly few of us were psychologists, maybe 10%, others, about 30%, had different careers and professions, and the majorities were engineers.


It is not strange, engineers are normally methodical, disciplined and they are always trying to reinvent new processes and systems to improve production. Obviously, it is a personal description, in fact mine, born of my experience working with this kind of profiles. But the discussion is not about engineers’ profiles, they are only the excuse I am using to introduce my topic. 

Processes are important for a company to survive in a complex market, they give the logical order an organization needs to get its RESULTS. They have to be known and understood by all the employees involved, respected and rigorously followed by everyone, so it is necessary to apply a tough discipline because if one part of the process fails, the rest of the team, and the most worrying, customers would be affected by it.

During the last 20 years, the main Companies, especially from the retail industry, have been working in their processes. A big effort has been invested looking for standard methods to save time and resources. I remember, in the nineties, when I worked for an important retail company in Spain that had just started to implant a plan to standardize all work methods.  During one of the meetings that was held to explain this project to all the Company managers, someone explained that if a manager was moved from one store to another, he should find the same processes, the same way to work. This idea, original in that time, is something usual nowadays, no one argues that Companies, no matter the activity; need a uniform  methodology, very important in the case of big companies with an important number of branches.

This focus in the processes and results has made a lot of companies choose managers with a high technical level, great executives who manage the teams towards clear objectives, using the right processes and instructions. Once, during a meeting in another retail company where I worked a few years ago, one manager approached me, very angrily, that he didn’t understand what happened with his sales, they were falling down, and he was doing everything, he was following all the steps in the right way. I asked him about his team, if they had all the processes clear as well as the objectives. “Of course!” He answered me and he added that everyone knew perfectly what to do. Then I asked him how he was sharing the information with his team, how they could know that they were doing the things in the right way. In this case his answer didn’t sound so convincing; he was so focused in the results and in the method that he forgot to maintain basic things such as motivation and communication with his own team. I don’t know, but maybe it was one of the reasons that explained the quality of his results. So what happens with our teams? Could we manage people like another process? Although there are certain processes like timetables, vacation planning and other similar HR issues, the answer is not so simple. The team management is more than a simple process, it is an art.  We can’t forget that behind processes there are people.

The conclusion is that however we have to acknowledge that managing processes and methods is very important for a company, the balance between them and managing people could determinate the future of an organization.

Then it is not a surprise that profiles like engineers, very competent in their own field, are being directed to rather trainings of management abilities to provide them with skills which allow them to lead teams. One way I used to convince my managers that the team could be easily managed was to present it like another process. Yes I know that it’s a contradiction, I said before that management is not a process, but what’s one of the best ways to teach adults? With examples that are directly associated with their reality. In this case, we can present it like a process.

A process, in which is important to respect all the steps, because if we don’t, it will fail, it’s like an engine, if we want to turn it on, we need to use technical roles, we have to apply them in all the cases. It could be the recruitment of our team, orientation program, establishing goals, doing objectives follow up and adjustments, training and evaluating to start again with new goals.

But it isn’t enough; we need to use our management roles, such as motivation, communication and leadership. If the first roles are the key to turn our engine on, the second ones are the oil we need to maintain our engine running in a perfect condition.



What about you? How do you manage your team? Where are you oriented to? Remember that the balance between both variables will lead you to a high performance team.