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TALENT MANAGEMENT
Deepali Jain
What is Talent Management?
The purpose of TM is to ensure that the right supply of talented
workforce is ready to realize the strategic goals of the organization
both today and in the future
Organization’s efforts to attract, select, develop, and retain key talented
employees in key strategic positions.
Talent management includes a series of integrated systems of
 recruiting,
 performance management,
 maximizing employee potential, managing their strengths and
developing
 retaining people with desired skills and aptitude
Talent Management
 TM introduced by Mc Kinsey consultants, late 1990’s
 TM is identified as the critical success factor in corporate
world
 TM focuses on
 differentiated performance: A, B, C players influencing
company performance and success
 identifying key positions in the organization
!!! Surveys show that firms recognize the importance of
talent management but they lack the competence
required to manage it effectively
What is Talent?
According to McKinsey; talent is the sum
of
 a person’s abilities,
 his or her intrinsic gifts,
 skills, knowledge, experience ,
 intelligence,
 judgment, attitude, character, drive,
 his or her ability to learn and grow.
Who are Talented People?
 They regularly demonstrate exceptional
ability and achievement over a range of
activities
 They have transferable high competence
 They are high impact people who can deal
with complexity (Robertson, Abbey 2003)
Why Organizations Need Talent
Development?
 To compete effectively in a complex and
dynamic environment to achieve sustainable
growth
 To develop leaders for tomorrow from within an
organization
 To maximize employee performance as a unique
source of competitive advantage
 To empower employees:
 Cut down on high turnover rates
 Reduce the cost of constantly hiring new people
to train
Talent Management Model
 There are different approaches to talent
management in organizations
 A successful TM model has to link
1. TM creed (culture, values, expectations) with
2. TM strategy and
3. TM system. (Lance and Dorothy Berger, 2011)
The values, expectations and elements of
 the desired culture and
 the business excellence
should be embedded in HR systems as selection
criteria, competency definitions, performance and
promotion criteria and development processes.
The Talent Creed
 “A TM creed is the set of core principles,
values and mutual expectations that guide
the behavior of an institution and its people”
 It describes in general terms what types of
people are expected to work in the
organization and what type of a culture is
desired to achieve success
The Talent Strategy
Describes what type of people the organization will invest in
and how it will be done
Besides the specific elements of their creed, the talent
strategy of all high performing organizations should have
these directives:
1) Identify key positions in the organization (not more than
20, 30 %)
2) Assess your employees and identify the high performers
(classify according to their current and future potential)
3) Retain key position backups
4) Make appropriate investments (select, train, develop,
reward)
Assessing the Employees
 Superkeepers- greatly exceed expectations
(3-5%)
 Keepers – exceed expectations (20 %)
 Solid citizens- meet expectations (75 %)
 Misfits- below expectations (2-3 %)
(Berger and Berger, 2011)
Allocating Investments in People
Superkeepers- receive about 5 % of all the resouces; need very
high recognition, compensate much more than the pay market,
promote very rapidly
Keepers –receive about 25 % of all the resources, need high
recognition, compensate more than the pay market, promote
rapidly
Solid citizens- receive about 68 % of all the resources, need
recognition, compensate at the market level or just above
Misfits- receive about 2 % of all the resources for some,
compensate at below market average
(Berger and Berger, 2011)
Talent Management System
Implementation program of the talent strategy which
has a set of processes and procedures
(1) assessment tools
(2) multi-rater assessment
(3) diagnostic tools
(4) monitoring processes
If the management is not willing to use
assessment in their organizations they can’t do
talent management
Assessment Tools for TM
The five assessment tools should be linked to
ensure that each assessment is consistent
with the four other evaluations
 Competency Assessment
 Performance Appraisal
 Potential Forecast
 Succession Planning
 Career Planning
Multi-Rater Assessment
 Employee. The owner of the career plan that
is aligned with the succession plan
 Boss. The primary assessor
 Boss’s boss. The key link in the vertical
succession and career plan
 Boss’s peer group. Source of potential new
assignments in the same or other function
Diagnostic Tools
SuperkeeperTM reservoir. SuperkeepersTM are employees whose performance
greatly exceeds expectations, who inspire others to greatly exceed expectations,
and who embody institutional competencies.
Keeper Key position backups. The “insurance policies” that ensure organization
continuity. Every key position should have at least one backup at the “Keeper”
(exceed job expectations) level.
Surpluses. Positions with more than one replacement for an incumbent. While
ostensibly a positive result of the talent management process, it can be a
potential source of turnover and morale problems if the replacements are
blocked by a non-promotable incumbent and/or there is no realistic way most of
the promotable replacements can advance.
Voids. Positions without a qualified backup. Determine whether it will transfer
someone from the surplus pool, develop alternative candidates, or recruit
externally.
Blockages. Non-promotable incumbents standing in the path of one or more high-
potential or promotable employees.
Problem employees. Those not meeting job expectations (measured achievement
or competency proficiency). Give opportunity to improve, receive remedial action,
or be terminated. The time frame should be no longer than six months.
(Lance and Dorothy Berger, 2011)
Monitoring Processes
Evaluate the results of talent management system
on a regular basis for
• quality,
• timeliness and
• credibility
What is competency?
C
Competencies
ompetencies are the core elements of talent
are the core elements of talent
management practices
management practices
They are the demonstrable
emonstrable and measurable
knowledge, skills, behaviors, personal
characteristics that are associated with or
predictive of excellent
excellent job performance.
Examples
 Adaptability, teamwork, decision making, customer
orientation, leadership, innovation etc.
Competencies and Definitions
Action Orientation
Targets and achieve results,overcomes obstacles, accepts responsibility,
creates a results-oriented environment.....
Interpersonal Skill
Effectively and productively engages with others and establishes trust,
credibility, and confidence with them
Creativity/Innovation
Generates novel ideas and develops or improves existing and new
systems that challenge the status quo, takes risks, and encourage
innovation
Teamwork
Knows when and how to attract, develop, reward, be part of, and utilize
teams to optimize results. Acts to build trust, inspire enthusiasm,
encourage others, and help resolve conflicts and develop consensus in
supporting higperformance teams
(Berger and Berger, 2011)
Why Competencies?
The challenge is to identify which competencies the organization
expects to see in their people
The starting point of the model is the creed (values, principles,
expectations) and the business strategies
 Through a competency model the organization sends a consistent
message to the workforce about “what it takes” to be successful in
the job
 Helps employees understand what helps drive successful
performance
 The Competency Model approach focuses on the “How” of the job.
 Competency model is behavioral rather than functional, focuses on
the people rather than jobs
 Competency models are outcome driven rather than activities (Job
descriptions focus on activities, competencies focus on outcomes)
 Integrates HR strategy with business strategy –both focus on
outcomes
Why Competencies?
The competency model serves as the
foundation upon which all workforce
processes are built.
Competencies promote alignment of talent
management systems by creating a common
language that enables these systems to talk
with each other! That is, results of one TM
system is used as the input data for the
following TM system.
The Competency Model
 The Competency Model identifies usually three
groups of competencies:
 Core competencies for the entire organization to shape the
organizational capabilities and culture required to achieve
the strategic goals(5 or 6)
 Leadership competencies for the management teams of
various levels for selection, career planning and
development
 Functional (technical)competencies (specific for each job
family)
Developing a Competency Model
 Use commonly available “ready to use”
models with small adjustments for your
organization
 Develop own competency model with help of
consultants
 Behavioral Benchmarking compare superior
performers with other best people in the
organization and in other benchmark
companies
Developing Organization’s Own
Competency Model
 Overview of current tasks and responsibilities
 Come to agreement about what successful “outcome
driven” performance looks like
 Review of competency library and selection of “must
haves” for the position
 Rank top competencies as demonstrated by exemplary
(superior) performers
 Identify of those competencies that align with the vision,
mission and strategic plan of the organization
 Verify the competencies with a larger sample of the
organization
Choosing Competencies
Before choosing competencies in an organization
following requirements must have been completed:
 Establishment of vision, mission, values
 Strategic business goals
 Identification of the tasks, responsibilities and
outcomes expected from each position
 Identification of the superior (exemplary) performers
 Satisfactory competency library
Talent Management
TALENT=COMPETENCE+COMMITMENT+CONTRIBUTION
 Being competent is not only enough to be a talent
 The competent person should be committed to the causes and
goals of the organization
 And should be able and willing to contribute to the success of the
organization
So, developing your talent is not enough, the organizations need to
take all the measures to motivate, reward their talent pool to gain
their commitment and contribution.
Retention is also essential to gaurantee future alignment of the
talent with the right key positions
Talent Management Model
Talent Management Model
 Expectations for the future. Businesses should identify
 Job roles
 Spesific objectives
 Competencies
 Capabilities to meet the expectations
 Work environment
 Managerial support
 Rewards and recognition
 Removing barriers
 Feedback systems needed to
 Focus
 To keep on track
 Develop
Talent Management Cycle
Talent Management Process
Organization
Analysis
-Job descriptions
-Job spesifications
Assessing the Emloyees
A B C D
Potential
Candidates
Performance
Evaluation
Buss. Results
Personal
Development
Activities
Career
Committees
Potancial Candidates
and
Succession Lists
Approval
of the
Lists
Analysis
Assessment
Development
Talent
Development
Programs
January - March April May on......
Assessment Tools
Structure of a Talent Management
Program
 Building Block 1: Identification and assessment of
competencies
 Building Block 2: Performance appraisals
 Building Block 3: Succession and career planning
 Development of talent (coaching, mentoring, training)
 Linking compensation with the program (reward and
motivate)
 Targeting culture as an important driver of TM programs
 Secure senior executives’ commitment to make the talent
management model work
 Evaluate the results of talent management system on a
regular basis
Integrated Functions of TM
 Performance appraisals, assessments of
potential, competency evaluations, career
planning, and replacement planning (the core
elements of talent management) should be
linked to each other.
 Stand alone functions are destined to end
with failure
HR and TM
HUMAN RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT
TALENT MANAGEMENT
o Broad Scope (entire
employees)
o Emphasize
egalitarianism
oFocus on administrative
functions
oTransactional
oFocus on systems with
silo approach
oFocus on segmentation
(key group of core
employees and key
positions)
o Focus on potential
people
oFocus on the attraction,
development and retention
of talent
oFocus on integratation of
HR systems
Classwork and/or Homework
 Prepare a list of 5 competencies for your own
position. Explain why you choose these
competencies and what do they include
behaviorally?

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What is Talent Management dan How It.ppt

  • 2. What is Talent Management? The purpose of TM is to ensure that the right supply of talented workforce is ready to realize the strategic goals of the organization both today and in the future Organization’s efforts to attract, select, develop, and retain key talented employees in key strategic positions. Talent management includes a series of integrated systems of  recruiting,  performance management,  maximizing employee potential, managing their strengths and developing  retaining people with desired skills and aptitude
  • 3. Talent Management  TM introduced by Mc Kinsey consultants, late 1990’s  TM is identified as the critical success factor in corporate world  TM focuses on  differentiated performance: A, B, C players influencing company performance and success  identifying key positions in the organization !!! Surveys show that firms recognize the importance of talent management but they lack the competence required to manage it effectively
  • 4. What is Talent? According to McKinsey; talent is the sum of  a person’s abilities,  his or her intrinsic gifts,  skills, knowledge, experience ,  intelligence,  judgment, attitude, character, drive,  his or her ability to learn and grow.
  • 5. Who are Talented People?  They regularly demonstrate exceptional ability and achievement over a range of activities  They have transferable high competence  They are high impact people who can deal with complexity (Robertson, Abbey 2003)
  • 6. Why Organizations Need Talent Development?  To compete effectively in a complex and dynamic environment to achieve sustainable growth  To develop leaders for tomorrow from within an organization  To maximize employee performance as a unique source of competitive advantage  To empower employees:  Cut down on high turnover rates  Reduce the cost of constantly hiring new people to train
  • 7. Talent Management Model  There are different approaches to talent management in organizations  A successful TM model has to link 1. TM creed (culture, values, expectations) with 2. TM strategy and 3. TM system. (Lance and Dorothy Berger, 2011) The values, expectations and elements of  the desired culture and  the business excellence should be embedded in HR systems as selection criteria, competency definitions, performance and promotion criteria and development processes.
  • 8. The Talent Creed  “A TM creed is the set of core principles, values and mutual expectations that guide the behavior of an institution and its people”  It describes in general terms what types of people are expected to work in the organization and what type of a culture is desired to achieve success
  • 9. The Talent Strategy Describes what type of people the organization will invest in and how it will be done Besides the specific elements of their creed, the talent strategy of all high performing organizations should have these directives: 1) Identify key positions in the organization (not more than 20, 30 %) 2) Assess your employees and identify the high performers (classify according to their current and future potential) 3) Retain key position backups 4) Make appropriate investments (select, train, develop, reward)
  • 10. Assessing the Employees  Superkeepers- greatly exceed expectations (3-5%)  Keepers – exceed expectations (20 %)  Solid citizens- meet expectations (75 %)  Misfits- below expectations (2-3 %) (Berger and Berger, 2011)
  • 11. Allocating Investments in People Superkeepers- receive about 5 % of all the resouces; need very high recognition, compensate much more than the pay market, promote very rapidly Keepers –receive about 25 % of all the resources, need high recognition, compensate more than the pay market, promote rapidly Solid citizens- receive about 68 % of all the resources, need recognition, compensate at the market level or just above Misfits- receive about 2 % of all the resources for some, compensate at below market average (Berger and Berger, 2011)
  • 12. Talent Management System Implementation program of the talent strategy which has a set of processes and procedures (1) assessment tools (2) multi-rater assessment (3) diagnostic tools (4) monitoring processes If the management is not willing to use assessment in their organizations they can’t do talent management
  • 13. Assessment Tools for TM The five assessment tools should be linked to ensure that each assessment is consistent with the four other evaluations  Competency Assessment  Performance Appraisal  Potential Forecast  Succession Planning  Career Planning
  • 14. Multi-Rater Assessment  Employee. The owner of the career plan that is aligned with the succession plan  Boss. The primary assessor  Boss’s boss. The key link in the vertical succession and career plan  Boss’s peer group. Source of potential new assignments in the same or other function
  • 15. Diagnostic Tools SuperkeeperTM reservoir. SuperkeepersTM are employees whose performance greatly exceeds expectations, who inspire others to greatly exceed expectations, and who embody institutional competencies. Keeper Key position backups. The “insurance policies” that ensure organization continuity. Every key position should have at least one backup at the “Keeper” (exceed job expectations) level. Surpluses. Positions with more than one replacement for an incumbent. While ostensibly a positive result of the talent management process, it can be a potential source of turnover and morale problems if the replacements are blocked by a non-promotable incumbent and/or there is no realistic way most of the promotable replacements can advance. Voids. Positions without a qualified backup. Determine whether it will transfer someone from the surplus pool, develop alternative candidates, or recruit externally. Blockages. Non-promotable incumbents standing in the path of one or more high- potential or promotable employees. Problem employees. Those not meeting job expectations (measured achievement or competency proficiency). Give opportunity to improve, receive remedial action, or be terminated. The time frame should be no longer than six months. (Lance and Dorothy Berger, 2011)
  • 16. Monitoring Processes Evaluate the results of talent management system on a regular basis for • quality, • timeliness and • credibility
  • 17. What is competency? C Competencies ompetencies are the core elements of talent are the core elements of talent management practices management practices They are the demonstrable emonstrable and measurable knowledge, skills, behaviors, personal characteristics that are associated with or predictive of excellent excellent job performance. Examples  Adaptability, teamwork, decision making, customer orientation, leadership, innovation etc.
  • 18. Competencies and Definitions Action Orientation Targets and achieve results,overcomes obstacles, accepts responsibility, creates a results-oriented environment..... Interpersonal Skill Effectively and productively engages with others and establishes trust, credibility, and confidence with them Creativity/Innovation Generates novel ideas and develops or improves existing and new systems that challenge the status quo, takes risks, and encourage innovation Teamwork Knows when and how to attract, develop, reward, be part of, and utilize teams to optimize results. Acts to build trust, inspire enthusiasm, encourage others, and help resolve conflicts and develop consensus in supporting higperformance teams (Berger and Berger, 2011)
  • 19. Why Competencies? The challenge is to identify which competencies the organization expects to see in their people The starting point of the model is the creed (values, principles, expectations) and the business strategies  Through a competency model the organization sends a consistent message to the workforce about “what it takes” to be successful in the job  Helps employees understand what helps drive successful performance  The Competency Model approach focuses on the “How” of the job.  Competency model is behavioral rather than functional, focuses on the people rather than jobs  Competency models are outcome driven rather than activities (Job descriptions focus on activities, competencies focus on outcomes)  Integrates HR strategy with business strategy –both focus on outcomes
  • 20. Why Competencies? The competency model serves as the foundation upon which all workforce processes are built. Competencies promote alignment of talent management systems by creating a common language that enables these systems to talk with each other! That is, results of one TM system is used as the input data for the following TM system.
  • 21. The Competency Model  The Competency Model identifies usually three groups of competencies:  Core competencies for the entire organization to shape the organizational capabilities and culture required to achieve the strategic goals(5 or 6)  Leadership competencies for the management teams of various levels for selection, career planning and development  Functional (technical)competencies (specific for each job family)
  • 22. Developing a Competency Model  Use commonly available “ready to use” models with small adjustments for your organization  Develop own competency model with help of consultants  Behavioral Benchmarking compare superior performers with other best people in the organization and in other benchmark companies
  • 23. Developing Organization’s Own Competency Model  Overview of current tasks and responsibilities  Come to agreement about what successful “outcome driven” performance looks like  Review of competency library and selection of “must haves” for the position  Rank top competencies as demonstrated by exemplary (superior) performers  Identify of those competencies that align with the vision, mission and strategic plan of the organization  Verify the competencies with a larger sample of the organization
  • 24. Choosing Competencies Before choosing competencies in an organization following requirements must have been completed:  Establishment of vision, mission, values  Strategic business goals  Identification of the tasks, responsibilities and outcomes expected from each position  Identification of the superior (exemplary) performers  Satisfactory competency library
  • 25. Talent Management TALENT=COMPETENCE+COMMITMENT+CONTRIBUTION  Being competent is not only enough to be a talent  The competent person should be committed to the causes and goals of the organization  And should be able and willing to contribute to the success of the organization So, developing your talent is not enough, the organizations need to take all the measures to motivate, reward their talent pool to gain their commitment and contribution. Retention is also essential to gaurantee future alignment of the talent with the right key positions
  • 27. Talent Management Model  Expectations for the future. Businesses should identify  Job roles  Spesific objectives  Competencies  Capabilities to meet the expectations  Work environment  Managerial support  Rewards and recognition  Removing barriers  Feedback systems needed to  Focus  To keep on track  Develop
  • 29. Talent Management Process Organization Analysis -Job descriptions -Job spesifications Assessing the Emloyees A B C D Potential Candidates Performance Evaluation Buss. Results Personal Development Activities Career Committees Potancial Candidates and Succession Lists Approval of the Lists Analysis Assessment Development Talent Development Programs January - March April May on...... Assessment Tools
  • 30. Structure of a Talent Management Program  Building Block 1: Identification and assessment of competencies  Building Block 2: Performance appraisals  Building Block 3: Succession and career planning  Development of talent (coaching, mentoring, training)  Linking compensation with the program (reward and motivate)  Targeting culture as an important driver of TM programs  Secure senior executives’ commitment to make the talent management model work  Evaluate the results of talent management system on a regular basis
  • 31. Integrated Functions of TM  Performance appraisals, assessments of potential, competency evaluations, career planning, and replacement planning (the core elements of talent management) should be linked to each other.  Stand alone functions are destined to end with failure
  • 32. HR and TM HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT TALENT MANAGEMENT o Broad Scope (entire employees) o Emphasize egalitarianism oFocus on administrative functions oTransactional oFocus on systems with silo approach oFocus on segmentation (key group of core employees and key positions) o Focus on potential people oFocus on the attraction, development and retention of talent oFocus on integratation of HR systems
  • 33. Classwork and/or Homework  Prepare a list of 5 competencies for your own position. Explain why you choose these competencies and what do they include behaviorally?