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Questions to ask when Assessing your Company Culture
The Austin Technology Council held a CEO Roundtable on May 18th about “How Healthy is your Organization’s Culture”? The featured speaker was Dr. Carol Kallendorf, the Founding Partner of The Delta Associates. I made a commitment to Tweet more often and so I maintained a Twitter Stream throughout the whole event. If you’re not following me on Twitter, why not?
The event wasn’t an exceptional one as the featured guest has been in business of telling companies what they do wrong for over 27 years. Further, no matter how pointedly people asked her questions she had a political answer that wasn’t based on experience and instead, sounded like rhetoric. At the end of the event we all got handed a piece of paper (how very Baby Boomer) of the 10 questions you can ask to assess your organizational culture. While the document wouldn’t surprise you even if you were from Mars and didn’t even know what culture was, there were a couple on there that at least bore repeating:
- What are the issues that tend to align your Executive Team? What about fractionalize it?
- To what extent do the people in your organization have shared goals, vision or fate?
- Could your employees explain to their family members what it is that they do within the company that contribute to its success?
- Do people at all levels in your organization know what business you are in, how you make money and who your customers are?
- What’s your culture for handling mistakes and failure? What would your employees say is the culture for handling failure or mistakes?
- Do people like to come to work?
- How big a priority is culture?
Again, nothing earth shaking or really insightful but they ARE thought provoking. Can you make any changes today inside of your company that could represent a baby step in the right direction?
Tags: alisha ring, amwf, Austin, austin technology council, brian wong, carol kallendorf, change management, culture, delta associates, drive culture, Fame, Family, Fortune, Fun, hire better, talent acquisition, tweets, Twitter
In Defense of our Culture at Hire Better
Earlier this week I found myself on the phone with one of our service providers at Hire Better. The company: Monster.com. We’ve used their service with average satisfaction for about 5 years. Every year we step back and evaluate it but ultimately, we’ve chosen to invest the $10,000-$15,000 that they want to charge for access to a huge database of largely uninteresting people – many of whom need work Visas to make career moves.
Our account comes up for renewal at the end of May. We haven’t heard from anyone in their company since last September when our account was nearly cancelled FOR FRAUDULENT ACTIVITY.
A little bit of history – Last year an interesting thing happened: their Compliance Department caught wind of a report that the “seats” that we paid for were being used by IP addresses that weren’t in Austin, TX. This set off all kinds of alarms at Monster.com and I received a disturbing voicemail from a woman who more than suggested that we were guilty of fraud because of our usage and that the legal team was looking into canceling our account without a refund – essentially a loss of $10,000 for us.
Why were they accusing us of Fraud? Because our Corporate Address is in Austin, TX. ”If your address is in Austin, why would you have anyone with an IP address in Iowa, Kansas or Arkansas?” they asked. How very 1993 of them. I challenged that same Legal Team and their Compliance Team by asking,
“Have any of our seats EVER been logged into by more than one person simultaneously and in different geographic regions?”
“No, never once.” they responded.
“And is our usage on any of these accounts outside of our terms of use or so heavy that it would make you think that we were trying to be fraudulent or mis-represent ourselves in any way?”
“No, not at all.” was their answer.
It took me a week and about 20 hours of our senior team’s time to explain to their Legal Department that we’re a Virtual Company that’s built around team members who work from their homes because of the Balance that it provides to each and every one of us. We finally settled on an agreement with their team that we could give each and every one of our employees their own usernames and passwords and split up the usage of each “seat” into what was the equivalent of 50% of a traditional license. This satisfied their Legal team and it allowed us to avoid a $10,000 loss. My Account Representative at the time was a gentlemen named Chris Shaw. He stuck up for us, was the internal champion for our cause and put his reputation on the line with that same Compliance Department to vouch for us and insist that there wasn’t any fraudulent intent or activity.
Fast forward to this week: my new Account Representative called me 4 times over the course of a week – only bothering to leave a voicemail once (a hint: while we’re virtual we do have “real” phones that have caller ID). When Cortney, my Assistant, finally reached him to book our phone meeting, we were less than a week from our renewal. Here’s the breakdown of the conversation:
9:15 AM Central Time comes and goes (our agreed upon call time)
9:21 My phone finally rings. It’s my new representative. It’s clear he doesn’t understand how OCD I can be about the timing on phone calls. He starts the call with, “So how’s your business doing these days?” with an artificially chipper tonality. I politely asked if he had turned on the news in the last 9 months and then reminded him that we had 15 minutes booked for the call and we were down to 7.5 minutes left because of his tardiness.
9:32 I’ve had to explain, at length, what the entire situation was that had happened during the previous September. Apparently, the CRM system at Monster.com isn’t equipped to keep track of week-long legal boondoggles with clients that have paid them nearly $75,000 over 5 years. If you’ll remember, I mentioned earlier that Chris Shaw, our representative at the time, was a great advocate for us. Our new representative made it a point to remind me, at least 3 times during these 11 minutes, “Well, based on all of these exceptions that you benefitted from in the past year, you’ll clearly understand why Chris isn’t with our company any more.”
9:34 I’m now 4 minutes late for a commitment I made to call a prospective candidate for one of our biggest clients. As politely as I can muster, I shared with our representative, “Look, I appreciate that you’re not a fan of Chris. I also respect that you have a precious “rate card” that you’re allowed to discount from by 75% (side note, if a sales rep can discount by 75% off of a rate card, what’s the point of even having a rate card?), but unless you can wrap your brain around the fact that I’m VERY familiar with your legal contract and that I’m not willing to buy ONE seat (as he suggested) and pass around the username to everyone (which is in violation of their agreement) or 9 full, individual seats for our employees who spend about 1 hour per week each on your website, we don’t have much more to talk about. And I’m late for my next call. I need to go.”
9:36 It’s starting to get ridiculous. Every effort that I’ve made to be polite so that I can move on to my next commitment has been ignored. It’s as if I’m speaking an entirely different language. My representative has shared with me things like, “You know, 2 years ago we were only permitted to discount by 15%” and “What you received last September was clearly a one time thing and there’s no way I could get that approved again.” His arguments were as pertinent to our conversation as the amount of snow they received in the Napa Valley last year. ”I know we’ve gone a bit over our alloted time this morning Jonathan. Why don’t you let me go back to my managers and that Compliance Team from last September and see if I can work something out for you.”
3:10 Central Time – My representative called me back to share the news with me. ”Jonathan, what I’ve gotten approval for is to sell you 9 individual seats at 75% off of our rate card. This is a great deal. Can I send over the agreement?”
If you’ve hung with me and read all the way down to this part of this blog post I hope you’ll let me clarify something: My intent of this post was NOT to air the dirty laundry of my discussions with Monster.com. However, sharing that level of detail was critically important because this is what I want every company who acts as a service provider for us to understand:
- Our Core Values are NOT something that we just hung on a wall for everyone to ignore. Earning Trust, Having Balance, Adding Value and Respect play a significant part in every decision that we make every day.
- I (and We) will never apologize for or alter our decision to have hired the team that we have in place that just happen to work from their homes all around the country. Because we have Balance in our lives, the quality of the work that we do for our clients is TOP NOTCH. When we work, we work hard. And then we stop and spend time with our families. We don’t waste time commuting, attending pointless meetings or waiting in line for lunch in the same 15 minute period that everyone else has to run to the local fast food joint.
- We may need a concession or two from you, as a service provider, because we ARE different. Here are some of the companies who have acknowledged that and will be Partners of ours for a long time:
- Pioneer Bank in Dripping Springs, TX
- 8×8: the providers of Packet 8 Phones
- Apple
- Otherinbox
- 37Signals
- Jintech
- Clutch Creative
- Spross & Associates
And one final note to Monster.com: it’s 2009. It might be time for you to take a good hard look at services like LinkedIn, ZoomInfo, Recruiter’s Earth, Door64, Google, Craig’s List and a host of other websites that passed you by a long time ago. For me, I’ll take the $13,000 I just saved by not renewing with your service and I’ll spend it on training our employees on AIRS. After all, our commitment to our clients is that they’ll HIRE BETTER. Your website simply doesn’t help us do that any more.
Tags: 8x8, A-Players, AIRS, american workforce, amwf, bad hires, career history, clutch creative, hire better, hiring, LinkedIn, Monster, monster.com, OtherInbox, pioneer bank, proactive recruiting, purchasing decisions, recruit don't absorb, Recruiting, research, talent acquisition, talent vault, Topgrading, tweets, Twitter, unemployment, unemployment rate, virtual bench, zoominfo
Build It Right – Right from the Start
Hanging out with Early Stage Entrepreneurs is about my favorite thing in the world to do. For the past 18 months I’ve been actively involved in EO’s Accelerator Program which is dedicated to helping companies between $250k-$1mm grow faster and more efficiently through peer to peer learning, introductions to advisors and facilitated learning opportunities.
This morning I got the chance to share some of our best practices with the Portfolio Companies of Austin’s newest Incubator: Capital Factory. (If you’re interested, you can follow them on Twitter: @capitalfactory). I find it exhilarating to spend time with new companies and brilliant minds and I’m proud to have American Workforce be a supporter of this organization. This morning we focused on how each and every one of their companies has a chance to do things right – right from the start. None of them have started to hire employees yet but each of them has the plan to in the very near future. We talked about a number of strategies and the ways that they can make their companies attractive to top talent without having to spend a lot of money. But what I really challenged each of them to do was to analyze their Virtual Bench, build a repeatable screening process that gets to the point of what they need to find out about someone before hiring them, and thinking about the candidates’ perspectives when they are considering joining these new companies.
There were FOUR main questions that I asked them to really think about as we were wrapping up. If you’re a Business Owner, aspiring Entrepreneur or Manager, you should be thinking about these questions too:
- What is the first impression we provide to prospective A-Players when they come on-site to meet us?
- If we’re interviewing an A-Player and everyone knows it, are we willing to make our decision on the spot? If not, what else needed to happen during screening to make us comfortable and confident?
- Have we acknowledged the spouse or significant other and included them during the recruiting process? How could we?
- Are we ready to have new A-Players on our team? Can our management style challenge them so that they’ll stay and thrive in our company?
And the BONUS Question: Are we comfortable hiring people that have the potential to take our position?
Sure, Topgrading is tough to implement. But in the 2 years that I’ve been involved with it, I’ve found that it’s the questions above that impair companies and limit the effectiveness of the process more than conducting 4 hour interviews or executing on TORC. What are you doing in your company to Hire Better?
Tags: @capitalfactory, @joshuabaer, A-Player, A-Players, american workforce, amwf, aspiring entrepreneur, Austin, capital factory, chris mursau, emerging entrepreneur, EO, EO Accelerator, Fame, Family, Fortune, Fun, hire better, hiring, Interview, job description, josh baer, recruit don't absorb, Recruiting, Scorecard, talent acquisition, Topgrading, topgrading methodology, TORC, Twitter, virtual bench, who the book
CEO Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-05-09
- The EOers who are improving the world for Emerging Entrepreneurs: @lead_by_change, @andreazdril, @strategista, @sweetriot. #EOGLC #
- @sweetriot love the energy, passion & insight you brought to Accelerator’s Global Cmtee meeting this morning. Welcome aboard! #EOGLC in reply to sweetriot #
- When Facilitation goes right: identifying Dangers get people engaged, reviewing Opportunities gets them inspired! #EOGLC #
- The benefits of EO continue to amaze me. I simply can’t imagine trying to be an Entrepreneur without it. #EOGLC #
- #EO member just shared with me: Topgrading looks great! I read all 600 pages. How do I do it? #EOGLC (via @Topgrading) #
- Stunned! Sitting with Remington Green in NoLa. His company employs all WAHMs in a virtual company. I’ve met my soulmate. #EOGLC #
- EO staffers backstage with the most incredible Mardi Gras Floats. Once in a lifetime! #EOGLC http://yfrog.com/0espgxj #
- Jindal flw-up: if you want new biz in LA we need access to talent. If the Ritz is example, the gene pool is shallow #EOGLC (via @HireBetter) #
- #followfriday Anyone at #eoglc – @sjagger @jmb3883 @amwf @matthewweiss @sweetriot @govindh @dhassell (via @JeremyBrandt & @HireBetter) #
- I’ve proudly accepted my new Global Committee role for #EO under the Leadership of @andreazdril. I call it: Head Whackamole-er. #EOGLC #
- Tried to scare 6 new Accelerator Site Champions away w/ the daunting work it takes to launch. All 6 said, “Bring it on!” #EOGLC #
- Developing your Human Resources in a downturn. Compelling point: it isn’t coming from the HR Dept http://bit.ly/kYc8O (via @HireBetter) #
- Results.com’s @stephenlynch provides great insight on Mgmnt By Walking Around in The Economist http://bit.ly/bR1er #
- If the growth & improvements of EO’s Accel Pgm are indicators, Entrepreneurs ARE the most qualified to lead us out of Recession #EOGLC #
- Hey GLC, thanks for the invite to your awards, I had a blast!!! Congrats to all the winners!! #EOGLC (via @ace_frehley) #
- RT @jmb3883: EO’s Managing Director Bob is cracking up the staff office at #EOGLC. Best. Managing. Director. Ever. (AMWF: I concur) #
- Enjoying the innovation & energy of 30+ EO member-leaders that will shape Accelerator in 09-10 #EOGLC http://yfrog.com/5323176772j #
- Jindal gave best “entrepreneurs are welcome here” pitch I’ve seen & he meant it. His policies prove it (via @adrobins) #EOGLC #
- The hosts for tonight’s Rock Star awards. #EOGLC http://yfrog.com/0hiu9j #
- Ace Freeley from KISS attempts to compare Emtrepreneurs to Musicians: “we all wear blue nail polish, right?!”. #EOGLC #
- Jackie Berry (@jmb3883) named #EO Employee of the year in front of 600 members at #EOGLC. That drives culture! (via @HireBetter) #
- Don’t know where in Louisiana I could live that’s as cool as #Austin but if there was, I’d pack up the family. Jindahl’s impressive! #EOGLC #
- LAGov Bobby Jindahl is giving entrepreneurs incentives to move their companies.. #EOGLC. (via @dhassell) #
- Jindahl: “Why are unemployed insured & lose health insrnce when they get jobs? People behave if you incentivize. #EOGLC (via @HireBetter) #
- Bobby Jindahl live! So wise & eloquent. Awesome to hear an Indian American with a sweet Southern accent. #eoglc (via @sweetriot) #
- RT@adrobins: B Jindahl: As long as who you know is more important than what you know, businesses are going to hold back investment. #GLC09 #
- Your 2012 Republican Nominee for POTUS: Bobby Jindal. #EOGLC. http://yfrog.com/0gmoeuj #
- Getting the chance to hear Bobby Jindal at #EOGLC. Only state in US to lose more population than it gained for 15 straight years. #
- Very cool: 09-10 Incoming Austin Prez for EO gives each Board Member a Texas Football Jersey. #EOGLC. Look out NoLa. #
- @sweetriot #envy. in reply to sweetriot #
- @JeremyBrandt is #EOGLC our official tag for the weekend? in reply to JeremyBrandt #
- The 3 Defining Moments of GenerationY (born 1977-1995): Challenger, Gulf War on TV, 9/11. #
- GenYGuy: Boomers consider this GenerationY group “lazy” but they are the 1st generation that will work for more than 60 years! #
- GenYGuy: whole room moans when he shares falling home values, dropping retirement accounts but their 28 yr old w/ a Masters just moved home #
- Listening to the GenYGuy in #Austin explain to the Baby Boomers why GenY isn’t remotely affected by the Recession #
- Single greatest challenge of a globally distributed team: meetings that start at 11 PM get you fired up and you can’t sleep. Sigh… #
- My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government. Thomas Jefferson #optea (via @dcjc) #
- @Coachjimbo Not unless the company doing the interviews is strong enough to “land” an A-Player. If not, they’ll get frustrated fast! #
- @snasta I believe Corey Bell at TriFusion would be a good place to start. in reply to snasta #
Tags: A-Players, american workforce, amwf, capitalism, capitalist, hire better, Recruiting, Topgrading, tweets, Twitter
CEO Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-05-02
- AMWF CEO Jonathan Davis will deliver “Topgrading: Your company’s not ready for it” on June 4th in #Austin. (via @Topgrading) #
- Snowboarding in the woods & navigating the trees is like moving thru life: don’t look at trees…focus on the spaces (via @SteveSavad) #
- @SteveSavad will there be an #EO twitter feed today? What’s the hashtag? in reply to SteveSavad #
- Cloud Potential is just incredible. Thanks to Rackspace & Mosso for hosting the first Lunch 2.0. #
- Headed to meet @jbryce and @lewmoorman for the Mosso Cloud event in #Austin. #
- It’s not my normal tweet theme about Talent or Capitalism, but this is important about #swineflu: http://doihavepigflu.com/. #
- @GamePlanHayden the time you waste drinking the High Life is not time wasted at all. in reply to GamePlanHayden #
- Brad Smart suggests Topgrading Interviews save $60,000 per hour you spend. Do you agree? (via @Topgrading) #
- Google continues to do cool stuff: compare & chart unemployment rates in any area – http://bit.ly/9Q962 #
- “Bigger than Texas” – a blog post from results.com about the EO Texas Roundup http://budurl.com/bigger (via @andymeadows) #
- Just joined http://twibes.com/EntrepreneursOrganization. If you’re in #EO you should too. #
- @FrontRowDave buy-in for a Topdrading can’t come on the backend. People run from pain, they wander towards pleasure. in reply to FrontRowDave #
- 190 babies will be born in the next 45 seconds. India: 25 / China: 20 / USA: 5 / UK: 1 #
- “We have to do it in the Facebook, with the Twittering, the different technology that young people are using today.” – former RNC Chair. #
- Congrats to @neelan on the acquisition of Lexcycle by AMZN – less than 18 months after launch! http://budurl.com/ykfj #
- GDP Down >6% but Consumer Spending was UP 2.2% http://budurl.com/rpug #
- @FrontRowDave What kind of “elevator” pitch are you trying to create? I’m a bit of a Topgrading Junkie. in reply to FrontRowDave #
- Dig your well before you’re thirsty: Tips for building a Virtual Bench – http://budurl.com/2ejg #
- @BobGambert the irony in your question is that the one candidate to “decrease taxes” in Austin might be the one to raise them the least. in reply to BobGambert #
- @ChrisFerdinandi check out budurl.com. Comprehensive click stats. in reply to ChrisFerdinandi #
- Passionate about Improving Hiring Success, Topgrading or Technology? Visit http://twibes.com/hirebetter to join the HireBetter Twibe. #
- Just started a Twibe. Visit http://twibes.com/hirebetter to join. #
- Jeffrey Miron’s case for the Government doing NOTHING. http://bit.ly/DGQ0A #
- Thank you Quickbooks! They released a beta today that allows their Online Edition to work on Safari. Welcome to 2009. #
- Liberty never comes from gov’t but rather from its Subjects. Its history is resistance & limitation of gov’t power not expansion – WWilson #
- RT @Topgrading – Brad Smart: “Our society is in need of an ethical transplant.” He believes at least 50% of people LIE on resumes. #
- 72 hours of “vacation” at the Texas Roundup and I’m utterly exhausted! Thanks Houston for a great time. #EOH09 #
- Mid 50’s 4 cylinder Testarossa. 1st to carry the name. #EOH09 http://twitpic.com/40c9k #
- Private race team garage at Ferrari. #EOH09 http://twitpic.com/40c43 #
- Verne decided to hang out with us. #EOH09 http://twitpic.com/40b9h #
- Private party at Ferrari of Houston. #EOH09 http://twitpic.com/407q9 #
- 80% of Americans do not like their jobs #eoh09 (via @salesby5) #
- Cool non-profit: efefoundation.org. Helping young adults in the Middle East realize that there is opportunity available! #EOH09 #
- 1st real takeaway from Sinek: “When you compete against everyone else, no one cares. Compete against yourself & people will help” #EOH09 #
- Verne Harnish: everyone taking furious notes. Simon Sinek: they draw a bullseye and then zone out. #EOH09 #
- Simon Sinek on stage now. Interesting: yes. Applicable: maybe. Unique: not at all. Everyone talks about Jobs, Dell, Gates. Yawn. #EOH09 #
- Big ?s Bizs are asking: Pricing? Add new services/products? Srvc Biz Productizing/Prdct Biz Servicing? To decide: ask customers! #EOH09 #
- Changed our Blog’s title, bought a domain, registered a new Twitter handle and bought a book in the last 20 minutes. Thx Verne. #EOH09 #
- China’s biggest business challenge: CASH (they see so much opportunity). #EOH09 #
- India’s biggest business challenges: PEOPLE & EXECUTION. #EOH09 #
- Western Culture’s biggest challenge in 09: STRATEGY (by a factor of 4) #EOH09 #
- 4 Challenges in Business: People, Strategy, Execution, Cash. Will tweet the Global Priorities in 1min. #EOH09 #
- What does Toyota think of Six Sigma? “using a nuclear weapon to take out an ant hill”. Verne Harnish at #EOH09 #
- Price Cutting is this economy’s cocaine. Reducing your price will NOT increase demand, it will just kill your margins. #EOH09 #
- Verne’s challenge to us: what are the 1 or 2 words that your company can OWN? AMWF’s: “Hire Better” #EOH09 #
- Verne Harnish: “I don’t actually enjoy doing everything I teach.” Find a great #2. #EOH09 #
- Michael Dell now realizes the primary reason for Dell’s woes is that he turned his back on Marketing. #EOH09 #
- As a leader, we think we have all the answers. What we lack is the questions. Listen more, talk less, ask questions. #EOH09 #
- To start the morning: “We are all food for worms”. Are you awake yet? #EOH09 #
- Are you a Lion or Gazelle? #EOH09 http://twitpic.com/3yktd #
- A first for #EO: Ben Richter gets a morning event started on time! #EOH09 #
- @andymeadows couldn’t agree more. in reply to andymeadows #
- Looking forward to Verne Harnish @thegrowthguy in Houston. Follow #EOH09 for the feed #
- Hash update for the EO Texas Roundup: #EOH09 #
Tags: A-Players, american workforce, amwf, capitalism, capitalist, hire better, Recruiting, Topgrading, tweets, Twitter
CEO Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-04-24
- M.Luttrell quote, “If you’ve ever quit once you’re a quitter & it’s only a matter of time til you do it again”. This guy’s a badass SOB. #EO #
- @stephenlynch got to hear Simon Mundell this morning. Awesome! #EO in reply to stephenlynch #
- Seriously: how does anyone run a company without the help of #EO? #
- @lead_by_change I wrote about just that last week. Check it here: http://bit.ly/2ocC in reply to lead_by_change #
- Cultural Change can’t be achieved by a one-person Army. http://budurl.com/aexw #
- Word of caution: upgrade BaseCamp account to get SSL. Our GroupHub got hacked & that’s how hacker found FTP info needed to hack our site. #
- RT @Topgrading: Smart&Assocs is offering free phone consulting to co’s that License the Topgrading Forms & Guides for a limited time. #
- FU to previous tweet on Topgrading: company stands to drop $8mm annually to the bottom line with A-Player Middle Managers. #
- Quote from a prospect today, “We simply can’t afford to execute on Topgrading”. Wow. #
- Art show for Maggie Weaver tonight. Please come join: http://budurl.com/maggie #
- In Negotiations with a domain squatter. Offering him a 3,000% ROI. If he turns it down I’m dropping the legal hammer. #
- Blog with Wordpress got hacked! Anyone know how to fix it? #
- RT @dcjc: in teaching Economics, this would work for kids today…maybe they could teach their parents! http://tparty2.com/ #
- Headed to lunch with the “Gen Y Guy” Jason Dorsey to talk recruiting, on-boarding and managent strategies for Gen Y. #
- Called Dr to pay bill. VM for Girl says, “Due to volume I will call you w/in 2 days”. Is volume due to ppl paying or crappy billing? #fail #
Tags: A-Players, american workforce, amwf, capitalism, capitalist, Recruiting, Topgrading, tweets, Twitter
Establishing Accountability on a Volunteer or Non-Profit Board: Topgrading can help
For the past 2 years I’ve been fortunate to be involved with something called the Accelerator Program. Established by the Entrepreneurs Organization, the Accelerator Program was built around educational content focused on four key issues faced by first-stage entrepreneurs: strategic planning, sales & marketing, people and finance. Unlike Business Schools or Government Programs, the Accelerator Participants learn from actual Entrepreneurs who are running their organizations day to day and have businesses that are over $1mm in Revenue (less than 4% of companies in the US ever attain this level).
In July, my role as the CHAMPION for Central Texas (essential the Chairman of the Program here in Austin) expires. My Champion-Elect, Jeffrey Stukuls, will take over. I’ve been working hard on a transition plan and wanted to be sure that I had:
- Chosen the right person for the position
- Assessed them on the skill sets and competencies needed to be successful
- Clearly set expectations so that they knew both (a) what success meant and (b) what was expected of them
As I was going through all of this I had one of those light bulb moments of clarity. I thought, “Why not create a Top Accountabilities document like we do for our clients here at Hire Better?” In case your not familiar, the Top Accountabilities idea was established by Dr. Brad Smart in his book Topgrading.
It’s funny that this kind of idea never struck me as being a solution before but when you really think about it, when have you ever gotten something as simple as a Job Description for a Volunteer role that you had?
Because this blog post wouldn’t have that much meaning unless I showed it to you, I asked Jeffrey if he would mind if I published the document. Hope you enjoy it! Click HERE and it will open in a new window.
Tags: A-Player, A-Players, Accelerator Program, american workforce, amwf, Austin, Board, Brad Smart, business school, central texas, Champion, Champion-Elect, chris mursau, competency, competency library, comptencies, Entrepreneurs, Entrepreneurs Organization, EO, first-stage entrepreneurs, Interview, Jeffrey Stukuls, job description, non-profit, revenue, Scorecard, Top Accountabilities, top accountabilities document, Topgrading, topgrading methodology, volunteer, what success means, YEO
An Open Letter to The Staffing Advisor
I’ve watched a dialogue occur over the last couple of weeks between Brad Smart, the Author of Topgrading, and Bob Corlett who owns a recruiting firm in Washington DC and refers to himself as The Staffing Advisor for his Blog.
I’m genuinely concerned that by responding to the initial post of Mr. Corlett’s called, “What Exactly is a Top Performer?” Dr. Smart provided some credibility to what was written and provided an opportunity for this blog post to get some notoriety that it didn’t deserve. After reading Mr. Corlett’s rebuttal I simply can’t stay quiet.
Disclaimer: Topgrading is not a novel. Topgrading is not an easy read. Topgrading is not a page-turner. Honestly, Topgrading is about as dry as a piece of burnt toast without butter. With that being said, it’s still one of the best business books ever written.
Before I begin, I’m going to take a small tangent. The book Freakonomics sold more than 3 million copies when it was released 4 years ago. Buried within those pages was a chapter about the imperfection of the commission model for Realtors. It closely assessed the value of a Realtor’s contribution to the home selling process and found, in short, “the commission you pay your Realtor is in essence a big fat tip”.
I’ll complete my thoughts on why I’ve included this random snippet from Steven Levitt in my conclusion but I wanted to make sure I got that in on the front end to get you thinking.
On to the Open Letter…
I’d like to point out that I’m going to be jumping back and forth between both of Mr. Corlett’s posts on Topgrading (the second being his rebuttal) and his website. I’ll lead in with a direct quote as a precursor to that section to make it easy to follow.
Part 1
“I freely admit that I gave up and only made it halfway through [Topgrading] (worst beach read ever).”
“I found nothing that would help my clients make better hires, short of implementing a massive, formal, top heavy initiative to learn how to conduct a Topgrading interview. And that is simply not practical when you are hiring only one or two of each kind of person.”
I’ve grouped these quotes together to try to point out a very significant element of my counter to Mr. Corlett. If you’re [Bob Corlett] positioning yourself as an expert in the world of “Results Based Hiring” and you’re choosing to bash your “competition” in a very public forum, might it make sense to actually read the entire book before making blanket judgments and heavy-handed criticisms of a process and methodology that is proven to be wildly successful when implemented properly? You’ve lambasted every CEO who shares with you that they want to hire A-Players through Topgrading after admitting that you personally have an inability to finish the foremost book on the topic. Is this at all indicative of how you screen candidates whom you are considering presenting to your clients – that is, seeing a resume that is more than a page long, making a judgment after reading their address and then choosing to wholeheartedly endorse or count an applicant out?
Here’s the thing: if you can’t find a single item in this book to help your clients make better hires I truly doubt that you even read half of it. My guess is, you got to page 63, read the section about Search Firms and Brad’s suggestions on due diligence, and stopped.
Here are some examples of things that we have implemented and have helped our clients implement as well that we learned from inside the pages of Topgrading:
1. Take the time to build Scorecards. When we know what we’re looking for and then we can show the new hire what we screened them on and what we expect of them, the likelihood of their success (in our experience) improves exponentially. Interestingly enough, Mr. Corlett, you even mention this exact idea later in your blog when you said, “Here is a strategy that will dramatically improve both your results and the quality of your life: set performance goals [and] manage your people against the results.”* My guess is that you weren’t able to get far enough into the book to read that part.
2. TORC (threat of reference checks). We always check references but not the ones that our candidates are interested in giving us. We require and only talk to previous managers and we don’t let candidates advance in the process until that is finished. Geoff Smart, Brad’s son, suggests that about 25% of the information you learn about a candidate is obtained during reference checks. I think he’s right on.
3. Create a Virtual Bench. Jack Daly, an esteemed Public Speaker and former CEO is famous for saying, “It’s called RECRUITING, not ABSORBING”. We’ve got a list of people that we’re always recruiting and talking to in the event we need to hire them due to growth or turnover at American Workforce. Our clients do too!
Part 2
“In a job description you need to nail down exactly what you are looking for.”
“There is no universal set of attributes. It depends on the job.” “Most companies need a diverse mix of skills and work styles, but all with a common shared set of values.”
“Small organizations need to think hard, move fast, and make the best decisions possible with imperfect information.”
Really, I love Jack Daly. I bring him up again because I got to hear him recently and so much of it rang true. One of his favorite stories is about VISION and PLANNING. The story goes something like this:
Jack walked out of his house the other day and saw his neighbor filling his car with luggage. He was really cramming it in; filled up the trunk and then the back seat too.
Jack called out to him, “Hey, where you headed?”
“East!” his neighbor replied.
“How long you think it’s going to take you?” Jack countered.
“Quite a while, not sure really.” his neighbor shouted back.
“How much money you gonna need to get there?”
“Beats me, just hope I don’t run out!” said the neighbor.
I shared this story because I think that the next-door neighbor is a lot more like most small businesses than you could possibly imagine. Simply asking a hiring manager to write a job description when they have no experience doing it and hoping that they can “nail down exactly what they are looking for” is a lot tougher than it appears on the surface. Believing that your clients need to think hard and move fast while making decisions based on imperfect information as it relates to their hiring decisions is very, very dangerous. Not only does it adversely affect your ability to screen for the right kinds of people, it leaves your clients open to hiring based on “gut feel” and emotion instead of reality and strategy.
No, Topgrading is NOT easy. Neither is being an A-Player.
Part 3
“We’ll continue…developing faster, less expensive, less cumbersome ways to help our clients consistently hire people who will drive business results”.
There was a time when we thought about touting our speed to hire or cost per hire at American Workforce. Before we learned about Topgrading we were proud of our speed. Today, the focus isn’t on speed or cost at all. Rather, we focus on helping organizations change their methodology and expectations around hiring. We know that Topgrading has been effective when (1) our clients can hire the first or second person they interview – no matter what the role because the hiring managers know what they are looking for and (2) the employees perform as expected.
When Business Owners or Hiring Managers share with me that Topgrading is or was too hard it is almost always indicative of them being ill-prepared by not knowing what they actually want to hire or too reactionary in their hiring process (e.g. only thinking about new hires when someone leaves). As previously mentioned, these companies are simply absorbing new people, not recruiting them.
Part 4
“As someone who runs a search firm, I am also cognizant of the candidate perspective, which is generally not favorable toward Topgrading.”
Dave Kurlan, Founder and CEO of the Objective Management Group, has come up with the five major challenges that salespeople face and must overcome before they can be successful in sales.
The most significant of these challenges is something that he calls a “Need for Approval”. He describes it as, “Salespeople who have a high need for approval will avoid saying or doing the things which, in their mind, would change how the prospect feels about them. This includes asking tough questions, legitimate confrontation and the potential inability to handle rejection.”
At American Workforce we’ve actually had to screen out the Need for Approval from the people on our team who conduct interviews. Why? Our interviewers need to be able to interview with the clear understanding that it’s not their responsibility to make the candidates like them. Candidates don’t hire us – companies do. If the candidates can’t handle a company doing its due diligence and lose their temper or get easily frustrated, what does that say about how they will react under pressure in front of a client six months from now as an employee? Conducting Topgrading interviews takes focus and guts. Focus to stick with the plan and the guts to be able to ask the tough questions and not back off when someone gives a weak answer to a question because they either have something to hide or they’re too lazy to go into greater detail.
Conclusion
As promised, I want to finish my thought on why I included a whole paragraph about the commission structure of Realtors in the beginning of this Letter. When he really dug into it, Levitt found that Realtors aren’t really acting in the best interest of their clients. You can pretty easily figure out why when you consider the following:
-When they are selling a house their only incentive is speed, not getting the best price. They’re going to receive 3% of the sale price. To encourage a homeowner to reduce the cost of their home from $200,000 to $180,000 results in a net loss of only $600 to the realtor but they pick up a check for $5,400. The homeowner loses 10% of their value. If they [the Realtor] turn down a lowball offer and really stand up for the seller of the house, they risk not getting paid at all.
-When they are helping to buy a house, every dollar that they negotiate in savings for a buyer results in them making LESS money.
Here’s why I think this is so applicable to why nearly every recruiting company in America is denunciatory of Topgrading:
-If a company is paying a recruiter a percentage of the first year’s salary (akin to a Realtor receiving a percentage of the sale price), the ONLY incentive that recruiter has is to get someone hired quickly so they can avoid expending more than the minimum amount of effort. They are NOT incentivized to:
- ask tough questions
- conduct reference checks with past managers
- point out red flags on a resume or a career history form
-If a company is paying a recruiter to help negotiate compensation with a prospective candidate, every dollar they help the company save is costing them part of their commission.
Your recruiters should be partners with your company. Because they are truly incentivized against doing so, why should we expect any traditional recruiting firm, and especially ones like Staffing Advisors, to ever embrace the tenets of Topgrading?
Finally, Topgrading isn’t the ONLY way of recruiting and it can’t be implemented as an initiative from HR. It must be adopted wholeheartedly and with the full endorsement of every Executive inside a company. When this happens and it is implemented properly and executed on with precision, its results are staggering – no matter the size of the company.
About The Author:
Jonathan Davis is the author of the HIRE BETTER blog and also the CEO and Founder of Hire Better.
Jonathan has spent the last decade helping build companies from scratch. It started with an e-commerce company in New York City in the late 90’s and he quickly learned that he loved helping other companies build strong systems that would support rapid growth. After five years as a Principal of a Staff Leasing and HR-Outsourcing firm he started working on the one area where he saw the biggest lack of viable solutions for growing companies: Talent Acquisition. A self-professed “Operational Dork”, Jonathan is responsible for the strategic leadership of American Workforce as it continues to revolutionize the world of recruiting through a focus on metrics and innovation. He graduated from the University at Albany in upstate New York. An active member of the Young Entrepreneurs’ Organization (EO), he sits on the Global Committee for Emerging Programs and is the Austin Champion for EO’s Accelerator Program. He’ll graduate from the MIT “Birthing of Giants” program in 2010. When he’s not at the office you’ll find him officiating a college baseball game or regaling the merits of capitalism with a stranger at a local coffee house. He can be reached by calling (512)-355-1499 or clicking here.
About Hire Better
At Hire Better, our mission is simple: provide high growth companies with high impact solutions for Hiring Confidently and Predictably. Because after all, should recruiting your future employees really be something that is done faster and cheaper?
We achieve success by focusing on our 3 Core Values:
- BALANCE: Because our employees have balance in their lives they produce a better work product and results than any other company in the world of Talent Acquisition.
- TRUST: Trust is paramount to everything else.
- VALUE: Always add value. Always.
Our understanding of recruiting processes, networking and government compliance combined with insight into the online landscape and technical innovation drive real, quantifiable results.
*Geoff Smart & Randy Street released a little more user-friendly book entitled WHO in 2008. The quick and dirty version of their scorecard framework can be found on page 44.
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