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Monday 29 May 2017

HR learning: 29 May, 2017

1.
Tweetchat on challenges in HIPO development: Maneuvering the Potholes

HIPOs are indeed talent of the future, with the change in business landscape there is need for assertive leadership. Therefore, identifying and nurturing HIPOS is crucial. Here is the insightful Tweetchat on HIPOs. 
Companies are striving today to build competencies through leadership development programs. Hi-PO programs are one such key initiative taken up by companies to inbuilt future leaders and fulfil future talent gaps. 
As per the CEB research, published in People Matters- HIPOs are 91% more valuable than non-HIPOs. Hi-Po has long been a buzzword in the HR community, but it seems like we are still struggling with the most basic challenges of identifying Hi-Po employees, and designing Hi-Po Development Programs.
Focusing on challenges in HIPO development, People Matters organized a tweetchat which witnessed a potpourri of thoughts and ideas from varied professionals in the HR world.

2.
Listening to the voice within

In an exclusive interview with People Matters, Ashish Vidyarthi, a national award winning actor, thinker, speaker and the founder of Avid Miner talks about the common threads of life and work hinged on incremental learning.
Ashish Vidyarthi is a National Award winning actor and has been trained in acting at the National School of Drama (NSD). Over the last twenty two years, he has worked in more than two hundred films across eleven languages.  Vidyarthi founded Avid Miner, a platform for engaging in unique conversations with people and organizations — conversations that are born out of real life experiences and interactions.  The following interview excerpt reflects Ashish’s learnings that he derived from his experiences, and how these help professionals in their quest for self-fulfillment. Q: You have been an actor for the last 24 years and now you are doing something that is totally different. Looking back at your career, what were the instances that led you to establish Avid Miner, and to start these leadership conversations?  A: From my life experiences, I have concluded that people usually have well-defined perceptions about each other; and if they find somebody doing ...

3.
Developing HiPo Programs: Averting the Red Flags

Some common mistakes can be avoided while developing a HiPo Development Program.
HiPo Development Programs are essential to establish a leadership pipeline, and ensure that the organisation continues to thrive in the future. Such programs spot and develop employees with potential for a larger role, and thereby bring in the element of sustainability in the organisation, and that of stability in the individual’s career. However, more often than not, such programs are not done right. The challenge is three-fold: organisations fail to identify the right talent, engage them in the right manner and then fail to retain them. The result: drop-out rates are dangerously high. 
There are, however some easy pitfalls one can avoid while designing and executing a HiPo Development Program:
Expectation setting: It is critical that you have adjusted your expectations to the reality and know for a fact the end result of such a program.
Screening: Relying only on managers and team leaders to identify HiPo employees is a subjective and rather biased methodology. The program must have a sufficiently high barrier to include the very best of the best, but must be inclusive for everybody to be considered.
Design the learning: Shipping off a bunch of employees to an exotic hotel for a two-week intensive training, and expecting them to come out as a senior leader is a misplaced intervention. The idea is to push HiPo employees to realise and hone their capability, and train them to be a natural part of the company’s future – not to overburden them with information, jargon and strategies. The design of the training intervention must be flexible to allow for everyone to learn and grow together, and must focus on actual application-based learning and mentoring, as opposed to classroom learning.
Measuring & Evaluation: Setting the baseline performance, measuring the progress, placing the employee in their future leadership competencies are all steps that must extensively use well-documented data and information. Psychological tests, 360 rating, group discussions, knowledge assessment tests are some tools that can be used to track the progress of an individual in different parameters. 
Sustainability: Ensuring the longevity of the program is one of the hardest challenges for HR professionals, as interest levels drop with time. Either the management fails to see the benefit of the program, or the participant doesn’t feel valued enough to continue; the challenge to engage the participants throughout the program is a tough nut to crack.
One thing is clear: there is no cookie-cutter approach to developing HiPo leaders, and organisations need to spend time, energy and resources in developing one that meets their unique requirements.

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