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Tuesday 31 October 2017

HR learning: 31 Oct, 2017



1.
How to make time for learning in your organization

Investing in employees learning and development is amongst the best ways to aid career growth, high engagement levels and retention 
Technical, functional and behavioral capability building helps keep an organization relevant in an increasingly disruptive marketplace. Apart from increasing productivity, training is also an indispensable talent magnet; it helps enhance the employee value proposition to attract, engage and retain top talent. This is because training increases employee loyalty, leading to better engagement and is a great career progression tool. 
Building a culture of learning is critical to engage in continuous learning. Bhanu Patnaik, Vice President - Talent Management at Happiest Minds notes that one of the ways the company ensures a learning culture is by finding the right balance between online and classroom courses. Further the company also employs internal employees to impart knowledge to create a learning culture.

2.
The Learning curve: Humor is more than ROFL and LOL

It leads to better coordination and connection and makes the cubicles more fun to work. Indeed, quality of life is a strong indicator of performance affecting the overall well-being of the employees.
How can we even ignore an important element of social dynamics of the organizations we work at?  Humor, often seen as positive deliberations is majorly perceived as invoking positive emotions. It is one of the fine-tuned keys to influence and getting work done. Although it cannot be ignored that decoding humor completely depends on interpretation by receiver.
Meyer (2000) quotes humor is a double edged sword, it can both be a unifier or a divider which may delineate social boundaries. There has been a considerable amount of research done on humor as a mode of communication. 

3.

How to craft a stable identity in the modern workplace.

In a professional world that allows you to and demands of you to reinvent yourself every few years, to be able to craft a homogenous professional identity is an opportunity and simultaneously a daunting necessity.
The question of who we’re meant to be in a professional environment, or because of it, has hurled an entire generation searching for alternate careers and skipping firms. Perhaps the most obvious paradox of the modern workplace is that it fails to offer a structure for the modern worker to navigate up to a successful end. The problem an average worker faces today is not of navigation, but that of discovery and creation. 
You can see the need for control in one’s career translate into a need for empowerment in one’s job, and the search for a coherent identity manifest itself as a search for meaning and purpose. While the firm’s response to the surface level anxiety lies in the emergence of an over 40$ billion wellness industry, the deeper problem is less simple.

HR News: 31 Oct, 2017

1.
Airbnb to buy Indians-backed background verification company, Trooly

Trooly helps in proactively identifying potentially highest value, lowest risk recruits at a cost of $1 per query.
Trooly, the back ground verification company founded by three Indians – Savi Baveja, Anish Das Sarma and Nilesh Dalvi – is now all set to be acquired by its client, Airbnb.

Trooly uses public and permissible digital footprints to understand and predict the trustworthiness of individuals and businesses. Its Instant Trust ratings evaluate multiple dimensions of trust - mining real-time data to evaluate identity, personality and behavior. It uses minimal and non-intrusive identity information as input, and provides screening for undesirable past behaviors, and, by using robust machine learning, it predicts the likely future behaviors.


2.
HR tech start-up Darwinbox gains investor attention: Raises $4 million series A funding

Plans to use the funding for product innovation and market expansion.
Technology in HR is on an upward trail and to boost it further, investors are showing great interest in the domain. American venture capital firm Lightspeed Venture Partners, along with a few others, just concluded a $4 million series A funding for home-grown enterprise Human Resource Management (HRMS) platform, Darwinbox.
Lightspeed India Partners led the round along with participation from Darwinbox's existing investors Endiya Partners, Mohandas Pai's 3one4 Capital and Startupxseed Ventures. The company had raised its pre-series A round less than a year ago.

Jayant Paleti, co-founder, Darwinbox, says, "There is a strong, ever increasing demand for a modern technology suite that will address the need for a system that’s not just for recordkeeping but a system of intelligence that helps propel the human resource agenda. With this capital raise, Darwinbox will continue to expand its core technology, product and go-to-market capability across India and internationally." 


3.
Acid attack victims to get reservation in central government jobs and promotions

Those with autism, intellectual disability, specific learning disability, mental illnesses and deaf-blindness will also be entitled to 1 per cent reservation.
In an effort to help acid attack victims, the central government has decided to give them reservation in central government job vacancies and promotions.

The Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) has made a draft policy where it proposes vacancies, promotions quotas and age relaxation for persons suffering from autism, mental illness, intellectual disability and victims of acid attack. This job vacancies reservation will be for the post of office assistant to the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers.

HR Movements: 31 Oct, 2017

1.
Ashwani Dahiya moves to Wells Fargo HK as regional vice-president-HR

Dahiya has shifted base to Hong Kong. 
Ashwani Dahiya has joined the financial service company, Wells Fargo, as regional VP, HR. He will be based out of Hong Kong. Wells Fargo is a diversifed, community-based fnancial services company with $1.9 trillion in assets. Founded in 1852, Wells Fargo provides banking, insurance, investments, mortgage, and consumer and commercial financial services through more than 8,500 locations, 13,000 ATMs, online, and mobile devices.
Dahiya, in his previous stint, was global chief talent officer & head of HR (corporate). He quit Cipla in July. At Cipla, he was leading HR for all corporate functions and centres of excellence, for talent acquisition, talent management, performance & reward, leadership, learning & development, organisation effectiveness and employee engagement. 

2.
Jones Lang LaSalle’s Sukhdeep Aurora joins ANAROCK as chief people officer

Aurora had worked for JLL for over four years before moving out. In the past he was with Aegon Religare and Abbott.
Sukhdeep Aurora, who was the head-HR, India at Jones Lang LaSalle has just joined ANAROCK Property Consultants as the chief people officer. Calling it a strategic career move, Aurora, in his new role, is looking at building up on the people front, for the rapidly growing business.
Having led HR at Jones Lang LaSalle for over four years, Aurora says, “JLL is a great organisation and I really enjoyed my journey there. It was a tough decision to move. However, for the want for fresh challenges, I decided to join ANAROCK, which is a growing start-up.”
The firm, founded by Anuj Puri, former chairman and country head of JLL, was actually JLL’s residential brokerage business, which was acquired by Puri earlier this year. The business has grown tremendously, starting with 150 people and now reaching a headcount of 700. While Aurora shares that the expansion is still on and the company is aiming for a headcount of 1000 by the end of this year, he also explains that they are hiring for culture fit.

3.
IDFC Bank’s senior director-HR, Ajay Pandey quits

Pandey has spent almost two years with IDFC, before which he was with ICICI for more than a decade.
IDFC Bank’s senior director-HR, Ajay Pandey, has put down his papers early this week and would now be serving a notice period. Pandey had joined IDFC Bank in November 2015, and after spending close to two years with the bank, he has now decided to take up a new endeavour.
While a source, close to the matter, confirmed the development, Pandey remained unavailable for comments.
A seasoned HR professional with over 30 years of experience, including over 21 years in the banking, BPO, life sciences industries and nine years in the Indian Air Force, Pandey carries a wide array of exposure. A postgraduate in human resources management/personnel management from the Somaiya Institute of Management Studies and Research, Pandey started his career with the Indian Airforce’s Technical Branch in 1984.
Prior to joining IDFC Bank, Pandey was associated with ICICI Bank for over a decade, where he joined as the head of HR for customer service and phone banking groups, in December 2005. Growing up the ranks over the years, he moved into the role of business HR head for retail assets in May 2007, and then zonal HR head for the East Zone. In June 2013, he took over as the deputy general manager HR and was heading the recruitment practice for the bank.
Pandey’s decision to quit comes only a few months after former Tata Sons’ head-HR, NS Rajan, joined IDFC Bank as the group chief human resources officer, in May this year.

Tuesday 24 October 2017

steps to succeed in the job you have been promoted to

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To go further in your career, know the rules for success after a promotion.
By Devashish Chakravarty

Congratulations on reaching your goal! Your promotion is done and dusted, you have figured out how much more you will be paid and you have celebrated the occasion with people who matter. You are now concerned about what to expect next and how will you deal with the changed situation.

Know that what you did in the past got you only up to this point and doing more of the same will not take you further. This is the time to learn a whole bunch of new things and work with a new set of people with different priorities. Read on for the rules for success after a promotion.

Reinforce confidence

One of the first things that you want to do is to assure the organisation that they did right in promoting you. Look for some quick wins that you can deliver in the first 3 months of your promotion. Is it that cost cutting measure you always felt could be implemented or is it that change in process that boosts team performance dramatically?
Make sure what you choose is impactful and the outcome is communicated to the right people, increasing your acceptance in the new role and making it easier to marshal resources for your big goals.



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What you will not do
A critical early activity that most new leaders miss out on is to make a list of tasks that one will not do! As a freshly promoted manager you are not expected to do everything yourself but to make sure that everything gets done. So, you were handling the reporting of data for your team.
Now is the time to drop that task and make sure someone else does it equally well and on time. This requires you to delegate, train people and not micro-manage them—all traits of a good manager. Doing so also frees up your calendar and gives you time for the next point.



What will get your boss promoted
Figure out the goals and KRAs for your new role. If these are not well defined, seek a meeting with your boss to know what is expected from you this month and this year. Go a step further and learn what are your reporting manager’s targets and what will get her the next promotion.

Align and expand your goals to include your boss’s success. Isn’t that exactly what you would want your new team members to do for you?


Currency of trust
Hopefully before you got promoted, you learnt that you are not a one-man show who can do everything single-handedly without the cooperation of colleagues. You will appreciate that learning even more after your promotion when the outcomes you are expected to deliver are way beyond your individual capacity.

To succeed, learn to trust your team. Trust them to generate great ideas, with responsibilities that stretch them, with resources they need to succeed and with confidence that they will execute them just like you did. Trust yourself to solve problems only when they fail and again trust your team to bounce back. This is the only way to grow each person and expand your team’s capability to deliver huge results.


Deal with humans
It will be easy for you to get caught up in your new role and massive responsibilities and forget that your colleagues are human beings with very real fears and aspirations. Work with them through their challenges and dreams to empower them to act. Step back socially to give them space and communicate frequently one-on-one to know them better.

Don’t play favourites and compromise on your leadership. Don’t avoid conflict or difficult conversations or else you will come across as a weak manager. Finally, don’t try to change everything and everybody simultaneously and thus avoid a set-up-to-fail situation.


Establish new relationships
Your new role requires you to deal with your team differently than when you were their colleague. Invest in transforming your relationship with them as their reporting manager now. Start with weekly meetings, set targets, establish responsibilities and deadlines and invite each person to share what they achieved, what worked and what didn’t.

While talking to your team, do not apologise or refer to pressure from your boss while changing targets or pulling up somebody. Similarly, to achieve your team goals you need to engage with a new set of stakeholders including your new boss, that manager in accounts, the head of sales and perhaps a new set of clients. Think through on how your relationship with them needs to be for your team to succeed. Then, act and communicate according to your plan.


Keep it real
Prioritise your own health and relationships even more once you are promoted. Your energy levels and how positive you feel impacts the productivity of a much larger group of people now and that, in turn, determines whether you will succeed in your new role or not.

While you are doing so, ask yourself whether you and your team are enjoying the journey. Not every day and every target is equally urgent so take time out for lunch and laughter together. A team that knows how to chill and de-stress regularly is always more productive, takes lesser time out for illnesses and makes it count where it is important!


IF YOU MISSED THE BUS

Breathe in, breathe out
You are agitated, hurt and emotional and might say or do something that will hurt further. Take time out. Go for a walk or join friends for coffee. Let your emotions run their course. Vent to trusted people if required. Calm down and put the event in perspective of your entire life.


Talk it up
Set up a conversation with your boss. Know that a rational organisation does not promote a hard worker or the smartest, but a professional who is likely to succeed in the next assignment. Figure out what was missing and what can be improved upon before the next promotion cycle.


Support the other guy
Reach out to the person who was promoted and genuinely congratulate him conveying your complete support. Make sure your actions match your words. Your attitude will cement your reputation and will win the support of everyone when your name comes up next.


Lean in
While you may have temporarily lost motivation, do not give up on the race or else you may undo the good work that you have done till date. The fact that you were considered for promotion means that the finish line is within reach. Lean in to the wind and work hard on what you believe will get you promoted next.


Face the mirror
Be honest. In a hyper-competitive world were you really the best person for the role? If not, how much of the feedback you have received is genuine? Accept it and shape up. Figure out if the missed promotion was because politics or nepotism that you can’t hope to overcome. If so, seek a career elsewhere.