60cb7e6cd77717e3c9fced10b97f8ad7.ppt
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Emerging Best Practices and Trends in Succession Planning Debbie Mc. Grath CEO HR. com 905 727 1340 x 104
Overview • Succession Planning as a critical business process • Trends influencing Succession Planning practices • Emerging Best Practices in Succession Planning
More Details on this Topic • This presentation was done with the help of an archived webcasts from Via People and help with i 4 cp. For sample scorecards and examples please visit the archive of the viapeople webcast on HR. com
What is Succession Planning? Succession Planning can be defined as a purposeful and systematic effort made by an organization to ensure leadership continuity, retain and develop knowledge and intellectual capital for the future, and encourage individual employee growth and development.
Why is Succession Planning such a “Hot Topic”? • Board concerns and directives • Increased costs associated with external searches • Increased turnover – People who had been regarded as successors for key positions left by surprise – High performers are leaving • Managers complain that they have no one ready to fill vacancies • Employees complain that promotion decisions are made unfairly • Insufficient numbers of women and/minorities at senior levels
Trends Impacting Succession Planning • Shifting demographics – Shortfall in the number of future leaders – Increase in attrition in executive level positions • Economic conditions resulting in massive downsizing and increasingly flat and dynamic organizational structures. • Reduced loyalty among employees despite focus on employee engagement and involvement
Trends Impacting Succession Planning, contd. • Recognition on the part of senior executives of the importance of values, competencies, intellectual capital, and leadership • Increase in the complexity of executive positions – Financial market and employee expectations – Globalization – Technology
Percentage of Organizations with a Succession Plan Survey of 385 HR professionals Source: Society for Human Resource Management, 2006
Global CEO Succession Rates, 2005 Study of the world’s 2, 500 largest publicly traded companies Source: Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006
CEO Performance-Related Turnover, 2005 (as a percentage of all departing CEOs) Study of the world’s 2, 500 largest publicly traded companies Source: Booz Allen Hamilton, 2006
HR Professionals’ Estimates of Readiness for Sudden Succession Survey of 385 HR professionals Source: Society for Human Resource Management, 2006
HR Responsibilities in the Succession Process Survey of 385 HR professionals Source: Society for Human Resource Management, 2006
Incidence of Formal Succession Plans 86 organizations participated in the Succession Planning Practitioner Consensus Survey Source: Human Resource Institute, 2006
Succession Planning Data Collection About half (51. 7%) of organizations have a system in place to gather information for their succession plans. 86 organizations participated in the Succession Planning Practitioner Consensus Survey Source: Human Resource Institute, 2006
Succession Rates by Industry, Across the Seven Years of 1995, 1998, 2000 -2004 Study of the world’s 2, 500 largest publicly traded companies Source: Booz Allen Hamilton, 2005
Succession Rates by Industry, Across the Seven Years of 1995, 1998, 2000 -2004 (continued) Study of the world’s 2, 500 largest publicly traded companies Source: Booz Allen Hamilton, 2005
Identifying High-Potential Talent A majority of organizations have a process in place for identifying highpotential talent. Survey of 96 organizations Source: Human Resource Institute, 2005
Identifying High-Potential Talent Processes, by Length of Existence For many of the organizations that have a process for identifying high-potential talent, this is a relatively recent initiative. Survey of 96 organizations Source: Human Resource Institute, 2005
Identifying High-Potential Talent Processes, by Position Among organizations that have an existing process for identifying highpotential talent, it is rare to examine all levels of employees. Survey of 96 organizations Source: Human Resource Institute, 2005
Emerging Best Practices 1. Top management involvement 2. Targeted processes to focus on clearly defined, specific goals 3. Comprehensive assessment programs based upon competencies 4. Creation of talent databases incorporating performance, assessment, demographic, education, experience, and career interests 5. Identification of future talent requirements 6. Structured and individualized development programs
Best Practice 1: Top Management Involvement • Communicates importance of planning for the future • Allocation of adequate resources • Modeling of effective coaching and development • Key development resource to high potentials
Best Practice 2: Targeted Processes • • • Evolutionary versus revolutionary Clearly defined set of goals Meaningful executive reviews Eliminate administrative burdens Using technology to facilitate data gathering, tracking and decision making
Best Practice 3: Comprehensive Assessment of Talent • • Behaviorally defined competencies Learning agility and derailment factors Defining performance and potential Early identification of talent Multi-source methods On-going feedback processes Continuous re-assessment – Test learning agility, development of competence and performance
Best Practice 4: Creation of Talent Databases • Integration of data from multiple systems, including HRIS, Recruitment, Learning. . Etc. . • Definition of missing talent data elements • Collection of missing talent data – Education, competencies, experiences, career interests, mobility • Reporting to facilitate decision making
Best Practice 5: Identification of Future Talent Requirements • Competency, skill and experience requirements for critical positions • Profiling the development content of key jobs – P & L accountability – Forming/managing external alliances • Detection of current and future talent gaps • Targeted career pathing and development • Sourcing and recruitment plans to secure new external talent
Best Practice 6: Structured and Individualized Development Planning • Formal, structured development plans • Targeted, individual activities with emphasis on experience-based learning • Transitional coaching during stretch assignments • Reporting and tracking of progress and outcomes • Accountability for performance
Continuing Challenges • Ineffective balance between identification and development • Identifying successors/hi-po’s not in line with most organizational cultures • “Executive cloning” • Poor linkage to business strategy • Overemphasis on replacement planning • Lack of top management support • Poor business unit buy in • Lack of organization-wide talent database
For More Information: www. hr. com Debbie Mc. Grath 905 727 1340 x 104 dmcgrath@hr. com A Special Thanks to I 4 cp and Via People for much of the material
Questions
60cb7e6cd77717e3c9fced10b97f8ad7.ppt