term definition introduced in...big leagues. two great movies that illustrate this are bull durham...
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Succession Planning Key Terms
Term Definition Introduced in:
Advisory committeeAn advisory committee is a system wherein a group of employees is assembled to provide knowledge and experience to employees who need to be versed in specific projects and processes or an organization's culture.
Module 5
Educational resources Educational resources are books, software, media, and online programs that provide training on a variety of topics. Module 5
Emotional intelligence Emotional intelligence describes how well someone works with people, builds relationships and teams, coaches and motivates, and empowers employees, and provides constructive feedback. Module 2
EQ EQ stands for Emotional Quotient, and it measures a person's emotional intelligence. Module 2
IDPThis acronym stands for Independent Development Plan. An IDP is a set of goals and projects designed specifically to help an individual grow professionally and advance in the organization for which he/she works.
Module 2
Mentoring program A mentoring program is a system wherein employees lacking knowledge or experience are matched with other employees who possess the needed experience or knowledge. Module 5
Stakeholders Stakeholders are those people in an organization who have a vested interest in a particular process or project. Module 1
Succession planningAlso known as workforce planning, talent management, or career planning, succession planning is the process that organizations use to prepare and identify talented candidates for high level management and leadership positions.
Module 1
The Process for Optimal Progress This is a 12-step approach for effective succession planning. Module 2
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SUCCESSION PLANNING MODULE ONE – THE SCOPE AND PURPOSE OF SUCCESSION PLANNING Female:
Module One – The Scope of Purpose of Succession Planning. Succession planning is
sometimes known by different names such as work force planning, talent management,
or career planning. For this webinar, we will call it succession planning. Throughout
this webinar, I will cover the following major points: what is succession planning? Who
does it? Why does our organization need to do it? What if we are a family run
business, a non-profit, or a government agency? How do we do it? How long will it
take? How much will it cost? What if we don’t do it? Succession planning is the
process that organizations to prepare and identifying talented candidates for high level
management and leadership positions that become vacant for a variety of reasons. For
example, a person could retire. The worst case scenario would be that the person dies.
A person could resign or move on to a new business opportunity. The company could
decide to make changes to the position itself because of changes in the business
strategy where the direction of the business or department because of economic
conditions, or the company might face the need for disaster recovery or even global
challenges, many of which are nearly impossible to predict. As you watch this webinar,
I recommend that you have your handout in front of you so you can make notes and
start to answer some of the questions I’ll be asking. Turn to the page for module one
now. Let me give you an example of what succession planning might look like. I’m sure
many of you are familiar with the national past time of baseball, particularly major
league baseball. Major league baseball can provide us with a simple example of how
the succession planning concept might work. Major league baseball has been using
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succession planning from day one. Ball players enter the minor leagues and are taught
or retaught the fundamentals of the ball game at a much higher level of play then they
have probably ever experienced. As they get better in their different positions, they’re
promoted through the varying ranks of the system until they are called to the show, the
big leagues. Two great movies that illustrate this are Bull Durham starring Kevin
Costner and Moneyball starring Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill. One is from the player’s point
of view, and the other is from the team’s. As the ball player moves up in the
organization, he’s filling a position for someone who has also moved up or perhaps
been shown the way out. The world of baseball is always looking for new talent and
has scouts out in all levels of society, and high schools and colleges are observing and
taking notes on young players who they would like to recruit. This process has been
practiced for decades. It keeps the organization healthy and maintains a constant
rotation of new talent. So, that’s what we are talking about: how succession planning is
a process. It is never finished. It is on-going. It assures that talented employees are
always being recruited, trained, developed, retained, appreciated, and prepared for
advancement into the ever challenging world that we live and work in. Who does
succession planning, and who is responsible for this process? First and foremost, it
must come from a key decision maker: the CEO, the president, the board of directors,
key stake holders, or possibly someone in human resources who is brought to the
attention of senior individuals the importance of succession planning. It could also be
an outside consultant who specializes in succession planning and has brought to the
company’s attention that this process must be done. The purpose is to make sure that
the organization has talented employees in place for the company to grow. The
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individuals who direct this process must be there to advocate for the purpose of
succession planning. They need to advocate, even cheerlead, to make sure all the
steps are implanted that will make this an effective and successful process. Why would
we want to do this? It does take time. A major news wire service published an article
stating that the major leadership is negatively affecting American businesses to meet
their prime objectives. A 2008 survey found that 56 percent of employers nationwide
are now experiencing that shortage. 31 percent are expecting to have a shortage of
leaders that will impede their performance in the one to four years. Why is this shortage
occurring? One reason is that nearly 80 million baby boomers are starting to move into
their retirement years in record numbers. When the future? Today is when you need to
start planning because tomorrow the future. Yes, tomorrow can be five years, ten
years, even 20 to 30 years from now, but now is the time to put these processes into
place. Now is when we have to plan for the leadership gaps and remedy the hiring
mistakes, deficiencies, and vacancies that are putting Americans businesses at risk.
You may ask yourself, “Do I have to deal with this change?” You bet you do, because
change is inevitable. This change will be extremely costly for your company if you are
not proactive in planning for the changes that are coming. Yes, all change costs
money. With change comes opportunity. Remember, opportunity lost is opportunity
that could be a deficit for an organization. On the module one page of your handout, jot
down what leadership gaps you see that exist today or that you see coming in the near
future. What vacancies do you foresee? What deficiencies? Don’t forget the hiring
mistakes. When we don’t hire smart, when we don’t hire right, we have to live with
those costly mistakes. Please, take a moment now to determine what this is costing
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your business. What are these gaps costing you now? Isn’t planning to fix or prevent
them starting to sound like a good idea? Be aware that we must have, as part of this
process, a positive, proactive approach to the realities of the world of this work. One of
the key skills, key habits you need to have for succession planning is to be proactive or
preventative. We have staff issues and business issues. Staff issues include attrition,
turn over, migration, growth based demand, and the needs for new skills and
competencies. You can see how these realities impact the business thorough turnover,
with growth, with changes, and the new skills and competencies businesses need for
the global economy. You can also see things happening within the business that impact
its success: changes in strategic direction, economic or competitive challenges,
transitions with a family business, ownership or executive leadership changes, and
mergers and acquisitions. Some of the questions to ask include: what do businesses
need to do to change strategic direction? How do businesses face these challenges?
What are some of the executive leader changes that might be needed to meet these
challenges? How do we deal with onslaught of mergers and acquisitions? How do we
transition a family business? How will this impact the business? Truly, the answers to
all these questions come forth when we realize that succession planning is necessary
for businesses to handle upcoming, competitive, and internal challenges. It provides
you with a positive approach you need to deal with these realities that will occur in the
business world. Change is inevitable at both the staff and business levels. Remember,
succession planning is insuring that the leadership continuity exists that can handle the
attrition and turnover and changes that will occur. It insures the business’s
sustainability and viability, allows it to grow. It is there to let you have a higher level of
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productivity with limited or no down time when you lose a key person or disaster strikes.
Another thing about succession planning is that it can provide career paths from within
the organization which in turn raises employee morale, lowers recruitment cost, lowers
attrition, lowers turnover, and helps prevent losing untapped talent before you have a
change to discover it and develop it. When you lose someone to retirement or for any
of the other reasons we discussed above, especially someone in a highly technical role
or a high level skilled position, these positions are much harder to recruit for and more
difficult to fill. If the replacement is a newly hired person without the history that comes
with a veteran employee and mistakes are made, you can start to see how important it
is to have a succession plan in place to prevent the gaps that would occur without it. At
the bottom of the module one page in your handout are two questions I encourage you
to take the time to answer in as much detail as you can. First, what if we don’t do
succession planning? What are the long terms consequences for your organization and
the reality of what is coming if you don’t take the time do this? You will have attrition.
You will have turnover. Let’s look at it from the positive side: what if we do start this
process? We are all about today, in this session, we are going to think your
organization today. Now, answer the second question. What would you do if a top
executive left, particularly one in a revenue generating position? What if major disaster
struck, like what happened on September 11th? On that terrible day, many companies
lost their entire businesses, their staff, their equipment, their data, their files. The
organization that survived that day even without that horrible on their business did so
because they had a plan in place. Those companies were able to recoup their losses
by following their plan.
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SUCCESSION PLANNING MODULE TWO – THE PROCESS FOR OPTIMAL PROGRESS: A 12-STEP APPROACH TO EFFECTIVE SUCCESSION PLANNING Female:
Module Two – The Process for Optimal Progress: A 12-Step Approach to Effective
Succession Planning. The page for module number 2 in your handout lists 12 steps for
the process of optimal progress in creating your succession plan. We will discuss these
steps briefly in this module. Then, we’ll focus on more on the most important steps in
the remaining three modules of this webinar that cover the six keys. We spoke about
the future in module number one. The whole idea of succession planning is to plan for
the future so that’s where your focus needs to be, and that’s step one: make the future
the focus. Step 2 is to identify functional and operational requirements. Again, that’s
the key to succession planning: understanding what type of people will be needed in the
future to keep the company running smoothly. Step 3 is gain leadership buy-in. You
will quickly see that everyone does not come fully committed to this process
automatically. The process takes time, and time is something that some people will not
want to give. How long will it take to write, promote, implant, and evaluate the
effectiveness of your plan? That depends on the size and type of your organization.
For example, for a medium-sized organization with fewer than 800 employees, you
need to plan for about six to eight months to complete this process. Please, understand
that this is a ball park figure as some organizations have leaner structures than others
do. No matter the size of your organization, however, don’t put it off. Start now. The
most important part of this process is simply to start it. Start with a beta group. Get
some success under your belt and then build from that success. When you start
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succession planning, sometimes it goes in another direction from what you want, so the
addition question on the bottom of the module two page of your handout is, what
happens if the process goes south? Here are some suggestions of things to be aware
of and thoughts you might want to jot down to be proactive and prevent that from
happening. Don’t keep succession planning a secret. You need open support from the
key leaders on down to others throughout the entire organization. It’s easy to overlook
the talent that you have inside. Why do we do that? Why do we overlook George over
there or Susie down the hall just because they’ve been here a long time? Maybe, it has
to do with that old management saying that an expert is someone who lives fifty miles
away and carries a briefcase. We always seem to more stock in the outside consultant
or the new recruit. Remember that you have experts in-house that have something no
one new will have: knowledge of your company and its history and the inside scoop. As
an aside, sometimes an outside consultant can make things happen that an internal
leader can’t. It might be worth bringing in someone to work alongside your in-house
succession planning team leader to move things along and impress the importance of
the plan on the rest of the management team. In addition to that inside knowledge,
some of your current individuals have untapped talent. Your succession plan helps you
realize this. It maps out the future for the organization by displaying the complete
corporate hierarchy which is step four of the 12-step process. You need to know what
particular skills your employees have and the competencies that are required in the
positions they hold. It’s so easy to overlook the individuals who have been with us,
thinking that we have to hire from the outside. Don’t do that. While you were listing the
key positions, you’ll also want to do step five: list the expected and likely vacancies and
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talent caps. As you inventory your existing people, you’ll have hints about whether
someone may be planning to retire or leave or if someone doesn’t quite have the skillset
she needs to either maintain her current or be promoted to the next level. You may also
have knowledge of new programs, software tools, equipment, or other game changers
the business intends to put in place that may require different skillsets to manage. If it
will take a year for the new building to be ready or the new manufacturing process to
start up, you have a year to recruit or develop someone to manage that change when it
occurs. To do step six, you need to use a tracking tool which is step seven. Whether
it’s a simple spreadsheet or a 360 degree assessment or a database you create to track
the skillsets of your people, this is important so that individuals you have hired do not
get overlooked or left out of the process. Relying only on outside recruiting to bring in
fresh blood won’t always fill the gap when you have a vacancy. To gather all this
information, you will need assertive, proactive communication skills. Don’t assume that
everyone wants to get on board don’t expect employees to assert themselves to help
you. You’ll need to have a conversation about succession planning and regular
communication to avoid a disaster or even just a bottle neck down the road if people
decide stop talking to you. While we are talking about communication, remember that
narrow-minded thinking is deadly. As you complete step eight, development and
resource planning, be open to seeing the individuals you already have in the company
in other positions. You cannot think that someone is too old or too young or too
something else to fill a position. Don’t just focus on the hard skills. We know that with
the most effective leaders today, it is not their IQ. It is there emotional intelligence or
what we call EQ. The emotional intelligence skillset lets us know if someone knows
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how to work with people, specifically if they know how to build relationships, how to
build teams, how to coach, how to motivate employees, how to give constructive
feedback, and how to empower employees. These skills are not necessarily natural.
The emotional intelligence increases with development and skill training. As the
generation X and Y people move into the work force, this becomes more and more
important. Unlike IQ, which is generally fixed at a fairly early age, EQ can be learned
and elevated and having time and experience under your belt helps. The last few steps
in the 12-step approach can be sabotaged if you don’t have a solid training budget.
Step 9 is to create individual development plans or IDPs for each employee. To carry
out those IDPs will require training. Succession planning means training. It means
developing. It means preparing people to use skill sets that they currently do not have.
If you begin this process with an insufficient training budge, one that doesn’t meet the
needs of your organization, you will find very quickly that you will not be able to move
forward with the goals and objectives of your plan. Step 10 is to train, mentor, coach,
and motivate. You need to offer appropriate training just in time which is why the
training budget is so critical. It has to be tied to the succession plan which is part of the
strategic plan which is tied to the overall business plan. All these plans have to mesh
and work together. One cannot oppose another. Step 11 is about measuring results
and monitoring overall progress. To do this, you need to hold the managers
accountable. You cannot let managers get in the way of the success of this effort just
because they are in secure positions. They may have biases. They may be thinking,
“No one did this for me twenty years ago, so why should I be willing to do this now to
help someone else?” Of course, the answer to that is that today we live in a different
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world. We live in a different age than we did 20 years ago. What worked in the past
won’t work now for today’s new talent. You cannot develop a one-size-fits-all program
because organizations are different, and organizations change with time. What you
need to do is have a plan based on your specific organizational needs and your specific
individual skill and training gaps. Your succession plan also needs to be part of your
organization’s mission, vision, strategy, and goals which is step 12. This plan needs to
be aligned with all the company’s other plans and aligned with programs to retain
management and create incentives to make people want to stay at the company. To
summarize, the succession plan is a crucial new element that will be your company’s
plan to accomplish the replacement strategy with your people as key positions open due
to attrition or retirement. You’ll have job descriptions clearly written and available for
people to see, so everyone has access to them for the current and future needs of both
your staff and your company.
[End of recording.]
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SUCCESSION PLANNING MODULE THREE – CRITICAL KEYS ONE AND TWO Female:
Module Three – Critical Keys One and Two. In this module, we will talk about the first
two critical keys to your succession plan. Key number one is solid support and buy-in
from executive management. Key number two is an accurate, honest, clearly
articulated assessment of the talent gaps and requirements. Notice that in your
handout, there is space to record the approaches that work for each key, notes on real
world situations and solutions, and a box labeled “ideas into action” where you can jot
down your ideas on how to move forward with this key. Key number one, you must
have solid support and buy-in from executive leadership and upper management, and if
you’re working with a board, you need their buy-in as well. This is your fall back when
other issues arise. This is critical because it is executive leadership who are the ones
who will send the message about the purpose behind why you are implementing this
succession plan. Here are the approaches that we know will work: make sure that you
demonstrate that succession planning is aligning with and supporting your strategic
business plan. Now, if you don’t have a business plan in place, you need to start there
and put it in place before you start succession planning. You need identify opportunities
in each functional area and describe the benefits of succession planning to the senior
leaders who oversee these areas making sure they do not feel threatened by
pinpointing possible replacements for them when they do move toward retirement. Be
sure to tie the succession planning process to the annual appraisal. This is crucial
because it sets an expectation that it will be done and it will be done right. Get buy-in in
a group setting. Share the purpose behind succession planning and explain what the
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benefits are for doing it. Let everyone hear the same information at the same time.
We’re going for a win-win here. If people are skeptical, let them voice their concerns
and put them out on the table and discuss those concerns. Do not move forward until
these concerns have been completely discussed and resolved and a commitment has
been received from everyone concerned. Another approach that works is to make sure
you have a reward and recognition system in place that gives the “attaboy” or “attagirl”
for their buy-in for the succession planning process. If some leaders are resistant or
fearful, find out why. This must be addressed. If this continues, discuss it with their
managers. What are the consequences if they do not get on board? Are they afraid
they might be replaced prematurely? Remember, the succession planning process
must be ethical. Nothing is to be kept secretive because this is for the health and long
term viability of the organization. Let’s look at some real world situations. What can
realistically happen? Some of you might be interested in how this can be done in a
family run business. In a family run business, it is very smart to plan early and plan
specifically. You need to involve all the family members who are in key management
positions. It is also vital to use a non-family advisory board that can be objective and
impartial in the decision-making process. You also want to involve non-family members
in the process. If there is no hope of advancement for non-family members, why would
they stay apart of the business? Another important thing to do is to have younger
generation family members build their skillsets outside the family business. There’s a
great story of a national poultry company who had a family run business. One of the
key individuals who was tagged to run the family business in a key leadership role
decided to move across the country to Washington state and enter a field that was
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entirely contrary to the poultry business. He was gone a long time, five or six years.
During that time, a non-family member successfully ran the company. When the family
member returned, he did not come in at the top of the business. He entered at the very
bottom and worked his way back up to the top doing the dirty work like plucking feathers
and processing the chickens as they went through the plant. This was a critical
process, so the individual understood how the business worked from the very beginning
and what the organization was all about. Another important thing for a family business
is to write and have posted a family relations charter. This document outlines how the
family will behave to remain professional and productive. Again, that outside advisory
board can help here by working objectively to support the family. Another real world
situation that occurs during succession planning is when a key leader says he’s bought
into the process but what he really wants is to sabotage the efforts. This case will
require a one-to-one intervention with a backup of the key decision maker who is the
champion of the succession planning process. You must confront this type of behavior
quickly, because it is now become a performance based issue. To keep the company
viable, all the leaders must comply and are required to be supportive of the process.
Further, they need to know what the consequences will be if they do not comply. Are
they willing to be disciplined? Discipline for not supporting this key business initiative
can include anything up to and including termination. Always be direct. Always be
ethical with these individuals. Key number 2 is to create an honest, accurate, clearly
articulated assessment of talent gaps and requirements. This is very important to keep
in mind when you are working with the keys to success and working with the
champions. You must have an accurate, honest, clearly articulated assessment
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process in place for each position. There are two areas to look at for this key: the
quantitative and qualitative issues that you need to bring to the table. You need to have
real, hard data when you’re working with succession planning, because there can be an
emotional side to this process. You may encounter some jealousy, or some aspects
can be misconstrued and misunderstood. It’s easiest to confront these issues when you
can rely on the hard data. Quantitative data includes your turnover rates, your short
and long term competency gaps, and the cost of hiring and training new employees. In
addition, you need to know what are the relevant metrics for each of the functional
areas. What is driving your revenue? What are your costs savings? What are you
losses? Then, there’s the qualitative side. Have you been using employee satisfaction
surveys to track how your employees are responding to the changes in the
environment? Do you have feedback instruments in place that your leaders can use
both formally and informally? We recommend that you add a commercially developed
360 degree feedback instrument. This allows you to evaluate positions from every
angle: the person’s peers, supervisors, and the people who report to him. This is a
great way to discover fascinating information about hidden talents and capabilities that
may be unknown to the person’s supervisor. Finally, do you conduct exit interviews to
gather data to understand why people are leaving the company? This might be your
only opportunity to find out what is making people unhappy, and some people can only
be honest when they know there won’t be any pushback or consequences. All these
instruments are crucial in helping individuals find out their strengths and weaknesses.
You need to be able to demonstrate the realities of the situation, and you need credible
data to work with. What are some of the approaches that work with these key? First
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and foremost, you need to keep decision makers informed of how well the succession
plan is progressing. Keep all employees involved. There should be nothing secret
about this process. For the decision makers, I call it “CEO-izing” your data findings. By
“CEO-ize,” I mean, keep it short; keep it concise; and keep it objective. CEOs are busy
people. They don’t have time to read long reports with a lot of information, so keep
them short and to the point. Think executive summary. That’s what the CEO wants.
Also, keep it evidence based, especially in family owned businesses. Use a validated
feedback tool to assess your talent pool. Those 360 degree instruments are great tools
to have in place to assess everything properly. For those of you responsible for this
project, always keep an open door. Be open minded, and probe for significant issues or
barriers that may be damaging the process in the early stages. Be alert to people who
might want to sabotage the process. Here is where your communication skills will come
in handy. You need to know how to be an empathetic listener, how to diffuse defensive
behavior, and how to stay on a solution-based approach. Remind everyone that there
are benefits of this succession planning process. The downside to not doing the
process and the consequences need to be foremost and up front at all times for review.
Remember, it is perfectly okay to disagree. That is why we have that open mind and
open door. Out of disagreement comes discussion. It’s okay to table items until a
thorough and valid research effort has been made. Once again, come back with the
facts to back up and discuss with the individual or group that is having an issue.
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SUCCESSION PLANNING MODULE FOUR – CRITICAL KEYS THREE AND FOUR Female:
Module Four – Critical Keys Three And Four. In this module, we will talk about the
critical keys three and four. Key 3 is start with executives and don’t stop there, and key
4 is proactive, assertive implementation. Succession planning is not just a CEO thing.
It’s not just for executives and senior managements levels. Surveys show that 55
percent of respondents say their organization does not have a formal succession
planning in place. Ten percent of them said they had one but only on the executive
level. Their thinking is that it’s only at the executive level where the most critical
positions need to be filled; however, that is incorrect. In today’s rapidly changing
business environment, it is not just the CEOs that require succession plans. You also
have the chief financial offers, the chief information officers, and even human resources
people play critical roles. Likewise, when you look at the different positions within the
organization, how would your organization survive a sudden change if you lost one of
your top information technology staff or key technical person? What would you do?
How would you handle that type of situation? If you had a succession plan in place, you
could have another key player prepared to take over. Everyone in the organization
needs to understand that his or her job is important enough to be considered for training
and development and that people in the organization can have the opportunity to move
up. Succession planning can be complex, but it’s not always out of your boundary when
you have everyone involved and wanting to be part of this. That is why it is not just a
CEO thing. The stakes are so high if you don’t it, so high that failure to look at this
transition can have a detrimental impact on the organization. Let’s talk about some
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approaches that work when you are in the succession planning process under key
number 3. Start with you executive leadership and ensure that have their complete
support and buy-in. Make sure that through the company website or newsletters they
are promoting this and it is staying front and center in everyone’s mind that this is critical
for the organization. Make sure this goes through all the different management ranks
and that you consider all the lateral moves that people can make too. One of the critical
mistakes companies make is that they think this is a secret. It is not a secret. You can
lose promising employees if you do not communicate this properly or if they think
something is being kept from them. Remember, the more you can involve all team
members, the more successful the plan will be. As you go through the succession
planning process, you need to develop more than one successor for each key
management position. Do not have all your eggs in one basket. What if you put all your
time and energy into one individual and she chooses to leave? Well, a person just
walked out the door into whom you’ve invested a lot of time and money. So, now what?
Remind those who have been tagged for possible advancement that there’s no
guarantee they will be promoted. Instead, this is an opportunity to prove their talents,
skills, and competencies through this process, but there is no guarantee that they will be
tagged for this position should the vacancy open. It is essential that you keep valid,
written documentation of all the development activities, projects, and assignments given
to any individual throughout the process. Who is tagged as a possible replacement?
Use valid competency assessments. Pinpoint those competencies. Have working
knowledge. Have financial analysis and technical skills assessed. Make sure you know
the work habits and professional behaviors that are required to make that key
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management position work. What are the values that are critical for each position?
Examine the records of individuals who have been successful in that position in the
past. What are the on-going strengths they possessed? Are there any identified
vulnerabilities that would be created if that key employee suddenly left? What are the
real world issues when you have a one of a kind position? For example, a person who
has intellectual property or has designed a product and is now leaving to work for your
key competitor, how do you survive this? Or what if your organization is small and
many of the positions are essential to your long term survivability? Are you capable of
filling the gaps? What would be the damage to your business? This is where
succession planning is critical your organization no matter the size of your business and
the solution to these real world problems. Key number 4 is to be proactive and
assertive when planning. Succession planning must have a clear leader. Someone
must be designated to be the individual who is spear heading this effort and is
responsible for making sure it is moving through the organization. This is not time for
wishful thinking. Oh, this is a great thing to do, and I’m just going to ask someone to
head it up. No. It’s a full time project that needs to be managed. You need to be
responsible in finding the right person to manage it. Don’t get caught up in the fairness
of it. Get caught up in the strategic needs for it. The best thing is to have that clear
leader where power has been vested. This person has to have accountability and clout,
and the clout needs to come from the senior most people in the organization who have
said, “We need to develop the next generation. We need to have objective standards
for the skills the jobs will require in the near and long term future.” You need someone
who can promote this process and get buy-in at all levels of the organization. This clear
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leader has to be able to bring to the attention of the key decision makers when certain
people are not on board. This leader needs to be proactive and preventative, always
looking ahead at what could be the downside if this plan wasn’t in place and working
through it before a crisis happens. You will always have time to work on a crisis, but
look at what the crisis will cost you in terms of money and the emotional toll. So, the
leader has to be assertive and unwavering in the confidence that the plan is working,
because it has been thought through to create strategies. The strategies have been
turned into action plans, and the action plans have specific deadlines and specific
individuals who are responsible for getting them done. That’s the accountability to
someone. Under accountability, you have consequences as well as rewards specifically
laid out. This is key, especially if you those individuals who support the plan to your
face but are ready to backstab and sabotage behind your back instead of getting on
board. To deal with this, a reporting and communication process is in place. The
communication needs to go up and down the chain of command. Progress reports are
crucial to keep everyone in the loop and prevent rumors from beginning. This is an on-
going process. It does not stop. What are some of the approaches that we know will
work? You need to have a clear vision. Begin with the end in mind of what you want
this process to provide for you, and know where this process is going. With that in
mind, you have to have clear goals and deadlines to stay on track. Document all the
steps in the process. Keep those accurate and detailed notes safe. Communicate
routine reports, progress reports to leadership and staff on a regular basis. This can be
your webpage, your internal reports, your proof materials. Make sure you communicate
to the leadership team on a regular basis. Champion progress. If there are blips along
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the way, refine them as needed. One real world situation is that the world of work is a
busy place. If you have managers who say they are too busy to work on this plan, key
decision makers must communicate to managers that this is a crucial strategy for long
term success and the viability of the organization that everyone needs to work on.
Some suggestions for dealing with this include: have black out times set aside. During
those times, you are only allowed to work on succession planning. Conduct succession
planning workshops. Let’s say it: you can mandate it, and that means if it’s not taken
seriously, there will be consequences. Look at the what if. What if one of those critical
individuals were lost and you didn’t have a replacement in place?
[End of recording.]
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SUCCESSION PLANNING MODULE FIVE – CRITICAL KEYS FIVE AND SIX Female:
Module Five – Critical Keys Five And Six. In this module, we will talk about keys five
and six. Key number five is comprehensive employee capability and development
tracking, and key number six is focus on the bottom line, financial acumen, and
command of business drivers. As you go through this process, you will likely encounter
what I call the “all-too-easy, internal bias.” This comes out as underestimating,
devaluing, and overlooking our own. So, don’t underestimate the value of your
employees, and don’t overlook your own staff. You have talent in house that you
haven’t uncovered yet. Potential can be hidden from you. That’s why it’s important for
you to know your employees outside of work. What hobbies let them use their natural
talents that the work place doesn’t showcase? Do they use leadership skills outside of
work that are not required in their job descriptions? How do they want to grow? What
are their career aspirations? What are their interests? What do they want to learn?
What approach that works for this key is a mentoring program? This is an area of its
own, but we can touch on it here. Mentoring programs can be effective and work best
when employees are assigned to them. They have a prescribed program that takes the
mentoree through a day in the life of an executive or key leader. Another approach that
works is for human resources to do audits on a routine basis. Look at the individual
developments plans or IDPs that are usually part of the performance review process.
Make sure people are given opportunities to grow and develop skill in areas where the
organization would like them to be more skilled. Make sure the audits and performance
reviews are done properly. Sometimes, the IDP can be seen as an administrative task
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without purpose or meaning. To work, they need to have meat and purpose. Develop
your own internal tracking system. You can develop your own in-house or use a
commercially available software system to help you with this. Sometimes, leaders have
favorites that they want to promote. There’s always the golden girl or golden boy in the
group. What if you don’t have a valid assessment in place? You don’t know if you
golden boy or golden girl has the skills and talents needed for the promotion. With valid
instruments, you can assess their strengths and weaknesses and have an IDP in place.
Another solution is to have a training budget that is strong enough to cover their costs to
offer all employees the needed skill planning, not just the chosen few. The organization
can find itself in the position of having a short bench where it doesn’t have the talent in-
house. That’s the rude awakening that comes when you don’t have a succession plan
in place. With the succession plan, you will always know that you have the necessary
people in-house and don’t have to go outside and define people. What if you have a
staff member who has the skills of the past but isn’t positioned with the skills to take on
the challenges of the future? Organizations need to have development plans in place.
A succession plan shows the different skill sets and competencies necessary. Each
employee needs to have an IDP for when a vacancy occurs. Key number six, last but
not least, is where we focus on the bottom line. Keeping the big thing, the big thing.
Let’s be honest, a business is in the business of making a profit, or if you are a non-for-
profit or a government agency, then it’s to perpetuate the mission and meet the needs
of the clients who use your services. If we keep the big thing, the big thing, people
moving into higher level positions need to have a strong command of financial analysis
skills. They need to know how to budget, how to forecast, how to understand the key
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metrics that keep an organization successful and profitable. They need know what the
financial indicators that mark an up-turn or a down-turn, what the economic indicators
are, and how to read the market as things change. These are crucial business
essentials that people need to be on top of. What are some approaches that help with
this key? It’s important to be active in business organizations and keep up with
business trends and processes in your industry group. Again, provide on-going training
either in-house or through outside educational resources. Let’s face it: today, who
doesn’t have some opportunity to learn? It’s a 24/7 information beast out there, and
there are online courses available to people willing to invest the time and effort to stay
up to date in their chosen career area. Another approach is to shadow a colleague who
is more skilled in a particular area. For example, let’s say I’m not really strong in
budgeting. In the succession plan, I’d be assigned to someone who is most skilled at
math. With an assignment or project, I’d learn by doing. Use the 360 degree
instrument to identify weaknesses. Then, match the employee with someone in-house
who has strength in those skill sets. Another approach is to build an advisory team.
This team is tasked with sharing their knowledge with others in the succession plan in
any area that focuses on the bottom line. Realize that you have to do standardize all
your succession planning processes. As we close out this key, think of your own
situations. What happens when a senior manager wants to hire a crony or a buddy?
What if you have an employee who is more likable than another person because he
knows how to network or play the in-house political game? Sometimes, these people
are called “empty suits.” Or what if you have a confident employee who has some life
issue going on like child care? But this has never impacted her performance or
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productivity. Maybe, someone has held her back because of the fear the one day these
personal issues might start coming into the work place and impacting the business. Are
you leaving someone out of the loop who needs to go through the process to help the
organization stay focused? I hope you can see how this and perpetuate the success of
the business. That’s really our mission: to perpetuate the entity. You have to conduct
business and that costs money. Not only do you need to focus on today, but you also
have to look at the future. You have to assure everyone that your succession plan will
be carried out in the most ethical of manners and will provide the company with optimal
achievement, give it financial health, keep it viable, and sustain it so it can grow. Let’s
recap some of the areas you need to be aware of to bring your succession plan to
fruition. We talked about how important it is to identify a key leader who will be
responsible for spear heading this effort. It is essential that the organization know that
this individual has the respect and the confidence of the senior most executives to
implement the process in the designated time frame. No one individual can do this
alone. The whole organization will need to take part, but everyone has to respect and
honor the individual task who has seen that the succession planning process is part of a
strategy to ensure the longevity of the organization. This succession process exists to
seek out future leaders. This process is a system for finding those starting employees
and making sure they are ready to take on key positions in the future. Encourage your
managers to be out there understanding the employees beyond the day-to-day. What
are their interests? Give them interesting assignments that let them shine in areas their
normal jobs don’t provide. This will help them to buy in and see the benefits of the
succession planning process. You also need to look at your corporate culture. Where
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do you want to go? Where do you need to change? A succession plan requires you to
look at your values and principals. It asks you to say, “Where do we want to be in the
future? And what will it take to get there?” The only way to know your plan is working is
to track its results. You want to be able to rely on the long term goals and objectives,
identify workforce development needs, and be aware of workforce trends and
predictions. In the past, succession planning often targeted only key leadership
positions. Today, you have to look at key positions across all job categories.
Employees need to be ready for these new leadership roles. They have to be ready to
step up to the plate and develop a diverse work force that enables decision makers to
look at the future makeup of the whole organization. What critical positions do you need
to be staffing up now? What are the current and future competencies those positions
will require? If you have to go outside, what recruitment strategy will you use to find
talented people? You must ensure that key employees understand their careers path
and the roles they are being developed to fill. We need to focus resources on key
employee retention. You have to know employment trends in your area to know the
roles you will have when a difficult time comes. When succession planning is done
right, it is truly an investment in both the company and the human capital of the
organization. The entire organization benefits from creating career paths and
developing critical criteria to fill positions as they open. Whether a change is required
because of normal business conditions or because of a death or defection, the
organization will be ready to act quickly, decisively, and effectively. Only then will a
company know that it is ready to conduct business.
[End of recording.]
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SPL KeyTermsSPL120607-1SPL120607-2SPL120607-3SPL120607-4SPL120607-5
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