Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go: Career Conversations Organizations Need and Employees Want - Softcover

Kaye, Beverly; Giulioni, Julie Winkle

 
9781523097500: Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go: Career Conversations Organizations Need and Employees Want

Inhaltsangabe

The new edition of the bestselling employee development classic includes advice on engagement and retention in today's more flexible employment environment and a new chapter on creating a career development culture in your organization.

Study after study confirms that career development is the single most powerful tool managers have for driving retention, engagement, productivity, and results. But most managers feel they just don't have time for it. This book offers a better way: frequent, short conversations with employees about themselves, their goals, and the business that can be integrated seamlessly into the normal course of business.

Beverly Kaye and Julie Winkle Giulioni identify three broad types of conversations that will increase employees' awareness of their strengths, weaknesses, and interests; point out where their organization and their industry are headed; and help them pull all of that together to create forward momentum. And the new chapter includes an assessment so you can measure how well your current culture supports development--and how to improve it.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Beverly Kaye is the founder of Career Systems International. She was recently honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association for Talent Development for her groundbreaking and continual contributions to workplace learning. She is the coauthor of several books, including five editions of Love 'Em or Lose 'Em.

Julie Winkle Giulioni works with organizations worldwide to improve performance through leadership and learning. Named one of Inc. magazine's top 100 leadership speakers, she consults, teaches, speaks, and writes about career development and a variety of workplace topics.

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Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go

Career Conversations Organizations Need and Employees Want

By BEVERLY KAYE, Julie Winkle Giulioni

Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2019 Beverly Kaye and Julie Winkle Giulioni
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5230-9750-0

Contents

INTRODUCTION: Development Debunked, 1,
1. Develop Me or I'm History!, 8,
2. Can We Talk?, 16,
3. Let Hindsight Light the Way, 32,
4. Feed Me, 44,
5. What's Happening?, 56,
6. If Not Up ... Then What?, 68,
7. Same Seat, New View, 78,
8. Advancing Action, 90,
9. Grow with the Flow, 106,
10. Culture Shift, 114,
CONCLUSION: The Development Difference, 125,
Acknowledgments, 129,
Index, 131,
About the Authors, 135,
Working with the Authors, 139,


CHAPTER 1

Develop Me or I'm History!


Spending forty-sixty-eighty hours somewhere each week ... I want it to mean something. I want to feel like I'm moving forward somehow. If I can't grow here, I've gotta look elsewhere.

— An employee (perhaps yours)


The decision to assume a management role in today's workplace comes with a front-row seat to some of the greatest business challenges of our time. Day in and day out, you must

Do more with less. It's become cliché, but it permeates life at work. You've likely become a master at finding ways to reduce costs, time, and other resources below levels you ever imagined were possible.

Navigate unprecedented uncertainty and complexity. The un-knowns outnumber the knowns today. Yet others look to you for clarity and direction in an increasingly unpredictable environment.

Meet ever-expanding expectations. Every quarter, you're asked to do a little (or a lot) more. Bigger sales. Greater numbers of service interactions. More projects. Higher scores.

Continuously improve quality. Good enough isn't. Given the competition in today's global market, perfection is the standard — until it's met and you have to do even better.

Deliver the next big thing. Most organizations believe that if they're not moving forward, they're sliding backward. Innovation gets its picture on business magazine covers because it represents the promise of greater success.

And, no matter how long, hard, or smart you work, you can't do all of this alone. Success depends upon tapping the very best that everyone has to offer. (By everyone, we're not just talking about employees — because the workforce has dramatically grown to include gig workers, contingent support, contractors and consultants, interns and even externs.) So today, your success rests upon finding ways to continuously expand everyone's capacity, engagement, and ability to contribute to the organization.

Study after study confirms that best-in-class managers — those who consistently develop the most capable, flexible, and engaged teams able to drive exceptional business results — all share one quality: they make career development a priority.


A "HISTORY" LESSON

Even during challenging economic times, your best and brightest have options. Failing to help them grow can lead employees to take their talents elsewhere. They become "history." But what can be equally damaging as this talent drain are the employees who stay and become disengaged. Their bodies show up for work every day but their commitment has quit.

So, if career development is a tool that can deliver what organizations need most — productivity gains, expense reduction, retention, quality improvements, innovation, and bottom-line results-why isn't everyone using it?


DEFINING TERMS

Perhaps it's frequently forgotten because the term career development strikes fear into managers' hearts.

Whatever your answer, we'll bet that ours is simpler. You see, many managers are intimidated by or steer clear of career development because they have a mistaken, outdated, or overwhelming definition of the term.

So try this definition on for size:

Helping others grow can take a nearly unlimited number of forms. On one end of the continuum, you help employees prepare for and move to new or expanded roles in obvious and visible ways. But far more frequently, growth shows up on the other end of the continuum, in small, subtle ways that quietly create greater challenge, interest, and satisfaction in a job.

The problem is that too often, career development evokes images of forms, checklists, and deadlines. And let's be honest — the organization needs you to comply with these processes and systems to support important human resources planning work. But administrative details are not career development. Unfortunately, these artifacts too frequently overshadow the true art of development.

Genuine, meaningful, and sustainable career development occurs through the human act of conversation.

Whether it's a formal individual development planning (IDP) meeting or an on-the-fly connection, it's the quality of the conversation that matters most to employees. That's how they judge your performance and their development. That's also how they make the decision to go or stay — or to stay and disengage.

So, if it really is as simple as just talking to people, why isn't career development a more common feature of the organizational landscape?


IMMOBILIZING MYTHS

Over the years, managers — by sharing oral history and spinning lore — have created and continue to propagate several myths. And these myths (read: reasons or excuses) keep them from having the very career conversations their employees want. Which are familiar to you?


Myth 1 — There is simply not enough time.

No one will argue that time is among the scarcest resources available to managers today. But let's get real. You're having conversations already — probably all day long. What if you could redirect some of that time and some of those conversations to focus on careers?


Myth 2 — If I don't talk about it, they may not think about it and the status quo will be safe.

Why invite problems? Developing people could lead them to leave and upset the balance of your well-running department, right? Wrong. Employees have growth on their minds-whether you address it or not. Withholding these conversations is a greater danger to the status quo than engaging in them.


Myth 3 — Since employees need to own their careers, it's not my job.

No one will argue that managers own the development of their employees' careers. Employees do. But that doesn't mean that managers are completely off the hook. You have an essential role in helping and supporting others to take responsibility. And that role plays out in large part through conversation.


Myth 4 — Everyone wants more, bigger, or better: promotions, raises, prestige, power.

If you believe this one, you likely view career development as a confounding no-win situation. Because these things you imagine others want are in woefully short supply, it's understandable that many managers would avoid a potentially disappointing and demoralizing conversation. But based on our research, the fundamental assumption behind this response is patently inaccurate. When asked about what they want to get out of a career conversation with their managers, the numberone response from employees is "ways to use my talents creatively."


Myth 5 — Development efforts are...

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