Editor’s Note: Frequent TLNT contributor Howard Mavity, who is also a partner at the law firm Fisher & Phillips, attended TLNT’s High Performance Workforce Summit in Atlanta last week. Here are a few of his thoughts.
By Howard Mavity
After 31 years as a labor lawyer, I don’t often feel like an amateur, but that’s how I felt listening to Day One’s HR and academic presenters at TLNT’s High Performance Workforce Summit last week.
We overuse the term “Thought Leaders,” but the expression fit the speakers. All of them dug deeply into HR and Talent topics without coming unmoored from practical application. I’ll write more as time permits, but today I want to share a few “nuggets.”
Risk taking in the workplace
The Importance of Risk: How NASA Celebrates Failure as an Important Step on the Road Innovation and Success … or Learning Fast and Failing Forward, by Jeri Buchholz, Chief Human Capital Officer and Assistant Administrator, Human Capital Management, NASA.
Take risks! I bet you didn’t expect NASA to boldly praise risk taking.
Because of the hazards associated with space exploration, you probably expected, “obsessively compulsively work out every detail, don’t get creative, and go with a belt and suspenders approach.” Let’s be honest — given public and political scrutiny, you might have expected something like, “the tallest grass blade gets cut first.”
However, NASA’s mission depends on bold innovation. Hence NASA’s Star Trek-like motto: “To reach for new heights for the benefit of humankind.” But innovation demands creativity, exploration, and calculated risk taking.
We all know the Thomas Edison saga of how he tried hundreds of variations before hitting on the right combination for the light bulb. NASA patron saint Neil Armstrong explained that we know that “the advancement of knowledge and the rate of progress is proportional to the risk encountered.”
Failing forward
Administrator and former astronaut Charles Bolden has set the tone with his guiding statement: “Risk intolerance is a guarantee of failure to accomplish anything of significance.” Bolden lives this motto and early on stunned engineers by responding to an explosive misfire by telling them, “this was a good day.”
Instead of having to make excuses and cover their flanks, the engineers kept trying and figured it out. They failed forward, to quote Ms. Bucholz. How many corporate managers would respond so positively to a calculated and necessary failure? NASA’s philosophy does not mean that they throw caution to the winds. They manage risk and try to learn as much from their failures as from their success.
NASA is a unique employer, but to some extent, their philosophy transfers well to all of our workplaces.
What managers do best
Competence + Commitment + Contribution = High Performance Workforce, by Dave Ulrich, the Rensis Likert Professor at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan and a partner at the RBL Group.
I can’t do justice to Prof. Ulrich’s presentation, so I’ll only discuss a few crucial observations. Ulrich followed Ms. Bucholz and set his tone by quipping that building culture is harder than “rocket science.” Ms. Bucholz chortled enthusiastic agreement.
In discussing how to build the right culture, Ulrich discussed the strengths and weaknesses of managers.
Out of 67 activities, managers ranked these areas as the top things managers do best:
- Ethics/Values
- Intellectual horsepower
- Integrity/trust
- Function/Technical skills
- Managing diversity
- Customer Focus
- Action-oriented
- Perseverance
- Drive for results
- Comfort around higher management
- Standing alone
- Business acumen
No surprise as to the areas managers ranked as their weaker areas: They ranked “Developing people” dead last at 67!
What managers are weak at
Personal disclosure and confronting direct reports were close behind at 66 and 65. Personal learning was at 63, and “understanding others” came in at 62. Seeing a trend here? The remaining weakest areas were:
63. Dealing with Paradox
62. Understanding Others
61. Conflict Management
60. Total Work Systems
59. Motivating Others
58. Managing and Measuring Work
57. Patience
56. Directing Others
55. Managing Through Systems
3 takeaways
You’ll have to read Ulrich’s books or wait for another post to learn his approach to talent development, but my immediate takeaways are:
- Managers are inherently weak in many of the areas necessary to develop talent.
- Many managers seem unconcerned about these weak spots, if they even acknowledge them.
- Purposeful actions are necessary to address these weaknesses, and those who do so will probably be the survivors in their industry.