TM - January 2008 - (Page 40) recruitment & retention assessment & evaluation compensation & benefits performance management learning & development succession planning [succession planning]by Brian Davis, Ph.D. Mapping T alent Among Younger Workers Many organizations find the critical constraint to achieving growth is not access to raw materials or capital, but access to labor. Specifically, organizations need a steady pool of internal and external leaders when dealing with succession issues. Unfortunately, many key HR leaders feel their organizations are not doing a good job of tracking, measuring and making the best decisions to identify and develop leadership qualities in existing employees or “internal talent.” When called upon to fill a critical leadership role, it’s not uncommon for a company to find it lacks the needed skill sets among eligible individuals. This isn’t always because the talent within the company is insufficient. Rather, the lack comes as a result of insufficient succession planning. Proper succession planning involves strategic and long-term “talent mapping” — that is, integrating the skill sets and competencies needed to fill current and future leadership roles into high-potential employee development efforts and tracking individual results as these efforts go forward. There is urgency to this development need. The market for business leaders has become a classic case of rising demand and falling supply. The demand for leaders is growing — the number of executive positions is projected to increase 10 percent to 20 percent over the next five years, and an I dentifying and developing high-potential leaders inside the organization is critical to business growth, and the demand for business growth is as strong as it has ever been. Organizations that can map the leadership talents specific to their business success against those exhibited by current high-potential employees can create a detailed road map for continuing success. unprecedented 70 percent of organizations surveyed report they are searching externally for leaders. Meanwhile, the supply of leaders is shrinking — the number of workers in the 35 to 44 age range is projected to decline by 8 percent over the next few years, and in the U.S., 50 percent of the senior management ranks of Fortune 500 organizations are eligible to retire over the next five to seven years. Talent is a precious resource, not just because it is scarce but also because it is valuable. Studies show, compared to less effective leaders, more effective leaders deliver: • 12 percent greater gross margins. • 8 percent stronger net operating contributions. • 5 percent greater sales. • 12 percent more profit. • Nearly 3 percent less staff turnover. Assessing Potential By definition, leadership potential is the capacity to develop into a leader. “Potential” consists of a broad array of traits, experiences and other characteristics necessary to create the capacity for this development. This means different people will come to the same level of potential from very different paths. Similarly, different companies will have customized definitions of what leadership looks like. For exam- 40 January 2008 talent management magazine www.TalentMgt.com http://www.TalentMgt.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of TM - January 2008 TM - January 2008 Editor's Letter Contents Learning Connections: Working With Those People Leading Edge: Hub Caps for a Buggy Human Performance: Hawthorne Effect Revisited Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment Assessment Centers in Talent Management: Strategies, Use and Value Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent Intersection of Web 2.0 and Talent Management Cross-Training for Workforce Agility Mapping Talent Among Younger Workers Dashboard: Using Personality Data to Identify and Develop High-Potential Leaders Application: Shaffer Title Uses Myers-Briggs to Develop Common Corporate Language, Jump-Start Growth Insight: Dreier, Stein & Kahan LLP: Using Strategy to Bring Back the Law Profession Advertisers' Index Editorial Resources Full Potential: Stop in the Name of Leadership TM - January 2008 TM - January 2008 - (Page Intro) TM - January 2008 - TM - January 2008 (Page Cover1) TM - January 2008 - TM - January 2008 (Page Cover2) TM - January 2008 - TM - January 2008 (Page 3) TM - January 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 4) TM - January 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 5) TM - January 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 6) TM - January 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 7) TM - January 2008 - Contents (Page 8) TM - January 2008 - Contents (Page 9) TM - January 2008 - Learning Connections: Working With Those People (Page 10) TM - January 2008 - Learning Connections: Working With Those People (Page 11) TM - January 2008 - Leading Edge: Hub Caps for a Buggy (Page 12) TM - January 2008 - Leading Edge: Hub Caps for a Buggy (Page 13) TM - January 2008 - Human Performance: Hawthorne Effect Revisited (Page 14) TM - January 2008 - Human Performance: Hawthorne Effect Revisited (Page 15) TM - January 2008 - Human Performance: Hawthorne Effect Revisited (Page 16) TM - January 2008 - Human Performance: Hawthorne Effect Revisited (Page 17) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 18) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 19) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 20) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 21) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 22) TM - January 2008 - Beyond Affirmative Action: The Changing Face of Recruitment (Page 23) TM - January 2008 - Assessment Centers in Talent Management: Strategies, Use and Value (Page 24) TM - January 2008 - Assessment Centers in Talent Management: Strategies, Use and Value (Page 25) TM - January 2008 - Assessment Centers in Talent Management: Strategies, Use and Value (Page 26) TM - January 2008 - Assessment Centers in Talent Management: Strategies, Use and Value (Page 27) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 28) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 29) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 30) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 31) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 32) TM - January 2008 - Nontraditional Benefits- How to Hook the Best Talent (Page 33) TM - January 2008 - Intersection of Web 2.0 and Talent Management (Page 34) TM - January 2008 - Intersection of Web 2.0 and Talent Management (Page 35) TM - January 2008 - Intersection of Web 2.0 and Talent Management (Page 36) TM - January 2008 - Intersection of Web 2.0 and Talent Management (Page 37) TM - January 2008 - Cross-Training for Workforce Agility (Page 38) TM - January 2008 - Cross-Training for Workforce Agility (Page 39) TM - January 2008 - Mapping Talent Among Younger Workers (Page 40) TM - January 2008 - Mapping Talent Among Younger Workers (Page 41) TM - January 2008 - Mapping Talent Among Younger Workers (Page 42) TM - January 2008 - Mapping Talent Among Younger Workers (Page 43) TM - January 2008 - Dashboard: Using Personality Data to Identify and Develop High-Potential Leaders (Page 44) TM - January 2008 - Dashboard: Using Personality Data to Identify and Develop High-Potential Leaders (Page 45) TM - January 2008 - Dashboard: Using Personality Data to Identify and Develop High-Potential Leaders (Page 46) TM - January 2008 - Dashboard: Using Personality Data to Identify and Develop High-Potential Leaders (Page 47) TM - January 2008 - Application: Shaffer Title Uses Myers-Briggs to Develop Common Corporate Language, Jump-Start Growth (Page 48) TM - January 2008 - Application: Shaffer Title Uses Myers-Briggs to Develop Common Corporate Language, Jump-Start Growth (Page 49) TM - January 2008 - Insight: Dreier, Stein & Kahan LLP: Using Strategy to Bring Back the Law Profession (Page 50) TM - January 2008 - Insight: Dreier, Stein & Kahan LLP: Using Strategy to Bring Back the Law Profession (Page 51) TM - January 2008 - Insight: Dreier, Stein & Kahan LLP: Using Strategy to Bring Back the Law Profession (Page 52) TM - January 2008 - Editorial Resources (Page 53) TM - January 2008 - Full Potential: Stop in the Name of Leadership (Page 54) TM - January 2008 - Full Potential: Stop in the Name of Leadership (Page Cover3) TM - January 2008 - Full Potential: Stop in the Name of Leadership (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.