TM - March 2008 - (Page 44) recruitment & retention assessment & evaluation compensation & benefits performance management learning & development succession planning [succession planning]by Agatha Gilmore Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans With the impending talent crisis and changing workforce attitudes, organizations can no longer afford for succession planning to be a one-sided, C-suite-only process. Today’s market requires organizations to incorporate succession strategy into their enterprise-wide business plans and engage employees in a consistent, collaborative effort to develop, retain and promote from within. When its CEO left, the Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS) celebrated his 40 years at the company. When its COO left, the company celebrated his 27 years at the organization. When several other 20-plus-year executives left, senior executives at NGHS started to panic. “We went from a 40-year CEO with a communityminded culture to a growth plan that really just defies the imagination,” said Jack Fulbright, vice president of human resources at the NGHS. “It’s amazing.” The plight of the NGHS isn’t unique. In fact, the scenario might become commonplace during the next few years. With more than 70 million baby boomers eligible to retire and not enough skilled workers to fill the ranks, the U.S. Department of Labor estimates the workforce will be short 10 million employees by 2010. And according to research from the Aberdeen Group, fewer than half of organizations surveyed for the 2007 report “The Looming Leadership Void: Identifying, Developing, and Retaining Your Top Talent” currently have a succession planning strategy in place, though this number is expected to jump to 75 percent by the end of 2008. “Succession planning, once reserved for the most senior positions at organizations and considered a component of leadership development, is being viewed more holistically across the organization and its stakeholders,” wrote Aberdeen Research Director Kevin Martin. Further, the concept of a successful succession plan has evolved. Gone are the days of the hush-hush, case-by-case replacement process. Today’s market requires organizations to look at succession planning as a visible, integral, enterprise-wide part of their overall business strategies, plot out projected growth and be clear with employees about how they fit into the equation. The Push to Promote From Within “One of the reasons succession planning is so key is the way that we work is changing,” said Ilene Ringler, principal of Ilene Ringler Associates, a consulting firm based in Phoenix. “So to have the right people ready to move when you need them is more critical than ever before.” This certainly became clear to those at the NGHS, who, without an integrated succession plan, had to wait until longtime employees retired before scrambling to find replacements. “The organization knew these people were going to retire, and yet we still had to go out and replace the executives that we lost,” Fulbright said. This resulted in external hires of more than 60 percent in top executive jobs. Recruiting talent externally — perhaps one of the most costly and unwieldy side effects of not having an enterprisewide succession plan — can have a debilitating effect on a company’s bottom line. 44 March 2008 talent management magazine www.TalentMgt.com http://www.TalentMgt.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of TM - March 2008 TM - March 2008 Editor's Letter Contents Human Performance - The Paradoxically Gifted Leading Edge - Reverse Engineering: Shifting Focus to HR's Cause Learning Connection - Sharing Talent On the Hunt for Talent Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing HR Crucial to Executive Compensation Process Downtown Management: Surfing May Not Be Slacking Think Tanks Aid Government in Talent Management Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans Battle Retention Deficits With On-Boarding Sunbelt Rentals: A Mid-Level View of HR From the Trenches Butterball: No Chicken When It Comes to Talent Management Advertisers' Index Editorial Resources Full Potential - Choosing Change TM - March 2008 TM - March 2008 - (Page Intro) TM - March 2008 - TM - March 2008 (Page Cover1) TM - March 2008 - TM - March 2008 (Page Cover2) TM - March 2008 - TM - March 2008 (Page 3) TM - March 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 4) TM - March 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 5) TM - March 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 6) TM - March 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 7) TM - March 2008 - Editor's Letter (Page 8) TM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 9) TM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 10) TM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 11) TM - March 2008 - Human Performance - The Paradoxically Gifted (Page 12) TM - March 2008 - Human Performance - The Paradoxically Gifted (Page 13) TM - March 2008 - Leading Edge - Reverse Engineering: Shifting Focus to HR's Cause (Page 14) TM - March 2008 - Leading Edge - Reverse Engineering: Shifting Focus to HR's Cause (Page 15) TM - March 2008 - Learning Connection - Sharing Talent (Page 16) TM - March 2008 - Learning Connection - Sharing Talent (Page 17) TM - March 2008 - Learning Connection - Sharing Talent (Page 18) TM - March 2008 - Learning Connection - Sharing Talent (Page 19) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 20) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 21) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 22) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 23) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 24) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 25) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 26) TM - March 2008 - On the Hunt for Talent (Page 27) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 28) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 29) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 30) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 31) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 32) TM - March 2008 - Unlock Employee Motivation Through Personality Testing (Page 33) TM - March 2008 - HR Crucial to Executive Compensation Process (Page 34) TM - March 2008 - HR Crucial to Executive Compensation Process (Page 35) TM - March 2008 - HR Crucial to Executive Compensation Process (Page 36) TM - March 2008 - HR Crucial to Executive Compensation Process (Page 37) TM - March 2008 - Downtown Management: Surfing May Not Be Slacking (Page 38) TM - March 2008 - Downtown Management: Surfing May Not Be Slacking (Page 39) TM - March 2008 - Downtown Management: Surfing May Not Be Slacking (Page 40) TM - March 2008 - Downtown Management: Surfing May Not Be Slacking (Page 41) TM - March 2008 - Think Tanks Aid Government in Talent Management (Page 42) TM - March 2008 - Think Tanks Aid Government in Talent Management (Page 43) TM - March 2008 - Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans (Page 44) TM - March 2008 - Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans (Page 45) TM - March 2008 - Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans (Page 46) TM - March 2008 - Creating Consistency: Enterprise-Wide Succession Plans (Page 47) TM - March 2008 - Battle Retention Deficits With On-Boarding (Page 48) TM - March 2008 - Battle Retention Deficits With On-Boarding (Page 49) TM - March 2008 - Battle Retention Deficits With On-Boarding (Page 50) TM - March 2008 - Battle Retention Deficits With On-Boarding (Page 51) TM - March 2008 - Sunbelt Rentals: A Mid-Level View of HR From the Trenches (Page 52) TM - March 2008 - Sunbelt Rentals: A Mid-Level View of HR From the Trenches (Page 53) TM - March 2008 - Butterball: No Chicken When It Comes to Talent Management (Page 54) TM - March 2008 - Butterball: No Chicken When It Comes to Talent Management (Page 55) TM - March 2008 - Butterball: No Chicken When It Comes to Talent Management (Page 56) TM - March 2008 - Editorial Resources (Page 57) TM - March 2008 - Full Potential - Choosing Change (Page 58) TM - March 2008 - Full Potential - Choosing Change (Page Cover3) TM - March 2008 - Full Potential - Choosing Change (Page Cover4)
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