Corporate boards still believe HR is ‘too fluffy’

-

>
In a rapidly undulating talent landscape, HR is getting increasingly called out for its preoccupation with process and someone else’s best practice.

The need instead is for pragmatic and simple yet highly commercial solutions which can be debated and sponsored at the very top.

The only effective way to align the people agenda with an organisation’s commercial strategy is to get business leaders to consider the internal and external talent context of business decisions in real time. This requires a shift in our strategy models and in HR’s orientation.

“My research suggests that many companies don’t actually have a real people strategy,” says Gyan Nagpal, the former head of talent in APAC for Deutsche Bank and now a talent strategy coach. “What they have instead is a list of initiatives which react to a specific issue or try and solve a problem, often when it’s too late anyway.”

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

“We find that in large organisations operating globally, major commercial decisions are made impacting distant global theatres with little thought about how the talent can be found to implement them.”

Nagpal, cites the rush into the burgeoning markets of China as a classic example of this. “Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese success story, but few have worked out where the managerial talent is going to come from to deliver it. There are simply not enough indigenous professionals with the expected skills and experience to round. ”

“Corporate boards are increasingly waking up to the need to discuss this early in the planning process and are looking to HR; both for greater involvement and depth of insight” says Nagpal. “to be successful at the partnership table, now more than ever, HR needs to present its case in a more structured and well-researched way.”

Latest news

Menopause support gaps push women out of jobs as ‘masking’ takes toll

Women consider leaving jobs as menopause symptoms go unsupported, with many hiding their condition at work.

Workers ‘ignore AI tools and stick with manual tasks’ despite heavy investment

Employees are avoiding workplace AI tools and reverting to manual tasks, raising concerns about trust, usability and the value of tech investment.

Victor Riparbelli on AI boosting the value of people

“AI will make great human communicators even more valuable than before.”

Up to 28,000 employees affected by paper-based data breaches

Thousands of workers affected by paper-based data incidents as organisations miss reporting deadlines and overlook offline risks.
- Advertisement -

Helen Wada: Why engagement initiatives fail without human-centric leadership

Workforce engagement has become a hot topic across the boardroom and beyond, particularly as hybrid working practices have become the norm.

Recruiters warned to move beyond ‘post and pray’ as passive talent overlooked

Employers risk missing most candidates by relying on job boards as hiring methods struggle to deliver quality applicants.

Must read

Nick Schneider: Happy LinkedIn (Job) Hunting: 3 Ways to Protect Yourself from Social Engineering Scams

Nick Schneider has put together the best ways people can stay vigilant and secure against social engineering hackers when browsing for jobs online.

Chris Martin: The career paradox facing the UK’s working women

  The landscape for professional women in the workplace is...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you