FC Expert Blog
Should You Hire For Skill Or Spirit?
BY FC Expert Blogger Michelle RandallTue Nov 8, 2011
This blog is written by a member of our expert blogging community and expresses that expert's views alone.
Companies
spend a huge amount of time and resources crafting business strategies.
Even so, most of these strategies end in failure.
I saw one
company spend half a million dollars and hundreds of employee hours
implementing a new strategy, only to admit that it wasn’t working. They
had to spend even more money and lay off employees trying to put things
back to the way they were before. The next time the company tried to
introduce a new strategy, it was met with considerable employee
resistance.
If employees don’t buy into a strategy, it’s doomed
to failure from the start. After all, strategy doesn’t execute itself.
People execute it. This is why it’s vital to integrate strategy and
people.
Because people represent the potential of the business,
high-growth companies need high-growth employees. Employee development
is the key ingredient in breaking through to the next level of growth.
Employees have to develop new skills that allow them to perform at
higher levels so that they can quickly deliver on the potential of the
strategy and the company itself.
While it’s certainly possible to
hire for new capabilities, there are tremendous benefits of promoting
from within. Just a few benefits include: retaining technical knowledge;
honoring the informal, social fabric of the organization; and fostering
the culture of the company.
Employee development needs to be
included in both strategy creation and execution. There are two main
ways to assess people and their development: skills and spirit.
Skills
are things that can be trained. A leader can be coached on how to
become more influential and engage their team to achieve great results.
An employee can be trained technical skills such as engineering,
accounting, and marketing that they need to do their jobs really, really
well.
Spirit refers to the “soft” skills that can’t be trained
effectively. You have to hire for them. These are hard to find but are
necessary for a company to function smoothly.
One of these skills
is teamwork--the ability to put the needs of the group ahead of
personal desires. Another is heart, as in “put your heart into it.” This
describes true commitment and passionate engagement. Employees with
heart take ownership of their jobs and go the extra mile.
One of
my clients, a growing manufacturing company, got a huge order that had
to be delivered on a rush basis. Everyone at the company had to pull out
all the stops to get the job done on time.
Two women working on
the manufacturing floor had the idea to make posters to keep track of
progress. These were updated several times a day so that everyone could
see how close they were to completion. The posters helped keep everyone
motivated, and with a lot of extra effort the order was filed with zero
errors.
The two women demonstrated both teamwork and heart. They were promoted to management positions shortly afterwards.
Too
often, companies hire for skills without enough consideration for
spirit. When that happens, you end up with a bunch of wonks who can’t
work together. There needs to be a balance between skills and spirit
across the entire company.
This same balance needs to exist
within individual senior managers. A VP of global marketing at a IT
company recently asked me about this. He told me that one of his senior
managers had great skills and was a decent leader, but he wasn’t showing
any heart--he just didn’t seem to care about the company. The VP said
that the manager’s bad attitude was starting to wear off on his entire
team.
My reply was clear and simple. I told him that if the
manager’s heart wasn’t in it, there were two options: move him into a
purely technical position or let him go. Senior managers are a microcosm
of your company. They are the role models for other employees. As such,
they need to have both skills and spirit.
Integrating strategy and people accelerates the potential growth of any organization and is critical for high-growth companies.
Too often, companies hire for skills without enough consideration for spirit. When that happens, you end up with a bunch of wonks who can’t work together. There needs to be a balance between skills and spirit across the entire company.
Should You Hire For Skill Or Spirit?