CIPD Ireland hosted a conversation on the future of HR and the profession. Drawing on their experience and research through this crisis, these renowned HR influencers shared their insights on the role of HR leadership in this crisis, how this experience is shaping the future of work and workplaces, and what this means for the HR profession.
Panellists:
- Peter Cheese, Chief Executive, CIPD
- David Collings, Professor of Human Resource Management and Associate Dean for Research, DCU
Chaired by Mary Connaughton, Director, CIPD Ireland
0:01
so as we've gone through this wave of change is back really seems to start out
0:06
year since February March time we've seen a lot of decisions that have actually been very people centric so
0:14
even the hold people have come along that helped that come before and economic issues and financial issues and
0:22
that has given Peter or a really strong role in terms of pulling the profession center stage in all the decisions of all
0:29
the actions that have to take place and I think that's how to move and with position up conversation around and the
0:37
leadership that HR has provided in despair and then we can move on and we can talk about the future of the
0:43
workplace that we're going to be working with and then what are the implications of that for the profession and how we as
0:50
ourselves need to end and stay up to the mark so people are going to ask am i
0:55
inviting you to talk to us about from your experience now engaging people over
1:01
the last number of months I've stood out to you in terms of hit your leadership role in disguise
1:08
yeah well thank you Mary Ann and good afternoon to all of you I'm so sorry that I'm not there physically with you I
1:14
always loved my tread style and meeting friends and colleagues and that as you say Mary this week ironically would have
1:20
been the the Irish conference but it's a real pleasure to be able to at least connect and communicate a little bit by
1:26
these sorts of platforms so yeah I mean as you said in your introduction I mean these are completely extraordinary times
1:32
I think the word unprecedented will slowly go down as the word of the year and it's true we've never experienced
1:39
things like this but right from the outset of this crumb assist in first the most important things everybody
1:45
recognized is this was a crisis of people of human humanity of health and
1:50
and it was therefore put right from the beginning the idea of people being very
1:56
very central to any of the organizational response and indeed there was a interesting article that I've
2:03
often quoted in The Economist there four weeks ago there compared this crisis to be global financial crisis of 2008 9 and
2:10
said that you know that was indeed it with all the financial in the CFO or the chief financial
2:15
officer was very much in the spotlight on that one but this one is very different it's very different in scale
2:21
and magnitude of course but it's also as I said profiling human crisis so that has put the head of HR and the HR
2:28
professional function very much the front front and center of the organizational response and I find that
2:34
very very consistently from organizations across all sectors and it has been preparing to mounting a very
2:39
challenging time at the beginning of the crisis and everybody we talked to was saying they have never worked so hard at
2:47
having to deal with many many issues as you said Mary that we haven't particularly experienced before and
2:52
you're also right to point out that the beginning of the crisis when we all had to very rapidly move into lockdown in
2:58
some ways the parameters for us were fairly clearly defined we have gotta move people to work for hire more and
3:04
close our workplaces and of course I had our other pitch the medium term impact but now we're in this things are
3:11
gradually easing restrictions everywhere I noticed in Ireland you're looking forward to further announcements next
3:17
week native June of further easing in the bays - and that's happening pretty consistently across across Europe and
3:23
other parts of the world but the complexities of the easing of restrictions are manifestly greater than
3:29
the original lockdown so we're I'm sure we'll explore some of those parameters but it is continuing therefore to put HR an HR leadership
3:37
front and center of the organizational response and I can say that I think is also a strong recognition not only as
3:44
it's been a challenge in time for the perfection but this is a time of opportunity - this is a time of
3:49
opportunity for the profession to really take its rightful place at the heart of business thinking and powered by many
3:56
ways this principle its idea that this crisis is fundamentally people crisis
4:01
and therefore how we deal with our people how we support them how we deal with their well-being they're engaged in
4:07
the noise of questions very much more front and center of the agenda and I for one believe we can take that momentum
4:13
pause and really should take that momentum pause to shape a better future better ways of working better focus on
4:20
people of the very heart of business and I'm David just turn to you now you
4:27
have been involved in a piece of research and in the last couple of months looking at the leadership role of
4:32
chief a key role working with University of Columbia and and that sounds like a really exciting thing to be doing that
4:39
research very much lies in the current environment maybe tell us any bit about that and about some of the key findings
4:46
and insights that are coming through from sure and firstly very just thanks
4:51
for the implications enjoying the conversation this afternoon and QG important topic and and it's going to be
4:57
part of us and I look forward to discussions and good afternoon to everyone yeah so we've been working on this pissy
5:02
research my colleague John mica Mackin and away and ECU and after all we should Anton over at the university so Carolina
5:09
many people have probably familiar with Pat writes work in one of the leading contributors the academic feeds of
5:15
theater for a number decades and and and he is one of his colleagues there and
5:20
yeah so we've been looking at the chief human resources officer role for about the last six weeks at this stage and
5:26
about I don't know exactly where from I had 45 to 50 C intervals globally at
5:32
last count they did covered about 1.4 1.3 1.4 million employees so quite a
5:37
wide spread in terms that the CEOs were speaking to and we're asking them questions about how to have the crisis
5:44
unfolded in their organizations what they're all have been at HR leaders how their priorities have shifted as
5:51
equalities evolved and how they're doing and you know from from a well-being point to you and it's been fascinating
5:56
to get that sense of seeing the crisis resolved from from their perspectives
6:02
and you know what we're finding is very much resonating way to number things that Peter mentioned it just now so this
6:08
is fundamentally a people process and I think you're compared to any crisis we faced on a global scale before it
6:15
probably I to be the first in modern times that has been that and that has really pushed hedge or in the in the
6:21
forefront and what does that look like well in many organizations said the HR leader is leading the crisis response to
6:27
crisis management teams or a lot of organizations from a governance perspective establish different types of crisis management teams and in a
6:35
significant margin majority affirmed led by H or and and the kind of things
6:41
were hearing from hecho are practitioners from they talk about the reaction you know the real challenge in
6:46
the early days was they were fourth act quickly and without precedent so the
6:51
kind of decisions they were having to make in early days where we had no precedent we had very little data to
6:58
inform the decisions that were being made so the kind of things we typically heard were you know a number of CHD
7:04
roles that said you know we made a decision on a date that would have seemed absolutely improbable on a Monday
7:10
and by from dates in two weeks legs so the sign was shifting so quickly in those early days and that they were
7:16
forced make you know very difficult decisions very quickly I completely agree with the point that Peter made though the ratings of options on the
7:22
table was quite limited at that stage so so in some ways as we go forward the decisions are likely to be more
7:28
challenging we kind of things they told us that really mattered so you know Manickam it was the importance of
7:34
returning to the first principles of HR so really getting the really basic hygiene stuff right so making sure
7:41
people were say it's thinking about well-being and they chose rule as as a coach to other leaders in the
7:47
organization who were struggling with this kind of unprecedented decision-making
7:52
so really return to first principles and you know I've done a couple of sessions
7:59
reasonably even a clip from my groin that the warrant Health Organization work where somebody asked in a press conference you know what have you
8:05
learned from managing Ebola that teaches us that's relevant for managing this crisis and he said well what we've
8:11
learned is you have to act quickly and have no regrets that perfection is the enemy of the coach and I think was a
8:17
really powerful message for HR leaders there in that you know certainly as as
8:23
the situation was as fluid as it was in the early days and continue to be relatively curious search for perfection
8:28
is probably not the ideal buyer that we're looking for here we understand
8:33
we're good enough is good you know and I think that's really something that comes through very very strongly anything in a
8:40
number of the conversations we've had and and and I think that that that
8:45
importance of of reflecting on where HR can I the most value of where we can make good
8:52
enough decisions I think as a real priority nearly days that shifts as we move forward we have more days and more
8:59
information yes certainly we picked up on the level of sort of flexibility in
9:04
response and that things that were previously totally untouchable or just
9:10
went out the window as people responders and if those the question is around
9:15
where does that leave us because now we've actually in many cases from what we might the past where some of the
9:22
rooms and yes certainly we always we had too many policies and being that we worked in the past but now we've shown
9:28
organizations how we can be adaptive we can respond so what do you see is coming
9:33
through around what way we're going to have to work for the future you know whether that if there are any and
9:38
enlightening come to from the research dave around but where are we going yeah
9:44
so I think to your point Mary the one thing that changes we're now starting from a new baseline in implementing
9:50
areas so we're all familiar with those leaders and organizations that were hugely resistant to things like working
9:57
from home and and the lack of trusted employees in some instances you know doubt the autonomy to be at home and I
10:04
think our starting point for any discussion on working from home now is well you know why on your what
10:10
circumstances will we bring people back office and you know who would we bring back and blame and so I think that
10:17
fundamentally shifts that conversation as an example of something that's changed like you forever and you know
10:22
there's a huge amount of debate about this and I think it like a lot of things the debate gets polarized so you know so
10:28
folks a or nobody'll ever come to an office again and I know they're like I will just sit back normally I think you
10:33
realities will land somewhere in the middle to mediate questions we need to be asking about in thinking about the
10:39
return to the workplace are questions like you know what why would somebody need to be in the workplace so even if
10:46
you look up the announcements from Twitter and some of the tech organizations that have said people can stay from home they're very clear that
10:52
if the job allowed that so there's some goals and organizations that point by
10:57
design have to be in the work place at least a significant amount of time and there are a number equals what we
11:04
would want people to work from home so so obviously there's a work/life balance issue you know takes kids away from people and it gives people more
11:10
flexibility it may help us with cost it take some real estate allow us to teach
11:17
our real estate certainly in the longer term with social distancing that's probably you know going to be a single
11:22
sum game person until that's resolved and you know so there are some reasons we might want to people to work from
11:28
home but there's also some downsides to working at home so you know we know people like the social interaction of
11:34
the office and the relationships that they build with people I was going to call that we could an insurance company
11:40
who had done some internal research of one of their sites and I would have a population of a couple of thousands
11:45
about 50% of people said they would like to look to stay home as much as they could and about a quarter people said
11:52
we'd like to come back to the office right now who proposed and there was another quarter that kind of work
11:58
equivocal so you know there are some folks for whom the offices is somewhere
12:03
they want to be and you know not everyone is lucky enough to have an environment at home that that's
12:09
appropriate for workplace so so I think you know we need to think about what we gave up from from working from home so
12:15
we know the pushback in Silicon Valley you know a technique ago when allows the tech companies roll back their work from
12:21
home because they felt it impacted our innovation so I think you know there's a sweet spot somewhere in the middle of
12:27
where we can achieve a lot of those goals but I think a question I would ask the HR leader so is well why do why
12:32
would we have people working from home right now it's safety it's easy right it's black and white and I think the other thing we need to
12:39
monitor is the quote the implications of working from home you know so so mental health among be you know is a huge huge
12:45
issue every catering leader you see brings that open and I think it's really telling we did some work on
12:51
the future or last year and I was 50 interviews I think when we asked you
12:57
know what are the skills of the future two people said mental health and well-being our variations thereof
13:03
well I think we now recognize how much of an issue that is and how far it inspected that social interaction is the
13:11
people at Lotte News and at the over tonight flag from the workers own thing is the impact on
13:17
diversity and a watchful eye on diversity you know we've seen already and we know from why you research anyway
13:24
that that ended situations you know females tend to take on more at home
13:29
care responsibilities whether they're other parents or our children and you
13:35
know we also know that Wesker's employees are less able to work at home the types of jobs they generally
13:41
do and he also saw a careful eye on diversity to ensure that we're not
13:47
disadvantaging Elliot and any of our employee groups true true that shift to work from home yeah I think just to go
13:55
back to you started off talking about the and they're not working and certainly when you look at when you
14:01
dwell into it you find that often people I like to do it for a certain period of
14:06
time actually don't want to do it and for full time so you know can we come up
14:12
with a formula that's sort of a blended way of working or by we have time for both and certainly when you hear of the
14:18
mental health and issue coming through so strongly makes you realize how much the social infrastructure in the
14:24
workplace was actually a support for that are an avenue to get support others
14:30
and and yes I mean we look at Irish organizations many people met their
14:35
partner in their work environment you know it has a lot of implications and pay for maybe just just turning to you
14:42
in terms of what you see as being some of the key features I mean Dave talks or a couple things but from your
14:49
perspective coming at it from a more additional perspective what's jumping out at you I think many reflections is
14:56
Dave's already observed I mean the first thing I'd say is that the paradigms of
15:02
work that we've had for a very long time have been that and not changed I mean the paradigm of work that if you're not
15:08
working in the workplace and somehow you're not really working those sorts of biases that we've seen for a long time
15:14
the fact that many aspects of flexible working in recent years have really shifted very very slowly and then you
15:21
combine that with other statistics and facts like the growing level of stress there people have seen and
15:27
therefore the mental health issues that they rattle called out were already growing and we were seeing far more
15:33
focus organizations on these ideas of mental health that work and so now we hit the crisis and the crisis should
15:40
have taught us already a number of things the first is is that people can work from home and that can work
15:46
productive it and they can be effective now state said that doesn't mean to say to so we now shift them all to everybody
15:52
works and home if they can and there's no other choice I think the reality is is what we need to acknowledge and storm
15:57
out is much more of this personalization of work if you will this ability to recognize this not one size fits all the
16:03
different people for different circumstances and different reasons need to if they can to have choice and that
16:10
choice would of course include it things like working from home where they can and it also can include things like more
16:16
flexibility and working hours and schedules and I think if we can create those patterns of work going forward
16:22
then not only will we attract to you today's point a more diverse workforce because there are many people are
16:28
constrained from work because of other issues like young children or whatever it might be secondly hopefully we'll have a more
16:35
well workforce because we're reducing levels of stress and allowing people to map their lives around their their work
16:41
as well and thirdly that we'll ever get the best out of people in terms of productivity because it's not again one
16:48
so so it's all and I think those have really profound shifts if you think about it it's not that they're all new I
16:53
might have often said interesting is in many of the features that we were starting to address the future where I
16:59
will fight mental health like flexible working we're all that we were understanding that stress is a big issue
17:04
understanding issues of productivity and innovation creativity but I think the process has taught us that we can
17:10
actually think differently and accelerate many of those good ideas about what the future work should
17:15
represent because of what we learnt through the crisis so I would absolutely emphasize the idea of a choice I would
17:22
also emphasize the idea therefore that this is an ongoing learning I mean I think those funds really well made this
17:28
is not about perfection it's about us learning as we go what works what doesn't what do people want keep
17:33
surveying you for your teams and your people to understand what they want what works best and then let's try them out and we're
17:40
going to have to do that in workplaces anyway because we do not know how we can make places truly safe but as a matter
17:46
harmony guidance and guidelines and piles of paper issued by governments to say this is what you should do the fact
17:52
is is we're dealing with human behavior and we will need to learn as we go and then take those out operations Ford's
17:59
insight as I said of being what I believe can be some learnings that really can improve work for more people
18:05
in more circumstances and have them thrive in a world of work in terms of all that means their well-being and
18:12
their productivity in their creative yeah certainly the concerns we're
18:17
picking up to is is how the risk of us all adopting to traditional behavior patterns so regardless of the structure
18:23
is that when I go back into a workplace my temptation will be to behave the way I did behave and that is actually one of
18:30
the key changes that we have to and support people to bring about so that
18:35
they have that consciousness of the need for different way of working and I'm similar to what you said Peter I know
18:41
certainly and we'll be talking here about the personalization of the employment relationship now more and
18:46
more people are looking for that but I think this and particularly as we move from where we are now into her chart
18:53
work situation is going to make that center stage how do we actually absolutely him deliver on that because
18:59
it is a different way of working and it means taking away those boundaries that we've all worked to and we know during
19:06
this fell people have struggled with boundaries that boundary of being safe at work in my home and they're not at
19:13
work is one of that people have struggle to actually manage and for themselves
19:18
and we sometimes also so we need to get better at that but Peter just to come
19:24
back the terms of the profession and where the profession is going and what this all means for like profession and
19:31
posse I P D because it you put it all together it's actually a lot to change
19:37
yes there is no but it but it's also opportunity I would like to think of thing claps are full I mean as we've
19:44
already explored there are many things changing because of the crisis which we can taking very positive better ways interestingly something I've seen it we
19:51
just released was the b-cup profession survey which was a wide survey looking at how people
19:57
felt about the profession all the way from what they gave meaning and purpose but also cause looking at things like
20:02
professional skills and competencies and and interestingly many of those reflections are exactly what we've been describing first of all there's a lot of
20:09
positive messages about how people feel about the profession giving the meaning and purpose and of course in the context
20:15
are now talking about with a much more human centered way of thinking about work that meaning I think grows all the
20:20
time it was also an acknowledgment that some of the skills and capabilities that we perhaps talked about for a little
20:26
while come much more to the center because the profession itself is being put much more to the center of business
20:32
now that ranges some things I mindsets which we're Dave and I have already explored that say ok well let's not just
20:38
imagine there's a perfect manual and it's every all the rules are in Dax they're not the fact they never were and
20:44
we've got to be much more adaptive and agile we've got to be prepared to experiment to try things and innovate
20:50
and that's what I've seen so much during this crisis many many HR practices innovating trying different things and
20:56
learning as a result of that not something we need to set forward but I think we do have to step up on some of these areas who talked about for a while
21:03
about analytical capability because because there's we try these different things we've got to understand what's working what are the measures were using
21:09
and if I go to some of the most profound measures of law at the highest levels of organization I really really believe
21:15
that now is the time to Center the ideas of transparency of businesses of what
21:21
they're doing with their people basically well being as just as an important output a business almost as
21:26
your profit and loss statement and that's an opportunity for HR to step up and how to define what really are these
21:34
aspects of responsible business at the highest levels to ensure that we keep our focus on these ideas of things like
21:40
well-being so to set an analytics and corporate governance and this more strategic part of HR is really important
21:46
OD organization design and development also going to be really important how do we restructure and adapt our business in
21:53
very fast changing economic circumstances I saw that the latest estimates in Ireland from the SR is that
21:59
the Irish economy might drop by as much as twelve and a half percent GDP this year that's not uncommon to many
22:06
across the world and that means many businesses having to restructure and HR needs to be at the very very heart of
22:12
that sort of debate and therefore OD change management those sorts of things I think very much comes in for in terms
22:18
of capabilities for the future yes certainly there is a lot of concern out
22:24
there about what is actually facing us in terms of the labor market because once we start to open up the financial
22:30
realities of that mercial realities are going to force people into making tough
22:35
decisions and again we want to make sure that people do that again and sensitive away as possible
22:41
these are I should put out there you know being transparent being open around us and being empathetic in terms of
22:48
situation that and that can be boring and today maybe a little more than just
22:53
come back to you and I mean you've talked there from the research and what
22:58
it's it's telling you about and what what see hey trolls are doing but where
23:03
do you see this going for the future what do you think in terms of of the profession and the chief hey Charles
23:09
what's coming through in terms of what they need to be capable of doing where they need to be putting their attention
23:15
yeah I'm just thinking as Peter I was talking it's much easier on those news shows where they have two completely
23:21
contrasting opinions and you have this really great debate but but I agree with absolutely everything Peter said and
23:27
just you know in terms of what else we're seeing I think you know one thing does that we're seeing it was creeping
23:34
into a chore but I think it's likely to become more common with the importance of agile skills and agile methodologies
23:40
and HR so to Peter's Peter's point of we need to try stuff and fail fast and how
23:47
we measure whether things are effective or not or don't absolutely those analytical skills those data analysis
23:53
and and data storytelling and I've always been of the view that the
23:59
analytics personal compass' are only half of their of the data side the other
24:04
half is the storytelling and the rule that HR leaders need to play in influencing their colleagues and
24:10
executive leadership team and colleagues in the business and telling the story of how our
24:16
essence of people matter to the business so I think you know that's that the second part of that scale and I think
24:22
the other thing that she G important is the kind of the forward-looking strategic planning so you know looking
24:30
at where just scenario planning around where the organization is going a blocking implications are for people and
24:38
skills and you know even before the crisis we generally organizations had a good sense of where they wanted to be
24:44
from a strategic perspective whether it was you know their market share or their sales volume or with the demonstrating
24:50
conversation of the people that enabled us and the implications for people often didn't get the same level of attention
24:56
and credibility and I think you know those organizations that we're seeing that are kind of better equipped to
25:03
manage true and out of the crisis have a kind of what we call in somewhere research at Northstar decided what
25:09
they're doing so that I'm thinking of what they want to be how that aligns with skills and capabilities I think so
25:15
so you know a great example of an organization that pretty well aligned looking forward is a global insurance
25:21
organization that we're working with at the moment in terms of research - this is pre crisis but they did an analysis
25:28
abroad in the organization and looking at the impact of of the future work and technology and the like and their
25:34
analysis was that 15% of rules will be eliminated in five this years by technology and 50% would need some
25:41
augmentation support organization is now using that roadmap to guide its investments in people and better analogy
25:49
to the crisis and the absurdity is that as parts of the business or closure and
25:54
parts of the business of our visitor right now they're realizing people into
26:00
the growing parts of business and the bits that are busier and also focusing on on building the skills in capability
26:06
so we skimming and upskilling folks in to the parts of the business sector that are doing well now they're lucky they've
26:12
got some resources they've got you know they've got a war chest that allows them to do that but very much their priority
26:18
now is to use any slack that's in the business to risk it an upscale and to
26:23
align people at work with parts of the business that are going so I think that forward-looking perspective
26:29
from where the businesses and one of the opportunities that this is given that hedge or isn't money instance of
26:35
greeting to crisis response team still right in the middle of the business narrowing so that that opportunity to to
26:42
really get into the weeds of the business and really understand the business I can consume so I would say
26:48
understanding the business the data side including the storytelling side and
26:53
agile an equally that kind of strategic planning and that forward-looking I
26:58
think you know I've often made the point that you know if you look at any data on skills and talent you know wcco's all
27:06
clocks are very year and year eighty percent of CEOs we don't have the talent capabilities we need when one of the
27:12
reasons is because a lot of our our our capability development is reactive at short term as opposed to looking forward
27:19
and investing in where we need to be not where we are right now so I think that that's part of the position of those
27:27
organizations to come out with this successfully I'm certainly not something we'd be picking up on the ground Dave in
27:33
terms of people needing to do that things not always necessarily having had it done actually now needing to say but
27:40
where are we going or what are our core capabilities and whether they are central offering and being able then to
27:45
look at what are the areas where they may need to to to downsize our moved
27:50
people from one skill set into another skill set and certainly we did recognize that the start of this was definitely an
27:58
opportunity for development you know where people had some spare capacity we
28:03
haven't necessarily picked up that it has happened as much as people apply and you know in terms of actually
28:09
organizations getting their head around the need to actually take good value from the time that's been available to
28:16
them yes it's thoughts but probably not John consistently are are strategically in
28:22
the way that you're talking about I have no I would agree with that Mary - from
28:28
what we're seeing it but I think this is going to be part of this next shift because as we're all exploring we're
28:34
moving more likely into some of this bigger restructuring types of things where you're going to have to redeploy
28:40
people or maybe in some cases let them go and so I think if they said it's going to put much more centrally this
28:47
agenda about how do we do that how do we develop and enhance our capabilities and
28:52
upskilling re-skilling businesses again things we're already looking at pre-crisis we're all talking about future work by sometime we need to do
28:59
that the crisis is going to accelerate this our ability to deliver digital learning all these other things in very
29:05
very fun ways where to focus on what those core skills and competencies are as you rightly said Mary what are the transferable skills and even if I am
29:13
letting people go what we're hearing from you obviously sometimes it needs the resources to do it but from from any
29:19
bigger employers saying if we've got a research let people go we are also going to provide learning and training opportunities as well so their best
29:26
position to pick up new opportunities so I think that's another aspect of responsible business but the final
29:31
points that make on this because it's such a big subject and importance of its own skills is what governments are going
29:36
to have to think about differently because if we're going to see shifts economic shifts across sectors you know some sectors being as much slower points
29:43
of recovery others already you're not able to fulfill demand then how do you shift people around and what's the the
29:49
role of government in helping you know Bri skill and up skill people more broadly and this again has been a very
29:56
challenging agenda in most countries of adult learning lifelong learning what's what's the role of government in helping
30:02
to match better supply and amount of skills and capabilities I think some of that is going to have to emerge as well
30:07
yeah it's starting to be recognized here in particular when they look at profiles of people who might be on some of the
30:13
state foreign schemes we are seeing that they tend to be predominantly young people low-skilled part-time workers so
30:20
we have a particular cohort who are likely to be at risk maybe more than some of the more and sort of traditional
30:27
and civil service are professional type roles so that means the investment is
30:33
really going to have to go into a cohort who we would have seen as being vulnerable in any case so yes certainly
30:38
and not under the moment P so we have negotiations negotiations going on about a program for government or said yes
30:46
they're going on and on and on I will say anymore and and and and and they free one of these
30:54
things you mentioned to us and the other day and talking about this was how you saw hate your leaders of the CH Orioles
31:02
investing their time and you know looking at what you learned so far but
31:07
what you see is being some of the key leaders that they need to be using as they seek to move their organizations
31:14
forward now in the way we will be talking yeah so I guess what we saw in
31:19
terms of time was and Peter mentioned this at the outset you know many HR
31:24
leaders were just completely overwhelmed in the early days it was seven days a week it was you know crisis meetings
31:30
true that we gained so so their time was just completely not their own and a
31:36
number of them reflected on the fact that they just just delegated all their
31:41
core work to their team so again a great opportunity for their teams have exposure to projects that they may not
31:47
have done well as the crisis evolved and it went on for long periods time a
31:52
number the HR leaders we were speaking to were reflecting on the fact that they were so guilty about the lack of time
31:57
they were given to their own teams so recognizing that they needed to connect them with their teams hot dogs one to
32:03
once again and support their own colleagues so I think and I think there's been a greater recognition of
32:09
that I think what a number of them are telling us in terms of time is that the boundary between Co would work and non
32:14
Corbitt work is now very much very difficult to see that you know covetous
32:21
is is now just normal it's normal day today and you know it looks like it's
32:27
going to be here for a period of time so really in terms of prioritizing their time you know again it comes back to
32:33
questions like you know well what do we put on the shelves and leave on the shelves that's just not a priority now
32:39
so we've seen some organizations that have you know put on hold large
32:44
technology upgrades or HR systems that have put on hold you know certain processes but will receive more and more
32:51
over the last couple weeks there's a recognition that this is going to last longer than we may have initially does
32:56
so some of the things have come back on the table so I had a great conversation last week with it with a chief Learning
33:03
Officer actually who was speaking about their their leadership development program and
33:08
initially it was due to launch in saying mid-march I can remember exactly but he
33:14
said you're thinking at the time was one let's waste and let's just wait and see and if we can get everyone together for
33:20
the kickoff weekend's in the autumn time did not make sense but there's no realization that's not going to happen
33:25
so they have to reorient at the lucious development program recognize that people are not going to be together on
33:30
the ground and come up with a way to do that virtually so what was done is kind
33:36
of redesigned it to try and identify some of the trickiest projects that are
33:41
ongoing in the organization and align that folks are the talent program with
33:47
those projects on a gate type basis in a forward ways that are get to work on this really interesting work which is
33:54
kind of very different to what they were planning before had actually yesterday I was on a call with somebody who had the
34:00
potential problem for a global technology company and they were at the back end of a program closing it out and
34:07
you know they had the last couple of sessions virtually and one of the things they did was brought together people in troops
34:12
kind of sized rooms are they online and a piece of feedback I got from almost
34:17
everyone was look normally that networks from these programs endure because we
34:22
need each other out sighs so what would matter most was is a way to keep those networks happening so they're putting in
34:29
place got a monthly copy groups or lunch groups of these folks we're the kind of
34:34
a gentle agenda so so it doesn't just become you know a child about football
34:39
or whatever and everybody gets forward but a gentle agenda to keep them engaged so a recognition that still has to come
34:45
back on the table because this is going to be a medium to long term going to deal with as opposed to something that's
34:51
going to be gone by the autumn okay I certainly we're picking up that
34:58
too both in terms of what we have to do within CIPD but overall in terms of people saying actually things that they
35:04
had say not ones to do virtually and just thought that they could allow time for they now actually have to completely
35:10
revamp and say we need to get on with this we need to actually work with this so I'm starting to have those learning
35:17
the development conversations and you can see with the range of challenges that we're all facing you do need to be
35:23
an op skilling and people one of the questions that come to is around some
35:28
practical examples of the innovation in here or and that have come true I've
35:35
I've you've got any examples of something particular that stands out in terms of innovation I mean I think it's
35:42
very exploring I mean to me some of the innovation has been about how we've supported people and how we've let them
35:47
work I mean there whether it's flexing their work hours and lots of different ways in which people have collaborators
35:53
connected how we support of those things here's some real innovation if you compare it to remnants of what we've
35:59
seen in the past this is pretty radical stuff and yes it may have been brought about a bit by force of circumstances
36:04
but oh my goodness we've seen a lot of that really innovation in thinking about
36:10
how we support people to work in these very different ways yes they've highlighted also the ways in which
36:15
people connect and supporting their well-being that's so important and therefore encouraging people you talked
36:22
about families well how'd you make those boundaries how do you use the losses you have physical interaction social
36:28
interaction how can you replace some of that through these sorts of environments and so people not just using them for work but
36:34
use them for forms of social connection as well and then of course I would also highlight a lot of innovation in how
36:40
high eighties are reaching out their organizations they're surveying the Millau they're asking lots of questions and doing and I think in very very
36:47
different ways much faster feedback much for us turnaround that implemented things quickly to support them where
36:52
they seem there is that kind of need and that that is innovation and this is I think we've already explored on the call
36:58
it's recognizing that yet to get to do those things you've got to let some of the things care you've got to let go
37:04
some of the old colleges and rules things which we brother buried ourselves under in the past and just be agile and
37:11
be adaptive and that is at the very heart of innovation yeah I think they
37:17
cooked some of the things that had struck me as being innovative I've been struck by the simplicity of them so it's
37:23
not necessarily sophisticated thing so so one example I saw was an organization who and basically they started because
37:30
they had a thickness team that huge community sessions on the outside journey and they were eager to do
37:36
something that so they subdued like what would we do and in a fitness team started developing online content and
37:43
it's been one of the most accessed of their life under learning and development program so far beyond the
37:48
sites colleagues around the world are accessing this content and it's to the well-being agenda another organization I
37:55
think communication has been something that's really come to the fore and organizations I think those
38:00
organizations that have the most positive I like a know Pro thr leaders
38:06
we speak to reinforce that essence that engagement is actually really high in their organizations know that there's a
38:12
sense that employees have been front and center and decisions that we made today's the organization's acted quickly
38:19
to protect them and I think that that that kind of that connection and that
38:24
sense of mutual and I guess respecting
38:29
the light from from the organization so a lot of organizations are reports high-level engagement I think what
38:34
really drives that is is excellent communication and those organizations that are doing a good job on
38:40
communication really standards and and you know obviously some of that is more
38:45
challenging in a virtual book form but you know I I heard two CEO rates there recently that was her third town hall of
38:52
the day and she said normally it takes me two days to do one because I need to fly and deal with it come back so so
38:58
communication again another organization that set up a weekly radio show where they had so many influencers that they
39:05
call them prick'd ever association with their brands come on speak to a DJ but it's completely targeted at their
39:11
employees and what they found was that the families of employees were becoming part of the community in a way and again
39:18
with this you know Marcus made a big play on online learning where they need
39:24
other Coursera content available to friends and family of their employees where they you know invested a million
39:30
euros in Khan Academy for content for kids so you know there's organizations do tremendous things out there most are
39:37
not very expensive most of them are pretty simple and I can't read up the key lesson here the things that really
39:44
matter to people aren't big enjoying generally clearly simple things yeah and
39:49
it's really worth emphasizing that communication point over every organizations also every HR lead every
39:55
CEO does that right click we've shifted how they communicate this is a very very regular very creative and how they do
40:01
what I did as well I never communicated more the organization and I now weekly blogs all sorts of webinars and seminars
40:08
and ways in which we can connect and some of it very crazy them it was one of my favorites who saw in the last couple
40:14
of days is a video training video for people returning to workplace Everett sort of the primary produce in the food
40:20
industry and they'd put it put together learning video now you can imagine what that might have looked like in the old
40:27
days this is incredibly creative it was all done to the tune of that is this the way to Amarillo and everybody was sort
40:34
of dancing all the workers doing their thing and it just got the message across in a very different way in a very very
40:40
engaging way so I agree I think another really powerful thing we've seen in innovation is around communication and
40:45
let's take that forwards as well and each one conscious you need to go and to
40:52
have another appointment with the end government to participate in their conversations so am I'm going to throw
40:58
another question today but before I do that I just want to say thank you very much for your contribution today and a
41:04
pc8 your time today and your sport and that's been very insight for the terms of sharing this almost yeah no thank you
41:10
Mary thank you all as I said it it's great to even be able to communicate in these ways and I really do look forward to the next time physically I can come
41:17
to Ireland to spend more time with you all these are incredibly challenging times but I think as we've explored
41:23
during this webinar already it's a time of opportunity for our profession and we want to do all we can as this happy to
41:30
support you not owning these sometimes but also as we think ahead and I'm sorry a little early it is a
41:36
minister a roundtable interestingly talking about the issue of what government can do to encourage upskilling re-skilling these really
41:43
difficult difficult times and we want to share those learning Sami so thank you and look forward to talking to you soon
41:49
thank you Mary thank you Dave so much very quickly part of this as well okay thank speech going to do Davis I
41:57
was reflecting on that last conversation where we were talking about the innovation and and you know the level of
42:03
communication and that and the positivity in terms of engagement but you know particularly look at the Irish
42:10
situation as we move forward we are going to be looking at downsizing and we are going to be looking at redundancies
42:15
in some organizations so what are the things we can do to try to maintain some
42:21
of that innovation and positively as we move forward through that struggle
42:27
that's all a bunch of halt actually gained yeah for sure I think we mentioned we were in the planning
42:33
coordinator game area one of the examples I thought that was very powerful over the last couple weeks was
42:38
Airbnb and so I'm sure we also Airbnb made a substantial number of redundancies and Bo verily I can't
42:47
remember his name I'm sorry he wrote a letter to employees that and I don't know much about their B&B but it seemed
42:53
very authentic right and he spoke about the culture and the personal challenge
42:59
of making the decision and said look this isn't something we've done easily but here is why we're doing this and
43:06
here's how we decide this which rules we would make redundant so again a real
43:12
effort in transparency and trying to explain to people this is how we get into the decisions we case and here's
43:18
what we're going to do to help you so you know a relatively generous redundancy package I support package in
43:26
terms of helping people find new roles at and putting in place those kind of things so I think at the end of the day
43:32
the importance of remembering you know human side of these conversations I think the importance of being
43:38
transparent in our communications and and and being humane at the end of the
43:44
day because you know I don't believe any leader makes these decisions lightly you know so so this those kind of things are
43:51
happening in the boardroom when we're making decisions but it's really important that our khloe's feel that
43:57
entity three things that that you know because it is really powerful and you
44:03
know I you know seen Mary we're doing some research on boob right hairs right now you console like a good business
44:10
it's going to come back around again you know we know economic sectors move up and down that's the nature of economy so
44:17
you know I think it's really important that we think about you have to make
44:22
those difficult decisions what the off-boarding process is like I hope we can we can maintain it as positive
44:28
relationship as possible and it's not going to be possible in all the cases where those people continue to be
44:34
advocates for organization that are brand they continue to be people we can
44:39
potentially tap into in new rules or even in future rules and when they come
44:45
back and the opportunities them to come back to us as boomer I hire so I think you know communication honesty and
44:52
transparency is a really really good static place to start and of course is always this you know how transparent
44:57
Diary of a lot of sorry it'll obviously dicta are you route to the transparency
45:03
is sometimes not not the best either but you know I think being as transparent as
45:09
one time and consistence with one's values you know again the number of literals that have spoken about
45:15
referring to their values as principles when you're making decisions without priests and without data and a hugely
45:22
important you know so I think organizations will be judged above by
45:27
how they make those difficult decisions moving forward like we said earlier the easy decisions happy made that would
45:33
becomes much more difficult for us yeah yeah I'm certainly we're picking up what
45:39
I liked about that particular example and of just off after attention just was that indeed lay out his principles and
45:44
he laid out the principles as to how they were going to go about that and that they were a very inclusive and
45:51
transparent and and parcel of people and the other thing and it's interesting when you finally how the decisions can
45:57
get made in the boardroom but actually they have to be delivered but it's having that empathy and making sure that empathy
46:04
comes through and I saw a recent debt comparison of should we really when we talk about CEO at this point in time
46:11
chief empathy officer is the role that they need to be playing and admitting their own difficulties you know showing
46:17
their vulnerability steeples and then acknowledging that this is a painful time for individuals even for people who
46:24
might be holding on to their jobs but how the processes man managed was determined really how connected I'll
46:30
engage the people were left behind are that that's a really important point Mariette and what it reminds me of it we
46:38
either grade that into procedure last weekend he was talking about and in the past how uncomfortable here the C major
46:46
or would have been to go to an executive leadership team and say I don't know and I don't know the answer and and I think
46:54
every one of us is making decisions that are religious right now where we don't know the answer and we can see clearly
47:01
what term of leadership looks like we see yellow on political leaders in
47:06
countries pretending they know the answers to things they don't and spreading false information to
47:12
vulnerable people about what works and what doesn't in curing in treating and
47:18
curing the lungs accorded so I think that the importance of the willingness of senior leaders to put their hands up
47:26
and say look people know we don't know what it's going to look like but we're going to do our best and here's here's
47:31
how we're going to hear the print that they're going to guide how we act and the decisions we make now under mental
47:38
health and the well-being point of view one of the most powerful and guest
47:43
speakers we ever had on our mattress full of DC which was a HR director who came and spoke about well-being in their
47:49
organization fast fast fast tech company he said Noah we're doing great in the
47:56
great place to work and were really good and he said then one of our board members I meant an issue and had to take
48:03
some time out of the workplace one of the directors of the organization and when he came back and told all he kind
48:11
of wasn't planned remember I need you said look I just wanted to say to everyone I thought I'm
48:16
great and others didn't find lasting ones have told me that I was not doing well and made me realize the importance
48:24
of speaking about mental health and being open about that good if I have an issue please come and talk to me I think
48:30
18 people counted within two weeks to the culture of the organization and the
48:35
approach of the organization and the willingness of people to be bonded of themselves in a haste by that leader of
48:43
being willing to be vulnerable in front of of his employees and that to me is
48:51
what defines a leader in these circumstances they're willing to be vulnerable the willingness to say that I
48:57
don't know all the answers here and you know we're all struggling with this and you know that that kind of tax
49:04
transparency it's not like you know and this then weeds of the financial
49:10
situation that is early or any of those things it's just that that personal
49:16
transparency is just as important to the in leadership yes yes yes definitely and
49:21
I mean one or two of the comments in the Q&A have been around and that kind of
49:27
that issue around mental health and virtual teams and how we and you know
49:32
how do we make sure that there aren't too high expectations and for for virtual teams and how we support them to
49:38
manage those boundaries and with their mental health so even if we do talk about trying to hold on to some of that
49:45
and home working and the optional home working and like let its acceptance be a
49:51
new normal we have to watch that that isn't much with and to high expectations
49:56
our demands on people and just feels great for their mental health careers
50:02
yeah so like we talked about it all the time in so many transitions from I think
50:07
vigil contributor to a leadership role we say you know what we want equip them with the skills they need to be a leader
50:13
just because they were a good team member doesn't mean they're good because we're you know just because I'm good at
50:19
doing my job in the office doesn't mean I'm going to be good at transition we're doing it to a virtual environment so you
50:24
know question I'd ask it as an organization what are we doing temper our colleagues
50:29
transition into that virtual environment how are we providing them with the tools that the resources they need to operate
50:35
effectively in those environments and I saw one of the tech companies is giving
50:41
a budget of what that x dollars the states for teachers to equip their home offices whether it be by a desk or you
50:48
know I cared like number of colleagues who said to me that big bad thing because they're sitting on our chairs
50:53
are inappropriate chairs we're at home so just not just that that the skills of
50:59
working the soft skills it's also that infrastructure and all those things that go with us that are for physical advent
51:05
Allah who you know I think we need to recognize that if the difference gives us it's certainly not exactly the same
51:11
and ask what we're doing is organizations to equip people with those skills and you know I'm online learning
51:19
platforms for example do we have the right content downloads in terms of you know digital working skills in terms of
51:27
conflict management in the digital environment whatever the different capabilities are are we tracking what
51:32
employees are accessing I'm tracking what employees are searching for in terms of things they need and only be
51:37
responsive to those trends in terms of providing that material that they're really need to enable them to do this
51:43
work and virtual environment yeah I think trying to cope with that virtual
51:48
world I'm accepting that it's with us for longer is really sort of opening people's eyes to we support that ways of
51:55
working I mean you mentioned the ergonomics there and it was interesting in the big survey that was done by the Western mission in nu IG that was one of
52:02
the reasons that came out terms what through my employer healthy with the and the ergonomics because it's not
52:08
something we talked about enough when we talk about not working and it came through and very and strongly as being
52:15
one of the things that needed to be tackled and but also I mean what emerging you know motor to people have
52:20
mentioned since today I think like trying to learn how do we move into and poaching into performance management and
52:27
discipline as we move into remote working and none of those have we fully package yet or got our heads around so
52:33
in terms of an innovation and I know Peter talk like keep you know I think we're still going to be
52:39
on this path over the next slide as we try and just sort of cope with both that
52:45
the change the organization and the organization development piece as well as just making sure that we have things
52:51
like virtual working working really well that individuals to keep that engagement up yeah and I would say in terms of
52:58
keeping it simple I completely agree I think one of the trends we've seen over the last couple years is a recognition that in many instances we over-engineer
53:06
EHR systems and processes so you know what guards are saying in terms of looking forward well well what's the
53:12
purpose of what we're doing so in terms of performance management you know what we do in performance management you know
53:18
we talk to a lot of organizations so there can be on guilty about that so if I'm a night manager I don't really know
53:23
what the objective that's here is it simply to come up with a number that's going to be used to allocate some sort
53:29
of for somebody's you know sometimes somebody's renumeration is it internet I've identified development gaps you
53:34
know whatever it is so I think being very clear about the objective of these processes is a really good place to
53:41
start as we think about what we need to do with how we do is in environment that looks like it's going to be virtual a
53:47
certain significant agreed for for the next very design yeah yeah but okay I'm
53:56
really conscious of time and we're coming up to four o'clock and and it is a holiday weekend coming up and a
54:03
beautiful sunny afternoon so I mean I think you've given us an awful lot to think about who's really good here to
54:08
start all about the research that's coming through what that's telling us about that response and what the next
54:14
steps are looking at and even for you know for for individuals to be thinking about what is the new normal in our own
54:20
organization and how do we shape this you know because we are at such a point
54:26
in time that the decisions we make now and how we build the organizations and the workplaces of the future we have
54:33
actually a lot of influence over and I love your face you know take action and
54:39
don't be afraid to fail because we're going to have to do some of the ashes to sort of learn fast and and move on because we're going to
54:46
have a lot of different issues that we're going to have to deal with we some strong principles and you know
54:51
mental well-being inclusion and equity that we're working off thank you very
54:57
much your clients afternoon thank you for everybody who's been with us for the hour I hope you've got some insights and
55:02
that we haven't got all the questions unfortunately I'd like to pull in some of the threads as we've been going
55:08
through our conversation and we we support really welcome your support and and we will be in touch in CIPD in terms
55:15
of that the we're going to support you as we go through all these challenges in the coming months so many thanks to
55:21
everyone special times to Dave and to Peter who's left us and hope you have a lovely weekend when familiar area times
55:27
over very good I know
55:44
you
55:54
you you
56:03
you
56:13
marry
56:19
hi
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