CIPD Mid West Region hosted a conversation on the future of HR and the profession with William Madden, HR leader.
Drawing on his experience and research through this crisis, this renowned HR influencer shared his 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.
Panellist:
- William Madden, HR Leader
Chaired by Lavinia Duggan Ryan, CIPD Mid West Regional Chair, CIPD Ireland
0:00
good afternoon and welcome to cipd
0:02
midwest's
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first podcast we hope our members are
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listening are keeping safe and well
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it is our intention to run a number of
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these podcasts with
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hr leaders in the region to hear their
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thoughts on various challenges and
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opportunities
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in the hr profession and take learnings
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from their experience
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for those who don't know me my name is
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lavinia and i'm the current chairperson
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of cipd midwest
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it is lovely to be joined today posing
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the questions with
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fellow cipd midwest committee member dr
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christine cross
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very well known too many in the region
0:37
in her role
0:38
as head of department work and
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employment studies in kenya business
0:42
university of limerick our cipd
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long-standing partnership with
0:47
university of limerick is
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very much valued our very special guest
0:52
today
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is william madden who has himself in the
0:56
past
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being chairperson of the cipd midwest
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and you certainly set
1:01
a great bar for us all to follow after
1:03
you william so
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thank you for being our first guest
1:06
today
1:08
so before we start asking you questions
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william you're very well known
1:12
and respected hr leader in the region
1:14
but i suppose i would like to share
1:16
um with everyone a little bit about your
1:18
background
1:20
so william has worked in human resources
1:22
for 38 years
1:24
in manufacturing industries covering
1:26
pharmaceuticals
1:27
medical device mining electronics
1:30
and textile industries with companies
1:32
such as roche ireland
1:35
mark sharp and dome minorca sheen
1:38
flextronics hermetica international lm
1:41
ericsson
1:42
and burlington industries originally
1:44
from rathkeel west limerick he is a
1:46
graduate from the university of limerick
1:49
and trinity college and it was lovely to
1:50
hear the
1:51
the sharing of memories there before we
1:54
started the podcast between
1:56
christine and and william but william's
1:58
areas of expertise are site startups
2:01
employee and industrial relations change
2:03
management
2:04
downsizing and most recently was
2:06
involved in a site closure with roche
2:08
ireland
2:10
he is currently establishing himself as
2:12
a human resources consultant
2:13
and workplace mediator after being made
2:16
redundant earlier this year
2:19
so william you're very very welcome
2:20
we're very proud to have you
2:22
um on our first cipd podcast
2:25
and just to i suppose to kick off the
2:27
first question there
2:28
2020 has been a very very challenging
2:31
year for many
2:32
but what are the hr challenges in the
2:35
short term
2:35
that you see with covert 19.
2:38
thank you lavinia and hi christine good
2:40
to meet you and thank you for those kind
2:42
words
2:43
and yes covet i guess in terms of hr
2:46
challenges
2:47
has generated a whole new meaning to
2:50
work
2:51
as i see it mandatory remote working for
2:54
all non-essential workers
2:56
has changed how businesses do their
2:59
day-to-day business
3:00
how they address employees and thrown up
3:02
a lot of new challenges
3:04
um the simple one of how do you stay
3:06
connected with employees
3:08
who are not with you every day i was
3:10
reading some research paper there
3:12
recently by uh jan fitzgerald from
3:15
harmonix
3:16
where did a
3:19
global survey of businesses that hr
3:22
leaders and we're questioning about
3:23
productivity and is it having an impact
3:25
and surprisingly i was delighted to see
3:27
they reported 69
3:28
of companies in ireland were reporting
3:30
that productivity had actually improved
3:32
as a consequence of remote working um
3:36
and while that's good to hear it also
3:38
showed up in the survey
3:39
that over 71 percent of companies
3:41
anticipate
3:42
there'll be a new hybrid form of working
3:45
uh
3:46
for in the future and that's likely to
3:48
take the form of
3:49
split time between home
3:51
[Music]
3:54
working and being in the office whenever
3:56
that happens uh
3:57
short term there is no plan for people
3:59
to go back into work
4:00
and i'm quite seeing in terms of the
4:02
challenges that people are facing in
4:04
terms of how do hr
4:05
ensure that employee well-being is being
4:08
maintained
4:09
while you have people at work it's
4:11
relatively easy to get them together to
4:13
talk to them to see how they're
4:15
they're getting on but while they're
4:17
away from the workplace how do you
4:18
identify
4:19
the stresses they're going through the
4:21
isolation
4:23
the loneliness child care issue
4:28
who's um for you where for a period we
4:30
had uh kids not able to go to school
4:32
uh you have third-level students not
4:34
able to go to college so all of those
4:35
people
4:36
uh within the family network need to be
4:38
looked after
4:39
and pa challenge for hr is ensuring that
4:42
we have that connectivity with people
4:44
um another aspect i think that people
4:47
have to
4:48
look at is what are the trade-offs that
4:50
hr can influence in the business
4:52
uh for employees because you're not at
4:54
work
4:55
you're not going to be uh dealing with
4:58
everything in the same pace you're not
4:59
going to have the same level
5:01
of cooperation among people uh
5:06
and you've got to figure out what's
5:07
really important for employees spending
5:09
your day
5:10
on back-to-back zoom calls it's become a
5:12
reality for a lot of people but is it
5:14
really
5:14
productive is it really good for people
5:17
uh that that's their only interaction
5:19
with people
5:20
and what i'm seeing is that it all tends
5:22
to be
5:23
formalized towards getting the business
5:25
results um
5:27
suggestions for companies in terms of
5:28
trying to deal with some of the
5:30
challenges of that
5:31
is do you create uh time limits and how
5:34
long your zoom calls last
5:35
so that employees have some downtime do
5:38
you create blocks of time where
5:40
people have uninterrupted work time to
5:42
to work on other
5:43
aspects of their job there are some of
5:46
the issues i see
5:50
as always within the hr campus
5:52
communication with employees falls into
5:54
that realm
5:54
and where you don't have the standard
5:56
form of face-to-face meetings
5:58
town hall meetings um and the huge
6:01
amount of business uncertainty out there
6:03
i think it's more important for leaders
6:05
within business
6:06
to stay connected with their employees
6:08
and how do they get that message out to
6:10
them
6:11
that the business is doing okay the
6:13
business is doing well
6:14
the business has challenges because
6:16
those concerns don't go away for
6:18
employees
6:19
and if there's no information coming
6:21
from the
6:24
leadership and hit or not facilitating
6:26
discussion around that
6:28
then i think that the the contract of
6:30
trust with employees
6:31
is under threat and you're not going to
6:33
be getting the best out of your people
6:36
two practical topics that i see for hr
6:39
daily dealing with employees new
6:41
day-to-day now is
6:43
how do you on board new employees
6:46
typically most companies were very slick
6:48
with their
6:49
induction programs moving people across
6:52
different departments meeting with
6:53
everybody
6:54
in the first week or month
6:58
of their time at work now you have
7:00
people that have joined companies
7:01
in the last three to six months that
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have never set foot in the building
7:04
they've never met
7:05
their immediate co-workers face to face
7:08
uh and they're they're trying to deal
7:09
with that reality
7:10
so i think that's that's a significant
7:12
challenge for businesses
7:13
um hopefully when we get back to
7:16
everybody back at work that they'll be
7:19
able to pick up any gaps that are there
7:21
in that
7:21
but i think for a lot of business that
7:23
is a significant challenge
7:25
one one other one that i see is in
7:27
relation to the topic of ongoing
7:29
development and learning
7:30
um a lot of the time
7:32
[Music]
7:34
and when you get people together in the
7:36
room you see the power of the collective
7:37
group
7:37
the thinking of being able to address uh
7:40
different problems in different ways but
7:41
if all of your learning now is done to
7:43
web based or a web or a portal of some
7:46
sort
7:46
and you have a competency test at the
7:48
end that says yes you know what you read
7:51
uh it's very good for read and
7:52
understand but are you really getting
7:54
the benefit out of it
7:56
so i think that that's a significant
7:57
challenge for hr
7:59
in the short to medium term um
8:03
if we all get back into normality in a
8:05
year's time
8:06
yes you might be okay but i think that's
8:08
something that companies have to be very
8:10
cognizant of
8:11
how are they trained
8:14
being people how are they ensuring that
8:16
they're continually learning
8:18
and the companies that do do it well uh
8:19
will excel but it is a challenge for a
8:21
lot of businesses that may not be as
8:22
well resourced
8:23
uh may not have the facility to train
8:26
people through web portals
8:28
or may not be able to connect with them
8:30
as much as they'd like to
8:31
so i think in the short term there's
8:34
some of the challenges that i see
8:36
um the companies that will be successful
8:38
will be the ones that do that
8:40
well and try to pick up some of those
8:42
gaps
8:43
and come with the novel ideas in terms
8:46
of how to address
8:47
issues like that
8:51
but covert is with us for the
8:52
foreseeable future so i think hr is
8:54
going to be central in terms of driving
8:56
some of those changes needed in behavior
8:58
and keeping people connected
9:01
okay so uh william i might uh pick up on
9:04
some of the things that you said there
9:06
um so how does hr continue to remain
9:08
relevant
9:09
in this changed business climate uh
9:12
because of all of the uncertainty that
9:14
employees are facing
9:17
yeah christine thank you for that it's a
9:19
good question um
9:20
and i guess it's back to the
9:25
the same position of what's the value
9:27
proposition for hr in the future
9:29
um because we're all facing rapid change
9:32
in the business
9:33
um that's lavinia rightly said i'm
9:36
working a long time
9:37
in hr i've come through a couple of eras
9:40
and generational changes
9:42
and seeing a lot of the transition but
9:45
i would say today we're in what i call
9:47
the digital age
9:49
and transformation is happening much
9:51
faster it's
9:53
a lot of it is technology based
9:55
companies are driving forward with the
9:57
use of new technologies
9:58
at a scale that we haven't seen before
10:02
um
10:05
and that coupled with uh pandemic which
10:07
is forcing people to work remotely
10:09
i think we're seeing that there's
10:10
changes there for businesses that
10:12
people hadn't anticipated and how do you
10:14
now develop that same relationship with
10:17
your people
10:18
and keep hr relevant um
10:21
and i think it's how you view your
10:24
workforce
10:24
we need to build this is what i'd call a
10:26
sustainable workforce
10:28
um a bit like sustainable energy it's
10:31
not tapping it
10:32
uh for when you need it and turning it
10:34
off it's really how do you make sure
10:35
that you care
10:36
and protect your workforce and that's
10:41
pushed into the future what i've seen i
10:44
guess over my working life
10:45
is this let's call it a continuum of
10:48
where businesses have come from
10:49
um there's probably three phases i'll
10:52
describe
10:53
in that continuum the industrial phase
10:56
let's call it the internet phase and now
10:58
digital phase and hr has transformed
11:01
across those time frames not all
11:04
businesses have moved at the same pace
11:06
uh when i started working hr was
11:09
typically
11:10
in the industrial phase i'll call it
11:12
where your
11:13
key focus of hr would
11:17
have been looking at compliance it was
11:19
dealing with administration design
11:20
looking at programs job design
11:23
and organizations were typically set up
11:25
um with service centers
11:27
and local functions and hr partners did
11:30
locally
11:31
what was right within their geography so
11:34
if you were in ireland you had an irish
11:35
solution and an irish system for dealing
11:37
with
11:38
many of the topics and issues you faced
11:40
and typically you designed it by
11:42
benchmarking with somebody else
11:44
local in the country i would say
11:48
when we move
11:51
moved through to what let me call the
11:53
internet phase and a reminder
11:54
in case people forget how long the
11:56
internet is around only it's not here
11:57
that long
11:58
uh early to mid 80s uh i would say spent
12:01
was
12:01
first regarded as having been created
12:04
but probably didn't
12:05
come into full force until late 80s
12:07
early 90s
12:08
and has revolutionized a lot of what we
12:10
do but a feature of
12:12
hr and how hr was relevant during that
12:15
time phrase was
12:17
the focus was on process excellence and
12:19
standardization
12:20
we were moving away from hr doing the
12:22
work for people to
12:24
self-service um and shared services for
12:27
employees and
12:31
that became the norm for probably 10-15
12:34
years
12:35
uh we were setting up centers of
12:36
excellence we had
12:38
recruitment centers of excellence
12:39
compensation benefit centers of
12:41
excellence
12:41
and a lot of those activities were
12:43
pulled out of the core hr function
12:46
and a lot of specialism started to
12:47
develop so the general hr role
12:50
developed and you typically became
12:52
classified as a
12:54
global business partner within hr
12:57
um but you were following standards now
13:00
that were being set across
13:02
different continents it didn't matter
13:04
whether you were in asia
13:06
whether you're in europe whether you're
13:07
in the u.s you had a standardized
13:10
process
13:10
and that
13:13
became the norm and i would say that
13:16
worked very very well
13:17
but the new phase or next phase that i
13:18
see in terms of how do we deal with the
13:20
digital phase
13:22
and i think what we're going to see the
13:23
focus areas within that
13:26
for employees will be hr will be
13:28
expected
13:29
to have a very very strong employee
13:32
experience
13:33
be able to cater for that a lot of the
13:36
services would have to be personalized
13:37
to the individual
13:39
and i think huge amount of transparency
13:41
will be the expected
13:42
norm for people um you're going to be
13:46
looking at areas
13:50
where you're developing global systems
13:52
with the end user in mind
13:54
and companies are moving through that to
13:56
try and get best in class and try to be
13:59
ahead of the other companies an example
14:01
i think that core activity hr performs
14:03
and has performed over
14:05
the time has been performance management
14:07
there was a time when
14:08
performance management was typically a
14:10
document that was created
14:12
you saw it once a year if you were lucky
14:16
and your manager would sit with you and
14:18
tell you how well you've done against
14:20
your objectives
14:21
that move to where a lot of it through
14:23
the internet phase has gone online
14:25
and it has become
14:30
leaving document uh much more
14:31
interactive and
14:33
probably has improved but now i see in
14:35
the digital age
14:36
where you have an app on your phone uh
14:39
where you have your objectives listed in
14:40
there
14:41
you could have your weekly monthly
14:42
check-ins with your
14:44
immediate manager to update them and to
14:46
update what you're doing
14:48
and companies have moved through that
14:51
some have embraced it
14:52
very much to the fore in terms of the
14:54
leading technology
14:55
and that has helped them excel and those
14:58
type of companies will survive
14:59
and prosper into the future so i think
15:02
in terms of
15:03
trying to go through the different
15:05
phases not every company will move at
15:07
the same pace
15:08
not every company will need to move uh
15:10
in the same direction
15:12
but if you want to be seen as a leader
15:14
in this area
15:15
companies have to embrace the new
15:17
reality of business
15:19
and the pace of change
15:23
and there's those are examples of some
15:25
of the developments i think that people
15:26
can expect to see
15:27
within their life in the next three five
15:30
years and then what comes after that
15:31
knows
15:33
okay so if we take a slightly different
15:35
perspective then william
15:37
and you know we know that a lot of
15:39
businesses are closing as a result of
15:40
the pandemic
15:41
and you know the economic factors
15:44
associated with covet
15:46
so would you see somebody getting a
15:48
notice of redundancy as a signal that
15:51
they should despair about their future
15:53
and then a related question what types
15:55
of opportunities might exist for them
15:59
okay christine thank you um yeah
16:01
redundancy is always
16:03
a difficult topic in any business uh
16:08
whether you're a small corner shop
16:09
local enterprise or a large
16:11
multinational um and when that does
16:13
happen when that announcement is made
16:15
generally what you'll find is there's
16:16
shock uh there can be chaos
16:18
and it does create huge feelings of
16:20
uncertainty and disbelief
16:22
for the employees and i can speak from
16:25
personal experience
16:27
of myself in terms of trying to manage
16:30
site through a transition like that over
16:32
a couple of years
16:34
where we went through a gradual close uh
16:36
it is difficult
16:37
but it's not the end of the world uh
16:40
people have been made redundant
16:42
in the past people will continue to be
16:44
made redundant and i think
16:48
it's about looking at that to say is
16:50
this a time for me to take stock of
16:52
what do i want to do uh do i view it as
16:54
an opportunity and
16:56
i advise anybody is to stop assess where
16:59
you are
16:59
what have you been doing and say okay
17:02
what do i want to do with myself next
17:05
um while you're in a job in a role
17:08
you tend to get caught up in the
17:09
day-to-day activities your focus is
17:12
always internally and you may not give
17:13
the attention to yourself
17:16
yes redundancy is a cold shower in the
17:19
morning to wake
17:22
you up they get your attention uh but
17:24
the effect of that means that you might
17:26
do something very positive for yourself
17:27
and i've seen this with people over my
17:29
career that it can
17:31
give you time to stop and think um set
17:33
out a career direction for yourself
17:36
and say this is what i'd like to do this
17:38
is what i want to do
17:39
um and some of the mistakes i've seen
17:43
people make is they jump too quickly
17:45
they say i have to get a job i'm
17:46
finishing in a month's time i have to
17:47
get a job
17:48
the monday after that without taking the
17:51
time to consider
17:52
what does it really mean for
17:57
and what are the opportunities out there
17:59
fortunately a lot of companies do
18:00
provide
18:01
outplacement services and people should
18:04
i would encourage anybody to use those
18:05
services
18:06
and where does that help you and how
18:08
does it help you
18:09
for a lot of people that are in jobs for
18:11
a good few years you
18:13
lose touch with the jobs market where do
18:15
you start looking for a job
18:16
how do you start looking for one a
18:18
simple question
18:20
that three four years ago what do you
18:23
have in your linkedin profile
18:24
how does that market you most companies
18:27
have moved to in-house recruitment
18:29
so where do their their recruiters find
18:31
people
18:35
typically it's using a facility like
18:37
linkedin so your profile there is going
18:39
to be paramount in terms of helping you
18:40
get a job
18:42
if you have if you're fortunate enough
18:43
to work for a company that does provide
18:45
our placement
18:46
typically it will involve giving advice
18:48
and interviews as well
18:50
getting your cv into shape where you can
18:52
present yourself
18:53
in the best possible light and also
18:56
connect you with other employers
18:57
that are in the region in the midwest
19:00
we're fortunate
19:01
that we have a good number of companies
19:03
that are recruiting
19:06
in my last company with rashford we had
19:08
250 direct employees
19:10
that unfortunately are no longer there
19:13
happy to say that the
19:17
vast majority of those people have
19:18
secured work at a time and
19:20
you have said is that practical is that
19:22
possible but yes the opportunities are
19:24
out there
19:25
but it's about how you as an individual
19:27
decide to prepare yourself
19:29
you look at what's your skill set what
19:31
do you want to do
19:32
is it time to change career and do
19:34
something different is it time to go
19:36
back to education
19:38
and reskill myself do i want to change
19:41
career completely
19:42
do something different change industry
19:44
sector or
19:45
start up my own business and see do i
19:47
want to do that
19:50
but i would say to anybody if you do get
19:52
the
19:55
opportunity uh to use an outplacement
19:58
service
19:58
please take the advantage and use it to
20:00
your advantage because they can help you
20:02
greatly in terms of trying to set
20:03
yourself up
20:04
and get you get you into a better place
20:06
than where you need where you need to be
20:08
um if you do
20:11
find yourself redundant my first advice
20:13
is don't panic
20:16
it's not the first time uh that
20:18
somebody's been married london and it
20:19
certainly won't be the last
20:21
so stop take your time consider what's
20:24
best for you
20:25
um and if it means that you want to
20:28
stop work for a while do that and then
20:30
pick it up when you're ready to go again
20:33
but don't panic i guess i've seen people
20:37
say that they had to get a job and jump
20:40
to the first job that came their way
20:42
within 12 months of leaving i knew one
20:45
employee
20:45
who had five different jobs in 12 months
20:48
that's
20:49
really not advisable um so
20:52
what are you saying to a future
20:53
prospective employer that you're
20:55
dependable
20:56
that you're reliable that you'll stay
20:58
absolutely not
20:59
so for anybody who's facing
21:03
redundancy situation yes it is not an
21:06
easy one
21:06
but don't panic take your time consider
21:09
what your options are
21:10
consider what you want to do as an
21:12
individual and what direction you want
21:13
to go
21:14
in terms of your future career and then
21:16
take it from there
21:20
william that was really insightful um
21:24
for for everybody and if i could kind of
21:26
bring this back
21:27
on a personal level if you don't mind
21:29
for you um
21:31
you've had a fantastic career with 38
21:34
years with
21:34
a a vast amount of experience but
21:38
um we'll have many people hr and members
21:41
out there
21:41
who will be just at the start of their
21:44
career embarking on hr
21:46
so um if you were talking to your 25
21:49
year old self
21:50
um embarking in hr what advice and
21:53
career advice would you give
21:55
to to yourself
21:58
well i guess i'd start with saying hr as
22:00
a career is very rewarding
22:03
um so the choices i made i have no
22:06
regrets about them
22:07
um and you're right lavinia i have
22:09
worked across a variety of industries
22:12
and have had the benefit of spending
22:14
time with some great people
22:16
so
22:20
i guess i'll go back to when i was
22:21
graduating out of college and it was a
22:22
long time ago
22:23
but i did get some advice from a branch
22:26
official of what was the itgwu
22:28
he happened to be a father of a friend
22:29
of mine and he said to me
22:31
you're working in personnel area and i
22:33
said yes that's my plan
22:35
and he said i'll give you one bit of
22:36
advice be firm
22:38
but be fair with the people you interact
22:41
with
22:42
and that stuck with me i would say for
22:44
the first
22:45
five to ten years as i was learning a
22:47
lot
22:49
one other piece of advice i would say to
22:51
people starting out
22:52
identify very early on a good mentor for
22:55
yourself
22:56
somebody who has the experience
23:02
of working in industry if you are an
23:04
industry or whatever business you're in
23:06
and i try and build on the experience
23:09
that they have and the knowledge that
23:10
they have
23:12
use them as a sounding board use them as
23:14
somebody to test ideas with
23:16
and be upfront with them saying i don't
23:20
know
23:22
oh where i'm going i need some help um
23:24
and generally you'll find people are
23:25
very open to doing that
23:27
in relation to how you work yourself i
23:29
think that's advice i would give to
23:30
anybody as well
23:31
in terms of you set your own standards
23:33
on what are your values
23:34
what's important to you how you want to
23:37
behave in terms of ethics
23:42
and my advice would be don't drop on or
23:44
compromise your standards on any of
23:46
those topics
23:48
and i guess the final piece of advice
23:49
i'd give somebody um
23:51
in terms of maintain your integrity in
23:53
everything you say and do
23:56
um you won't get everything right um
23:58
i've made plenty of mistakes over my
24:00
career
24:01
the important thing though is to learn
24:02
from them and to use that experience
24:05
to build and make yourself into a better
24:08
practitioner in whatever area you're in
24:11
and i guess the final piece of advice
24:13
i'd say to people is
24:15
ensure that you're having fun at
24:16
whatever you do
24:21
because if you're not if you're not
24:22
enjoying what you're doing it's probably
24:23
not the right role for you
24:27
well william that is very fair and
24:29
honest advice
24:30
it's certainly um i know anybody
24:33
listening to this podcast
24:34
um i know i'm so delighted that we have
24:37
recorded it
24:38
because i think it's a podcast that we
24:40
could go back and you could listen to a
24:42
number of times
24:42
because you've given so much insight
24:45
there
24:46
and but so much advice and to to help
24:49
and the hr uh profession along their
24:52
journey for 2021
24:54
you mentioned there that uh you know one
24:57
of parts of the advice is that you know
24:58
we don't always get everything right
25:00
what i can tell you what we have gotten
25:03
right
25:04
is to ask you to be our first um
25:07
our first hr leader within the midwest
25:10
to
25:10
to to lead out and to listen to um what
25:13
you have to say
25:14
um for our first podcast of the midwest
25:17
so um
25:18
a little bit of history is is is
25:20
embarking on today so
25:21
we're very delighted that we've gotten
25:23
that one right right william
25:25
um so i suppose uh without further ado i
25:28
think what i would like to just do
25:29
um is to say thank you william we're
25:31
very much appreciative of your time
25:33
today
25:33
um i'd also like to thank to thank uh dr
25:37
christine cross we are very much looking
25:39
forward to our event in january that we
25:41
hold
25:42
um every year so please keep an eye out
25:44
for that
25:45
we're going to be talking about um
25:48
well-being
25:49
for covert and beyond so it'll be very
25:51
relevant for for 2021
25:53
so keep an eye out on your
25:54
communications and
25:57
and as william said you know have fun
25:59
with it and
26:00
stay safe so thank you very much thank
26:02
you william thank you christine
26:04
thanks lavender thank you christine
26:06
thanks lavinia
26:11
you
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