Teaming with Young Guns
It’s
tough to attract and retain great employees — at any level and of any age. With
unemployment low, skilled employees often have their pick of positions. The
combined effects of digitization and pervasive social networking equip
potential employees with insights into an organization’s inner workings
before they even apply. Many websites and blogs, such as Glassdoor and Vault, publish unvarnished, anonymous insights on the nature
of a company’s work, as well as its policies, benefits, and culture. Certain
industries and specific firms are able to dominate the war for talent, easily
snapping up the best and brightest. But even at those golden firms, keeping
high-potential employees is increasingly difficult.
The
challenge is particularly acute when it comes to finding and keeping the cohort
that has become the largest component of the workforce: millennials. According
to the Pew
Research Center, there are 53.5 million people in the
U.S. who were born between 1981 and 1997. And they arrive at the office with
a specific set of attributes and goals. They expect to glide up the corporate
ladder, place a higher priority on engaging in fulfilling work, and have
significantly shorter attention spans than employees of prior generations. If
and when it becomes apparent to a millennial that one of these expectations
will not be met, she is quick to look elsewhere. According to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, in 2014, the median tenure for workers age
25 to 34 years in the U.S. was just over three years. In his book The First 90 Days,Michael D.
Watkins, a professor at IMD in Lausanne,
Switzerland, argues that companies don’t start to make money on new employees
until after they’ve been employed for 6.2 months. That leaves less than 2.5
years, on average, to get the best out of millennial hires.
Companies are addressing these issues by rethinking their
recruiting and people strategies, both by offering rotational programs to
appeal to highly qualified candidates and by boosting pay and offering an
impressive array of perks. But there is a far simpler and more pragmatic
solution that individual managers can try that may have more success than
bonuses and free snacks. It’s all about teams.
Working as a team is a concept that is much used but rarely
defined. Here’s a useful definition: As depicted in the exhibit below, a
“performing team” is a group of people that typically have a common purpose and
have clear performance goals, mutual accountability, complementary skills, and,
importantly, shared leadership roles. The highest-performing teams also adjust
their teaming models depending on the situation, have a strong emotional
commitment to the team’s purpose, and are invested in one another’s success.
Focusing on the following
three attributes of effective teaming can help companies appeal to younger
workers:
·
Shared Leadership. Shared
leadership roles means that leadership switches seamlessly from one member of
the team to another, depending on the situation. Everyone, from the summer
intern through the managing director, has the opportunity to lead at specific
points in time. This makes for an exciting work environment and gives younger
workers, many of whom expect to scale the corporate ladder quickly, an
opportunity to contribute and lead just like their managers do. Who needs early
promotion when you already are calling the shots? Additionally, the opportunity
to lead the team ensures that millennials are visible in the organization,
which enables them more easily to display progress. For high performers, shared
leadership roles may actually result in faster promotion.
·
You may have heard the buzz about holacracy. Companies like Zappos and Medium
have embraced this innovative way of organizing, which removes managers in
organizations entirely and replaces them with layers of circles. But we are not
advocating the end of managers. Instead, we believe that managers can and
should hand off elements of their roles to subordinates, giving team members
the opportunity to lead in areas where they have expertise. The manager
simultaneously should act as a facilitator — easing the leadership transition
from one member of the team to another — and as a key leader who understands
the team’s motivations and how to help each team member grow and develop.
Leaders
can instill shared leadership on their teams by setting expectations that
leadership will shift based on the team’s focus. When the team needs to work
together to troubleshoot a technical issue, rather than calling and leading a
working session herself, the leader should empower the expert on the team to
own the issue, schedule the meeting, guide the discussion, and manage the next
steps that result from the meeting. If the team’s current way of working is
drastically different from this approach, it may take some time and practice
before everyone feels comfortable.
·
Strong emotional commitment.
Millennials are seeking fulfillment from their work, and fulfillment comes from
an emotional commitment to the organization, team, or individual’s purpose. It
may seem that instilling an emotional commitment is easy when your organization
is bringing clean water to undeveloped regions of India, or producing an app
that delights its hundreds of millions of users. But years of research make
clear that leaders of all organizations can draw upon their
employees’ emotional commitment by instilling a sense of shared purpose.
·
On a visit to the NASA space center in the early 1960s, the story
goes, President Kennedy spoke to a man sweeping up in one of the buildings.
“What's your job here?” asked Kennedy. “Well, Mr. President,” the janitor
replied, “I'm helping to put a man on the moon.” Apocryphal or not, the story
reminds us that there is almost always a way to connect to meaningful elements
of our work.
Leaders
can aid this process by connecting with their team’s purpose on their own. As
they set the mission, leaders must explain, repeatedly, why the team’s purpose
is important. Leaders also should take pains to understand the motivations of
each team member so they can identify the components of the purpose that will
light a spark — it will be different for different people. Finally, they should
help the team learn to connect smaller tasks to the bigger picture in order to
embed the purpose in tasks, goals, and projects.
·
Be flexible. High-performing teams
adjust teaming models depending on the situation. In his early
work, our colleague Jon Katzenbach argued
that teams should be used strategically depending on the situation. Team
structures and ways of working should vary depending on the nature of the
project or assignment and the time horizon involved. In an emergency or when
decisions need to be made quickly, it might make more sense to work as a
single-leader unit. At other times, a working group, established for
information sharing, is more suitable. Having a variety of working arrangements
will appeal to millennials, who tend to have shortened attentions spans and
appreciate a more dynamic environment at work.
·
At Strategy&, our work is largely project-based, and we work
with a variety of colleagues from diverse backgrounds for relatively short
periods of time. As a result, and to maximize the effectiveness of our teams,
we instituted a process called Project Closed Loop. It consists of a series of
conversations throughout the project life cycle that help teams set
expectations and align on group and individual goals. We use these meetings to
decide how we will work together effectively. For each situation we anticipate,
we discuss which teaming structures we will use. The result is a predictably
dynamic work environment that stays interesting without becoming confusing or
chaotic.
Millennials have an abundance of talent to offer organizations as
they move through the ranks in the workforce. They are capable, technologically
savvy, and have the desire to derive significant meaning from their work.
Managers must play a key role in harnessing and directing that energy — and a
deliberate, fit-for-purpose teaming environment can be a powerful tool.
Companies that embed this way of working into the teams in their organization
will attract new talent and create an environment in which the most promising
employees want to make meaningful contributions. In time, they also will drive
better business outcomes.
-
Katherine Dugan is a member of the financial services practice with
Strategy&, PwC's strategy consulting business. She is a manager with PwC US
based in New York.
http://www.strategy-business.com/blog/Teaming-with-young-guns?gko=277e6
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