Talent management as
a business discipline: A conversation with Unilever CHRO Leena Nair
HR
leaders can leverage people analytics to play a key role in aligning talent
with value creation, says the global consumer-goods group’s chief human resources
officer.
With 161,000 employees in more than 150 countries, Unilever operates globally
and at scale. The consumer-goods group’s brands range from Lipton tea and
Magnum ice cream to Surf laundry detergent and Dove skin care. Under the
leadership of Paul Polman, chief executive since 2009, the Anglo-Dutch group
has sought to drive growth though innovation and by actively reshaping its
portfolio while reducing operational complexity and focusing on sustainability as a key theme.
Leena Nair, chief human
resources officer (CHRO), joined Unilever in 1992 as a management trainee.
Prior to taking on her current role, she was the group’s global head of
diversity and inclusion. She says, “If you look at a competitive advantage that
a company truly has, it is really only the ideas, the ingenuity, the passion of
its people. Because everything else can be matched.”
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In January 2018, Nair
sat down with McKinsey Publishing’s Rik Kirkland to share her views on how HR
leaders can play a key role in driving value creation by leveraging data
analytics, focusing on the most important value-creating roles, and developing
a close partnership with finance teams. The interview took place on the
sidelines of the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland.
Interview transcript
McKinsey: How do you view the relationship
between the HR function and the finance function?
Leena Nair: I believe that the CFO and
the CHRO have to be very close. Their agendas have to be intertwined. Graeme
[Pitkethly, Unilever CFO] and I have ensured that a key finance person from his
leadership team sits on my HR-leadership team and that key person from my
HR-leadership team sits on his finance-leadership team. We also make sure that
we have regular catch-ups, both with each other and with the CEO, to ensure
that we’re looking at business strategy in totality.
We’re discussing how we
want to deploy investment into certain countries, markets, and categories but
at the same time seeing if there’s organizational readiness. Because if you
invest but the people are not ready—if there’s not enough talent and capability
there—we will never see the investments being turned into reality. So, making
the strategic investments in financial capital and human capital at the same
time is really important.
McKinsey: Can you give some examples of
how this works in practice?
Leena Nair: When we have defined our key
strategic levers for the year, we ask ourselves, “Which are the five or ten or
15 roles where the biggest impact of value creation in the business could be
seen?” Then we use analytics to see whether we’re putting the right people into
those roles.
For example, we look at
what we call “stubborn cells”—parts of the company where we haven’t seen the
traction and performance we would like to see. And we look at the talent that
we’re putting into those roles, the teams we’re getting ready to take on these
challenges. How equipped are they? What’s their level of readiness? What’s
their level of capability? What’s their level of experience? What’s their level
of passion and perseverance?
So, we look at these
human dimensions through the data analysis we have and also look at the
business challenges. Then we’re able to say that, for example, “This team
created value equivalent to €100 million.” We’re able to link the appointments
and placements of talent to the actual value creation that’s happening in the
business.
McKinsey: Are you focusing mainly on
key leadership roles in the organizational structure?
Leena Nair: Increasingly I find that we
need to be far less hierarchy-conscious in the way we think about value
creation. Often the value is being created in roles that are probably two or
three clicks below the CEO.
In Unilever, we are
creating multifunctional, empowered teams, which are actually the front-facing
teams looking after a particular category in a particular country. In many
cases, you find that the person in the country handling the P&L [profit and
loss] might not be very senior in terms of hierarchy but is in the most
important role to create value as part of one of our key strategic thrusts.
McKinsey: What role does analytics play
in these conversations and decisions related to value creation?
Leena Nair: Most of the measures that you
see HR teams looking at are very internal measures. What bench strength do we
have? How many people do we have on a talent slate? These are very internal
measures that don’t tell you what difference it’s making to the business. At
Unilever, we are using people analytics to change this.
We are, for example,
the number one employer of choice in 44 of the 52 markets we recruit in. This
is great. It’s also a number I like because it’s externally measured, based on
Nielsen Universal. But with the power of data and analytics, I’m able to
connect the dots and show that in markets where we are more attractive, we are
attracting the right kind of people, our costs of recruitment have fallen, our
conversion rates have gone up, our recruitment yield is better. So, suddenly,
I’m able to show the business that we’re saving €15 million because of the
sheer strength of our employer brand in some of our key markets.
These are the kind of
conversations that HR leaders must hold themselves and their teams accountable
for.
McKinsey: The Unilever Sustainable
Living Plan has been one of Paul Polman’s signature initiatives. What does the
data tell you about the business impact?
Leena Nair: I passionately believe that
the future is about meaningful work and purposeful work. Because the pace of
change is so fast, people do tend to be overwhelmed and threatened. One of the
things that can give them anchor is a sense of meaning and purpose in their
role. It is a key part of our talent strategy to help people discover their own
purpose and therefore deploy them into the roles where they can live their
purpose.
And I see the results
in our employee surveys. Ninety-two percent of people say that they’re proud to
work for Unilever, they want to work for Unilever. Employee-engagement scores
are higher than any of our peer and benchmark companies. I see that in the
retention numbers—our talent attrition is far lower than the market in almost
every market we operate in.
So, I see the impact of
what a meaningful purpose does to employee engagement, motivation, attrition.
And I passionately believe that companies with purpose last, brands with
purpose grow, and people with purpose thrive in uncertain times.
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