How to Convert a Job into a Career
We
don’t have a skills gap, we have a thinking gap.
In a recent survey, 95% of over 4,700
fully-employed and passive candidates said they'd be willing to have a serious
discussion about a better career opportunity. Another smaller survey earlier
this year indicated that more than 75% of these same people would take a modest
increase in compensation for a significant career move. Unfortunately, it’s
hard to ever have the discussion, since recruiters and candidates alike both
establish inflexible conditions (e.g., compensation, title, company, location,
skills) before the serious career discussion can ever begin.
At
its core, the problem is the continued use of traditional skills-infested job
descriptions as the de facto barrier-to-entry. Companies, at least HR folks,
are reluctant to give these up, thinking they’re set in stone. They’re not. To
put my neck on the line, I asked one of the top labor attorneys in the U.S.
from Littler Mendelson (recognized as the #1 US labor law firm), if the
Performance-based Hiring process described in The
Essential Guide for Hiring & Getting Hired was valid, appropriate and
in compliance. Not only did he give two thumbs up, he also prepared
a white paper
(it's now public), contending that the process described was more legally
sound, in full compliance, and more likely to attract stronger people. The
process described below incorporates this process.
What's
Needed to Have a Serious Career Discussion
Step
1: Put the job description in the trash basket.
Most job descriptions
aren't job descriptions at all, they're people descriptions. If you're
uncomfortable with the trash bin, just scratch out everything listed on the job
description that defines what a person taking the job needs to have. We'll get
back to this in Step 4.
Step
2: Ask, "What are the big things the person needs to do during the first
year in order to be considered highly successful?"
Job success can usually be
defined by two or three big performance objectives and two or three sub-steps.
For example, a big objective for a distribution manager could be, “By Q4
upgrade the cross-docking system to enable 24-hour delivery.” This is much
better than, “Must have a BS and 7-10 years supply chain experience in the
consumer products industry.” Subtle point: if the person can do the work, they
have exactly the skills and experience necessary.
Step
3: Ask, "What would the person do in the first 30-90 days to ensure that
the performance objectives described in step one are likely to be
achieved?"
Most strong people start a job by evaluating the situation, developing potential
solutions to the big problems, putting plans together, and then implementing
the solutions. For the distribution manager one of these first steps might be,
“Within the first 30 days, evaluate the current cross-docking process and
develop alternatives to achieve the 24-hour objective.”
Step
4: Convert HAVING to DOING.
Retrieve the job description from the trash and
determine if there are any skills listed that are not captured in the
performance objectives created above. For example, assume the job description
included the requirement that the person “must have excellent communication
skills.” If so, simply ask, “What does this look like on the job?” Something
like, “Lead weekly conference calls with the global operations team,” would
suffice. This is a great way to convert any skill into a measurable and
non-subjective performance objective.
Step
5: Put the list of 5-6 performance objectives in priority order based on real
job needs.
Since most performance objectives require 3-4 different skills in order to be
achieved, a job can be fully represented by only 5-6 performance objectives.
It’s also far easier to put these objectives into priority order than a list of
skills and experiences. This step alone dramatically increases the focus on
what the person in the job needs to do to be successful.
Step
6: Determine the Employee Value Proposition.
Ask, “Why would an outstanding,
fully-employed person with multiple opportunities want this job for only a
modest increase in compensation?” Ask your most highly motivated people for
some clues. Caution: don’t begin looking for people until you can answer this
question.
Step
7: Engage in a career conversation, not a two-way box-checking session.
When talking to
candidates eliminate the preconditions; instead have a discussion about what
the job entails and what the candidate has done. If the gap is too big the
candidate is too light. If the gap is too small or non-existent, the job is a
lateral transfer. But if there is some short-term stretch combined with
long-term growth, the job might just be a great career move and worth more
discussion.
Eliminate
skills-based job descriptions. Eliminate preconditions. Stay open-minded. Go
slower. Then don’t be surprised that with more career discussions about
performance, growth and opportunity, the skills gap people are talking about
somehow disappears. From what I can tell, we don’t have a skills gap, we have a
thinking gap.
LOU ADLER https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130819012925-15454-how-to-convert-a-job-into-a-career
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