10 Factors That Best Predict On-the-Job
Success
Stretch
Factor for Job-seekers = the combination of factors that collectively indicates
the types of jobs you can handle without all of the requisite skills and
experiences.
Here’s why this idea is important:
the criteria we use to hire or promote someone we know is different than the
criteria we use to hire or promote someone we don’t know. When we have directly
observed a person’s performance on the job, factors like a track record of
delivering results, leadership, ability to make decisions, problem-solving and
potential count for more than skills, experience, knowledge and industry
background. This point was reinforced during a presentation I made at a recent
Oil & Gas industry recruiting summit. One of the talent leaders in
attendance described promoting a very successful project leader into a job
about twice the size of the person’s current position in terms of team size,
scope of responsibility and overall budget. Yet she, and the people who made
the decision, were confident he would handle it successfully. A Stretch Factor
analysis can be used in a similar way to assess people we don’t personally
know. (Job-seekers, you need to present information in such a way that gets
interviewers to fully understand what you've accomplished.)
As part of my recruiting practice,
for the past 30 years I’ve been tracking the career growth of dozens of people
I’ve known, worked with, and placed. While circumstances turned out to be as
important as talent, here’s the short list of common traits that I’ve
discovered best predict upward mobility.
Some of the Big Components
of the Stretch Factor
- Drive to gets things done.
The best people proactively seek out opportunities to be
challenged. They don't just wait for them. Look for a pattern of taking on
bigger challenges, and delivering results on a consistent basis.
- Steady upward trajectory.
Dig deep into the person’s major
accomplishments over the past 5-10 years. This will
give you a sense of how fast the person’s job scope, level of responsibility,
and impact are increasing. The rate of change is the key.
- Successfully handling projects beyond the person’s current experience level.
Ask
candidates to describe their biggest accomplishments with the least amount of
experience. You'll quickly see why experience is overrated.
- Ability to learn and apply new knowledge quickly.
This is a
prerequisite for getting promoted, but it goes beyond just expanding technical
competence. It includes dealing with ambiguity, taking on a broader functional
role, and being comfortable making the right decisions without a complete set
of information.
- Persuasive.
As part of the Most Significant Accomplishment questioning pattern, it’s
important to find out who the candidate has worked with and influenced in some
way. Consider peers, senior managers, executives, and leaders in other
functions. The significance and scope of the issues involved is as important as
who was persuaded.
- Big Picture Thinking: Strategic–Tactical–Technical Balance.
Ask people how they made their biggest decisions. The
best people naturally see all of the strategic, tactical and technical issues
involved. Big picture thinking this way, in combination with the size of the
biggest decisions in terms of scope, scale and complexity is part of the
Stretch Factor assessment.
- Broad Picture Thinking: Having a Multi-functional Business Perspective.
The best people are sensitive to the needs of other
functions. For example, techies who fully appreciate the user experience,
marketers who understand engineering, and sales reps who understand the impact
on logistics on a huge order, are often assigned to cross-functional project
teams early in their careers. Success on these projects leads to bigger
opportunities in the future.
- Organization and the Process of Success.
The best people use a consistent approach for handling
complex projects. The process steps include an assessment of the situation,
figuring out the best solution, getting approval for a comprehensive plan of
action, pulling together the required resources, and successfully executing the
plan.
- Managing Others and Managing Other Managers.
While building, developing and managing a team of top
people is not insignificant, managing and developing other managers requires a
big step-up in ability. Look for cross-functional project leadership to gain a
sense of this.
- Leadership = Vision plus Execution.
Here’s a recent post I wrote on how to assess
leadership.
In some way it captures all of the above factors. The big idea: talk alone is
cheap, but talk and action is priceless.
This
isn’t the complete list, but it’s a start on developing a means to use past
performance and future potential to assess people we don’t know, rather than
box-checking their skills and experience. If you're a job-seeker, use the
Stretch Factor concept to demonstrate your performance and potential using
specific examples of major accomplishments. While you won't get every job you
deserve, you will get one. Good luck.
Lou Adler ttp://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130909225324-15454-10-factors-that-best-predict-on-the-job-success
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