1. Best Practices in Competency Models
Transcription
1. Best Practices in Competency Models
Best Practices in Competency Models CEB Corporate Leadership Council Mark Whittle, Director CEB, Latin America Friday, April 22nd Santiago, Chile CEB Corporate Leadership Council™ ¿Quienes Somos? CEB es una compañía de mejores prácticas y benchmarking. En conjunto con miles de compañías en el mundo, desarrollamos soluciones innovadoras para impulsar el desempeño organizacional y gestión de talento. Fast and Right es una promesa de la marca: Ayudar a nuestros miembros a aprovecharse de los hallazgos de las mejores compañías para ahorrar tiempo (be fast) y hacer mejores decisiones (be right). Lista Parcial de Asociados en América Latina ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 30 años apoyando la toma de mejores decisiones que impactan el negocio 4. 000 empleados en 32 oficinas a nivel global 89% de las Fortune 500 3. 000 empresas miembros en programa recursos humanos NYSE:CEB cotizado en bolsa de Nueva York © 2016 CEB. All rights reserved. CLC5302216SYN Detail about CEB Inc. and its subsidiaries can be found at cebglobal.com/offices. 2 cebglobal.com Desafíos que Resolvemos a Través de Hallazgos, Benchmarking, Mejores Practicas y Guías de Implementación Compromiso de Empleados Propuesta de Valor de Empleo Desarrollo Organizacional Sucesión Altos Potenciales Liderazgo Estructura de RR. HH HR Business Partners Métricas y Analíticas de Talento Desempeño Gestión del Cambio Planificación de la Fuerza Laboral Planificación Estratégica de RR. HH Diseño Organizacional Carreras Reclutamiento y Selección Compensación y Total Rewards Gestión del Conocimiento © 2016 CEB. All rights reserved. CLC5302216SYN Detail about CEB Inc. and its subsidiaries can be found at cebglobal.com/offices. 3 cebglobal.com Hallazgos (Insights) y Tendencias Apoyo de Consultores Especializados de CEB Benchmarking La membresía anual incluye Apoyo Continuo de un Gerente de Cuenta Dedicado Múltiples Canales para Apoyar Sus Prioridades Mejores Prácticas ■ de manera ilimitada Networking Ejecutivo Acceso al Portal de CEB Diagnósticos, Plantillas, y Guías de Implementación Eventos Presenciales y Virtuales de Capacitación ■ Por Donde Comenzar… Definición de Sus Prioridades en Consulta con su Gerente de Cuenta © 2016 CEB. All rights reserved. CLC5302216SYN Detail about CEB Inc. and its subsidiaries can be found at cebglobal.com/offices. Recibir una Orientación del Servicio para Usted y Su Equipo de RR. HH 4 Lanzar el CEB Ignition™ Diagnóstico de RR. HH cebglobal.com Fast and Right—Valor de Membresía en CEB Fast and Right es una promesa de la marca: Ayudar a nuestros miembros a aprovecharse de los hallazgos de las mejores compañías para ahorrar tiempo (be fast) y hacer mejores decisiones (be right). ■ ■ Be Fast ■ ■ Minimizar el tiempo para la toma de decisiones Hacer las cosas bien la primera vez y evitar errores comunes. ¡No reinventar la rueda! Ahorrar en sus presupuestos en comparación con consultores tradicionales. Reducir riesgo del cambio continuo a través del modelo de apoyo ilimitado de la membresía and ■ Acceder a mejores prácticas y benchmarking globales ■ Mantenerse al tanto de las tendencias críticas de RR. HH Be Right ■ ■ Crear una función de RH con impacto estratégico en el negocio. Capacitar y profesionalizar su equipo de RR. HH, evitando la dependencia en la consultoría tradicional. © 2016 CEB. All rights reserved. CLC5302216SYN Detail about CEB Inc. and its subsidiaries can be found at cebglobal.com/offices. 5 cebglobal.com Apoyo para RR. HH y para el Negocio Innovar y Liderar la Función de RR. HH Gerente de RR. HH Le ayudamos a establecer e implementar una dirección para la estrategia de capital humano, y a impulsar mejoras continuas en su función. Le mantenemos al tanto de las tendencias y riesgos críticos para aumentar su influencia con el CEO y junta directiva. Mejorar los Procesos, la Planificación y el Relacionamiento con el Negocio Equipo de RR. HH Les ayudamos a mejorar la eficiencia de los procesos de RR. HH en base a mejores practicas, y a mejorar el relacionamiento con el negocio e impacto al negocio. Le equiparamos a su equipo con las herramientas para hacer las cosas “fast and right”, lo cuales mejora la productividad y compromiso de su equipo. Desarrollar al Equipo de RR. HH Una de nuestras metas principales es desarrollar su equipo para hacerles mejores profesionales de capital humano Fomentar la Buena Gestión de las Personas por los Gerentes Líderes y Gerentes del Negocio © 2016 CEB. All rights reserved. CLC5302216SYN Detail about CEB Inc. and its subsidiaries can be found at cebglobal.com/offices. Les ayudamos a desarrollar a los lideres y los gerentes del negocio para que sean buenos gerentes de personas. Les proporcionamos guías y herramientas para los gerentes. 6 cebglobal.com Agenda 1. Best Practices in Competency Models 2. The New Path Forward: Creating Compelling Careers for Employees and Organizations 3. Leveraging Engagement to Support Business Priorities © 2016 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. 7 Types of Assessments Traditional intelligence tests, such as numerical reasoning, vocabulary, critical thinking Questions map to traits, attitudes, and motivations known to predict performance Custom job/culture fit • Retention predictor • RJP/RCP Ask about past experiences (education, work, life) Interactive demonstration of skills, aptitude or ability. May not include items to answer, but rather tasks to perform • Past performance, Future performance Ask what candidates think is best response in a work-related situation 8 How Well Do Assessments Work? Objective assessment provides a better prediction of a candidate’s likely job performance than many typical methods +1 Perfect prediction +.65 Assessment Centers +.45 +.40 +.35 +.30 Ability Tests/Job Samples Group Exercise/Personality Composites Structured Interviews/In-Tray Exercises Biodata (e.g., work history) +.15 Employment Interviews +.10 Educational Qualifications Graphology/Astrology/Phrenology 0 Random prediction 9 Designing and Implementing Competency Models CEB Learning & Development Leadership Council 10 Our research demonstrates that clearly communicating performance standards and providing fair, accurate, and informal feedback drives employee performance. ■■ Organizations need a fair and simple framework to assess employee performance and support continued improvement. THE BUSINESS CASE FOR COMPETENCY MODELS Clearly Communicating Performance Standards Drives Employee Performance We surveyed 19,000 employees from 34 companies and 29 countries and found that an employee’s understanding of performance standards can impact performance by up to 36.1%. We also found that providing fair, accurate, and informal feedback has a maximum impact of 39.1% on performance. To achieve this impact, organizations must establish a framework to measure employee performance fairly and accurately. A well-designed and -implemented competency model will provide managers with an actionable and realistic understanding of performance and allow them to positively influence performance through informal feedback. Providing Fair and Accurate Informal Feedback Drives Employee Performance Impact of Employee Understanding on Performance Standards ∆ = 36.1% 1.36x 1x Performance of an Performance of an Employee with a Employee with a Poor Understanding Strong Understanding of Performance of Performance Standards Standards Source: CEB analysis. Impact of Fairness and Accuracy on Informal Feedback ∆ = 39.1% 1.39x 1x Performance of an Employee Receiving Unfair and Inaccurate Informal Feedback Performance of an Employee Receiving Fair and Accurate Informal Feedback Source: CEB analysis. © 2015 CEB. All rights reserved. LDR1360115SYN 11 Organizations use a combination of behavioral and technical competencies in performance management processes. ■■ ■■ Behavioral competencies are transferable behaviors that typically compose attitudes, values, and leadership competency models. THE ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF COMPETENCY MODELS Organizations Typically Measure Employees’ Performance in Two Ways ■■ ■■ Technical competencies are specific skills and knowledge linked to particular roles and activities. Management by Objectives (MBOs): A system in which specific performance objectives are jointly determined by subordinates and their superiors. Progress toward objectives is periodically reviewed, and evaluation and rewards are based on this progress. Competency Models: The knowledge, skills, and behaviors required to perform job responsibilities are correlated with on-the-job performance measured during formal performance processes. Advantages and Disadvantages of Competency Models Advantages Disadvantages MBOs ■■ ■■ Measure output that can be directly linked to business unit and organizational goals Ensure employees within the organization are aware of the link between their roles and responsibilities and the goals of the business by coordinating objectives from the top down ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ Can be overly focused on output and ignore other core responsibilities of a role Do not measure adherence to organizational values Do not break down performance at a role into actionable behaviors Tend to be more applicable to certain positions than others Competency Models ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ Standardize performance management criteria to enable the comparison of performance within job families across business units and geographies Standardize development expectations across the organization Help to create a unified corporate culture Enable organizations to strengthen leadership bench and facilitate the identification of future leaders Create a more robust hiring process by ensuring better candidate fit Help integrate HR processes such as recruiting, development, succession planning, and performance management ■■ ■■ Creating and updating competency models is a time- and data -intensive process. Competency models present serious design and implementation challenges. Failing to overcome these challenges can have the following consequences: –– Competency models can become complex and unwieldy, thus overwhelming employees and managers. –– Competency models can become outdated rapidly and fail to reflect the changing reality of employee roles. –– Competency models can be too abstract and nonactionable. –– Competency models can be insufficient for developing skills needed for future strategy. © 2015 CEB. All rights reserved. LDR1360115SYN 12 Best in Class Competency Models Best-in-class competency models are: 1. Aligned with core values and company mission and strategy 2. Balance comprehensiveness and simplicity 3. Streamline the number of competencies and provide flexibility 4. Are anchored in specific behaviors 5. Are embedded in the talent management process 6. Use ‘talent analytics’ to identify the most impactful competencies © 2016 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. 13 CISCO: NEW LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES MODEL Highlights of the Process for Creating a New Leadership Competencies Model • Interview the best leaders to identify the ideal profile of the leaders in their area, and to understand how the leadership roles are changing for the future • Use talent analytics to identify the competencies and behaviors that most differentiate the best leaders from the average leaders • Motivate the leaders to want to close the development gaps themselves Definir la diferenciación temporal—Cisco delinea la diferencia entre las conductas pasadas, presentes y futuras del modelo CDesarrollar la LEAD mediante demostraciones para ayudar a los líderes a autoconciencia emprender cambios conductuales. Liderazgo para el—Las Modelo CLiderazgo Liderazgo para maña LEAD de evaluaciones hoy día na tradicional desarrollan la “competenci Mantiene el Colabora entre Colabora entre (Futur (Presente) (Pasado) autoconciencia as enfoque distintas distintas Colaborar o) de los líderes primario en el funciones, funciones para diferenciante sobre si están éxito informando a desarrollar s” Encuesta de las conductas del modelo C-LEAD DesarrollaJuan una Pérez: Procura el Se opinión desafía a360 sí sobre demostrando funcional los demás sobre soluciones que Liderazgo tradicional Liderazgo para ver hoy día Liderazgo para el mañana Aprender profunda pericia desarrollo fuera mismo para una transición soluciones y beneficien la Resumen Superiores Colegas Subalternos dentro del área de la función y el las cosas desde criterios función, la región del liderazgo Trabajar más allá de los límites Demuestra un Demuestra Incentiva en los funcional área de otra perspectiva tradicional al y la empresa Ejecutar enfoque intenso pasión por la demás la pasión Involucrar a los demás Colaborar especialidad y liderazgo para el en una ejecución ejecución por las metas a Ganarse como la hacerlas de otra mañana de Implementa Participa en los el Se adapta impecable la así también largo plazoaylas los confianza manera Autodesarrollo Cisco. Aprender desarrollo de la condiciones del objetivos objetivos Acelerar estrategia tal El desarrollo de los demás como se da estrategia mercado y del globales de la empresariales Demostrar pasión mundo a fin de empresa Soluciona Ejecutar Hace que alalos equipos Desafía Facultar evolucionar y problemas para innovación sea continuamente el Revolucionar Obtener resultados desarrollar una procesos y parte de la estatu quo y fija Forjar la estrategianueva estrategia estrategias Acelerar ejecución nuevos criterios Desarrollar la capacidad comprobadas a cotidiana y para el mismo medida que prioriza el trabajo surgen y la planificación en equipo × × × × × × × × 14 Translate Competencies in Behaviors that Facilitate Performance Evaluation Driving for Results Competency Rating 1 Rating 2 Rating 3 …Rating 5 Creates generic plans without timeframes, milestones, or deliverables Develops specific plans but has difficulty accurately estimating timelines and resource needs and may not consistently communicate the plan to others Creates and communicates specific, detailed, and comprehensive plans, which may need revisions throughout the course of the project Develops realistic short and long-term project/work plans with accurate forecasts of all potential restrictions Does not monitor or measure progress against the plan Inconsistently or infrequently checks progress against the project/work plan Regularly monitors and measures progress against the project plan Puts systems or processes into place to continuously monitor and measure progress against the project plan; effectively communicates project plans to others, checking for understanding and commitment © 2016 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. 15 Translate Competencies in Behaviors that Facilitate Performance Evaluation (CONT) Driving for Results Competency Rating 1 Rating 2 Rating 3 …Rating 5 Does not attempt to identify obstacles and is often unsuccessful at resolving problems once they have occurred May give up when confronted with obstacles or resistance Consistently checks in with team members to identify and resolve obstacles early on Works across organizational boundaries to overcome obstacles Does not make effective use of available resources; occasionally wastes time, money, materials, and/or people’s productivity Occasionally has difficulty resolving unanticipated resource problems Organizes and coordinates resources to ensure that the project meets its overall objective Anticipates changes in resource needs and organizes those resources accordingly to prevent delays or problems; gets more out of fewer resources © 2016 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. 16 CASE PROFILE: IBM’S LEVEL-SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE DESCRIPTIONS FOR PROBLEM-SOLVING COMPETENCE Best-in-Class Competencies Are Anchored in Specific Behaviors To help employees understand their competency model, organizations should provide a definition of each competency, as well as behavioral anchors linked to each (examples of what the competency would look like in action). Behavioral anchors serve two purposes: a) they better enable managers and employees to understand how the abstract competency translates into observable behaviors and b) they enable organizations to define baseline levels of competency required for specific roles and levels in the organization. Organizations may use a single competency model covering all levels of seniority for a given job family and use behavioral anchors to specify the level of competence mastery required for each seniority level. The following IBM and Alpha Company1 case profiles provide examples of competencies that are anchored in specific behaviors, with different performance levels illustrated. Case Profile 3: IBM’s Level-Specific Performance Descriptions for Problem-Solving Competence Creative Problem Solving: Sees patterns not obvious to others; breaks problems apart to prioritize; identifies multiple causes and effects Needs Development: Breaks down problems into basic components to devise a solution ■■ Thinks through contingencies and consequences of actions, identifying pros and cons of different solutions ■■ Quickly identifies the issues that must be resolved, using cause-and-effect thinking to plan out next steps Demonstrated Competence: Synthesizes information from multiple sources to identify opportunities and solve problems (e.g., to pinpoint the customer’s compelling reason to act) ■■ Assembles multiple data points into a coherent whole to prioritize action ■■ Identifies a trend in the marketplace and uses this insight to solve problems and identify opportunities Strength: Redefines the problem by getting underneath the surface to gain insight into the underlying issue being faced ■■ Quickly identifies the root of the problem or issue rather than being distracted by the details surrounding it ■■ Demonstrates significant mental flexibility, moving quickly and easily among complex problems to move the opportunity forward Extraordinary Strength: Brings multiple disparate factors (technical, pricing, negotiations, etc.) together in new and creative ways to structure an elegant business solution ■■ Simplifies complex situations to create a unique vision of a solution that brings business value to the customer ■■ Identifies options that others have not seen, finding fundamentally new and different opportunities (e.g., applications, ways to structure deals, market opportunities) Source:IBM; CEB analysis. 1 Pseudonym. © 2015 CEB. All rights reserved. LDR1360115SYN 17 CASE PROFILE: COMPETENCY BLIND SPOT ANALYSIS (ALPHA COMPANY1) Deplyoing Competency Models for Training and Development Case Profile 8: Alpha Company Uses Performance Management Data to Identify Blind Spots Situation: Multiple competency models do not provide a clear overview of skill gaps. A review of performance management practices revealed that there were 16 different competency models in use at Alpha Company—making the identification of skill gaps across employee groups very difficult. Action: Alpha Company uses data from its performance management system to identify skill gaps. Following a redesign of its performance management processes, Alpha Company is able to generate blind spot competency reports that identify skill gaps for teams and departments. HR can then pinpoint the number of individuals in a team or department who do not meet the required level of competence for their positions and provide managers with a view of aggregate talent problems. The graphic below is a sample blind spot analysis report. Sample Blind Spot Analysis Based on Pilot Data Development Priorities Specialist Competencies L1 L2 Leadership L3 L4 L1 L2 L3 L4 4 1 6 4 4 Influencing 6 1 1 5 5 Decision Making 3 5 1 Project Management 1 Selection and Assessment 5 3 4 8 1 Areas of Deficiency 9 6 3 7 How do we develop project management skills? Areas of Serious Concern 3 Areas of Excellence Blind spot analysis identifies where individuals at different levels meet or exceed their required competency performance levels... 1 Planning and Prioritization Efficiency Generalist Meeting or Exceeding Profile Requirements Not Applicable to Profile People Not Meeting Profile Requirements Problem Areas ...as well as the number of individuals not meeting their profile requirements. Blind spot analysis automatically highlights areas where individuals at different levels fail to meet performance expectations, including team-wide skill gaps. Source:Alpha Company; CEB analysis. 1 Pseudonym. © 2015 CEB. All rights reserved. LDR1360115SYN 18 Best-in-class organizations apply competency models to all employees and align competency models with business needs. GUIDELINES FOR CREATING COMPETENCY MODELS Case Profile 10: TD Bank’s Strategy-Driven Competency Model Development TD Bank Financial Group employs an iterative process for developing its leadership competency model. Using internal executive interviews, focus groups, and CEO review, TD Bank refines competency data from external sources to ensure its competency model reflects the unique organizational values and maps to its new strategic direction. In addition, TD Bank’s model provides leaders with clear performance expectations and serves as the overarching framework for its leadership development initiatives. Three Months Three Months One Year Three Months One Month Benchmarking Executive Interviews Profile Development Focus Group Testing Final Review Owner: L&D Owner: L&D and HR Directors Owner: Steering Committee Owner: Steering Committee Owner: CEO Expert opinion identified through a review of secondary literature, benchmarking, and input from external consultants Interviews conducted with 50 executives to ensure the leadership profile aligns with current and future needs of the organization Steering committee consolidates, analyses, and discusses all collected information to identify and synthesize attributes that reflect the values and strategic direction of the organization. Steering committee pressure-tests the draft in cross-functional, executive focus groups; changes are then integrated into a final version of the leadership profile. CEO reviews and edits the leadership profile to ensure that the attributes reflect the organization’s values and strategic direction. Source:TD Bank; CEB analysis. © 2015 CEB. All rights reserved. LDR1360115SYN 19 Novo Nordisk reduces the number of competencies being assessed to the four most critical for each requisition and drives a more detailed discussion with candidates based on those competencies. ■■ ■■ To avoid having to conduct wide-ranging conversations that cover the whole competency model, Novo Nordisk identifies and focuses on the competencies that have disproportionate impact on business results. Interviewers use behavioral interviewing questions that show how a competency manifests itself in a candidate rather than simply whether or not he or she possesses the competency. LEARNING MORE ABOUT THE THINGS THAT MATTER MOST Novo Nordisk’s Competency-Based Interviewing Approach Organizational Competency Model: Prior Approach Streamlined Job-Specific Competency Model: Current Approach All candidates to be assessed for: All candidates for Job A to be assessed for: ■■ Problem solving ■■ Problem solving ■■ Inquisitive nature ■■ Task execution ■■ Innovation ■■ Results orientation ■■ Relationship building ■■ Communication ■■ Communication ■■ Leadership ■■ Problem solving ■■ Resilience ■■ Innovation ■■ Flexibility ■■ Flexibility ■■ Detail orientation ■■ Task execution ■■ Supporting others ■■ Task execution ■■ Results orientation ■■ Ethics and integrity All candidates for Job B to be assessed for: Challenges: Solutions: 1. Too many competencies to assess for 1. P rioritize competencies by how they drive business results. 2. Insufficient level of candidate information regarding each competency © 2013 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. RR6104513SYN SITUATION OVERVIEW 2. Identify how competencies manifest themselves in candidates. PRIORITIZED COMPETENCIES QUESTION COMPASS RESULTS 20 To avoid conducting wide-ranging conversations covering the whole competency model, Novo Nordisk identifies and evaluates candidates on only the competencies that have disproportionate impact on business results. ■■ Prior to needs definition, hiring managers identify the objectives for the role and the tasks required to meet those objectives. PRIORITIZE COMPETENCIES BY DEFINING HOW THEY DRIVE BUSINESS RESULTS Novo Nordisk’s Competency Prioritization Exercise 1. S et Objectives: Hiring managers set role objectives and prioritize them based on alignment to business strategy and alignment with peers’ objectives. Alternatively, they do this during needs definition with a recruiter’s support. Exceed last year’s sales by 7%. ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ Increase prospect pipeline by 10%. Manage and develop team of six direct reports. Win back at least two key accounts. ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ … ■■ Implementation Tip Store the competencies identified for each role to help prompt discussions the next time the role needs to be filled. © 2013 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. RR6104513SYN 3. P rioritize Competencies: Recruiters and hiring managers select the four competencies that best reflect the tasks. Objectives for Role ■■ ■■ 2. D efine Tasks: Hiring managers define the tasks required to meet those objectives (prioritizing the tasks if needed). SITUATION OVERVIEW Identify new ways to cross-sell. Align new product offerings with emerging customer needs. Conduct market mapping. ■■ Problem solving Develop relationships with new customers. ■■ Task execution ■■ Results orientation ■■ Communication Identify organization-wide development opportunities. Share technical expertise. Provide coaching on specific skill gaps. PRIORITIZED COMPETENCIES QUESTION COMPASS RESULTS 21 To make the concept tangible for leaders and to translate it into American Express’s context, L&D held interviews and focus groups with senior leaders to understand what differentiates the best leaders. DRIVE AWARENESS BY CLARIFYING KEY BEHAVIORS Step 1: Interview Senior Leaders to Ask Them What Defines Leadership (Without Specifically Asking About Mindset) Step 2: L&D Translates Interviews into Key Behaviors That Define a “Growth Mindset”a at American Express Interview Questions ■■ Welcome new ideas ■■ Anticipate and act ■■ Test and learn ■■ Welcome new voices ■■ Operate at the edge of our comfort zone ■■ Gather input from across the organization ■■ Welcome candid assessment ■■ Encourage stretch goals ■■ Embrace change Illustrative ■■ ■■ To get an unbiased definition of leadership from today’s current and rising senior leaders, the interviews did not explicitly ask about state of mind. ■■ ■■ ■■ ■■ L&D then summarized and translated the leaders’ own words into a set of behaviors that characterized a “growth mindset.” What does leadership need to look like in American Express now and in the future to ensure our sustained success and transformation? Are there behaviors that you see in leaders today that will be less important in the future? What should be unique and distinctive about leadership here in the future? Step 3: Highlight Presence of Behaviors in Existing Leadership Frameworks L&D then highlighted where in their current leadership competency model these key behaviors already existed to make it tangible for leaders. Drives for Results ■■ ■■ Manages time effectively, delivers on commitments, and meets deadlines Adjusts actions to respond to changing situations Drives Innovation ■■ ■■ Is prepared and willing to challenge the status quo Identifies root-cause problems Source:American Express; CEB analysis. a “Growth mindset” is a term coined by Professor Carol Dweck from Stanford University. Situation © 2013 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. LDR6574413SYN Overview Make Tangible Make Actionable Reinforce through Development Results 22 Deere uses explicit key talent criteria to identify situations in which strengths become weaknesses. ■■ Put simply, Deere believes that strong attributes of key talent employees can, when taken to an extreme, also represent common causes of leadership derailment. –– To ensure that this is addressed, Deere provides managers of key talent with specific “red-flag” indicators concerning negative behavioral tendencies sometimes associated with overused leadership attributes of key talent. –– Managers are then asked to indicate the extent to which any key talent employee reporting to them has exhibited these behavioral tendencies. When Strengths Become Weaknesses Criteria to Evaluate Key Talent Identifying Coaching Opportunities: Tendencies to Watch For Rapid Mastery of Assignments Performance Initiative: Coaching Opportunities High performance among peers; masters new role assignments quickly; engages others effectively in new assignments; anticipates and readily meets deadlines Dependability Political Savvy Initiative Political Savvy Can sometimes state own position, not taking into account the backgrounds, knowledge, and interests of others involved; needs to do more pre-selling of new ideas; may at times show a lack of respect for sensitive information in the change-management process Shifts priorities, adapts roles, takes on new “higher value” work; champions change, proposes new ideas, takes risks, suggests and pursues improvements in processes and practices; builds alliances across the organization and externally Decision Making Decision Making Learning Agility Strategic Thinking Learning Agility: Coaching Opportunities Learns faster than peers; keeps abreast of functional/ technological trends; shows curiosity outside of normal scope; actively pursues learning, selfstudy, interaction with role models and networking Adapting to Differences Strategic Thinking Emotional Maturity Team Building Shows humility, self-awareness, and sensitivity to others; shares credit with peers and subordinates; builds mutually supportive relationships with peers; puts things into perspective; seeks balance; makes prudent, independent judgments Sensitivity to Others Sensitivity to Culture May experience difficulty making tough decisions; may take too long or overanalyze; may defer too quickly in the face of opposition when right Can overmanage people; sometimes gets too far into the details beyond what is warranted for the situation; has trouble stepping back to understand the big picture Adapting to Differences Composure Can get wedded to one idea and be reluctant to consider other views; sometimes has difficulty differentiating which ideas to spend the most time on Displays Tendency? Yes No Displays Tendency? Yes No Displays Tendency? Yes No Displays Tendency? Yes No © 2012 The Corporate Executive Board Company. All Rights Reserved. LDR3561512PRO 23