HR Era,     Issue # 46,       Jan 25th, 2004
 

Sharing & Growing

Writing down what we have learned from experience or reading sharpens our own understanding & thinking on the subject. Publishing it (in HR Era) adds value because we gain from critical as well as appreciative comments of readers. Publishing also makes us well-known amongst fellow professionals & makes our contribution permanent.

We invite you to use HR Era as your medium of self-expression, sharing, and growth.
Email your contributions to Rajeev@HREra.com  


Contents

1. General Electric, Jack Welch, & HR - by Rajeev B Bhatnagar

2. Moderator's Space

3. Tomato Soup for the Soul - Computerized Life

4. HR in News – by V.S.Sathiyamoorthy

ICICI Bank Deploys New People Management Program

5. Book Extract / Review - Sent by Ms. MC Jitha

Practice Points from "Light the Fire in Your Heart" - Debashis Chatterjee

6. Fellowship Program (Doctoral Level) of AHRD, India

 


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1. General Electric, Jack Welch, & HR - by Rajeev B Bhatnagar

Why should we learn from GE or Welch?

General Electric is one of the largest most respected corporations in the world. Jack Welch, the CEO of  GE from 1981 till recently, is widely regarded as America’s most respected manager. He steered GE with great success, as we shall see, through turbulent times.

Jack Welch attached great importance to HR issues. “I have never heard of a chief executive who devotes as much time to people issues as Welch does,” write Tichy Sherman. So it may be worth reviewing  he has done in HR.

What are the key HR initiatives practices that Jack Welch followed in GE?

Down - Sizing

To an HR professional, the most striking is down-sizing of General Electric. Manpower  reduced from 420,000 to 230,000 in 12 years between 1981 1993. The painful part of the reduction was that 170,000 people who lost their jobs through layoffs attrition. Newsweek named Jack Welch  as “Neutron Jack”  for  his willingness to vaporizing people.

Downsizing was part of larger changes which Jack Welch brought in General Electric. At end of the changes, GE was healthier -  value of company’s stock increased by 7 times as against 2 times for S&P 500 over the period. Overall, Forbes rated GE as the world’s most powerful corporation. By contrast, several other Fortune 500 companies had started wilting. For example, IBM, famous for its no-layoffs policy, had shed 100,000 jobs till 1993 planned to shed another 100,000. 

The reason (=blame) for down-sizing should be put on changed economics realities. “Companies can’t promise lifetime employment, but by constant training and education we may be able to guarantee lifetime employability,” Welch said.

Shared Values:

This is a unique concept that Jack Welch has implemented in General Electric. He believes that to lead people in today’s environment, all GE managers must hold the “Shared Values.”  The person who does NOT hold these “shared values” typically forces performance out of people rather than inspire it: the autocrat, the big shot, the tyrant. Too often all of us have looked the other way tolerated such managers because they  always deliver - at least in the short term.

His reason for rejecting such managers runs like this: “And perhaps this type was more acceptable in easier times, but in an environment where we must have very good idea from every man and woman in the organization, we cannot afford management styles that suppress and intimidate…”

Jack Welch has used every available tool to implement Shared Values- pre-placement talks, , training programs, including in appraisals forms, rewards by way of higher compensation promotions, and  dismissals in extreme cases.

Recruitment:

GE has been accustomed to produce more talented managers than it needs, so the company almost never recruited outsiders for senior positions. After Welch’s becoming CEO, a couple of consultants were inducted in think tank of GE. GE develops enough leaders from within and has some to spare for other companies. 

The core of recruitment is from campuses and here Jack Welch urges business leaders to personally go to campuses. They explain GE culture and hire people who would fit in the GE culture.

Training:

Company invest heavily in training. It has some of the best training facilities in the world. This reflects Welch’ philosophy that GE can ensure employability by providing training (but not continuous employment).

The center for development of GE leaders is at Crotonville. It trains about 10,000 top managers annually. The CEO himself spends at least half-a-day every month talking to participants at the facility.

Appraisals:

GE employees rate themselves on several criteria. They are rated by their peers, subordinates bosses in 360 Degree appraisals. The person being rated always sees the data and discusses it with a capable person. Senior managers are rated on holding Shared Values also.

Session-C:

Session-C is the pinnacle of a painstaking system for appraising executives and helping them improve their skills and plan their careers. It covers GE’s 3500 most senior managers.

Jack Welch spends a full month every year on this rigorous management appraisal succession planning review. He visits each of the 13 business leaders their staff, and discusses qualifications, achievements, development needs of every single member of top management. These discussions are based on hard facts.

GE’s elite Executive Management Staff amasses data to bolster these judgments. The data includes:

  • Comparison of GE manager’s work goals to actual results

  • Appraisals prepared for compensation reviews and for annual succession development evaluations

  • Accomplishments Analysis

Compensation:

Greater flexibility is the aim of compensation policy. For this the number of pay levels has been reduced from 29 in 1981 to a few broad bands.

Incentive pay constitutes about 25% of the total pay for top 3500 managers, and 35-40% of pay for the top most 450. Every year the CEO personally devotes several days to reviewing adjusting the incentive compensation for each of the top 450 managers. Here also managers holding Shared Values get better rewards.

In addition to incentive pay, about top managers get stock options.

Employee Communication / Management of Change:

The massive change that GE has undergone to re-invent itself, could not have been possible without getting support of many internal employees. This necessitated a massive communication effort.

Phase-I: In 1988, the now famous “ Work Outs” were introduced for this purpose. Rank-and-file employees participated in these. Workouts involved communicating corporate philosophy behind the massive changes to employees and to get the employees to speak out share their ideas. Work-Outs could cover about 200,000 employees till 1993 whereas training programs could reach only 10,000 each year.

In Phase-2, Work-Outs implemented the  “Best Practices” Program, a thing which now has become very popular. In Phase-3, Work-Outs implemented a Change Acceleration Program (CAP).

Jack Welch himself spends at least half-a-day every month speaking to rank and file employees in these Work-Outs Programs.

Can We Adopt GE practices?

Each one of them may not work for you as it did for GE. They require commitment of top management to breathe life into them. And some of them may not be accepted in all organizational cultures. The lesson is that revolutionary change will be necessary for most organizations. We must act proactively. What exactly to do how should be discussed and decided within your organization.

References:

Factual data is taken from Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will, by Noel M. Tichy Stratford Sherman, Harper Collins Publishers, Inc., 1994.

(Contributed by Rajeev B Bhatnagar, DGM-Personnel, Larsen & Toubro Limited, Chennai)

 


2. Moderator's Space

Dear Friends,

Thanks for the many appreciations for the article on Balanced Score Card. No other article till date has fetched so many!

But my strong feeling is that more members of our e-newsletter should write and share their thinking and experiences.

For members interested in Doctoral Level study in HR, I have no hesitation in recommending the Fellowship Program of Academy of HRD, India (Dr. TV Rao is the Chairperson of Executive Committee).

warm regards

Rajeev B Bhatnagar

Rajeev@HREra.com

 


3. Tomato Soup for the Soul - Kamakshi Ganesan

Computerized Life

1. Five minutes ago you were traveling to office at 80 mph in your brand new car. Now you are traveling to hospital at double the speed in an ambulance.

You wish there was ‘undo (ctrl + Z)’ in life!

2. You are already late, and your key is missing.

You wish there was ‘find tool (ctrl + F)’ in life!

3. The train is so crowded that you cannot get anywhere near that nice girl at the other end.

You wish there was ‘zoom & view full screen’ in life!

4. After marriage you realize that there is bound to be a mismatch.

You wish there was ‘evaluation period’ or at least a ‘sample download’ or a ‘demo version’!

5. One day you realize that you are turning bald.

You wish there was ‘cut and paste (ctrl + X)/(ctrl + C)’ in life

And the best one is ............

6. The best part of the keyboard is that U & I are together, which is not always there in lives!!


Sent by Ms. Kamakshi Ganesan

Email: kamakshi@lntecc.com
 


4. HR in News – by V.S. Sathiyamoorthy

ICICI Bank Deploys New People Management Program
( August '20,2003, Financial Express)


‘Mentoring the mentors’, this is the new people management program that ICICI Bank has deployed for its senior management professionals. The initiative is aimed at honing the mentoring abilities of professionals.

Accordingly, the organization will identify some corporate professionals from companies across other sectors for the initiative. And then these professionals will conduct sessions on effective mentoring for the senior management cadre at the bank.

Says ICICI Bank general manager K Ramkumar: “The initiative is aimed at acclimatizing professionals with a diverse gamut of perspectives on what it takes to become a successful mentor. And once we are able to enhance the mentoring abilities of our professionals, then that will be one of the ways to equip them to spot future leadership talent for the organization.”

Despite the fact that the bank will be inviting other companies for such initiative, Mr Ramkumar discounts the possibility of any confidential business information being leaked to these companies. “We have adequately brainstormed on such a possibility and have come to a consensus that the sessions in mentoring will not border on any of the specific business aspects of the bank,” he adds.

This would imply that the program will concentrate mainly on areas that include personal effectiveness and other relevant internal orientation of professionals.

The effort behind many such HR interventions that the bank has deployed is to help senior management identify successors for the organization. Another objective is to sustain the enthusiasm of these individuals who have moved into a top management role at a relatively young age in their careers.

“Such interventions also provide individuals with an opportunity to give back something to the bank,” he adds.

Along with this initiative the bank has also rolled out a couple of other HR processes to gauge the overall performance dynamics of senior management. For instance, there are 360 degree feedbacks that are regularly conducted. Through this the bank tries to understand whether the individual concerned attributes the credits and successes to the entire team that is working under the individual or hogs the success. “We want to create a culture of sharing success rather than taking it all on oneself,” sums up Mr Ramkumar.

 

Sent by by V.S.Sathiyamoorthy

Larsen & Toubro Limited, Mumbai. Email: vssm@lntecc.com
 


5. Book Extract / Review - Sent by Ms. MC Jitha

Practice Points from "Light the Fire in Your Heart" - Debashis Chatterjee

Hi all,

There's something interesting i read through yesterday night, thought of sharing with you all. A book which one can possess. Here it goes.... a brief summary:

Source: "Light the fire in your heart By Debashis Chatterjee".

Practice Points:

1.Identify with something bigger than just your career or professional goal. The more we concentrate on limited things the narrower our identity becomes.

2.Cultivate the law of one-pointed attention by taking up just one thought or idea in the morning & reflecting it for some time.

3.Creativity comes from doing ordinary things differently. It also comes from doing different things - like multi-tasking. Sometimes, the way we organize our desk in the morning can bring a creative spark to our day. Just placing a fresh flower in a vase on our table can make this happen.

4.Leaders cannot afford to lose sight of reality. Whenever you are judgmental about yourself or about someone else just take a deep breath and ask "Is it real?" .

5.Deep breathing helps in infusing more vitality into our life as well as into our thinking process. You can breathe as many as three times per second. Just do it for fifteen seconds. You will immediately experience heightened energy in your nervous system, increased alertness in your mind and more vitality in your body.

6.Very often we undermine our own actions by talking about what we intend to do. Please remember what Lou Gerstner, the CEO of IBM said: “My choice in everything is to say nothing and go do it”. When your action can speak for itself don't interrupt by talking about it.

7.Withdraw energy from mindless activities and invest this energy in total action.

8.The only way to earn the commitment of people is to demonstrate your commitment to a cause or an ideal.

9.The most powerful way to commit an employee to an organization is to ensure that he / she is adding value to himself or herself.

10.Create a culture of appreciation within your organization. Praise when you should, but do not overdo it. Please remember that appreciation is like perfume – meant to be gently inhaled and not be drunk.

11.Cultivate a mind that is always ready to go against its assumptions if reality so demands.

12.Evolve an attitude of holding on to your values whenever you can. Your behavior will naturally express your determination to stick to principles.

Happy learning.

Cheers!
Jitha

Sent by MC Jitha

Executive HR & Training , Sathyam Cinemas, Chennai
Email: mcjitha@yahoo.co.uk

 


6. Fellowship Program (Doctoral Level) of AHRD, India

Dear Professional Colleague,

Greetings from the Academy!

As you might be aware, we are in the process of admissions for our Fellow Program (Doctoral Level) and Associate Program (Pre-Doctoral Level) for Batch 2004. These programs have been specially designed for working HR Professionals to be pursued on a part time basis. We would like to inform you that the process of procuring the brochures and submission of duly filled in application forms is still open.

Professionals interested to pursue the above programs may please contact us at the earliest so as to be able to procure the brochures well in time and send us the filled in application form latest by 15th Feb '04.

In case you have not received the announcement, please let us know. You may also forward this mail to other interested professionals and colleagues who you think would be interested in this program. Your queries may be addressed to:

1. ahrdad1@eth.net
2. ahrd@gipl.net 

Looking forward to hearing from you.

Thanking you,

With Best Regards,

Biji Roy

Program Coordinator, Academy of HRD, 12, Cosmoville, Satyagrah Marg, Ahmedabad - 380015. Ph.: (079) 6870218, 6871341, 6873416. Fax: (079) 6870681

Website: www.academyofhrd.org
 

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