Daily Archives: August 18, 2012
Human Resources – Teacher and Educator of Human Souls
I was a guest at dinner last evening with “delightful and erudite folk”.
During our conversation I was asked why I “flinch” when I heard HR “labeled” with the title of policy and procedure maker and the department of the pink slip! They (sadly) said that they have come to believe that their HR departments are like that.
The conversation was much about the fact that HR either stops them (as managers of people) doing what they want to with the people who work for them and slowing up progress with many forms and convoluted processes. The sad fact is that HR gets in the way of people doing their work.
The conversation went on about HR tending to support the status quo and hierarchies of seniority and payments for tenure. The list was lengthy.
They listened to my stories of conversations without policies and discussions about heart and soul and mission, about simple yet deep conversations.
On my door it says:
“When you enter here all drama stops and meaningful conversations start”.
When you enter my office discussions are about:
- Making your last year before retirement the best years of your working life.
- How I can help you identify the very best talent within you but yet to be discovered?
- Conversation about legacy at work.
- When this place is not for you I will support you beyond the time that you leave our organization.
- When you enter here we will talk about “how we can rather than what cannot”.
You see relationships are not formed and end in this Human Resource Department just because people sometimes have to leave when things did not work out for the best.
In this HR department it is where the questions of heart and soul are forged and formed into meaningful relationships. In this department we mean it when we say that the most important conversations, and always will be, are about nurturing the souls who come and stay a while, and in some cases much of their life. Some leave to do other work sooner but all will remember us.
My role in Human Resources is to do all of those business strategic things that are part of who I am and what I do to build and create a successful organization, but I never forget that everyone who comes through my door is first and foremost a human being. To be a teacher and educator of hearts and souls.
Most everyone goes away with “homework of the mind” when they leave my office, and we always have another conversation. This is the stuff that turns people into the very best they can be so that in turn our organization becomes the very best we can be.
picture by :rainbow-freak427.deviantart.com
Building an effective team
Building a team is not easy; the key is getting the right people in the right positions.
Like building your “football team”.
Your Quarterback is the leader, the Full Back’s responsibilities includes protecting the Quarterback, blocking the opposing players from entering the offense half; the Safety is your last line of defense; the Wide Receiver is fleet of foot.
You need all of these positions (and then some) to make the perfect team.
In building any successful team you have to use their talents in the best way possible. Don’t let half job people slow your business down. Get the right people in the right positions, those who put their heart and soul into what they do!
Observations of an effective team:
- They can make mistakes but they recover from them – Fast.
- They cover each other at all times.
- They care about each other.
- They apologize with sincerity when they make mistakes.
- They understand that it is Ok to agree to disagree; they also understand that the team comes first.
- Everyone has a voice.
- They have developed trust in each other.
- They have a mission.
- They will achieve!
Let your employees talk, if they have a suggestion, hear them out. It gives them self-assurance and a confidence that they are an important part of the organization. You will be thanking them later!
Finding committed/focused team members in your organization is essential. Your success depends on it!
Remember that when you have collected all these skills you have created a sincere, respectful, confident, trusting, and committed group of people with the ability to become a winning team.
A great team develops a rhythm, a confidence, a pace and a winning game plan.
Your next job as a leader is to keep them for others will want them too.