Total Executive Member News

The Latest Total Executive Membership Newsletter has been released with new benefits for members

Have you subscribed to Total Executive yet?

Complimentary membership is currently available saving $495:00

Subscribe here

Total Executive Membership Newsletter
Hello 

Welcome to our Monthly Membership Newsletter with a variety of NEW Exclusive Total Executive Member Benefits and Interviews for You

Link to this newsletter online here


Leadership Interviews

Leading an International Organisation

Tom Gorman - CEO, Brambles explains how to lead an international organisation over more than 50 countries here

Is it a Good or Bad Time for Executive Transfer?

James Allen - MD for Stanton Chase Australia provides insights here


To discuss how our leading partners are improving engagement and direction - for executives and their staff - Contact Us
Your Total Executive Membership Benefits Grow

You can now benefit from Additional Benefits with your Total Executive Membership...

  • Save 30% off Business, Trade and other Publications here now
     
  • Save money and time with Global Executive search for contractual and full time engagements here
     
  • Complimentary subscription to Executive magazines as shown here

    Your complimentary 2011/2012 subscription for peers and partners is available now here


Leadership Articles

What Leaders can Learn from The Rise of The Planet of The Apes
Some interesting comparisons here

Put Staff Down Cleverly to Increase Creativity
Research shows that creativity can be improved through a clever put down here

Are you Screening more than Your Employees
Learn why and how you should screen more here

CEOs favourite Lies
Learn what they are here

The importance of Networking at Executive Level
Learn why it is so important here

Do Nothing and Achieve More
Great ideas here

Attracting Talent
Learn how to attract talent and build your business here

View dozens of recent leadership articles here


Communication Skills

Beyond The Brand
'Culture' is the new competitive edge to marketing - view more here

Build Exposure via LinkedIn
Build exposure and increase web traffic using LinkedIn here

Monitor what Others Say about Your Business Online
You can be the eyes of the mirror as shown here

It is OK to Lie to Your Boss
When is it OK to lie to your boss? - learn here

Get FAST relevant responses to your email
This newsletter does not follow these rules - ARE YOU? - learn here

Social Media Comes of Age
Learn how social media, communications and security are working in harmony here

View dozens of articles on communication here


Learn how Total Executive can support your Communications (internally and externally) here

Technology Knowledge

The Power of Web 3.0
Learn how to design the transcendent web here

Cloud Computing and Information Security
Learn what is really the case with Cloud and security here

Retail Banking and Apponomics
Learn how banking is changing here

Make your website Mobile and Tablet Friendly
Learn how to do it cheaply here

5 things you Need to Know about the iCloud
Learn what is most important for your business here

Fight the GOOD IT Fight

Learn how to fight the Malware here

View dozens of technology articles here


Total Executive Interviews and Reviews

What an Australian Marketing Award Winner thinks about Marketing
Reg Bryson - Founder of Brand Council talks about how marketing is changing here

Questions to Ask at the Informational Interview
Learn what you should be asking here

6 innovation lessons from eBay
Learn new ideas from eBay's think tank here

Australian Safety Innovation
Attracting global attention as shown here

View dozens of interviews and reviews with leaders here


Total Executive Exclusive Educational Benefits*
Total Executive members have access to exclusive benefits with coaching, education and mentoring, like those shown here

Contact us to discuss exclusive benefits for your staff and direct family members


Upcoming Events with Exclusive TE Member Benefits*...

Your Total Executive membership entitles you to receive exclusive benefits when booking and attending conferences, events and forums.

To book any program below with Total Executive benefits simply reply to this email with your contact details... we arrange the rest for you.


LEADERSHIP For the Real World
Complimentary Breakfast about the latest skills in leadership engagement for Total Executive Members available here


To have your event promoted Contact Us

Register Now*
Your peers and colleagues can currently register for complimentary 2011/2012 Total Executive membership here saving $495:00

Test Your Brain

Have you tested your Brain lately?

Test your memory here

View a history of Brain Tests here


Search by Subject
Search the Total Executive Knowledge Bank by key subjects we cover here

You are receiving this membership newsletter because you have previously been a client when we have introduced you to publishers, coaching organisations and other companies providing services supporting executives and their staff. Or, you have been in communication with one of our team and confirmed that you would be interested in learning more about Leadership, Sustainability, Responsibility, Technology and/or Communication via our newsletter. If you believe you have received this email incorrectly, you may select to unsubscribe using the link below


Email: Info@TotalEXEC.com.au  Phone: +61 (0) 408 844 009

Total Executive
Suite 102
370 Kingsway
Sydney, NSW 2229

Add us to your address book

Copyright
© 2011 Total Executive All rights reserved.

Forward this email to a friend

The 6C's of Leadership and Total Executive Newsletter

View the latest Total Executive newsletter for June 2011 below with lot's of benefits for members...

Total Executive Membership Newsletter
Hello

Welcome to our June 2011 Membership Newsletter with a variety of Exclusive Total Executive Member Benefits (highlighted below)*

Complete our survey on Improving Partner Connections here


The 6 C's of Leadership

The 6 C's of Leadership - Jon Scriven - Qantas Group Executive of People and Corporate Services

Learn how to have good conversations and the five critical things to know about building high performance workplaces here


To discuss how our leading providers are improving engagement and direction - for executives and their staff - Contact Us
Executive Survey*

You can Help Enhance the Relationship between clients and providers - then view survey results

Join the hundreds of executives who have helped provide a platform of engagement between clients and their providers globally here


Leadership Articles

Creating Individual Futures - A New Perspective on Career Management

Charles Brass talks about how a new breed of consultant and counsellor has emerged in the recruitment field here

View dozens of recent leadership articles here


New Home for Consultants*

Do you work SOHO? Consider a new complimentary service option...
Consultants in Sydney now have access to offices where they can collaborate with fellow consultants, benefit from complimentary services and more...
To discuss benefits available for Total Executive members further contact us


Communication and Technology Articles

Designing Connected Brands

Is your brand connected with the customer? Learn more here

View dozens of articles on communication here



IT is about creating new products, Not just Cutting Costs

A global CIO study shows the web has enabled many businesses and corporates to develop new products and profit centres using IT as explained here

View dozens of technology articles here


Total Executive Interviews and Reviews

Is Policy our Roadmap?

Graeme A Kraehe AO, chairman of Bluescope and Brambles talks about the carbon tax here

View dozens of interviews and reviews with leaders here


Total Executive Exclusive Educational Benefits*
Total Executive members have access to exclusive benefits when studying, like those shown here

Contact us to discuss exclusive benefits for your staff and direct family members


Upcoming Events with Exclusive TE Member Benefits*...

Your Total Executive membership entitles you to receive exclusive benefits when booking and attending conferences, events and forums.

To book any program below with Total Executive benefits simply reply to this email with your contact details... we arrange the rest for you.

MULTIPLIERS: How the Best Leaders Inspire their Team
Liz Wiseman explains how multipliers get more done with fewer resources in:
Melbourne
Sydney
Brisbane

Relationships are built through Communication
Each of us have a distinct method of communication
Book with exclusive Total Executive benefits here

View the full programme calendar here


To have your event promoted Contact Us

Have you Trained your Brain Lately?

Do you avoid Distraction? Measure your Mind Here

View many more Brain Training Exercises here


Register Now*
Your peers and colleagues can currently register for complimentary 2011/2012 Total Executive membership here saving $495:00


Search by Subject
Search the Total Executive Knowledge Bank by key subjects we cover here


Email: Info@TotalEXEC.com.au  Phone: +61 (0) 408 844 009
Total Executive
Suite 102
370 Kingsway
SydneyNSW 2229

Add us to your address book

Copyright
© 2011 Total Executive All rights reserved.

Retaining key employees in times of change

Source: Total Executive


Many companies throw financial incentives at senior executives and star performers during times of change. There is a better and less costly solution...

Too many companies
 approach the retention of key employees during disruptive periods of organizational change by throwing financial incentives at senior executives, star performers, or other “rainmakers.” The money is rarely well spent. In our experience, many of the recipients would have stayed put anyway; others have concerns that money alone can’t address. Moreover, by focusing exclusively on high fliers, companies often overlook those “normal” performers who are nonetheless critical for the success of any change effort.

Our work with companies in many sectors (among them, energy, financial services, health care, pharmaceuticals, and retailing) suggests there is a better and less costly approach to employee retention—and one that will serve companies well as they merge, restructure, and reorganize to seize strategic opportunities as the economy picks up. It starts with identifying all key players, but targeting only those who are most critical and most at risk of leaving. These people are then offered a mix of financial and nonfinancial incentives tailored to their aspirations and concerns. A European industrial company applied this approach during a recent reorganization and found that it required only 25 percent of the budget that had previously been spent on a broad, cash-based scheme. What follows are three suggestions for companies with similar hopes of keeping their top talent without breaking the bank.

1. Find the “hidden gems”

HR and line managers need to work together during times of major organizational change to identify people whose retention is critical. Yet too often companies simply round up the usual suspects—high-potential employees and senior executives in roles that are critical for business success. Few look in less obvious places for more average performers whose skills or social networks may be critical—both in keeping the lights on during the change effort itself as well as in delivering against its longer-term business objectives.

These “hidden gems” might be found anywhere in the company: for example, the product-development manager in an acquired company’s R&D function who is nearing retirement age and no longer on the company’s list of “high potentials”—yet who is crucial to ensuring a healthy product pipeline; or the key financial accountant responsible for consolidating the acquired company’s next financial report. Even if the employees’ performance and career potential are unexceptional, their institutional knowledge, direct relationships, or technical expertise can make their retention critical. In one merger we recently observed, certain sales support personnel who filled orders and took inventory turned out to be just as important as the star salespeople.

Once HR and line managers have generated a thoughtful and more inclusive list of key players (usually 30 to 45 percent of all employees), they can begin to prioritize groups and individuals for targeted retention measures—in our experience, 5 to 10 percent of the workforce. The key is to view each employee through two lenses: first, the impact his or her departure would have on the business, given the focus of the change effort and his or her role in it; and second, the probability that the employee in question might leave.

When a European industrial company conducted this exercise, it mapped the outputs on a risk matrix. The results were sobering. The company had been launching a new centralized trading unit—requiring almost all traders and their support staff to relocate, with half of them heading to another country—and was steadily losing people. The risk matrix revealed that another 104 people were likely to leave. Among them were 44 employees who were critical for the success of the trading unit. To be sure, some were traders but most were IT, finance, and administrative staff with unique knowledge of the unit’s systems.

2. Mind-sets matter

One-size-fits-all retention packages are usually unsuccessful in persuading a diverse group of key employees to stay. Instead, companies should tailor retention approaches to the mind-sets and motivations of specific employees (as well as to the express nature of the changes involved).

When executives at the European industrial company looked beyond their standard retention package (bonuses plus compensation for the costs of the move) and focused instead on the needs of individual employees, they found a more nuanced situation than they had anticipated. Among the key people at risk were two main groups with two different mind-sets.1 One consisted of individuals who were worried about relocating because it would uproot their families. The people in the other, more career-driven group didn’t mind living and working abroad but wondered, as they faced change in any event, whether staying or searching for another employer would best further their careers.

In one-on-one conversations with the people in the family-oriented group, managers explored specific concerns and discussed how the company could add to the measures already in place to increase the likelihood of retaining these individuals. On the menu of incentives: an increase in base pay, assistance in finding schools and kindergartens for their children, career counseling for their spouses, language training, and alternative work arrangements so employees could work at home or commute instead of relocating.

Meanwhile, in the conversations with the career-driven people, managers offered them a cash bonus but focused primarily on the organizational chart of the new, centralized unit, which had been designed from scratch. For people who had held senior roles in their local organization, it was essential, for example, to learn about their new responsibilities and how many direct reports they would have; for many of the more junior people a key question was who their bosses would be. Also high on the agenda was a dialogue with each individual about his or her future career and leadership opportunities in the context of the unit’s new strategy.

This targeted approach, which cost just one-quarter as much as the broad financial incentives plan the company had previously applied, succeeded in stabilizing the new unit. One year after its launch, some 80 percent of the staff who received special attention had started to work in the new location—a significantly higher share than for the group that didn’t receive this attention. Since its founding, the unit has increased its sales by more than 30 percent and its earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) by more than 90 percent.

3. Retention is about more than money

As the European industrial company’s experience suggests, financial incentives play an important role in retention—but money alone won’t do the trick. Praise from one’s manager, attention from leaders, frequent promotions, opportunities to lead projects, and chances to join fast-track management programs are often more effective than cash. Indeed, a 2009 McKinsey Quarterlysurvey found that executives, managers, and employees rate these five nonfinancial incentives among the six most effective motivators when the main objective of the exercise is retaining people.2

One financial services firm undertaking a recent cost-cutting initiative elected to use onlynonfinancial measures—including leadership-development programs—to retain the pivotal players it had identified as being at risk of departure. One year later, none of those players had quit.

Leadership opportunities are a powerful incentive in any sector. In a pharmaceuticals merger aimed at building the North American acquirer’s presence in Europe, some 50 middle managers from the acquired company accepted invitations to join trans-Atlantic teams with key roles in integrating the two organizations and developing business strategy. The chance to network with the acquirer’s senior people and develop leadership skills during the two-year program signaled to these high-potential employees—in many cases, people who had been slated for promotion before the merger was announced—that they had a promising future in the new organization. For the acquirer’s senior executives, one benefit was the opportunity to assess first hand a potential next wave of top management talent. The program was one part of a carefully designed communication and engagement plan that made it possible to sustain the energy of the 50,000-person strong workforce during the merger. The company ultimately needed to offer only 750 targeted employees a financial incentive.

When financial incentives are required, it is important to design them appropriately and use them in a targeted way. For example, one-third of the retention bonus during a merger might be paid to pivotal staff even before the deal is closed, with the remaining two-thirds to be paid out a year later—dependent in part on the recipients meeting defined performance criteria such as the successful transfer of systems from the acquired company.

Targeting retention measures at the right people using a tailored mix of financial and nonfinancial incentives is crucial for managing organizational transitions that achieve long-term business success; it’s also likely to save money.

Still, executives mustn’t view employee retention as a one-off exercise where it’s sufficient to get the incentives packages right. Rather, best-practice approaches build on continuous attention and timely communication every step of the way to help employees make sense of the uncertainty inherent in organizational change. Ultimately, what many employees want most of all is clarity about their future with the company. Creating that clarity requires significant hands-on effort from managers, including the ongoing work of tracking progress so that companies can quickly intervene when problems arise.

About the Authors

Sabine Cosack is a consultant in McKinsey’s Vienna office; Matt Guthridge is an associate principal in the London office, where Emily Lawsonis a principal.

Notes

1 The number of groups will vary according to a company’s specific situation. We have observed circumstances where employers have identified up to six distinct employee segments.

2 See Martin Dewhurst, Matthew Guthridge, and Elizabeth Mohr, “Motivating people: Getting beyond money,” mckinseyquarterly.com, November 2009.

 

Source

McKinsey

Executive Recruitment - It is hard to find a video that is not an ad... here's one...

Source:
Total Executive
http://www.TotalExec.com.au

Firstly, jump through approximately the first minute of this video - it's the ad part...

After that you will find some interesting facts - decide what suits you, and the future of executive research - for you - either as an executive, or a recruiter...

</object>