Overview of the webinar
Fortune 500 companies and small family businesses alike share a business need - ensuring that they have the talent necessary to effectively lead their organizations in the future. One of the most significant contributions a leader can make is ensuring his/her business’ continuity and sustainability - by having employees who are willing and capable of filling each key position with a plan for doing so when the need arises.
Succession Planning is a:
· the deliberate, systematic process of anticipating the need for talent and ensuring that the necessary employee competencies and experience are available when needed in the future
· a strategic approach for avoiding an undersupply of talent, enhancing the organization’s current talent pool, and meeting its future needs
Not having a Succession Plan can be costly and sometimes disastrous; it’s expensive to recruit, interview, select, onboard, and train a new leader and significant opportunity costs are incurred when a key job is not being performed.
Area Covered In The Webinar
Succession Plan Defined
· A deliberate, systematic process of anticipating the need for talent and ensuring that the necessary employee competencies and experience are available when needed
· A strategic approach for avoiding an undersupply of talent, enhancing the organization’s current talent pool, and meeting the organization’s future needs
Objectives and Benefits of Succession Planning
· Sustain the business through a systematic effort to ensure leadership continuity in key positions
· Attract, retain & develop high potentials [HiPos]
Encourage HiPos development by:
· Identifying career paths
· Conducting performance appraisals
· Providing daily coaching
· Creating Individualized Development Plans [IDPs]
· Holding Talent Review meetings
Tools and Processes Commonly Utilized for Developing and Implementing
· Self-appraisals and career goals
· Performance appraisals, 360 feedback, and ratings
· Assessment instruments
· GE grid
· Individual development plans [IDPs]
· HiPo talent development interventions
· Talent review meetings
What an Organization, its Leaders, and the Program Participants Need to Do To Achieve an Effective Plan
What an organization needs to do:
· Supply funding/budget
· Establish a clear vision and guidance for the program
· Develop a formal, written program
· Announce the objectives of the program to all employees
· Ensure that all leaders and managers support the program
What the leaders need to do:
· Have job descriptions developed for their teams
· Conduct effective, formal performance appraisals
· Identify employee developmental areas
· share their knowledge and experience
· Involve employees in more of the leader's responsibilities
· Facilitate the completion of IDPs for all Hi Pos
What the program participants need to do:
· Conduct self-appraisals
· Identify their desired career paths
· Learn as much as they can about potential future assignments
· Perform to their capabilities
· Complete their IDPs
· Develop the employees reporting to them - so they have successors
Potential Measures of the Program’s Success
· Whether there is, at least, one successor for each key position
· Having developmental goals and IDPs established for each successor
· Determining how much of their manager’s job the successors can perform
· Determining whether successors can perform their manager’s jobs when they are unavailable and evaluating their performance during those times
Why should you attend?
The primary objectives for and deliverables of a Succession Planning program are to:
- Sustain the business through a deliberate and systematic effort to anticipate and ensure leadership continuity in key positions
- Retain and develop the organization's high potential [HiPos]
- Encourage individual development by:
Identifying career paths
Conducting formal performance appraisals
Providing daily coaching
Creating Individualized Development Plans [IDPs]
During Succession Planning Programs:
At the macro level the organization is proactively determining:
- the talent needed in the future
- the talent it has now
- where there are talent gaps
- the initiatives necessary to close those gaps
At the micro level, the organization is addressing - for each of its key positions - questions such as:
- what the organization would do if it had to fill the position tomorrow
- whether there is, at least, one successor who could immediately perform the duties of the position
- if there is no successor ready now, what will need to be done to enable the best internal candidate to be ready, and when can he/she be ready
- can the organization afford to wait or would it be better to recruit a successor, etc
Experience has found the following two processes to be very effective in enabling organizations to have the talent they need when it’s needed:
#1 Performance Management and/or 360 Feedback Processes - through which the organization is able to:
- evaluate its employees’ current performance - based on documented, objective
- performance and achievements
- assess its employees’ advancement potential
- determine its employees’ current readiness for advancement
- obtain from its employees self-appraisals identifying their developmental needs and
- preferred career plans
- meet its bench strength needs by initiating Individual Development Plans and
- experiences - at least, for its A Players and/or High Potentials - such as:
special or stretch projects
assignments in other depts./job rotations
'try-out/popcorn stand' slots
mentors
formal training and development initiatives
fast track programs with exposure to other functions
intense coaching, etc.
- track their A Players’ and High Potentials’ performance and advancement potential against a Performance-Potential Grid
#2 Talent Review Meetings - during which the executive team in a disciplined fashion:
- asks each leader to report on the status of the Individual Development Plans for each of their A Players and High Potentials
- ensure that each A Player and High Potential is receiving regular coaching and is actively involved in opportunities that will help retain them while accelerating their development
- drives the organization past 'business as usual' by ensuring that its future needs for human capital are identified and will be satisfied when the time arrives - as it will
Succession Planning initiatives also increase the levels of engagement and performance of your A Players and High Potentials - the talent your organization will most need in the future.
Who Will Benefit?
- HR Professionals New to the Field - seeking a comprehensive view of the subject with multiple application initiatives
- Experienced HR Professionals - seeking a refresher
- Leaders and Managers - interested in understanding how a Succession Plan benefits an organization
About the speaker
Years of Experience: 35+ years
Pete Tosh is Founder of The Focus Group, a management consulting and training firm that assists organizations in sustaining profitable growth through four core disciplines:
• Implementing Strategic HR Initiatives
• Maximizing Leadership Effective