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The Definitive Guide To Talent Mobility

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The Definitive Guide

To Talent Mobility

Steve Bonadio
December 2010

A systematic talent mobility strategy enables organizations to more effectively


acquire, align, develop, engage, and retain high performing and potential talent
by implementing a consistent, repeatable, and global process for talent rotation.
This report explores the importance of a talent mobility strategy, considerations
for approaching and deploying the strategy and supporting technology, and the
significant business benefits that it affords.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 2

Introduction
Industry analyst firm Bersin & Associates defines talent mobility as “a dynamic
internal process for moving talent from role to role – at the leadership, professional
and operational levels.” The company further states that “the ability to move
talent to where it is needed and by when it is needed will be essential for building
an adaptable and enduring organization.”1

SumTotal’s experience with global enterprises also reveals that talent mobility is:

• A business strategy that facilitates


organizational agility and flexibility

• A mechanism for acquiring and retaining high


performing and potential talent

• A recruiting philosophy that favors internal


sourcing over costly external hiring

• A method for aligning organizational and


individual needs through development

• A proactive and ongoing approach to


succession planning rather than a reactive
approach

A systematic talent mobility strategy enables organizations to more effectively


acquire, align, develop, engage, and retain high performing and potential talent
by implementing a consistent, repeatable, and global process for talent rotation.
This report explores the importance of a talent mobility strategy, considerations
for approaching and deploying the strategy and supporting technology, and the
significant business benefits that it affords.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 3

CURRENT CHALLENGES & BARRIERS

According to SumTotal’s 2010 State of Global Talent Management survey of 300


human resources (HR) practitioners, many organizations currently face similar
challenges, including:

• Retaining high performers and reducing flight

• Aligning current and future talent needs to rapidly changing


business needs

• Developing deep talent succession pools and bench strength

• Reducing external recruiting costs

• Improving overall HR measurement and reporting

Organizations grapple with these challenges due to process- and technology-oriented


barriers. From a process perspective, only 35% of organizations currently conduct
annual succession talent reviews for most of their critical positions. While the trend
for many companies is to extend succession planning deeper into the organization,
many lack the executive direction and supporting enterprise software to effectively
automate and manage the process. Instead, succession planning is often a slow,
manual, reactive, and paper-intensive discipline in most organizations.

From a technology standpoint, most organizations have no single, complete view


of global talent yet due to a spaghetti mix of existing HR processes, systems,
and data (i.e., there is no definitive talent-based system of record). Only 12% of
organizations have fully integrated their various talent functions – performance,
succession, development, learning, recruiting, compensation, etc. – from both a
process and technology perspective. Integration is an important key to enabling
a systematic talent mobility strategy and will be discussed in detail throughout
this report.

GETTING STARTED: KNOCKING DOWN THE BARRIERS

Aligning HR strategies and programs to business results is essential in any


economic environment. To this end, SumTotal correlated several factors –
strategy, leadership, and integration – to HR and business operating metrics in
order to determine their impact. As outlined below, the results are significant.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 4

• Develop Clear Talent Management Strategy: Organizations


with an advanced talent management strategy that is well
aligned to overall business objectives and strategy outperform
those organizations that have no talent management strategy
by 32%.2 Yet more than 80% of organizations have still not yet
aligned their HR programs and activities to business results,
which suggests that there is significant room for improvement.

• Assign Dedicated Leadership to Ensure Program Success:


Organizations that have assigned a dedicated senior executive
– one who is responsible for overall vision and execution of
talent management strategy and programs – outperform those
organizations that have not by 11%. Fully 60% of organizations
have already assigned a dedicated senior executive.

• Integrate Talent Processes, Systems, and Data: Organizations


that have fully integrated their disparate talent processes,
systems, and data outperform those organizations that have not
integrated by 41%. Most organizations (69%) have achieved only
partial integration to date.

When effective strategy, leadership, and integration are all pulled together within
an organization, a dichotomy between talent management leaders and laggards
becomes clear. Talent management leaders have a talent strategy in place, a
dedicated executive responsible for strategy and programs, and integrated talent
processes, systems, and data. Laggards, on the other hand, do not.

Overall, talent management leaders outperform laggards by 37% across twelve


key business and HR operating metrics. Leaders significantly outperform laggards
in several areas, including:

• Better internal talent mobility

• Decreased voluntary turnover

• Improved workforce alignment to overall strategy

• Workforce responds more quickly to changing business needs

• Improved workforce productivity


THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 5

Bottom line: Institutionalizing talent management strategy, leadership and


accountability, and integration has a profound effect on improving internal talent
mobility (i.e., finding new opportunities for high performers and potentials within
the organization) and reducing voluntary turnover (i.e., high performer and
potential flight).

Even more revealing, when talent management technology usage and the overall
business impact of technology are correlated, several potential areas of focus
emerge to both increase internal talent mobility and decrease voluntary turnover.
Figure 1 highlights some of these areas.

Figure 1: Talent Management Technology Usage & the Business Impact

Better
Decreased Total
Talent Management Technology / Internal
Voluntary Impact
Integrations Currently In Use Talent
Turnover (Rank)
Mobility
Integrated Employee Development &
Learning Management: Development High Impact High Impact 1
plans executed via training
Integrated Performance
Management and Succession
High Impact High Impact 2
Planning: Top performers designated
as successors
Leadership Development
High Impact High Impact 3
(Standalone)
Employee Career and Development Moderate
High Impact 4
Planning (Standalone) Impact
Integrated Performance
Management & Compensation: Low Impact High Impact 5
Pay-for-Performance

The survey results clearly reveal the impact of leveraging talent management
technology to standardize processes and facilitate integration among them. In
the short term, consider leveraging the “high impact” technologies and integra-
tions to improve talent mobility and reduce voluntary turnover. In the long term, a
more holistic “ecosystem” approach to talent management is required. This will
be discussed in more detail below.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 6

TALENT MOBILITY AND SOURCING

Bersin & Associates observes: “Talent mobility can only be achieved through a well-
integrated talent management strategy. In addition to succession management,
how a company recruits talent, manages its employees’ careers, and develops the
right capabilities to fulfill business needs is essential for enabling a mobile, high-
performing workforce.”3

Sourcing and recruiting is central to talent mobility. In many organizations, external


sourcing is the de facto standard because the tools and business intelligence to
effectively analyze, group, and rotate talent internally do not exist. Open positions
typically lead to a requisition being opened followed by an external recruiting
effort. Figure 2 highlights a better way.

Figure 2: The Future of Talent Sourcing Is (Mostly) Internal

Rather than defaulting to a requisition when a position needs to be filled, a decision


point will prompt whether a search is conducted internally leveraging intelligence
about existing talent pools, externally, or both. The decision must be based on
accurate and accessible talent data, including:A few key questions to consider to
create seamless on-boarding plans for employees are:

• Talent pools and bench strength depth

• Positions and people at risk

• Existing development and career plans


THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 7

• Calibrated employee performance ratings and potential


assessments (e.g., 9-box)

• Position demand (market-factors)

Research reveals that the goal for a typical global organization is to get to 65-
75% internal sourcing, since it is significantly quicker and cheaper than sourcing
externally. Additionally, the costs of a wrong hire – which often amounts to 3-5x
the person’s salary – can be minimized.

Naturally, external hiring will not disappear, nor should it. But the hiring process
must link seamlessly to other HR processes including succession planning,
performance management, and learning. One salient example of this linkage
is the ability to assign external candidates to internal succession talent pools, a
capability many organizations require when there is a weak bench for a particular
role or position.

GAME PLANNING APPROACH TO TALENT MOBILITY

The goal of game planning is to align people (high performers and potentials)
who are at risk of flight to positions at risk. There are certain indicators that flag
risk, and this opens the door to more thorough analysis and discussions. For
example, flight risk generally increases for high performers after 15-18 months in
the same position when there is little hope of movement (either laterally to round
out skills or upwards from an advancement perspective).

Game planning is designed to answer several key questions, including:

• What do we have from a current talent “inventory” perspective?

• Which high performers/potentials are a flight risk and why?

• Which critical positions are at risk or will be at risk in the near


future (weak bench)?

• What positions will become open in 6-9 months and how do


we plan to fill them?

• How can I provide more meaningful work and/or career paths


to ensure my high performers/potentials are engaged and
getting what they need to be successful?

• Can we take at risk employees and put them in open positions


today (or develop them to be ready in the future)?
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 8

To answer these questions, and facilitate the internal vs. external sourcing
decision, a new framework is required. Called the Talent Mobility Ecosystem, this
single platform recognizes the core processes and data that must natively come
together to support a systematic talent mobility strategy. Figure 3 highlights the
major components of the ecosystem.

Figure 3: The Talent Mobility Ecosystem

The Talent Mobility Ecosystem is predicated on a single, complete talent-based


system of record which includes all of the required processes and capabilities to
enable mobility. It also recognizes the inherent benefits of a natively integrated
reporting and analytic environment that spans the various process and functional
domains to enable quicker and more accurate business decisions.

PROCURING THE TALENT MOBILITY ECOSYSTEM

When asked which approach best describes the current and future planned state of
their HR and talent management systems, Figure 4 highlights respondents’ answers.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 9

Figure 4: Talent Management Technology Approach


Talent management Technology Approach Today Planned by Growth(e)
2011
Single “best-of-breed” platform 9% 24% 182%
Primarily use ERP/HRMS platform 17% 29% 70%
Use multiple systems (mostly integrated) 21% 29% 37%
Use multiple systems (little/no integration) 30% 11% -63%
Primarily paper- & spreadsheet-based 23% 6% -72%
Note: Calculated columns such as Growth are derived from unrounded percentages but rounded
percentages are provided here for ease of readability

Despite being the least penetrated within organizations today, the single “best-
of-breed” platform approach is poised for the highest growth (182%). It is not
difficult to understand why: A single, complete platform that natively integrates
the various talent applications, processes, and data to support a talent mobility
strategy virtually eliminates the need for manual and costly systems integration.

In other words, a single talent platform is a prerequisite to enabling talent mobility


both quickly and cost effectively. It helps knocks down the barriers presented
earlier in this report. And, it facilitates HR reporting and analysis – a top HR priority
for 2010 according to survey respondents – since all of the talent data required for
business intelligence is located in one place.

Relative to the other approaches, organizations currently using a single “best-of-


breed” platform for talent management report significant advantages in these areas:

• Better internal talent mobility

• Improved workforce alignment to overall strategy

• Workforce responds more quickly to changing business needs

• Reduced administration overhead and costs

Furthermore, when technology delivery approach is correlated to perceptions about


the overall business impact of technology, the single “best-of-breed” approach is
nearly 3x as likely to be rated “excellent” in terms of business value relative to legacy
ERP/HRMS systems, and more than 2x relative to multiple systems that are
mostly integrated.
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 10

TALENT MOBILITY IN ACTION: CASE STUDY

ALFA is a SumTotal customer that is based in Mexico and employs more than
50,000 people. The company is highly diversified and global in scope, and consists
of four distinct business units: petrochemicals, aluminum auto components,
refrigerated food, and telecommunications.

A key challenge facing ALFA was promoting cross-business unit transfers, thereby
minimizing employee attrition to the competition. ALFA was losing at-risk high-
performing talent because it was unable to find growth and leadership opportunities
for these employees within the organization. Due to the proliferation of different HR
systems at each of its four business units, ALFA suffered from inconsistency in
managing its global talent processes as well as a lack of visibility into key employee
information that could be used to drive a cohesive talent mobility strategy.

To address its challenges, ALFA standardized on SumTotal’s talent management


platform across its diverse business units (see Figure 5). This platform became
the centerpiece of ALFA’s employee lifecycle, which consists of planning, hiring,
compensation, performance management, learning, development, succession
planning, reporting and analysis, and HR management. ALFA also leveraged
SumTotal’s global experience in developing and implementing standard HR policies
and best practices. As a result of the deployment, it is now far more common for ALFA’s
employees to rotate from one business unit within the company to another, expanding
their experience, competencies, and skills via promotion and advancement.

Figure 5: SumTotal Talent Management Platform


THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 11

Conclusion
Talent mobility has become a mainstream talent management strategy because
of its ability to help organizations more effectively acquire, align, develop, engage,
and retain their high performing and potential talent. While challenges and
barriers exist within many organizations, they are not insurmountable. Organizing
properly for success, approaching talent sourcing in new and innovative ways,
game planning (asking the right questions), and deploying a single, complete
enterprise software platform to enable mobility are all efforts that can be readily
tackled by innovative HR leaders.

ENDNOTES
1, 3
Lamoureux, Kim. “Talent Mobility: A New Standard of Endurance.” Bersin & Associates, November
30, 2009.
2
Based on the aggregation of twelve key HR and business operating metrics.
3
THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO TALENT MOBILITY 12

AUTHORED BY

Steve Bonadio, Vice President of Product Marketing,


SumTotal Systems, Inc.

For more information, contact:


sbonadio@sumtotalsystems.com

ABOUT SUMTOTAL
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