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Jul
3 2008 | “Come on Baby Light My Fire”: Innovation and Talent DevelopmentIn learning organizations often a valuable question or insight relies on another question being asked. Here are three related questions– Is your talent on fire with innovation? What factors precipitate talent being fired up to learn? Where (and with whom) does talent development begin?
Immediately post-hire, new talent wants to learn who the “go to” people are for answers, and how to get things done in keeping with the company culture. Last week I was on a breakfast panel in NYC at a meeting of the Five O’Clock Club to discuss best in class onboarding with 250 people also interested in how to accelerate time-to-productivity and the related learning curve. HCI’s webcasts on Onboarding have had over 4000 sign ups from a broad spectrum of HCI members in HR, senior leadership, OD, and hiring managers, indicating there is clearly shared responsibility for developing new talent during the onboarding process. At some point post-hire (3-6 months), after the essential ‘know how’s’ to perform on the job are under one’s belt, motivation to learn may become taken for granted. Who continues to fan the flames of talent development? Is talent development a shared responsibility and by whom? Let’s begin with the learner. Looking at blog directories under the heading of “talent development” I found countless blogs devoted to self-development. To be frank, my first impulse was to skim right past most of them, because as an OD practitioner and baby boomer, my corporate experience began with answering the question, “what competencies does the organization want to develop?” I’m not ready to throw that baby (boomer idea) out with the bath water, but upon reflection I think it is more important than ever for organizations to attract, recruit, retain and develop talent who are passionate about self-development and to find out what they want to learn. Sun Hydraulics is known to hire talent who are passionate about learning through collaboration, and their practice with new talent is to NOT provide job descriptions on day one because a preconceived job description might be too constraining to people’s learning. Rather, new talent is given a time period post-hire to learn about the company and align their individual motivation to learn with company goals. What a refreshing an avant guard concept! Peter Senge says that a learning organization comes from people who are excited and passionate about learning and enjoy learning together in pursuit of a shared purpose. This is the fertile ground for team learning and accomplishing the shared mission.
If people are passionate about self-development, it will be much easier 1) for managers (who are increasingly becoming developers of talent) to engage in conversations about learning and find out what motivates their talent, 2) to connect their interests to learning opportunities and strategic business priorities, because 3) it is these individuals who are likely contributors to innovation as they are committed to learning and continual improvement at their very core. I invite your posts about learning practices in your organization to develop talent, and in particular learning related to innovation… |
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