Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Talent Management: Chess or Checkers?


I was inspired by a recent conversation with a colleague to examine this question more closely.  We were comparing and contrasting the work of different teams within an organization.  He likened another team’s work to checkers, while suggesting that we were playing chess – and pointed out that there was really no comparison.  He was right!

If you think about it, checkers is largely a game of tactical skills, about blocking your opponent’s next move or preserving yourself.  Checkers is fairly reactionary, a jagged continuum of random movements.  On the other hand, chess is quite strategic.  Rather than simply having red and black pieces (or as the Glossary of Checkers Terminology calls them, “men”), there is an array of pieces that can be used in a myriad of ways.  Chess is far more strategic and analytical; it requires thought , forethought and afterthought.  There is no checklist in chess; you must use your brain.

When it comes to talent management, many companies are still playing checkers.  I prefer chess.   I began to ask myself “what is it that differentiates those organizations playing chess from those still playing checkers?”   I’ve concluded that there are four significant characteristics that differentiate those organizations:  a clear strategy, a holistic approach, the absence of boxes, and an inclusive “what if” mindset.

Strategy is the foundation upon which the function is built, right?  You’d be surprised at how many organizations simply do not have a talent management strategy.  It seems so basic, yet I believe it is the primary reason so many organizations fail miserably at talent management.  A talent management strategy keeps the organization and its leaders “honest”.  It roots out nepotism and favoritism and brings in objectivity.  It levels the playing field, creating equal opportunities for all qualified candidates.

It must be stated that talent management is not a stand-alone activity.  One cannot see “talent review” in isolation; it must be connected to employee engagement, compensation, performance management, and leadership development.  There must be actions, insights and deliverables that come from talent review discussion, and those discussions should involve both supporters of a candidate and those with whom there have been disagreements.  Talent management professionals need to push for a 360 degree view of the subject.  Without intention, the act of managing talent becomes a “check the box” activity.  Sadly, this mindset exists in too many companies.  Stakeholders are sometimes led to believe that there is a strong bench of “ready now” talent and that the talent pipeline is deep when, in fact, there are merely names on a list; names of people who could succeed a leader in the event of a departure.

Then, for organizations who actually do have a formal process for reviewing talent, many ruin it all by insisting on putting names in boxes --- the dreaded, antiquated 9 BOX grid.  Checkers players love the 9 box because checkers requires one to simply put pieces (men) in boxes, move them across the board and viola’, you’re either a winner or a loser.  Chess requires meaningful thought, even internal conversation, about your next move.  Chess requires that you ignite thought from a different part of your brain.  Unlike checkers, chess requires that you consider a wide range of possibilities.

Pursuing the thought that chess requires consideration of a wider range of possibilities, so should talent management.  Talent leaders should constantly be asking themselves “what if?”   In Peter Block’s “The Answer To How Is Yes”, he asserts that when we ask “how”, that we’ve already revealed our bias and that we’re looking for reasons not to act.  By shifting away from “how” to “what if”, we again call on a different part of our brain to explore opportunities.  Who knows, we might just find a possibility that we’d never find playing checkers.