Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Leadership Deficiency: Why Business Executives Are Falling Short

Leadership Deficiency: Why Business Executives Are Falling Short

Leadership stands out as a business competency critical for success say executives from across business, according to the Society for Human Resource Management’s recent report: ‘Using Competencies to Achieve Business Success: The Executive Perspective.’ The study found that a significant number of executives reported that many employees and candidates lack leadership competency.
More than one-third of executives (39 percent) reported a deficiency in the leadership and navigation competency in their talent pools. “Over the years, many business leaders have openly voiced their concerns about a leadership gap in their organizations,” said Joe Jones, SHRM’s director of HR competencies. “The survey results provide further evidence that business executives are seeing a disconnect: competencies — particularly the leadership and navigation competency — are critical for the overall success of business units, yet many employees and job candidates lack them.” A leadership gap also was identified in a ‘Business and Human Capital Challenges’ report released by SHRM. The report found that both HR professionals and non-HR C-suite executives said that developing the next generation of leaders was considered the top human capital challenge over the coming decade. “Because competence in leadership and navigation impacts the entire organization, HR will not only have to work on developing this competency within specific business units, including HR, but will need to develop organization wide leadership development strategies and initiatives,” said Ms. Jones. “This requires thinking of leadership from more of a systems perspective.” Leadership and navigation is one of nine competencies identified in the SHRM Competency Model created for the HR profession. SHRM describes competencies as individual characteristics — knowledge, skills, abilities, self-image, traits, mindsets, feelings and ways of thinking — that allow individuals to be successful in their roles. A well-defined set of competencies aligned with business strategy is useful for businesses to differentiate good from poor performers and for individuals to assess their career readiness. Besides leadership and navigation, competencies include communication, relationship management, business acumen and ethical practice.

The survey also showed.

93 percent of the executives surveyed said competencies are important for the overall success of their business units. All of the respondents in customer service said they use competencies for business and talent management. Many of the other business units agreed: research and development (90 percent), IT (84 percent), and purchasing and procurement (80 percent). Business unit executives said the use of competencies is almost equally as important for HR departments as it is for their own business units. About one-third (37 percent) cited leadership and navigation as the most lacking competency in the HR talent pool. Ten years from now, respondents said, HR expertise (cited by 47 percent), communication (44 percent) and relationship management (37 percent) will continue to be the top three competencies critical to HR professionals. Despite large talent pools, the quality of available workers with the right sets of competencies appears to be lacking, according to multiple reports. According to the latest ‘Recruiter Nation Survey’ released by Jobvite, 56 percent of recruiters cite the lack of available skilled talent as a key stumbling block in hiring. The report, which polled over 1,400 executive recruiting and human resources professionals, also found that 95 percent of recruiters anticipate equal or increased competition for talent over the next year. A recently released hiring survey by DHI Group, Inc. found that 53 percent of hiring managers and recruiters say the inability to find qualified professionals was the key detriment in filling open positions at their respective companies. “The recruiting environment for certain highly-skilled professionals is the toughest I’ve seen in nearly a decade, with companies jockeying for in-demand talent and candidates having their pick at ideal positions and compensation,” said Michael Durney, president and CEO of DHI Group. Within organizations the quality of talent doesn’t appear as well-suited as it should with executives saying they are generally not comfortable with the leaders they have in place. According to Korn Ferry’s report, “Real World Leadership,” few executives believe they have the right leaders in place to effectively deliver on strategy. The study found that only 17 percent were fully confident their organizations had the right leadership capabilities in place to execute on strategic business priorities. Just over half of the respondents (56 percent) said they were ‘somewhat confident,’ while more than a quarter (27 percent) were either unsure or did not believe their teams had the necessary leadership capabilities. “If I were a CEO, being only ‘somewhat confident’ that I had the right leaders in place to drive my company’s strategy wouldn’t be good enough,” said Stu Crandell, senior vice president, Korn Ferry Institute. “That’s why effective leadership development is extremely critical to the success of any organization. It’s required to address the skill, pipeline, and culture gaps required for organizational growth, yet it’s one of the CEO’s most underutilized levers to drive strategy.” Scott A. Scanlon is founding chairman and CEO of Hunt Scanlon Media. Based in Greenwich, Conn., Scott serves as Editor-in-Chief of Hunt Scanlon's daily newswires, its recruiting industry reports and Executive Search Review.

1 comment:

  1. This write-up is for effective and practicing managers

    ReplyDelete