TALENT MANAGEMENT
‘Talent Management’
means having systems and plans in place that ensure that we plan for, attract,
recruit and select, retain and develop our employees to meet present and future
needs. We need to plan ahead, make sure we recruit people with the skills and
behaviors we need and then retain them and help them grow. Importance of talent
management is building a high performance workplace, to encouraging a learning
organization, adding value to the ‘employer of choice’ and branding agenda and
finally contributing to diversity management.
Comprehensive
Learning and Development programme for Talent Pool
Employees are the
greatest strength in the organization and wants to be invest on them for empower them to stay
ahead of competition by providing regular exposure to learning and knowledge
enhancement. As continue to grow as an organization, it is vital that employees
keep pace and develop as professionals and as teams. Learning and Development
programme aims to instill a culture of continuous learning and excellence .The
Learning and Development programme's goal is to enhance every employee's
competencies at the individual, team and organisational levels, and to equip
her/him with the right knowledge, skills and attitude, so that each person can
contribute significantly to ensuring the organisation's success. In the
process, each employee is personally and professionally enriched and motivated
to sustain excellence in performance. The competitive edge created through a
knowledgeable, skilled and motivated workforce ultimately results in achieving
its strategic business goals. Learning and Development programme creates a pool
of exceptional talent that can be tapped by it grows globally in the future.
1.
Identify key talent.
The executive team must
identify specific high-potential employees who have the skills and aptitudes
required to advance over time. The talent belongs to the whole organization,
not to a particular department.
2.
Assess readiness.
The executive team as a
whole provides its perspectives on the readiness of emerging leaders to advance
or take on new roles. For example, emerging leaders are evaluated as ready now,
in 1 to 3 years, or in 3 to 5 years. All department heads also identify
development areas for each of the high potentials.
3.
Offer an array of development opportunities.
Organizations must
offer, by themselves or with other local governments or educational partners,
an array of special assignments, interim management, project leadership,
training workshops, certificate programs, and professional development
opportunities.
4.
Create development plans.
Based on the
development needs of the specific high-potential employees, managers create
development plans with the individual employees, focusing on their targeted
areas of development, such as people or leadership skills, community engagement
skills, budgeting, or public speaking skills. The plans include specific
development assignments, measurable objectives, and timelines.
5.
Communicate
Keep leadership up to
speed, so that they, in turn, can keep their teams up to speed. Communication
is “an ongoing step that parallels the other implementation steps and the leadership so that they can share the process
with their teams and assist their local managers.
6.
Measure progress.
The executive team
meets three to four times per year to further identify high- potential
employees, assess readiness, and measure progress toward their development
goals.
Conclusion
The skilled people who
staff in organization bring the greatest competitive advantage. But finding the
right fit talent is just the first step. To succeed in today’s ever-changing
marketplace, optimizing the potential people is priority. That’s why after
attracting and hiring the best people for organization.
References
Armstrong, M and Taylor, S (2014)
A Hand Book of Human resource Management Practice, Kogan
Forbes Magazine (2015 July)
(https://www.forbes.com/sites/steveolenski/2015/07/20/8-key-tactics-
for-developing-employees/#79d535d06373)
accessed on 20thNov 2017 at 8.17 pm
https://int.search.tb.ask.com/search/AJimage.jhtm
See R.E. Lewis and R.J. Heckman,
“Talent Management: A Critical Review,” Human Resource Management Review 16
(2006): 139-154.
E.G. Chambers, M. Foulon, H.
Handfield-Jones, S.M. Hankin and E.G. Michaels, “The War for Talent,” McKinsey
Quarterly 3 (1998): 44-57.
E.E. Lawler III, “The Folly of
Forced Ranking,” Strategy & Business 28 (2002): 28-32; and J. Pfeffer and
R.I. Sutton, “Hard Facts, Dangerous Half-Truths and Total Nonsense: Profiting
from Evidence-Based Management” (Boston: Harvard Business Press, 2006).
Photo Credit
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