Thursday, December 26, 2019
Does Your Company Stifle or Nurture Ambition
Does Your Company Stifle or Nurture Ambition Does Your Company Stifle or Nurture Ambition With the assumption being that you want to retain your talent and minimize unwanted turnover, it seems vital that you create an environment that is warm and welcoming to ambition and not cold and hostile. But, the question is are you doing it? Is your business stifling or nurturing ambition?For example, does your organization regularly recruit from within? Many companies are good at promoting internal employees but many employers offer positions externally without considering external applicants. This approach of not advertising internally is career limiting for internal staff, stifles ambition and doesnt make business sense, as a Wharton Business School study shows that internal hires are 18 20 percent cheaper and perform better than external applicants hired to comparable posts.And/or does your organization use Stretch Assignments? Stretch assignments are jobs, often on a temporary basis, w hich internal hires can be promoted into. In these scenarios internal hires may take on a new role, which is beyond their current experience level and requires them to learn new skills and extend themselves (stretch) in order to succeed. If they succeed, they will have developed and progressed in the competency level. Stretch Assignments are a great way to nurture ambition and develop potential.There are two important conditions of stretch assignments in that there should be organizational support in terms of mentoring and coaching and a soft landing, meaning employees can return to their former roles if things dont work out. It is about stretching, not breaking, employees.Also, does your company have a competency framework making clear what skills are needed to progress within the business? If employees dont know what skills they need to develop to progress, they are working blind and are not self empowered to learn in a way that can help them reach their career aims- and their amb ition is being stifled. So, make sure to let employees know what qualities are needed to succeed and nurture their ambition.Do you provide access to mentors? A study by Sun Microsystems of 1,000 employees over a five year period showed that staff who had been mentored were 20 percent mora likely to get a raise than those who had not been mentored. Another study by Sylvia Anne Hewlittshowed that mentored staff are more likely to ask for more responsibility. Mentors are clearly a great way to nurture ambition.Are all learning opportunities, internal vacancies, project opportunities, job rotation opportunities advertised internally? If you dont advertise these things you are creating a closed environment for career progression, as employees do not see any opportunities to progress and this stifles ambition. Try and create an open and transparent market for career opportunities .Is your organization accepting of failure? If you want to encourage your employees to learn, develop and exte nd themselves, the best way to do this is to build a culture that is tolerant or even accepting of failure when an employee has attempted to push his/herself. If employees who extend themselves and fail are crucified, then this may discourage other employees from pushing themselves beyond their current personal boundaries.If you find that your business is answering no to a lot of these questions it may be that your current culture is stifling ambition, which could suggest there is a need for some change in order to cultivateand ultimately retain top talent.
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