Lecture by Mario Derba at Master Human Resources Pisa University
1. La sfida di valorizzare
e motivare le risorse umane
in un’Azienda nazionale o
globale,
realizzando
il miglior posto in cui
lavorare
2. Background:
25+ years IT sales & services international
experience
1984-2005: IBM
making the difference
2005-2008: Microsoft Italy: EPG Lead, then
Managing Director, then Western Europe
every day!
Since January 7, 2009 at Hewlett-Packard
Why I work here:
Great company & culture
Fantastic people
Exciting environment
3. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
nce 3
4. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
nce 4
5. Simplifying technology experiences around the world
As A Company, And As Individuals, We Value:
Integrity And Honesty
Passion For Customers, For Our Partners, And For
Technology
Openness And Respectfulness
Taking On Big Challenges And Seeing Them Through
Constructive Self-Criticism, Self-Improvement, And Personal
Excellence
Accountability To Customers, Shareholders, Partners, And
Employees For Commitments, Results, And Quality
7. Ispirare le persone
Essere “giovani” e aperti
I nostri valori
Strumenti informatici
Investire sulle persone
Prendersi cura dei dipendenti
Premiare il contributo
Impegno sociale
MOTIVAZIONE
8. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
nce 8
9. 1.It’s the basis for being selective
(G.E. philosophy)
2.It’s the basis for a merit culture
3.More important, it’s the basis for
motivating your best people
10. • Reflect the company’s values and business
strategy
• Continuous feedback
• Be consistent
• Develop S.M.A.R.T. objectives
• Management role is key
• Adapt it but not frequently
11. Evaluate people based on the requirements of the job—Don’t evaluate people on their potential or
what you think they are capable of doing. Set expectations for the job, and then hold people
accountable for the job.
What you say and how you say it is not nearly as important as what is heard. Focus on the core
message/both in documented/written and verbal form.
Ideally, give feedback throughout the year. No Surprises at Review time.
Make sure to have the employee do a meaningful and insightful self-assessment. Review time is
the perfect time to ensure that everyone’s definition of “reality” is the same.
Challenge the employee that turns in a self-assessment that has all meets or exceeds
expectations on every item.
Always give the Review to the employee at least 1-2 hours before the sit down Review so that
they have had a chance to read it prior to the Review.
Be honest, truthful, direct and candid.
Differentiate on performance.
Reviews should be based on results and observations. Be specific.
Give praise where praise is due. Reinforce the good things verbally and in the final Review.
The sit down Review process is a good time for you as a leader to listen by asking open-ended
questions.
17. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
nce 17
18. 1.Reflect the company’s values and business
strategy
2.Be developed with the employees’
involvement
3.Involve cash, noncash or both
4.Be various
5.Be changed frequently
19. 1. Match the reward to the person
2. Match the reward to the achievement
3. Be timely and specific
20. “The key to developing people is to catch them
doing something right” (Ken Blanchard)
Informal rewards: “Recognition for a job well
done is the top motivator of employee
performance” (Bob Nelson)
Carefully design reward and recognition
programs
21. • Sincere.Be genuine. "Token" acknowledgments are seen for
what they are.
• Meaningful. Align rewards with the values, priorities, and
goals that matter the most.
• Adaptable. The workplace has become diverse. Consider
creative options. One size doesn’t fit all.
• Relevant. Inject a personal dimension. The relevance of any
recognition is improved with a personal touch.
• Timely. Rewards should reinforce good behaviors. Don’t let
too much time pass or the reward will be devalued and
credibility eroded.
22. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
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23. Planning Development
BU
Recruitment
Requirements
27. Company’s own Compensation Guidelines
Base Pay
Sign-on Bonus
Bonuses/Incentives
On-Hire & Annual Stock or SO Awards
Benefits: tangible & intangible
28. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
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Excelle
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29. 6 Climate Dimensions example
Clarity
Standards
Responsibility
Flexibility
Rewards
Team Commitment
32. • Understand graduates • Answer graduate‘s questions
point of view • Keen to talk to graduate
• Give meaning to action, • Be very open and straight in
projects providing feedbacks
• Listen carefully and • Send out graduate to
value graduate's customers within the first
thoughts and ideas weeks
• Take graduate as a
professional
• Caring for the • Provide autonomy and
graduate‘s career flexibility
• Believe and trust in the • Be available for the graduate
graduate
• Give financial reward for good work
• Give warm thanks for good work
• Act as a coach
* Based on: survey to 82 graduates
• Put graduate on challenging projects working in HP and Generation Y
Characteristics
• Set clear objectives in line with (Web & Literature Research)
HP strategy
33. Continuous
expansion of Integration +
responsibilities Teamwork
and possibilities
Discussion
Work
of graduate
according to
professional
skills
goals
Giving
advices and
Job Rotation
hints to Personal Work
graduate Development Management
monthly informal
Support feedback
Manager is available in Career Responsibilities + + quarterly formal
and close to graduate development Challenges performance
reviews
34. Management Excellence
From Culture “Aspire To” Culture
Features and technology Solutions and services
Product focus Customer focus
Last minute heroics Disciplined execution
Activity-focus Results-focus
Solve for my P&L Solve for the Company
Individual-focused Collaborative
Opacity Transparency
36. CAREER EVENTS CONNECTIONS CONTINUOUS LEARNING
Manager Ramp Up Management Excellence Recommended Readings
Manager (M1) Community (MEC) ME OneNote Notebook
Foundation Leaders who Teach Job Aids
Midterm Mentors and Coaches Tip of the Week
Pivotal Community Events E-Coaching
Manager of Managers (M2) MEC Web Online training
Foundation
Midterm
Classroom training
Pivotal Best Practices
37. Development is more than training
Education 10%
•Professional journals
Learning & Development Continuum
•Conferences/seminars
•E-learning/Blended Learning
•Books
•Formal “Training”
10%
Relationships 20%
•Role models
•Coaching
•Ongoing 360 feedback 20%
•Career Planning
•Mentoring
Experience 70%
•Cross-functional teamwork
•Start-up/Shut-down assignments
•Job change/rotation
•Special projects/taskforces 70%
•Development in role “on the job”
37 18 June 2012
38. Only 10% of your managers will make a
difference
Develop Focus & Energy
Source: "Beware the Busy Manager," by Heike Bruch and
Sumantra Ghoshal
39. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
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41. Building careers at HP
Employee Manager HP
OWNS SUPPORTS ENABLES
• Takes responsibility for • Commits to career growth • Offers career development
career for employees opportunities across many
business models, customer
• Regularly seeks • Hires the best talent segments, geographies &
feedback
• Communicates strategy, functional roles
• Assesses his or her goals and performance • Delivers career
strengths, opportunities, feedback development policies, tools
goals, and aspirations
• Encourages open, candid and resources:
• Identifies career goals, dialogue on career −Grow @HP
development needs and options
potential next jobs −Career Development
• Discusses potential future Resource Center
• Prepares for and roles, opportunities, fit
initiates career dialogue −Career Development
• Co-develops actions, Frameworks
with manager
enters development plan
• Co-develops actions into FPR tool −HP Professions program
with manager and −FPR process
• Provides guidance, timely
executes plans
feedback, support and • Drives staffing solutions to
• Creates career profile removes barriers to optimize internal
and applies to new jobs growth placement, e.g., hpFirst
when ready
41 18 June 2012
42. Talent Calendar
Begin defining
Annual
new year End of year
Performance
performance
Review Total
goals
Managed Year-Round Rewards
• Performance Management Differentiation
• Career Development Q4 Career
Q1 Dialogue
• Talent Management
Annual Talent
Right-click icon to view web Operating Cycle
content for each area Begin
Talent
Reviews
Q3
Q2
VOW
Mid-Year
Goal Check-In
End
& Career Dialogue Talent
42 18 June 2012 Reviews
43. What stage am I in? Choose Development
What path am I on? Activities
Where do I want to go? What development activities
and experiences will meet
my development and career
objectives?
ONE
Development
Plan
What results are
expected?
How do I get to the next Take Assessment
stage? Where are my
development gaps?
What competencies
enable better results?
44. Competencies Experiences
Set of behaviors that differentiate Building blocks for
outstanding performance learning and growth
Career Stage Profiles (CSPs)
What is expected in current stage and how to
get to next stage on chosen career path
44
46. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
ment
Manage
ment
Excelle
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48. Drive and apply Business Excellence
in our daily activity
More the External Vs Internal
“Show case”
External : for partner, friends, clients,
community
Internal : within your Company
49. Actions Media
Emails
Intranet
Branding Eventi
Surveys
Mostra progetto Audience
Sito intranet Team progetto
Newletter Gruppi pilota
Italy employees
Visite guidate
Community
Eventi Emea/Corp
50. The
Human
Resour
ces
Role Perfor
Off-the- mance
record Manage
ment
Workpl Reward
ace ing &
Advant Recogn
age ition
Talent
Manage Hiring
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Manage
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51. The Influence Model forms the second phase of the Performance Leadership approach
Where are you today and What do you need to How do you lead the
where do you want to go? do to get there? implementation?
Direction
Account-ability Coordination &
Control Role-modeling Fostering
understanding
and conviction
External
Leadership Innovation Behavior
Orientation
and mindset
shifts
Developing Reinforcing
talent with formal
Capability Motivation
and skills mechanisms
Environment &
Vaues
Performance Profile Influence Model Tailored
Understand current Develop a set of Implementation
performance and set initiatives required to Architect an
aspirations for the future change mindsets and implementation program
based on a diagnosis of behaviors and close the and make choices
the nine elements of existing performance around tailoring the
organizational gaps changes
performance
52. The Influence Model consists of four change levers designed to shift
mindset and behaviors
"I will change my own behavior if…"
Role-modeling Fostering
“I see superiors, peers understanding and
and subordinates conviction
behaving in the new “I know what is
way” expected of me – I
agree with it, and it is
meaningful”
Reinforcing with
Developing talent and formal mechanisms
skills “The structures,
“I have the skills and processes and systems
competencies to behave reinforce the change in
behavior I am being
in the new way”
asked to make”
53. Sharing some basic ethic values is fundamentally
relevant for a complex business success, especially in
tough times
Ethics is a pragmatic discipline related to acting and
decision making: to make sound business decisions
one must develop criteria based on experience
The key is to evaluate the effect of a given behavior
not only from a pure economic perspective or by
comparing it to theoretical ethical values: it’s
fundamental to assess if a given action is pursuing the
good of the human being
55. Ispirare le persone
Essere “giovani” e aperti
I nostri valori
Strumenti informatici
Investire sulle persone
Prendersi cura dei dipendenti
Premiare il contributo
Impegno sociale
MOTIVAZIONE
56. Learn Everyday!
Give Feedback
What’s Important – Mission & Values
Build Relationships/Connect Broadly
Impact & Accountability
Be Compliant with all Policies
Own your career
Be aware of your work/life balance !
58. BIBLIOGRAFIA
“The secrets to successful strategy execution” -
HBR, June 2008
“The heart of a leader” by Ken Blanchard
“One more time: how do you motivate employees?”
by Frederick Herzberg
“1001 ways to reward employees” by Bob Nelson