Human Resource – a song about work

I finally got round to making a recording of the musical collaboration between Neil Usher and myself. It’s taken me to wonderfully unexpected places. This song has been played live at ConnectingHR and Workplace Trends, and formed a part of the 2011 Never Records exhibition. It’s been played in clubs, pubs and even somewhere in a field in Hampshire. I’m hugely grateful to Neil for his fine lyrics and I hope you like the song.

So welcome to careers advice
By Crystal, Balls and Whistles
For us, ten minutes’ sacrifice
For you, a bed of thistles
Blessed as we are, with retrospect
We may just steer you rightly
We’re not quite sure what you expect
But suggest you curse politely
Contractually from what we say
There’s no redress or recourse –
You’re on your own and on your way
Now you’re a human resource;

You’ve come prepared I do regret
With your qualifications
You may as well have stacked a debt
On hedonist vacations
There’s nothing at university
You can’t find in the cloud
Your i-Pad is a library
And talking loud- well, is allowed
And I see you’ve got a suit and tie on
A stuffed shirt without remorse –
Get your jeans, forget the iron
Now you’re a human resource;

Its great you have a CV
But that’s for oldschool peasants
We’ve abandoned linearity
Now its online presence
Its from here to ubiquity
With LinkedIn, Tweets and blogging
Push a 3D identity
and avoid the dead-horse flogging
You may be digital native
But you’re really rather coarse –
You’ve got to get creative
To be a human resource;

So – you want flexibility
And a chance to work abroad
Pure sustainability
And merit-based reward
Space for concentration
And interactive tools
Online collaboration
And exemption from the rules?
There must be some confusion
You’re a million miles off course –
A super-sized delusion
For a human – bloody! – resource

But I see you’ve got a start-up
And are followed by a legion
And organise a Tweetup
That’s legend in the region
You fart and its Retweeted
You cough to find it trending
And every thought completed
Is another patent pending
I feel the truth approaching
We’d better close this discourse –
‘cause I’m the one needs coaching
Now you’re a human resource….

Teamwork – Messing about in boats

Last week I spent a hugely enjoyable day aboard the Midnight Star. Cap’n Glenn Le Santo had advertised for four crewmates to join him on a canal trip from Limehouse Basin to Camden Lock. Having recently had such fun with the Never Records experiment (a result of simply saying yes), I decided to take advantage of this next opportunity. I said yes. We were joined by lookout Barry Furby, vice admiral KateGL and first mate Ntathu Allen. I was cabin boy.

The day was a mixture of hard work and serious relaxation. Operating locks is tough and I lost count how many we journeyed through. Drinking beer and great conversation is the reward. Here are a few more pictures from the trip.

boat beer boat
boat beer boat
Step into the light - emerging from the Islington tunnel

The day closed with a great canalside party where more twitter folk, including Claire Boyles, joined in for beer and conversation. I managed a quick sketch of the canal to keep my learning to paint experiment flowing (ouch!).

Camden Lock
Camden Lock

This was a great day on many counts. I met new friends. I saw London from a totally new viewpoint. I practiced aspects of team working. I painted. I enjoyed myself.

The teamwork aspects of the day were really powerful for me. We were all very different people and had never worked together previously. From a fairly clunky start at Limehouse we improved our teamworking efforts considerably by the time we moored up at Camden Lock. The sequencing of activity improved and as we worked together and became more aware of each other, we gently and easily shifted from one task to another, playing to our strengths.

Increasingly when working with teams who are seeking to redefine and improve the way they work, I’m encouraging people to try new experiences together. Being in different places, seeing and trying different things, and achieving new things together are all useful and enjoyable ways to make work better. Difference is very powerful, and when we can integrate people’s skills and enthusiasm without losing their difference, we can achieve great things together. Aye aye Cap’n.

 

Employee Engagement Taskforce

These notes are my recollections and scribblings from the latest engagement taskforce (gg) meeting. If you really want to know what (gg) means, go here.

Warning – this is a pretty long post. Coffee or other stimulation may be required to get to the end. Good luck!

Part One

engagement taskforce meeting slide one

In groups we were asked to consider the ‘bigger picture’ shown above and to discuss what the taskforce should seek to achieve over the next 18 months.

At our table the conversation started around shareholder value, profit, productivity etc and then we quickly shifted, these things are old talk, and yet we recognise that they are often what the CEO and board is measured against. A CEO will (nearly) always think survive first, thrive second, particularly when times are tough.

A lot of folk still see engagement as HR’s job. How we manage is important. Actually it’s not about management it’s about consultation and involvement. It’s about ongoing simple dialogue, understanding what better work means for everybody. There was a sense that the senior management (sorry but I will not use the term C-suite, these are people not furniture we’re discussing) might agree with the principles and don’t know how to implement. This emerged from observations that all too often we ‘blame’ layers of management beneath the top team when of course there is responsibility for the most senior teams to engage directly with others too.

We talked about the need for some faith, and trust. Familiarity is important, and this could be gained through being more visible. The open door policy is patronising and out of date. No one should have an office enclosing them. Private space is readily available for sensitive meetings, conversations etc. as needed. O2 were held up as an example of this – the CEO sits out in the open, well done! In conversations later that day I learned of two more accessible senior management examples at Yellsites and LBi. I think we need many more.

Who people are is important, behaviour matters and we talked about how, when driving people to meet KPIs and targets, there is little or no acknowledgement of this. Despite the fact that some organisations may try to measure the behavioural stuff using Myers Briggs and other tools, we don’t seem to acknowledge the differences when people are managed.

Developing a sense of commitment to each other, to suppliers, customers and other groups is important. There is no mention of community in the diagram yet most if not all felt it was a strong, even vital connection to the world of work. We need to find ways to encourage emotional connections, belief is important.

Looking ahead what would we like to see (comments from our table and the wider group)?

There is a growing expectation for dialogue; a wider workplace acceptance of social tools may be needed

Engagement and Wellbeing appearing on the MBA syllabus

It’s not how we manage – more like how we work (the word manage came in for a lot of stick and several people asked for it to be removed from the diagram – old fashioned)

Stronger connections with community, wellbeing and customer service

We are still doing this to people; it’s not a way of life yet (even after decades of discussion)

We manage too much

Metrics don’t make a story

Leadership (at all levels) means more than management

Creativity and innovation if allowed make a big difference. Few organisations allow for the disruption and mess that creativity and innovation bring so if your organisation punishes mistakes (and many do) then perhaps creativity and innovation are not for you.

Small is significant. No programmes required try some small behaviour changes and see what works.

Part two

engagement taskforce meeting slide two

We were shown these sub groups of activity which the taskforce wishes to develop and progress, and were invited to choose one and have a conversation about it in our groups. We were a little greedy and talked about the barriers to engagement and engagement through adversity.

We felt that how well (or otherwise) redundancies are handled makes a big difference. Bad news is bad enough without it being cloaked in false hope and dishonesty. Be straight with people and tell them as much as you possibly can. Authenticity is partly about sharing pain and discomfort. Big rises in exec pay and huge share options against a backdrop of cuts is disengaging.

We talked briefly about whether current management training schools people to lose touch. We acknowledged that managing beyond KPIs and targets is not easy and the emotional economics of work need to be explored. There should be more acknowledgement of the many differences between us.

A story was told whereby two separate local authorities devised and implemented a parking charges scheme for employees. One was imposed, the other suggested and agreed upon. Needless to say the involving approach worked – people were happy to adopt the scheme and get on with other more important things. In the imposed case, the charging scheme is still causing problems.

Management involves coercion – lead through involvement

Underperformance is not dealt with well, and in adverse times it seems that it’s dealt with even worse (perhaps as companies use underperformance to directly reduce staffing numbers – rather than deal with the root cause of the situation?).

Loyalty and respect have to flow all ways, short termism is a problem. Tough times lead to draconian compliance, fewer chances for self-determination and risk aversion thrives. Be risk astute.

Here are a few other things that buzzed around the room and caught my attention

Work is increasingly no longer at the centre of people’s lives

Innovation is not an ideas box – crowd source stuff. There was talk of other cultures, e.g. China, which has a greater sense of community connectedness, where innovation works better as people are mindful not just of themselves, but of others too.

Over engagement leads to burnout. Wellbeing is partly about sustaining purpose and aspiration.

Community connectedness is important

A results only working environment versus possible unravelling of workplace social fabric

What next?

Folks were encouraged to make connections and get involved with activities they felt strongly about. This is a good thing and I hope it will lead to more focus and less talking and more action. There will be another taskforce meeting next week and more news to follow on that (quickly I hope).

A couple of personal observations

Lots of emphasis on creating a movement not another model. I quite like that. Lots of emphasis and pushing for case studies and evidence. I’m much less keen on that. As far as I’m concerned there’s sufficient evidence that the previous 100 years of management and coercion have produced less than satisfactory employee and customer experiences. I’d rather get on and co-create new ways of working with those people and companies who are interested, and let the rest stumble along until they either realise they need a new direction, or fade from view.

I’m turned off by the apparent need to turn this thing into a diagram. I prefer pictures and stories personally.

At the first of these meetings I observed that almost all the participants were white, seemingly middle class folk. It’s very rare these days that I find myself in a group of that size and think I am one of the younger ones in attendance. I contacted the taskforce team after this first meeting to pass on this and a few other observations. The make-up of the group seems largely unchanged. This taskforce group are the now of work; we are not the future of work. I will ask again that the group be infused with some youth and cultural diversity. The group may well be experienced, and it also has lots to learn I’m sure.

I will be seeking to get more involved in ‘Barriers to Engagement’. I’ll keep you posted. Oh, and if you made it this far, well done!