• Thursday, March 28, 2024
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Potential Pitfalls to Succession Management

Treat others how you/they want to be treated: The workplace

Succession planning helps an organization to manage its pool of candidates. The aim is to keep track of the number and quality of business leaders who can contribute to their effective performance. Subject to the succession management’s scope and the organization’s culture and readiness, note the following pitfalls to a formal succession planning program and consider them when implementing your succession management program.

First, is the resistance to change. Succession planning is one initiative that can be done incrementally. Enhance existing selection and performance management programs to show the value and importance of building internal bench strength. Introduce the ideas of waning skill sets in the labor market and internal talent that can quickly be developed.

Lack of support by persons of influence. If outspoken naysayers get the floor, succession planning can be a tough sell. Find the source of their skepticism, and present facts and figures to support the program and neutralize issues such as concerns that jobs are at risk, worries about costs or loss of productivity, tendencies to promote knowledge-hoarding rather than knowledge-sharing, and organizational silos.

Lack of equal employment opportunity. Succession planning involves preparing employees for possible future roles; it is no pre-selection. If the succession planning program is rooted in diversity and equal employment opportunity, employees’ ultimate selection to fill new roles will focus. During the succession planning process, choose positions generally filled from within, work to identify several potential feeder roles and incumbents, and ensure everyone knows that succession planning is intended to match the organization’s needs with the employees’ interests it makes no promises.

Weakness in performance management. If the organization has not had a consistent practice of giving honest performance feedback, not only is that an obstacle for succession planning, it is a bad business practice that needs immediate correction. Educate managers about the legal and ethical reasons for giving honest feedback. Employees deserve to know when their behavior or performance is meeting expectations. They also deserve the chance to improve their behavior or performance when it does not. There are four essential factors in an effective performance management program:

1. A feedback process that is continuous and timely throughout the review period, so employees know how they are doing and what is expected.

2. A dialogue that includes performance feedback measured against clear and specific goals and expectations established at the outset of the performance management cycle.

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3. A documented process for acknowledging the performance review process’s outcomes between the manager and the employee.

4. A two-way individual conversation between the manager and the employee (preferably face-to-face) at least once a year.

Manager resistance. To some extent, a succession planning process involves asking managers to prepare to let go of their best performers. Approach that challenge by:

1. Fostering a sense that keeping talent within the organization, wherever it may migrate, is the goal.

2. Holding managers accountable for developing their subordinates and recognizing those who excel in that area.

3. Educating managers that employees will recognize as managers-of-choice those who invest in their subordinates’ development will likely have their choice of internal candidates as job vacancies arise.

Lack of time. This issue represents the age-old conflict between time spent and time invested. Consider the amount of time spent recruiting, selecting, training, and managing new employees, not to mention the assimilation learning curve. Compared with those time-consuming activities, the investment in developing incumbents’ skill sets does not seem so daunting. Time invested in succession planning prepares the employee for a more comprehensive array of responsibilities within the organization.

Organizational silos. One way to address silos in succession planning is to start with a partially shared function among one or more business units. Find leaders who believe in knocking down silos to see if they have jobs that could be feeders into another area. Explore the possibility of temporary assignments in other areas that could be used to develop employees for future roles.

We are rewarding the wrong behavior. Many employees seem reluctant to share their expertise with others. Often their self-esteem is linked to being the local expert. However, it is in the organization’s best interest to reward employees who willingly share their expertise and demonstrate an interest in learning new things.

Lack of leadership participation. Cultivating high-level commitment and support will have a positive influence on the succession planning program. It involves not merely making time to provide learning opportunities for employees; it also involves leading the culture toward lowering barriers and creating a learning organization.

Non-alignment with business objectives. When selecting job functions for the program and methods for the transfer of learning, be sure to align them with business operations, practices, and schedules.

Short time thinking. Succession planning is a 12 to 36-month process. Encourage team members and leaders to think long-term and big picture during the program development. Reinforce the concept of preparation and no pre-selection.

Lack of Agility. Responsiveness to new situations, including unexpected ones, and resilience in the face of conditions in the external environment are traits of successful organizations. Having all your knowledge or skill “eggs” in one person’s “basket” is never good business practice.

No plans for knowledge transfer. Succession planning includes identifying skills and competencies next-generation employees will need to function well in critical positions. Developing systems to identify and transfer that knowledge and shorten learning curves should be a primary objective. Partner with a trainer to determine the best way to promote learning.

Limiting job development to promotion exercise. Succession planning might include job expansion, in addition to job progression. That is, if traditional step-by-step succession planning does not work for certain functions, consider individual skill development opportunities such as enrichment, enlargement, and cross-training as sources for enhancing employee skill sets.

Sobande is a Lawyer and Leadership Consultant. He is a Doctoral Candidate at Regent University, Virginia Beach, USA, for a Ph.D. in Strategic Leadership. Contact him by Email: [email protected]