Talent management is about having great conversations. For leadership development, those great conversations are critical to have when transitions happen. Not sure if you believe this? Then read this post. Believe it? Then read this post where I give you some resources to become better at handling these situations so they don’t happen again.
talent management
Listen: If you hear any of these 3 things you/we have a problem
Talent management is about great conversations. If you hear any of these statements coming from your own mouth or someone else’s, then there is a problem. Listen for these, figure out where it is coming from, and fix it. It is natural to have these barriers as leaders seek to have greater conversations with their people, but if we get stuck on one of these then things will get messy.
You don’t need more data
Talent management is about great conversations. I have used the Strengthsfinder assessment to facilitate the start of over 500 of these conversations. Now you can get more data from Gallup on the Strengthsfinder assessment, but you do not need more data. Here is why.
My Top 4 Learning Tools
Where do you learn? Here are my top four sources of learning. Talent management is about great conversations. What is the conversation you are having with yourself about what you need to learn today?
Greg Hartle – Wisdom from walking around
I had a chance to share a meal with Greg Hartle. Does his name sound familiar? It shouldn’t. Here is some wisdom I gained from a dinner with Greg, and the tips are relevant for anyone. They are especially relevant for people in transition because their work has gone away. Talent management starts with our perspective and willingness to shift.
Good advice for new or old grads – Effective Immediately Post 1
Talent management is about great conversations. This book not only helps new graduates understand how to apply that in the workforce, but also provided invaluable tips on how to self manage the transition to a new role. The tips provided will also be tools that can be used at any point in a career transition. This is the first post as I read the book – with my ultimate goal of writing a book review.
1 on 1’s – Do you ask this question?
Talent management is about great conversation. The most valuable conversation between a leader and a team member is the one on one. Within that conversation are three questions a leader can use to get some feedback on how they are doing. Here are the two I came up with and one that is shared from a leader in my network.
Rule 1 – Be in the same room together
Talent management is about great conversations. For leaders, it is about shutting out the other things and focusing on one person at a time. This is called a one one one, and here is a template on how to do it. Some data – parents and kids only spend about 3.5 minutes a day in meaningful conversation. So what would your habits at work say about the quality time you spend with your people?
Everyone needs a Target. Everyone!
Talent management is about great conversations. It is a mistake to assume a six figure salary means that people can be totally independent and will create their own performance expectations. The one on one template I use defines that expectation and helps people see the goal that must be attained.
It must be the shoes – Yes and No, but mostly No
Making the most of the talent in ourselves is less about learning and more about heart, attitude, and community. I received some Supeman shoes yesterday that remind me of that, and of 21 special people I was able to share a journey with over the last 106 days. The shoes are a reminder of what is really important.
Can the CEO Coach? 2 Myths that get in the way
Making a transition to a senior level leader is tough. The CEO can play a key role in success, and they can also choose to stay away until it is too late. Here are two myths that get in the way of a CEO being a coach/mentor for the success of their leaders. Talent management is about great conversations – get past these myths and you can go have one.
Questions to help the work get done (and the team to be built)
Talent management starts with what we will commit to doing and making sure we have what we need to be successful. These are also the building blocks for teamwork. Seth Godin paints a great picture of teamwork and how to get past disagreements. Here are a few more questions to help you use these to solve your disagreements and move the work/the team/your contribution forward.