Follow-up: Strategy Conference in Human Resources (spring of 2009)

The first thing I noted while checking the notes is that I didn't pay that much of an attention on what I've written. Most of the things I've written are not in my head. And that's, simply put, bad. I've slept 5 hours prior to the conference, and almost 12 after it, but my memory isn't helping me all that much two days after. Still, these are the things I noted as important: 1. (a very well arrived reminder) In getting business solutions, you should first know how to listen to the other party; 2. How to make someone change its actions (whatever that may mean):
a. Why doens't that person change? (ask) b. How can you involve that person to wish, for herself to change?
3. The best example leadership on Earth: building the pyramids; 4. In a time of crisis, HR should take care of:
a. Reducing costs (including salaries); b. Reducing personnel;
in a responsible manner; 5. It's still not too late to take proactive measures regarding the crisis; 6. Profit is King, cash is King-Kong; 7. You can have the qualities of a leader, but still not have leadership (no followers); 8. Rather than bluntly reducing one specific thing with X percent, you should optimize a process, you can get better results in such a way (analyze procedures, and work on them; the price cuts may have no relation with the current performance of a process; look carefully at the process and work on that); 9. If you have a bad working person in an organization, it's better both for your company (for obvious reasons - reduce losses) and for him to leave the company earlier; Why is it better for him? Simple: if he will leave 6 months later, in a full-manifesting crisis, he will be unprepared, and it will be hugely difficult for him to get a job at that time; Until then, he can prepare; Help him get a better job in a not-so-bad time by firing him earlier; 10. HR people should be 25% of their time on the field, talking to people; 11. Think at any task in three areas: from a tactic => to a strategy => to a context; e.g.: I can do a training (that's a tactic), which will make the team reach it's objectives better (that's a strategy), which in turn will help the company and industry perform better (context); 12. In five years' time, 80% of what HR people do today will no longer be doing; Learn to adapt. Some of the speakers saying these were the following:
  • Dr. Lisbeth CLAUS, Ph.D., SPHR, GPHR, Professor of Global HR, Willamette University, USA;
  • Anca Georgescu ALADGEM, Chief Human Resources Officer, Romtelecom;
  • Brent W. MATTSON, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, Learning & Development Executive, Enterprise Learning & Talent Management, Bank of America;
  • Dave ULRICH, Partner and co-founder The RBL Group and Professor of Business - Ross School of Business, University of Michigan;
  • Radu PANAIT, HR Vice-President, Ursus Breweries Romania.
I was late at the very first session and I had trouble identifying who said what, and also I may have poorly understood things, so I won't associate a thing being said with a speaker. How was the message for you? Did it help you understand HR a bit better? You can leave a comment below.

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