Perspectives from the Kinetix team on HR, Talent Acquisition & Management, life lessons and whatever else we want.
Energizing the Workplace
"If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed." -Mark Twain
Kinetix CEO to Present at 2010 Georgia CPA Conference
ATLANTA, Aug. 17, 2010 – Kinetix, the RPO for growth companies, is pleased to announce that CEO Shannon Russo will be offering attendees at the upcoming 2010 Southeastern Accounting Show (SEAS) keen insight into the differences among the generations in today’s workforce and how those differences affect a wide range of workforce management decisions.
In “Understanding the Generations at Work,” Russo, a nationally recognized speaker and writer, will give perspectives on:
· Enhancing comprehension of how generational differences affect people in the workplace,
· Promoting skills to foster intergenerational communication, and
· Developing abilities to manage diverse working styles across generations in the same office.
“For the first time in history, we have four generations at work in the U.S. workplace at one time, and there’s a great competitive advantage to having an appreciation for the differences in the events and experiences that have shaped them and how those differences affect their attitudes and beliefs in the workplace, and how that can affect everything from an organization’s planning for job training to succession planning,” Russo says.
Click here to read more about the 4 generations.
Tags: career, HR, press release
Four More Reasons the Right RPO KO’s In-House Recruitment for Mid-Size Businesses
Despite common thinking and modern myths, Recruitment Process Outsourcing can be a perfect fit for a mid-size organization – a company with as few as 100 hires annually. The days are gone when the arguments against this kind of professional partnership could stand up to strong argument.
In the first installment of their executive brief, “An Eight-Round Knockout: The Right RPO KO’s Mid-Size In-House Recruitment “An Eight-Round Knockout: The Right RPO KO’s Mid-Size In-House Recruitment,” the experts at Kinetix, the RPO for growth companies, explained why mid-size organizations have been neglected by most RPOs and shattered the first four of the eight most common arguments against an RPO being a good partner for a mid-size organization:
1. Recruitment Is Core to Our Business
2. With an RPO, We’ll Lose Control over Our Recruitment Process
3. With an RPO, We’ll Lose Control over Our Hiring Decisions
4. We Have Relationships with Specific Recruitment Vendors for Specific Needs
In this new installment, Kinetix delivers solid punches against the remainder of the most common arguments against partnering with an RPO if you’re a mid-size organization. The final arguments are:
Prevention and Wellness Lead Benefit Designs
HR professionals have been trying to control health care costs by continually tweaking the medical plan designs, which result in shifting more costs to employees but do not reduce the cost of health care. That is why the new focus needs to be on prevention and wellness.
While this is not a new concept there needs to be more focus on it in order for it to make a difference. Some of the moderate plan designs (such as 100% coverage for preventative testing and wellness exams and intrusive disease management) have not moved the needle enough. Also, discounts to health clubs and gyms as well as smoking cessation support have failed to influence the behaviors of most employees. It is time to take a more direct approach. Watson Wyatt conducted a survey in 2009 to see what the major trends for 2010 would be. There were five trends that were noted:
- Higher out-of-pocket costs
- Consumer-directed health plans
- Consolidation of health plan offerings

- Closer eye on spousal and dependent coverage
- Prescription drug benefits
- Greater use of incentives to stay healthy
The last trend, greater use of incentives to stay healthy, has been growing over the past three years according to the report, How Employers Use Incentives to Keep Employees Healthy: Perks, Programs and Peers, which is conducted by Health2 Resources, a firm providing health care trend research.
“During tough economic times, employees who take control of their health and are more engaged and active in their own health are valuable assets,” says Katherine H. Capps, president of Health2 Resources. “We are not talking about $5 here or there. We are talking about serious investment into productivity, made by employers with as few as 200 employees, for as much as $1,400 a year per employee. Employers are taking control of health care costs by creating smart, effective new strategies to keep employees healthy, and to keep employees at work.”
Employers are not only making greater investments in wellness they are calculating their ROI. The percentage of US companies calculating their ROI on wellness investments has increased from 14% in 2007 to over 73% in 2009 with most, 83%, reporting at least a 1:1 return. These companies are rewarding achievement both during the program and continuing after the program is completed. This measurement of ROI has lead to an increase in investment with the average in 2009 being $329 per employee and ranging from $1 per pound lost to up to a $1,500 reduction in premiums. Another trend is the extension of these types of offering to dependents including disease management programs which have typically not been available to dependents.
These programs must start with a comprehensive confidential health history questionnaire. Two-thirds of all size companies are offering this type of health assessment to their employees and three-fourths of them are also offering incentives for their employees to participate in these questionnaires. These incentives range up to $300 annually with a small percent, 10% to 15%, offering more. While company size does matter in whether incentives are offered, it does not dictate the value of the incentives. Some companies with as few as 210 employees are offering incentives valued at $1,400 a year because they see the benefit to keeping their employees healthy. This benefit not only is health care cost reduction but also shows up in reduced number of sick days and increased productivity.
Programs are being designed to prevent and manage chronic disease. Smoking cessation programs have been around the longest. In this latest survey more than 53% of the responding companies offer some type of smoking cessation program to their employees. Other programs such as weight loss and increased physical activity are gaining popularity as they are continually being linked to more chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. Diabetes management programs are the most popular disease management programs with over 92% of the companies surveyed offering these programs.
The biggest challenge that companies face with all of the preventive and disease management programs is how to keep them going and to keep employees involved. Like any behavior change, time is the key to success. The more you practice a new behavior the more likely it is to become a new habit. However, time is also the biggest obstacle to success. Behavior change is hard and more people cannot keep up the motivation long enough to succeed. Companies need to calculate into their plan design ways to keep the motivation up. This may require an added investment up front but should give a greater return on that investment in the long run.
“Employers are becoming more sophisticated about measuring the return on investment from wellness and disease management programs, and today’s economic outlook dictates that these programs bring a positive ROI,” says Sean Sullivan, president and CEO of the not-for-profit Institute for Health and Productivity Management. “No other kind of health management program has been given the same scrutiny as health and productivity management in measuring its effectiveness in reducing total health-related costs, including sick days, disability claims and impaired performance at work. Employees are too valuable a human capital investment for companies to take their health and productivity for granted.”
The above quote is the best conclusion I could come up with for this post. As managers of our companies talent we need to be proactive in the approach to preventative heath care and continued wellness of our employees, not just to reduce health insurance cost but to protect our companies greatest asset, its employees. There is a skill shortage that we will really feel when the economy recovers and added to the increase of global competition, HR professionals need to do everything they can to retain their skilled talent and keep that talent productive. I hope each of you accept these challenges and make a true difference in your companies.
Diane has over twenty five hears of HR experience, twelve of which were at the HR Executive level. As Director of HR Solutions for Kinetix, Diane uses her extensive experience to work with organizations to solve their business issues with talent solutions and working directly with the Executive Team to design an integrated Talent Strategy that aligns with their Business Strategy. Diane is a thought leader in her profession and has been awarded the SHRM-Atlanta Lifetime Achievement Award and the SHRM Nation Pinnacle Award. Connect with Diane on her LinkedIn profile.
Tags: Benefits, healthcare costs, HR, wellness programs
Operational Excellence Depends on Cultivating Talent’s Strengths
As if the global economic situation isn’t enough to keep an executive up at night, concern abounds when you consider that only 20% of employees working at large organizations use their strengths on a daily basis. Since that poll was taken, downsizings, layoffs and restructuring have become every day occurrences. As a result, already compromised organizations now find themselves with fewer employees and the same, or even larger, amounts of business-critical work to be done – even as the majority of their employees’ capabilities remain untapped.
Globally, only 20% of employees working in large organizations we surveyed feel that their strengths come into play every day. Most bizarre of all, the longer an employee stays with an organization and the higher he climbs the traditional corporate ladder, the less likely he is to strongly agree that he is playing to his strengths. Marcus Buckingham and Donald O. Clifton, Ph.D. brought those startling results to light after The Gallup Organization polled 198,000 employees working in business units of 36 large corporations. The pair later expounded on the survey results in their breakthrough tome, “Now, Discover Your Strengths.”
Survey respondents who “strongly” agreed with the statement that they were working from their strengths produced improved results over those who did not work from their strengths, according to the poll. Consider these poll results:
- 50% of the employees’ business units experienced lower employee turnover;
- 38% were more likely to work in the organizations’ more productive business units; and
- 44% of their operations posted higher customer satisfaction scores.
How well can your company compete with a staff working at 20% of its true capacity? If your answer is “Not very well,” now is an optimal time to turn to a proven human resources approach that leverages each individual’s strengths to create high performance teams. In competitive global markets, mining the massive opportunity buried in the 80% of unused strength-based capacity can mean the difference between survival and market dominance.
Precision-Based Team Building
One approach to achieving more with fewer employees centers on precision-based team building – an innovative effort that creates strength-based working units. Precision teaming takes into account the strengths and weaknesses of each employee before creating the working unit.
This approach flies in the face of “traditional” human resources utilization which often spends the majority of HR staff’s time addressing the weaknesses of so-called “problem employees.” In precision teaming, each potential team member’s strengths and weaknesses become part of the overall team’s capabilities. Taking the precision teaming approach empowers HR executives to compensate for one team member’s weakness by selecting another team member with strength in that same area.
Literally changing employees’ brains
Creating strength-based teams not only allows each team member to come to the assignment from a strong position, it leverages the total potential power of the collaborative collective. In fact, neurological research points out, refocusing employees’ attention via strength-based teaming can actually change the molecular structure of their brains.[1] Schwartz writes, “…directed, willed mental activity can clearly and systematically alter brain function.” He explained saying, “The exertion of willful effort generates a physical force that has the power to change how the brain works and even its physical structure.”
The strength-based approach to teaming pays dividends to employees and their employers now and in the future as the employees’ brain-resident priorities are literally re-prioritized. “Therefore, to continue to rehearse counterproductive behaviors reinforces the physical structures in the brain that create the urge toward that behavior. A strengths approach encourages individuals to focus on the correct use of their innate abilities which subsequently reorders the brain to produce behaviors indicative of excellence,” Schwartz concluded.
Preparing to create teams
Implementing strength-based teaming relies heavily on three key HR-based activities – a stringent skills assessment which looks at individual potential through a “collective-oriented” lens, aligning skilled capacity with the company’s business goals and a compensation structure that incents lateral moves.
Creating high performance teams depends on an accurate and up-to-date inventory of each employee’s strengths and weaknesses. Several automated tools for skills assessment, including but not limited to StrengthsFinder® 2.0, Halogen eLearning Manager, Oracle’s PeopleSoft Enterprise Human Capital Management and a range of inhouse-developed systems, can streamline data collection and speed analysis. Attempting to create teams with strength data only is akin to trying to complete a puzzle while missing 50% of the pieces.
Before teams can be created, Human Resources experts need to review the organization’s business goals. Knowing the direction in which the company is headed, especially in respect to product, technology and market lifecycles, is vitally important to creating productive teams. For example, if a large number of employees currently work in product areas, industry markets or technologies that are about to be “sunsetted” or phased out, that information influences redeployment decisions. Also, emerging products, markets or technologies that will need a fully staffed organization to be best positioned for success must be considered as well. The human resource expert can use the skills inventory to determine how much of the staff currently allotted to the sun setting areas can be assigned to the emerging offerings, even identifying the types of training needed to make the transition.
Compensation restructuring, the third recommended activity, plays a critical role in helping ensure a successful transition of motivated staff. Employees targeted for redeployment must see the new assignment as a reward and an opportunity to showcase their strengths. To do that, the compensation scheme must incent lateral moves with the same career enthusiasm and pay package as clear “advances” up the corporate ladder. In fact, the compensation package associated with lateral moves that enable the company to be more competitive in the marketplace may even outstrip those of “advancing” positions.
Conclusion
Armed with the employees’ collective’s skills inventory and its own expert analysis, Human Resources executives can create high performance teams that leverage employees’ strengths and compensate for individual’s weaknesses – all while helping to advance the company’s business and improve its bottom line. Aligning compensation with the company’s business goals will reward employees’ flexibility and reduce turnover, likely building long-term loyalty to the company. Tapping into the unmined 80% of true capacity that today goes unused not only benefits the company, it creates employees who are engaged in their work and look forward to the next challenge.
Diane Tuccito is currently the Director of HR Solutions for Kinetix and has over twenty- five years of HR experience, 10 of which were at the HR Executive level. In her current role, Diane is working with companies to solve their business issues with talent solutions. Her focus is on three main areas: Organization Design, Talent Optimization and Total Rewards.
[1] Schwartz, J., “The mind and the brain,” New York: Harper Collins, 2002.
Tags: HR, human resources, Operational Excellence, Retention, Strengths, team building
Rant: Death to the VMS
In the course of the staffing portion of our business, occasionally we are asked to be part of a VMS (vendor management system) program. While we normally decline the business at that point, for a variety of reasons we have chosen to be part of a few of these over the years. Nearly every time I regret being convinced that this next account will be different. Now I will say, with my finance background, I get the logic that managing rogue spend is important and a system can be a good way to do this, no issue here. My beef is simple – if you think that anyone involved in the process will have an improved experience or that you will get any better process or quality out of doing a standard VMS system – you are sorely mistaken. That is not to say that it cannot be done, I just have yet to see any of the big players or the system based programs do this, ever. It is all about the perceived money savings, period, the end.
Here’s a little playback from a recent experience:
they: you haven’t submitted candidates to the last 8 jobs we sent you….please sign this stating that you know that you got “0″ points for this period and that is bad….we will be reviewing vendors for high scores (submittals for jobs)
me: we stopped submitting to jobs that we do not have a direct relationship with the hiring manager because any time we did, it was a complete waste of time, we never got any feedback, never, nothing, nada… and the jobs are actually already filled by the time you give it to us thru the system anyway.
they: Well [hmph]…1st – you are NOT allowed to have direct contact with hiring managers…EVER; 2nd they are not filled when we send them, why would you possibly think that?
me: “perhaps 2 reasons: a) because that is what we do to you with those we have the relationship with e.g. the hiring managers reach out directly and we work closely with them to fill the position, then they post the job to the system…to which we submit the final candidates and they make the selection which was already determined… and b) as a result, the other jobs you send us are closed within about 24 hours of you sending them out (an impossibility if client wants to review, phone and f2f interview, etc using the system….) to us.”
they: um, I was not ready to discuss specific jobs and have not reviewed them, but I am sure that is not the case……I’ll have to check on that and get back with you….
me: “you do that…..I am sure I’ll be getting a call back real soon” {cut to crickets chirping}
Now, I may be a little harsh in my view, but is there honestly anyone (with a brain) that believes that you can do high quality recruiting with only a (usually terrible) boiler plate job description? No ability to ask questions, discuss the team, the environment, what makes someone successful in the role, and not what aspects are most important, etc. A whole world of information that is relevant both to making the best match and selling candidates on why this opportunity may be worth their time.
Second – the experience for the hiring managers is just as bad! they have to, ahem, do their normal process…. and then put the job into another system, supposedly review resumes, put in the right pay (which is usually terribly hard for some reason) and start day and time. Of all of our clients over the years…I have yet to meet a hiring manager that EVER thought this gave them higher quality talent or improved their
speed to hire…..NOT.EVEN.ONE.
That is not so say that there are not companies that have been able to merge the best of high touch and a system (we are working with one Fortune 50 now that has), but the number is staggeringly small in comparison to how many put the systems in horribly. Why is it that these companies cannot get it right, or even be in the right ball park?
Tags: HR, Talent Acquisition, Vendor Management, VMS
How not to get help….
I was getting gas for my truck the other night. A pretty simple activity today with pay at the pump and fast passes, and something that is relatively solitary – many times happily so. As I was about half way done, a young boy, about 10 or 11 years old, approached my car. I did not see him until he was standing about 3 feet from me along side my truck. I was surprised, but looked at him, smiled and said hi. He said hi and then took a step closer – he could have been in my kids’ grade school class – clean clothes, hooded sweatshirt, sneakers.
The next moment shocked me……”can I have some money?….my dad lost his job and we need help….” at which point I looked up to see his dad at the door of his truck, about 30 feet away, in the next bank of pumps. Dad did not wave, or smile, or indicate anything, except that he was paying attention.
I said no, uncomfortably…… and he turned and walked away. The dad went back to getting gas. I got back in my truck, started it up….my mind was racing. I was shook up from the event, not sure if I should be or not. I went thru a whole range of emotions – from anger, shock, frustration, fear, distress, concern (for the boy and the dad) and frustration (at them and me).
- Once I got my wits about me I realized I could have given him my card, since we do recruiting…duh – if he really needed a job….
- Anger over the dad doing that to the kid – irrespective of the true issue….
- Distress over not helping them or seeing what I could do……
- A bizarre frustration that he did not start the conversation with please or say thank you at the end….
- Sadness over the situation, but also a tinge of anger wondering if the requests was a lie…..
Am I alone here – I still am not sure if I would react differently if this happened again, but not sure if or what I should consider. Would love some input.
Shannon
Tags: background check, bio, career, HR, life lessons, truth, unemployed
Be Thankful for your Problems
In my “book” the holidays (and not simply the one we most recently
celebrated) are a time for reflection and giving thanks in more ways than one. I try every year to take time alone and with my family (especially with my children) to reflect on how blessed we are. This can be challenging during the rush of the season and the many “priorities” imposed as a result of expectations we generally put on ourselves. Add to that my children, who essentially live in a lake wobegon world, and invariably we have conversations about why they cannot have everything they want, and why we are giving things to other children (‘why don’t their parents just get it for them….?”) etc.
As well its is time for my favorite Kinetix holiday tradition of sharing a special book that inspires us as a team of people to feel better and do better. The cornerstone of this tradition is the participation of our clients and friends in making suggestions for each year’s book. Today, I wanted to share it with you as well. After carefully considering a large number of special and intriguing books, we selected “Embrace the Struggle” as one most fitting in relationship to the challenging year that has been 2009 for so many. The Author and I are convinced that in the last year the overwhelming majority of people have struggled with some kind of concern – personal, family, business, health, job, relationships – you name it.
In “Embrace the Struggle, Living Life on Life’s Terms”by Zig Ziglar and Julie Ziglar Norman, Zig posits that “it seems that struggles just happen over the course of time…the [key] question is how do you handle them?” In it, Zig is moving in his willingness to be transparent and open about how he is embracing his struggles with a brain injury and positional vertigo, the results of a fall down the stairs in his home. The remainder is a collection of inspiring stories of others who faced struggles and not only survived, but amazingly live lives more
fulfilling than they experienced before their struggles began. The book will challenge those who might be tempted to hide behind the frailties of their health or challenges of their circumstances to take positive steps toward living life fully and gracefully.
There are many good stories and messages, but my favorite was Fred Smith, for his attitude on life and this life view: “A problem is something you can do something about. If you can’t do anything about it, it’s a fact of life, and so we accept facts: we solve problems.” For me, this encapsulates the challenges and opportunities with living life on life’s terms: understanding what you cannot change and endeavouring to take something good out of every bad experience. If you are currently struggling, I hope you can take some solace and direction by accepting the “facts” of your circumstance, and focus instead on solving the problems. As hard as this may be, it will help you to move forward positively.
As hard as 2009 has been, I know that I have much to be thankful for: family and friends, including many new ones thanks to social media; the growth of our firm in such a difficult time, our clients and partners; my wonderful team and their daily contributions to name a few. I am grateful for the ability to help others and for the many people who help and support me. As we go into the holidays, this is a gentle reminder to accept the facts, solve the problems and live life with an expecation of what is to come. As Zig says: “where there is a struggle, there is life. For that we can be grateful!”
Tags: career, career search, Embrace the Struggle, HR, Inspiration, life lessons, Live life to the fullest, truth, Zig Ziglar





I am a fan of Sodexo’s talent acquisition approach from afar and I am excited to see their social media “investments” paying off so quickly. I also love the better business outcome proof. By thinking more broadly they are spending less on recruitment advertising, but gaining a broader reach while hiring apparently better candidates. Talk about a triple play! And I am impressed because they really seem to walk the talk (from what I can see). I truly believe that they are improving their company brand by the clearly improved employer brand they are building. To me they are proof of the shift happening away from traditional job boards and advertising as how the majority of companies find talent…..–toward social media as how smart companies will find their preferred talent pools. Now, you should know - I am biased as the hair on my neck is always raised when I hear the “post & wait” mantra of some of our clients – it makes me crazy!