A few years ago, IBM's system for grooming
future executives had a bug. The computer industry giant
found that at times, people nominated into its "executive
resources" program
were languishing there for more than five years without landing
promotions.
So last year, Big Blue put a limit on the leadership development
program, which involves training and career consultation. Only
those individuals deemed likely to move into the executive ranks
within 18 months are now eligible, says Karen Calo, IBM's vice
president of global talent.
Calo says some feelings may have been bruised when individuals
were removed from the program. But IBM is working on another effort
to focus attention and resources on a broader swath of the company's
standout performers.
"These are really good people we don't want to lose," Calo
says.
The evolution of IBM's programs for rising
stars illustrates a broader trend in leadership development.
Efforts to identify and nurture "high potential" leaders can go awry, analysts
say, in part because organizations can put that label on too many
employees or miss good ones. At the same time, giving lots of corporate
love to "high-pos" can turn off high performers not included
in the programs and cause them to seek work elsewhere.
Striking the right balance when it comes to recognizing potential
executives may be hard, but it's vital, says leadership consultant
Cara Capretta Raymond. Shrinking tenure among chief executives
and a likely mass exodus of leaders in the near future mean companies
should start to groom individuals ages 30 and younger for the CEO
slot, says Capretta Raymond, vice president of strategy and intellectual
property at Korn/Ferry International's leadership development solutions
unit.
"Who are your next CEOs?" Capretta Raymond asked in
a presentation earlier this year. "About 50 percent of our
top leaders are going to retire in the next five years."
High-potential leader programs can take a variety of shapes, and
often include mentoring, competency development and rotating
stints in a company's key divisions. Such programs have grown
in popularity over the past dozen years or so at Fortune 500
companies, says Jeff Cohn, managing partner at consulting firm
Bench Strength Advisors. Factors behind their rise, he says,
include companies' desire to rely less on external hires, which
often fail to fit in, and a growing body of research showing
that leadership development can boost the bottom line.
The results of high-potential leader programs
have been mixed, Cohn says. "Some did it right," he says, "and
a lot of them did it wrong."
Cohn says companies can commit sins of omission
and commission with high-po programs. It's easy to leave out
promising individuals because organizations often lack consistent
ways of assessing leadership talent, he says. At the same time,
Cohn says, if companies are tagging 10 percent or more of their
managers as high-potential leaders, they are almost certainly
wasting resources. "Once
the percentage gets too high, you lose focus and squander capital," he
says. Capretta Raymond suggests narrowing high-potential programs
down to 2 percent to 3 percent of rising stars.
IBM's recent move is along these lines. The
330,000-employee company, which has about 5,000 leaders with
titles of director and above, has relied on executives to nominate
people into its executive resources program. But it became clear
that sometimes solid performers were nominated as a reward rather
than because of their legitimate near-term potential to become
IBM executives, Calo says. The new 18-month rule is meant to
help the executives make better choices. "This
isn't a science," she says. "It's a bit of an art."
Some companies are steering clear of rising-star
terminology altogether. Internet company Yahoo doesn't call anyone
a "high-po," says
Libby Sartain, the firm's senior vice president of human resources.
Sartain presents a scenario: You've found out that a colleague
has been labeled high-potential: "Think of how you'd feel," she
says. "You're going, ‘If he's a high-po, and I don't
know I'm a high-po, does that mean I'm a low-po?' "
What's more, the definition of who would truly be high-potential
leaders in a company can change dramatically based on the organization's
business goals, Sartain says. If an Internet company suddenly makes
a foray into telecommunications, employees with a background in
that industry become more valuable, she says.
Even so, Yahoo pays special attention to its
stars. A few years ago, it conducted an exercise to determine
who was crucial to the company. Co-founder Jerry Yang characterized
that pool of talent as the people Yahoo wanted to "build a moat" around
so they wouldn't leave.
Sartain and crew adopted that language, and
the Build a Moat program focuses on training and career development
of select employees. The company also identifies people with
leadership potential through performance reviews and an annual "talent calibration" session
held by senior executives.
But when it comes to an executive training program offered by
the firm, Yahoo again has an egalitarian streak. The program's
classes are open not only to individuals earmarked for possible
advancement, but to other employees as well.
A new training initiative at consumer products company SC Johnson
also looks beyond just budding leaders. SC Johnson, which makes
products including Ziploc storage bags and Windex glass cleaner,
launched a leadership skills program last year for the 300 or
so "senior leaders" just below the top executive level.
The general managers, product division heads and other participants
include both individuals identified by the company as high-potentials
as well as those without that designation.
Sherry Johnson Metz, SC Johnson's director of global leadership
development, says the firm thought it was important that all senior
leaders get training in areas such as strategic and global thinking.
To focus exclusively on high-potentials would be a mistake, she
suggests.
"We want the talent at all levels of leadership to be high-performing," Johnson
Metz says. "Not everyone is going to be moving up in the organization.
They may not want to."
IBM also is looking to expand the range of
standout employees who get particular attention. The company
already has a mentorship program for budding leaders called NextGen,
and a career-development program for up-and-coming technical
employees who are headed to positions such as "IBM fellow" or "IBM
distinguished engineer."
The Top Talent program in the works might include both business
managers and technical employees, Calo says. It is being designed
for people who are high-performing but who are not ready to be
considered for an executive post in the near term.
Such efforts for great performers are wise,
Capretta Raymond says. Companies with high-potential programs
can neglect to create development plans for what she dubs "high-pros," or "high professionals." These
are superior employees who may not be seen as future executives
but are nonetheless crucial to a company. After all, the loss of
a critical engineer or product manager can seriously set back a
firm.
At the same time, Capretta Raymond says it is critical for organizations
to pinpoint people who are CEO material and begin grooming them
at a young age. She cites research that says CEO tenure is down
to a median of five years and aging executives are going to be
heading for the golf course in droves soon, leaving many top jobs
open.
Ronan Knox, executive vice president of learning consultancy the
Forum Corp., says programs for high-potentials should tie directly
to a firm's strategy, emphasize teamwork among rising stars and
actively involve senior executives as both champions and coaches.
In addition, the initiatives should shake up old beliefs and habits.
Knox helped SC Johnson with its new program, which fostered fresh
perspectives among leaders by having them work on projects in a
Racine, Wisconsin, homeless shelter.
"What we don't want is for people to say, ‘That which
has brought me this far will carry me forward,' " he says.
Another key is plain-old patience, says Johnson
Metz at SC Johnson. She has seen companies sour quickly on a
high-potential when the individual ran into trouble in a new
role. "The whole idea
of stretch assignments is to learn and grow. Sometimes learning
doesn't look like 100 percent success," she says.
Companies also can be tripped up as they decide
whether or how to communicate high-potential status. Consultant
Cohn says that making it public throughout a company who is in
a program for up-and-comers is likely to breed internal competition.
That may be right for firms where sparring is a healthy part
of the corporate culture, he says, but wrong for more collaborative
companies. "There
is no one-size-fits-all," he says.
On the surface, at least, the notion of a high-potential leader
runs counter to one trend in management: the recognition that a
heroic, decisive CEO may be less effective for a company than the
overall leadership skills of the firm, including not only the CEO
but also top lieutenants and even rank-and-file workers.
Cohn, though, says well-crafted programs for
rising stars can shape people for this new era of leadership,
teaching skills such as persuasion. "The right high-po program is always a good
thing," he says.
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