The Business Execution Blog

The Business Execution Blog


September, 2008 Archive


September 25th, 2008

Go Team – Get Real Performance from Virtual Teams

At SuccessFactors, it is easy to take virtual teams for granted. We began with a global vision, and from the start worked across geographies in virtual teams. Simply put, we got things done – the actual mechanisms, e-mail, PRDs, webcasts, were not nearly as important as the attitudes of the team members. Not long ago SuccessFactors Research, along with Jim Ware and Charles Grantham from the Future of Work, took a look at how the workforce is changing. One clear result – more people will be working remotely. The days of knocking on the office door, or ducking into a coworker’s cube to ask a question are coming to an end. 

The question arises, as companies expand opportunities to work remotely, how can they ensure that their virtual teams stand up and deliver? How can companies recreate the seamless virtual teams that I have taken for granted at my time with SuccessFactors? The folks over at OnPoint Consulting have done some research on virtual teams and found that successful teams have members that:

  • Show Initiative
  • Are willing to assume Leadership/Responsibility
  • Share Processes
  • Have a clear understanding of their contribution to the company
  • Provide timely feedback
  • Are willing to  expend extra effort
  • Work together well
  • Help each other
From our perspective, looking at what makes a successful team is only half of the equation. To get great performance, companies should think about why the aformentioned attributes are so important. When people are working remotely it is much easier to:

  • Pass responsibility around to others
  • Disappoint another person on the team (it is a lot harder when you have to see their angry face at the lunch table, etc.)
  • Make excuses
  • Let communications break down
It is said that a chain is only as strong its weakest link – imagine if that chain were stretched around the globe – each link is even more critical. This one reason SuccessFactors has developed social networking tools within its product suite. In addition to keeping teams aligned with group goals and clear, performance objectives, social networking tools encourage the kind of positive interactions that build strong teams. Check out our NEXTlabs website, to see mockups of some innovations that could enhance communication, transparency, and teamwork.
Remember, at the end of the day “virtual” teams need to deliver “real” results. It is critical to tackle the challenges of working in virtual teams early, before team members develop bad working habits that drag down team performance.
September 11th, 2008

Moving Mountains

Well, it has been said that man cannot move mountains. Technically, this is true – fortunately  people are more flexible than their geography. In fact, with great human capital management, you most definitely can move mountains, and should. Let’s talk about the mountain facing managers in most companies, the performance Bell curve.

Looking at low, medium, and high performers, it’s obvious that the lion’s share of people in a company will be middle-performers (particularly a company with many employees). They are the mountain.

A lot of companies unintentionally focus on their top and bottom performers – the very worst are let go or disciplined and retrained, while the best performers are recognized and rewarded – but what about everyone in between? More often than not, they are ignored because they are doing “okay” and because fixing performance problems in the middle of the curve requires more effort and greater understanding of the individuals.

Managing the high and low performers is important, but rarely matches the impact of moving the mountain in the middle of the curve. If the bulk of your workforce is in the middle performing, logically the most of your people costs are there, and therein lay your greatest potential for improvement. Think about it numerically, if your company has 35 slackers, 200 middle performers, and 35 rock stars, increasing the performance of those 200 middle performers would have a far greater impact than say, firing or retraining the 35 slackers!

Moving that mountain, shifting that bell curve to the right, increases the performance of everyone, including the heart of most workforces – the middle performers.

Companies should focus on moving the entire curve to the right, elevating the performance of everyone. Pulling that curve to the right takes some effort, but the potential payoff is tremendous. To start, you can lure some of your middle performers to the right with a transparent, and strong pay for performance system. If it is clear that higher performers are getting a lot more than the middle performers, real impetus to perform can be created – in fact an article highlighting our research on the spread of pay was recently published in Talent Management magazine, which clearly shows companies with a larger spread of pay between performance levels do better!

Of course pay for performance is just a start. Giving your middle performers clear career paths, opportunities to advance their skills, and managing their competencies can help you to pull the performance curve at your company to the right. Maybe a person needs training, would fit better in another department, or has an issue with his or her manager, etc. With great HCM, you can get to the heart of the problem and move mountains in your organization.

Solutions Technology Customers About Resources