The Business Execution Blog

The Business Execution Blog


November, 2008 Archive


November 30th, 2008

Make it Simple, Fun and Relevant – Part 1

Often when meeting with customers and prospects I get the question: how do we make SuccessFactors so easy to use for managers and employees across the world? The question always arises from HR pros when I explain that we don’t build SuccessFactors for them, but rather for busy managers and individual contributors around the world. Fail to make it easy to use and no one will use it. Simple. No usage means no transactions, which means no strategic data. This leaves managers and executives in the dark when it comes to making decisions around the biggest cost to businesses today – people.

No one can afford to be blind sighted when it comes to their people. Now more than ever, with so much need for restructuring and resizing, this is critical. Our approach to designing the SuccessFactors Suite simply has to be different from “design for super users,” those who use the same tools day in and day out. It doesn’t matter much though if it’s hard to use, if users spend all their time figuring it out.

I decided to ask one of our User Interface leaders how we actually make it so easy and rewarding for people to use SuccessFactors. User Experience Manager Andrew Wong was pleased to share this with us. There are three pillars to the SuccessFactors approach to design:

  1. User Involvement – Over the years, SuccessFactors has conducted volumes of research, including usability testing, focus groups, site visits, customer interviews, surveys, and usage data analysis. We talk to companies of all sizes, customers and non-customers alike. We also talk with end users — the managers and employees who use our product — not only HR professionals, whose challenges are often different than the everyday challenges that our end users face. You can often find us performing usability testing at trade shows and at our annual SuccessConnect user conference.
  2. Innovation – We value the creative process and innovation, and we believe that innovation is what significantly differentiates SuccessFactors from products that stick to a more conventional approach. We constantly challenge ourselves to solve problems better than how they’ve been solved before, and we do not settle for “me-too.” Our NEXTlabs™ is a testament to our commitment to innovation. “New” and “exciting” are never words we avoid in our thinking. We lead with ideas, and we embrace change.
  3. Corporate values – Another way we differentiate ourselves is by designing in a manner consistent with our founding principles: measurable customer success and delight, superior excellence, and constant improvement (Kaizen!). We also align our goals throughout the company and enforce our Rules of Engagement (including our “no jerks” rule) to ensure that we are all working well together, with nothing but our customers’ best interests at heart.

Our latest product, Stack Ranker, features many user-friendly design elements – it is visually appealing, easy to use, provides all the relevant information a manager requires at a glance, and strives for simplicity (see the screenshot). The Stack Rank appears clearly and cleanly on the right-hand side of screen. Easy-to-understand results will drive usage.

Our design pillars form the foundation of our truly User-Centered Design approach to building fun and easy to use software. Next week Andrew will share with us the 8 principles that drive our success in user interface design. We want our customers to get the most value out of their investment – creating a great user experience helps us to ensure that the system is used so customers will have a rich source of data from which to make their most important people-related decisions.

November 19th, 2008

Gen-Probe Proves Companies can Win Through People

We often talk about the advantages of using talent and performance management systems to drive results and gain a competitive edge over other organizations. Our research and the research of our thought leader partners shows how human capital management really works, but sometimes nothing speaks better to the impact of people and performance management than a success story.

One question we often get is exactly how much improvement can I expect from talent and performance management systems. SuccessFactors Research engaged with Gen-Probe over a year ago to develop a case to show them how they could drive improvement in their organization through people. After successfully implementing SuccessFactors, the results have been very impressive.

  • 10% Increase in the retention of high performers
  • 37% Decrease in the retention of low performers
  • 20% Increase in the employees who felt they had a good understanding of how their pay is determined
  • 19% Increase in employees who understand the measure used to evaluate performance

Furthermore, Gen-Probe was able to reform their compensation process. High performers could now earn 150% of their bonus awards, while low performers were limited to less than 100%. In fact the visibility and transparency built into the system allowed Gen-Probe to look at the total distribution of merit and bonus pay, as well provide immediate insight into performance appraisals.

How did Gen-Probe drive change in their organization? Then recently answered this question in an article about the success of their performance management system:

“The new performance management system focused on four critical elements. The first was to provide support for defining and aligning individual goals with Gen-Probe corporate goals. The second was to provide frequent opportunities for feedback to maintain focus on achieving the already-established goals. The action plan also focused on a rewards system that tied achievement of individual and corporate goals to the allocation of merit and bonus awards. Lastly, the plan focused on strengthening the foundational skills for all employees and managers to effectively communicate goals, performance expectations and address issues before they become hurdles to achieving results.”

Can you afford to let your competitors gain that kind of advantage? Particularly now, with the economy slowing and companies renewing a focus on cost and performance, talent and performance management is critical to driving success. Companies who cede this advantage will emerge from the slow economy weaker and less competitive. Gen-Probe has proved that when companies take human capital management seriously, they win.

November 17th, 2008

Stack Ranking Employees Works

Now more than ever, organizations need to optimize their workforce in today’s economic climate of falling revenues and shrinking profits. Companies have long used stack-ranking to manage their people and identify employees to manage out or up, GE for example categorizes their workers as being top, middle and low performers with 20% high, 70% middle, and 10% low performer distribution. They regularly manage out the bottom 10%. Stack ranking is a powerful tool, but does it work? 

Professor of management at Drake University in Iowa, Steve Scullen, found that forced ranking, including the firing of the bottom 5% or 10%, results in an impressive 16% productivity improvement.

Companies that are able to quickly compare the performance of their people to find high and low performers have an advantage over those who cannot. Low performers actually cost the company money, so when a business manages them out, they see an immediate benefit. The opportunity cost is even higher. If high performers contribute about 5 times as much as low performers, as our friend and thought leader Dr. Peter Cappelli has found in his research, the opportunity costs is huge. Imagine how much more value the company could generate if they could replace low performers with high performers.

Stack Ranker

These kinds of optimizations are on everyone’s mind in todays slowing economic environment. SuccessFactors decided to tailor a solution for optimizing the workforce by building a tool that allows managers to stack rank their employees.

Of course stack ranking isn’t just about managing out low performers, but it is also about ensuring that you are able to find and cultivate your best talent. Those top performers who contribute 5 times as much as the low performers should be rewarded, leaders should be identified and trained. Competencies should be compared and managed across teams to ensure that the right capabilities are in place. Stack ranking is a great tool not only for optimizing your workforce, but also for building it. 

Already rich with performance management data, the SuccessFactors Stank Ranker helps managers to:

  • Visually Rank Talent – Instantly identify your top-ranked players so that you can optimize your team by motivating and cultivating your best people. Give limited rewards to top employees that deserve extra recognition, or quickly identify low performers to let go when faced with tough layoff decisions.
  • Go Beyond Performance Reviews –Stack Ranker expands the formal review process by letting you capture new characteristics for a more holistic assessment. For example, you can incorporate factors like criticality of the role into ranking or other criteria to serve as tie breakers.
  • Assess Everyone at Once – Quickly assess your entire team across critical competencies and criteria in real time — all in one place. Side-by-side rating promotes more accurate relative assessments.

Stack Ranker was designed to help companies act now. Organizations simply cannot afford to carry the dead weight of low performers in these uncertain times. Furthermore, they need to move quickly or they will be outflanked by their competitors. Tools like Stack Ranker are critical to succeeding in today’s environment.

November 13th, 2008

Lessons from the Holiday Season: Optimize, don’t Just Cut

 

Everyone puts on a little weight during good times – vacations and holidays are notorious times for over eating, relaxed behavior and good feelings. Well for businesses, the vacation has come to an abrupt end. After years of easy credit and a booming housing market, the bottom has fallen out from under companies more quickly than anyone had expected, and the economic uncertainty looks as if it will continue for some time.

What will businesses do with all of the excess weight they put on during the good times, when they were content and growing with the rest of the economy? Well for those of us who have had to lose holiday pounds before, we know there are a lot of ways to get back in shape. The obvious solution is calorie restriction, cutting back on the excess – but this technique alone will leave you weaker than before you put on the weight. When the economy recovers, companies who depend on cutting calories alone will emerge weak and unable to take full advantage of the changing and improving business environment. Cutting calories alone leads to smaller muscles and a weaker body.

The best approach to losing weight is an approach that optimizes your body. Sure calories will have to be cut, but if you plan and execute carefully, you can ensure that you don’t lose any muscle. You might even emerge leaner and stronger than before. This should be the goal of every company planning layoffs and workforce adjustments for the economic downturn. To optimize the workforce in a downturn you should:

  • Lay off people based on data from the performance management system, so your strongest “muscles” aren’t lost
  • Find the positions within the company that are critical to your success, and ensure that successors are named for those positions
  • Identify the key competencies that drive your success, and ensure that they are cultivated during the downturn, so you can emerge with strength

Companies often focus too much on cutting, or building one part of their organization. Strong arms won’t help you win a footrace. Optimizing the whole body is the best way to lose holiday weight – for companies it is the difference between remaining competitive and falling behind. Use the data in your talent and performance management system to optimize your workforce. Now more than ever companies need to be smart about managing their resources, including their talent.

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