Getting
the right culture fit through Competencies Chitra Narayanan
How Volvo Eicher Commercial Vehicles is betting on eight competencies to
build its talent
Hiring has never been as tough as now
for employers. Job roles are changing, the digital era requires new skill sets
and one cannot just make a call about the direction the company might take. So
what do hiring managers do? Some go by credentials while recruiting. Others swear
by competencies.
Competency-based hiring is not new.
Several companies have a list of competencies – both position-specific and
organisational – that they look for when they hire. For some companies
integrity may be the top competency. For others it may be interpersonal skills,
and so on.
But Volvo Eicher Commercial Vehicles
(VECV), the joint venture between the Volvo group and Eicher Motors, decided to
overhaul its approach to competencies.
“All organisations have competencies
in some form or other. We wanted to be different. Instead of doing the usual
leadership, communication, relationship management type of competencies, we
thought of coming up with a list that would stick in the minds of our people,”
says Kinjal Choudhary, senior vice-president & CHRO, VECV.
After deliberations the list of eight
competencies it drew up was Scientist, Introspector, Executor, Collaborator,
Owner, Strategist, Magician and Innovator. The idea was to make the names
catchy so that they would stick in people’s minds. “It was not an HR initiative
alone but the entire leadership was involved in drawing up the list,” says
Choudhary.
Though the names sounded fascinating,
people did not understand what they meant. So then the company had to undertake
a massive communication exercise to translate what these meant. That a Magician
denoted someone who could draw clarity from ambiguity and do seemingly
impossible tasks. A Scientist was a curious person who would keep asking
questions.
To explain it simply, it took clips
from movies, sports and advertisements. For example, for Owner, a person who
assumes accountability for overall results, it showed clips from the movie
Guru, and how he follows through his passion despite criticism and discouragement.
But then when it was time to use these
competencies in hiring, the company faced another challenge. How would the
eight competencies work across levels? “The competency of ‘Owner’ at CXO levels
will be different from that at an entry level. You could not apply the same
definitions for a shop floor person and an SVP (senior vice president),” points
out Choudhary.
To resolve this, the company came up
with varying definitions for different levels. It also created a huge question
bank to draw out candidates’ competencies.
In competency-based interviews,
questions are specific, with the intention of drawing out anecdotes. “The
functional interviews tells you what the candidate has done. In a competency
interview, you get a view of how the task was done,” explains Choudhary.
For instance, you might ask “How did
you take a strategic view of GST implementation in your company?”
These are specific instance-based
questions where the candidate cannot fudge. Second, it tells us the behaviour
of the person at work, and you can match it with the desired behaviours, he
says.
Also, the questions are designed in a
way to bring out the individual contribution vs team effort. Right now, VECV is
in the midst of training all its hiring managers.
“People are more comfortable doing
functional interviews than competency-based interviews. So this is an
entrenched kind of change process,” admits Choudhary.
But it’s not just for hiring that VECV
has introduced the competencies. The idea is to use it across the employee life
cycle in the firm. “We want people to use this in everyday work,” says
Choudhary.
Even before it was introduced for
hiring, VECV began using competencies it in its performance appraisals.
“We had our mid-year appraisal, basis
the competencies. Typically people talk about attitudes and so on. But we made
sure everybody got a 360-degree feedback basis the competencies,” says
Choudhary.
VECV plans to use the competencies to
decide on promotions. “We are preparing the ground for that.” It will also be
used for career growth and development within the organisation, he says.
So what’s the ROI of a
competency-based approach? Is the pay-off worth it?
The ROI is you get a better culture
fit. During hiring, a functional interview will only tell you whether the
person has domain knowledge. But in a competency-based interview, you can gauge
the behaviours that will fit within the organisation,” answers Choudary.
What are the possible challenges in
implementation? “One of the pitfalls of competency-based evaluation is people
go by flash-in-the-pan situations,” he says. If somebody fails at something,
they are labelled as not good at executing. But competencies have to be mapped
over a longer period of time. “Competencies are manifested behaviours at the
workplace over a period of time, explains Choudhary.
That may be so – but doesn’t the
competency approach add too much complexity? After all, VECV has had to spend 4,500
man hours of training to make each and every one of its 2,137 employees
understand the eight competencies. And implementation is a nightmare.
“Competency becomes critical when you
focus on culture,” defends Choudhary. And today culture is very important when
we are facing tectonic changes, he says. For instance, commercial vehicles
industry will soon be hit hard when electric vehicles replace diesel or when
self-driving vehicles come into play.
“We will not be able to survive unless
our people demonstrate certain behaviours,” argues Choudhary.
That, in fact, was one of the raisons
d’ĂȘtre of introducing this approach. It’s still early days – but VECV’s
experiment and how it tides through the coming changes could be a case study.
Source | Business Line | 4th January 2018
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi
Institute of Management
No comments:
Post a Comment