How to Promote Potential With Success Mapping

 -  10/12/12

Many companies are surprised to learn that the skills they need already exist somewhere in their organization.

The fast pace of workplace change requires employees to rapidly adapt their skills to shifting expectations, or new roles, companies or industries. Therefore, to win in the new world of work, today’s talent must possess a flexible mindset, skills and competencies to guarantee their ongoing employability and potential.

Despite the evolution of organizational needs, recruiting processes have not advanced at the same rate. Recruiting, developing and engaging talent today require a radical rethink, and new methods and tools. Companies need to define roles not by detailed responsibilities, but by the outputs and outcomes needed to deliver against the business strategy. Job success profiles often can help talent leaders do this better than traditional job descriptions.

Job success profiles enable employers to map essential technical skills and employability competencies — traditionally known as soft skills — against expected outputs and outcomes. Employers should consider supplementing one-dimensional job descriptions with detailed requirements and a framework for how to succeed in a designated role.

Effective job success profiles do more than itemize responsibilities; they guide performance by mapping the mindsets, skills and core competencies required to deliver the desired outcomes. This allows for more effective recruiting of the right skills and matching for potential, as well as on-boarding and development, because the focus is on outcomes connected to business strategy versus a stagnant group of work duties attached to a specific job.

Employees also have a role to play. They must stay on top of the increasingly specialized skills companies require to remain attractive to employers in a demanding job market. To fine-tune skills development, job hunting and, ultimately, career-planning, individuals can create employability profiles to supplement resumes and continually update them to ensure their skills remain relevant in the external marketplace.

As a human sales tool, profiles can better communicate an individual’s value add. An effective employability profile should feature the critical skills and competencies employers seek and demonstrate the candidate’s potential to contribute successfully to a company’s overarching business goals. Demands will constantly evolve, and individuals must keep pace to ensure their skills, competencies and mindsets reflect the demands of the current workplace, and identify gaps they can take action to bridge.



how-to-promote-potential-with-success-mapping

Related Articles

  •  

From the Network

Twitter Updates


Latest Media

Five Strategies to Help Employers Navigate Health Care Reform

Jessica Saperstein, division vice president at ADP, offers practical advice for employers as they continue to grapple with the complexities of health care reform.

Branding and Big Data: Trends in Talent Acquisition

From building brand to bringing sourcing back in house, LinkedIn’s Leela Srinivasan discusses how companies find top talent.

Maximize Productivity and Efficiency with Social Technology

Social technology has enabled workforces to easily organize and share ideas, says Stephen Miles, founder and CEO of consulting firm the Miles Group. Among the potential benefits: increased productivity and efficiency.

The Anti-Social Part of Social Media

Social media provides mostly great benefits, but Stephen Miles, founder and CEO of human capital consulting firm the Miles Group, says there’s an interesting side effect firms should also be prepared for.

How to Engage in Social Recruiting

Tweeting about job openings and interacting with candidates over Facebook are just a few ways to leverage social recruitment, says Janet Manzullo, vice president of talent acquisition at Time Warner Cable.