• Solutions
  • Campaign Planning
  • Knowledge Center
  • Success Stories
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Blog

Welcome to Bells & Whistles

GE’s Bill Conaty: Secrets of an HR Superstar

  • Author: Amitai Givertz
  • Posted: March 30, 2007
  • Category: Business Matters
  • Tags: No Tags
  • Comments:

General Electric Secrets of an HR SuperstarThis week BusinessWeek publishes a swan song of sorts for General Electric’s departing HR honcho Bill Conaty. In Secrets of an HR Superstar former Chief Executive and BusinessWeek columnist Jack Welch says, “He has enormous trust at every level. The union guys respect him as much as the senior managers,” adding, “The guy is spectacular.”
 
The article pays tribute to Conaty’s 40 years at GE with the last 13 years as Senior Vice President of Corporate Human Resources. He is credited with creating a new breed of HR and talent management machine that produces leaders, the next generation who will continue to drive the GE’s business strategy, performance and succession plans.

So what are Bill Conaty’s Secrets of an HR Superstar?

  • Dare to differentiate
  • Constantly raise the bar
  • Don’t be friends with the boss
  • Become easy to replace
  • Be inclusive
  • Free others up to do their jobs
  • Keep it simple

Easy enough to be like GE, wouldn’t you say?

John Lynch succeeds – literally – Bill Conaty as the top-dog in GE’s HR organization.



Trackbacks

Trackback URL
  • Trackback by Job Tips and Search, August 28, 2007 at 2:50 pm

    Job Tips and Search

    I couldn’t understand some parts of this article, but it sounds interesting

Comments (6)

Comments RSS
  • Comment by laurence haughton, April 2, 2007 at 3:20 pm

    The “secrets” article reads (as it should) like a retirement party valentine. I sure the guy has done plenty of good (and been lucky) but these reminiscences should be smiled at politely and taken skeptically IMHO.

    Glad to read that Jeff Immelt “doesn’t like to fixate on hard targets.” That sounds like a polite way of saying there always was some unintended (and unproductive) consequences caused by that forced firing of the bottom ten percent at GE and it needs some rethinking.

    The line “Employees must be constantly judged, ranked, and rewarded or punished for their performance” makes my skin crawl.



  • Comment by Amitai Givertz, April 2, 2007 at 6:44 pm

    Laurence,

    I think you are referring specifically to item two in the bullets “Raising the bar” so let me mention that in reply.

    Performance management is being revisited by organizations who want to measure any number of things. It could be measuring individual and team contributions for setting comp. levels or gap analysis for employees’ tapped for promotion; ROI on recruitment and training, whatever.

    To the extent that this process can now be systematized and the data applied to positive outcomes, I’m all for it.

    However, the Darwinian approach to performance management - constantly raising the bar - is dubious at best.

    Forced ranking has been debunked by many thinkers in the fields of human capital- and talent management. Culling “C” players as a means to regulate the ongoing development of a workforce seems wasteful. It also carries the risk of discrimination claims. Is there really no better way than corporate-sponsored “eugenics?”

    As talent becomes increasingly difficult to acquire at some point one has to make a value judgment relative to the costs of replacing that bad-hire versus having programs that grow people and elevate the organizations’ standing as an employer of choice.

    Some would argue forced ranking is a cover-up for bad profiling, sourcing, screening, assessment, training and management just as mediocrity as an acceptable standard of performance is. But if “C” players cannot be measured against potential and helped to reach it, one wonders under what circumstances where they hired in the first place.

    Certainly, if poor performers cannot be rehabilitated they should be replaced but that is an altogether different thing from the kind of systematic performance intervention Bill Conaty is being credited for as an HR innovation.

    Still, others hold an opposing point of view.

    I reminded of a plaque that hung behind the desk of an old-school sales manager who I later grew to love. It read: “The firing will continue until morale improves.” Now what sense does that make?



  • Comment by Mark, April 2, 2007 at 7:34 pm

    There was an article in this month’s Chief Executive magazine highlighting academic underachievers who went on to make it big: http://tinyurl.com/2le2b2



  • Comment by Amitai Givertz, April 2, 2007 at 11:42 pm

    Thanks, Mark, it is an interesting read.

    I thought the last bit summed it up beautifully…

    To get the most out of these hires [South Polars or academic underachievers], a company must have a system for developing and leading its talent—not to mention a human resources department equal to managing this critical task.

    To shine, HR must execute against a talent management model that begins with adopting the organization’s business strategy and forecasting its talent needs. It must attract the internal and external talent needed for this strategy. Then it must effectively deploy (assign the talent with clear deliverables and measurable outcomes), evaluate (measure performance against metrics), develop (provide skills training and mentoring) and retain (offering rewards, opportunity and collegiality) that talent.

    U.S. business has focused on academic achievement as a measure of potential for too long. With the looming talent shortage, that’s a mistake businesses can no longer afford. They must begin to mine the “South Pole.”

    ….and dovetails with my last comment.



  • Comment by Lavinia Weissman, August 28, 2007 at 10:44 pm

    this article describes the GE WorkOut from an HR and OD persective.

    http://www.strategy-business.com/press/article/03403?pg=0

    Free Subscription

    Title: General Electric’s Next Workout
    Author: Art Kleiner, WorkEcolgy Thought Leader and Editor in Chief S+B



Write a comment.




  • Recent Posts

    • Survey Says…
    • Mike Moore on Sourcing
    • Tip of the Week: Choosing The Right ATS
    • Mike Moore on Employment Branding
    • Tip of the Week: Boomerang Programs
    • Tip of the Week: Text messaging
    • Tip of the Week: Candidate Profiling
    • Tip of the Week: Employee Reward Programs
    • Find Better Candidates While Saving Time and Money
    • Introducing…Us
  • Recent Comments

    • Defining Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO)  1
      jon
    • Tip of the Week: Text messaging  1
      Nate Nead
    • It's Time to Kill the Diversity Ad  4
      Eric Peterson, Erik Samdahl, Eric Peterson, Russ Doherty
    • 10 Reasons Why Salespeople Don't Work Out  1
      Bob Abel
    • Seek and ye shall find  1
      Priyanka
    • A New Face for RCIRS.com  3
      Peggy McKee, Joshua Bloom, Maryanna Choinski
    • What Best in Class Companies Do To Grow Leaders: Part 2  2
      Lavinia Weissman, Marjan
    • Wet Paint  1
      Amitai Givertz
    • Your Employer Brand: The Bottom Line of Top-of-Mind  15
      Kyle Callahan, Amitai Givertz, Lavinia Weissman, Amitai Givertz, Anna Kassulke [...]
    • That was the week that was...  1
      Lavinia Weissman
    • The 10 Most Common Sales Force Hiring Mistakes  1
      Gil Keough
  • Share This Page

    del.icio.us Digg Newsvine Furl Yahoo! MyWeb reddit spurl tailrank
  • Solutions
  • Campaign Planning
  • Knowledge Center
  • Success Stories
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Blog

550 Heritage Drive, Suite 200, Jupiter, Florida 33458

Phone: (866) 332-7650 | Send Us A Message

Copyright © 2008 Recourse Communications Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Categories

    • Blogging
    • Business Matters
    • Candidate Selection
    • Center of Excellence
    • Employee Retention
    • Employment Branding
    • Miscellaneous
    • News and Events
    • Performance Staffing
    • Profiling
    • Recruiting
    • Recruitment Communications
    • Recruitment Solutions
    • Screening and Assessment
    • Sourcing Strategies
    • Talent Management
    • That's Life
    • Tools and Resources
    • Workforce Planning
  • Archives

    • July 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
    • May 2007
    • April 2007
    • March 2007
    • February 2007
    • January 2007
  • Links

    • Blogs De Jour
    • Animal Feed
    • ERE Blog Network
    • interbiznet
    • Quote for the Day
    • Recruiting Trends
    • Recruiting.com
    • RecruitingBloggers.com
    • RecruitingBlogs.com
    • RecruitingFly
    • The Day in Recruiting

    • Blogs on Our Radar
    • Brand Love Hate
    • HRMDirect Blog
    • Just What the World Needs
    • PHC Consulting
    • Talentism
    • The Impassioned Workforce

    • Blogroll
    • Amitai Givertz's Blogversity
    • Breakout Performance
    • CyberSleuthing!
    • director of recruiting
    • EXCELER8ion
    • Your HR Guy

    • Talent Management Links
    • All Metrics, All The Time
    • ERE
    • Hewitt HR Summaries
    • Monster Intelligence
    • Performance Staffing
    • Recruiting Industry Newswire
    • Society for HR Management
    • Society of Workforce Planning Professionals
    • Taleo Research
    • The Hudson Index
    • The Human Capital Institute
    • The McKinsey Quarterly: Talent
    • WorkEcology
    • Workforce Management
  • Site Tools

    • Register
    • Login
    • Our RSS Feeds
    • Comments RSS
    • WP