Businesses are made of people. Recruiting, motivating, inspiring, developing, rewarding and celebrating good people is the most important thing about being a CEO.

But there’s something broken with HR. Too often, it solves the wrong problems or applies the wrong solutions.

Why?

  • I think the HR-military-industrial complex is to blame for sticking to outdated approaches.
  • CEOs are to blame for not thinking hard enough about HR.
  • We’re all to blame for sticking to worn out ideas and/or embracing new fads without really thinking about whether they are good or whether they work in our company or not.

‘Best practice’ is a dangerous idea. Someone else’s best practice could be your worst nightmare. For example, stack ranking worked at GE but, arguably, failed at Microsoft.

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It’s time for a shake-up. We’re working hard on this here at Turbine (and our parent company Articulate) so, for myself as a CEO, these issues are very current and pressing. I have some criticisms, thoughts, suggestions and questions; what do you think?

Problem #1: Appraisals

Appraisals are not life-enhancing experiences. If any other aspect of a business failed so epically, it would have been stopped long ago.

For many commentators, the traditional approach to appraisals is broken and it’s time to bury it. For Microsoft, stack ranking may have held the firm back. However, even as Microsoft abandons that approach, Yahoo adopts it.

It’s like a zombie that just won’t die.

So, what are companies actually trying to achieve with appraisals? Yes, it’s a link to pay and promotions and it’s a tool to address underperformance, but that misses the point.

Appraisals, like HR as a whole, need to address the fundamental questions: how do people improve and how do companies improve. Fostering progress is more important than measurement. Looking forward is more valuable than looking over your shoulder. Employees are human beings capable of infinite growth, not interchangeable units of production.

Here are two alternatives to corporate kabuki: Google found that monthly one-on-ones produced measurable improvements in manager and team performance and Adobe switched from a traditional performance review to real-time feedback.

Problem #2: Training

Traditionally, ‘training’ happens in a classroom somewhere, probably on a one-day course. This model is both painfully expensive and mostly unproductive, especially when you consider that some people forget 90 percent of what they learned after one month, it all seems like a pointless David Brent-esque charade.

The key point here is that learning is a multi-faceted, active process. Sending people back to school and boring them to death doesn’t help; people learn best by doing.

In fact, you can read all the manuals you like, but until you get into a plane with an instructor, you’re not really learning to fly. The 70:20:10 model for learning and development suggests that:

‘Lessons learned by successful and effective managers are roughly:

70% from tough jobs

20% from people (mostly the boss)

10% from courses and reading’

This video is a good introduction to this approach:

Problem #3: Motivation

What motivates people? What demotivates them? Many bosses get this terribly wrong, creating incentives that demotivate people. They ‘kick people in the ass’.

Let me give you an example of this from my own experience. Back when I was running Intelligent Games, we used to offer teams a timely delivery bonus if they finished on schedule. However, employee motivation was only one factor in timely delivery. When the delivery date slipped, as it inevitably did, people saw their bonuses go up in smoke. It must have felt like getting a pay cut – not the original intention.

A CEO’s job is to create a culture that promotes satisfaction and addresses the hygiene factors to avoid creating dissatisfaction.

Motivational factors Hygiene factors
Achievement, recognition, the work itself, responsibility

Advancement

Growth

Company policies, supervision, relationship with supervisor and peers, work conditions

Salary

Status

Security

For knowledge workers – such as programmers and writers – understanding what matters to them is the key to motivating them.

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Dan Pink’s Drive has some attractive insights about how motivation really works.

Problem #4: Paperwork

Over the last couple of years, I’ve talked to a lot of HR people through Turbine. One thing I keep seeing is a morbid addiction to paperwork. They ask if we can recreate their forms in Turbine or adapt Turbine to incorporate some quirk in their own workflow.

One company I talked to collected time off forms in more than 40 different locations, posted them to one office to be signed off and to another office to be entered into the world’s most depressing Excel spreadsheet by the world’s most bored employee.

Obviously, I’m going to recommend Turbine as the answer to a lot of this stuff (Expenses, Purchases, Time off requests and HR records), but there are dozens of apps and tools to automate other routine admin. Here are a few that we use:

  • Basecamp for project management
  • Toggl for time recording
  • Freshbooks for invoicing
  • Zendesk for tech support
  • Taco for task aggregation and management

The biggest obstacle to off-the-shelf solutions is a bureaucracy’s natural instinct to replicate all the idiosyncrasies of its existing practices. However, it is often easier to go for the 90 percent solution and adjust behaviour to match tools rather than pay to adjust tools to match behaviour.

Physician heal thyself

As we try to solve our own HR problems over the coming months, I’ll share what we do and how it goes – good and bad.

I’d love to get your ideas, feedback and thoughts. What works for you? What doesn’t? In the meantime, beatings will continue until morale improves.

Download our human resources cheat sheet here