Posted by Cameron
on March 06, 2010
Interviewing,
People /
No Comments
The best potential employees aren’t looking for a job because they’ve already got one. That’s why you have to poach them.
In close to thirty years of my professional life, I’ve only had two job interviews. The rest of the time I was poached by one company while working for another.
There are lots of reasons why finding the right people is hard, but if you want your business to be exceptional, your staff must be exceptional people. It takes work but it’s worth the investment of time.
I had to remind someone of this while on a multi-city speaking engagement. At a talk in Sydney, Australia, a member of the audience commented, “What you don’t realize is we have a really tight economy in Sydney right now, and there are just no employees out there. We have the lowest unemployment in forty years.” I replied that I felt her pain—in Vancouver, we were at the lowest in fifty years! But honestly, I asked, what difference does it make? Even in tight job markets the great employees still exist, they’re just working somewhere else.
Poach them! Show them why working for you is WAY better!

Tags: Employees, Recruiting, Team Building
Posted by Cameron
on December 03, 2009
Learning,
People /
3 Comments

If Monkeys could be Business Mentors
I threw out the corporate 360 Reviews years ago in favor of something I made up that I call ‘Monkeys Looking Sideways’.
Years ago at a seminar I heard a story about monkeys in a tree. When the monkey at the top looked down all he saw was smiling monkeys looking up. However, the monkeys below had an entirely different view.
It was at this seminar that I thought about doing 360 Reviews live and in front of the rest of the team. I always try to build teams that embrace healthy conflict and that want to build more trust. Well open communication like this takes trust up to an awesome level. I built this exercise so everyone on a team would know what everyone else thought and they’d hear it in person so they could grow together.
The Monkeys Looking Sideways exercise works like this.
Essentially it is a verbal, in person, group 360 feedback. Ideally get everyone out of the office for a half to a full day. It’s a great exercise to do on company or team retreats too.
1) Give everyone 1 pad of Post It Notes and a pen.
2) Do the review of the groups leader or CEO first.
3) Have each person write down the TOP 5 things that the person being reviewed:
a) Should continue
b) Should improve on
4) Then with the person being review staying in their seats, have one person at a time stand up and read out each post it note. Start with all the positives first and then they read the stuff to work on second.
5) The person being reviewed can only say thank you or ask a clarifying question. There is no debate.
6) Have all of the Post It Notes put up on a flip chart and give them to the person being reviewed so they can type them up and refer to them in their one-on-one coaching meetings with their supervisor over the year to keep working on improving.
7) Repeat the process for each person in the room.
This exercise done properly takes about 45 min per person but will be way more effective than the garbage that comes out of any online or 3rd party 360 Review Process.
In addition to using it in your company try it with an EO, YPO Forum or TEC/Vistage group on a retreat too. It’d be awesome…

Tags: 360 Review, Conflict, Culture, Feedback, Leadership, Team Building
Posted by Cameron
on November 25, 2009
People /
2 Comments

In Jim Collins book Good to Great
, he describes the process of hiring as getting the right people ‘on the bus,’ the wrong people ‘off the bus,’ and ‘everybody in the right seats.’ He just never really explains how to make all of that happen.
Collins also talked about the ‘Merry Pranksters’ who drove around the United States back in the early sixties on their bus called ‘Further,’ tripping on acid. I’m not suggesting that you trip on acid to build your business–you’d get some weird press and some truly unexpected consequences if you did–but Collins talks about this group because when they were planning the trip around the United States that would last a year, they needed to make sure they only had people on the bus that they wanted to spend time with, and with whom they could have meaningful experiences.
In addition to finding the right people, the Merry Pranksters needed to get the negative people, the low performing people, or the high performing people who had bad values, off their bus. Collins does a good job of using the Pranksters as a model for building your team.
It’s worth adding that business people do not obsess enough about the wrong people getting off the bus. This is crucial to completing Collins’ final step in the process, which is getting people into the right seats.
I help companies get the right people into their organization and the wrong people out of it, so they can begin to really drive the business faster and further.

Tags: Firing, Good To Great, Hiring, Jim Collins, Merry Pranksters, People, Team Building