In this post, we will continue
our exploration of Unorthodox concepts in Human Resources/People Management.
Here we are exploring concepts that are unlikely to be found in ‘respectable’
text books (and also not taught in ‘premier’ business schools) but are very
much real in the paradoxical
world of people management (See ‘The
attrition principle’, 'In the valley
of attrition' , 'Sublimation of
vision statements' and 'Computer-controlled Manager Empowerment'
for the previous posts in this series).
Often, the way the HR function is structured in the organization increases the possibility of a wrong diagnosis. This happens mostly in those organizations where the Learning function separate from the Organization Development and HR Business Partner functions. In these contexts, when a business leader directly contacts the Learning specialist supporting the unit with a 'capability problem' (or even with the request for a particular training program), it is highly possible that the Learning specialist just carries out the request without spending much effort to check if the problem has been diagnosed correctly and if a training solution is appropriate. Sometimes, this happens because the Learning specialist does not have sufficient understanding of the entire business/people context in the unit or because the training specialist does not have the requisite diagnostic/consulting skills. In these cases, 'training need identification' becomes no more than 'order taking'. Also, if the training specialist is measured mainly on the number of training programs/number of person-days of training, then there might not be much incentive for the training specialist to 'refuse an order' or even to 'question an order'!
Training the victim' is one of the most common 'crimes' committed in the domain of HR/Learning and Development. Often, this 'crime' follows a standard plot. There is a steady deterioration in the performance of a unit. Customers are unhappy. There is a lot of firefighting happening. The unit head is shouting at the senior employees. But nothing seems to be working. The unit head feels that since the situation hasn't improved despite all his efforts, the employees must be incompetent and/or don't have the right attitude (e.g. 'solutions mindset'). So he calls the HR Business Partner demands that the employees should be trained urgently. This leads to things like attitude training, skill-based training and training the managers in the unit on people management (under fancy names like 'engaging and energizing teams'). The employees dutifully attend the training programs, though they feel that they are being blamed (or even 'punished') for no fault of theirs. Even after the training programs have been rolled out, there is no significant improvement in the performance of the unit.
These kind of situations
occur mainly because of wrong diagnosis/wrong need identification. The main
problem in these contexts might not necessarily be related to the capability
level of the individual employees at all. The problem could mainly be at the
strategy, structure, policy, business process or leadership level. However, it
is relatively difficult/inconvenient for the organization/unit head to address
the issues/make changes at these levels. So there is a temptation to jump to
the conclusion that it is an employee capability issue and to attempt a
training solution. Since the real issue remains unaddressed (despite the
'training solution'), there can't much improvement in the situation.
I am not
saying that there won't be issues at the individual capability level. Of course, this possibility should also be explored and if there is evidence for the
existence of such a need, an appropriate learning solution could be attempted.
My point is just that a proper diagnosis needs to be carried out before a
solution is attempted (instead of jumping into the most convenient solution)
and that when it comes to taking the responsibility for the
deterioration in the performance of the unit in such situations, sometimes, the
individual employees are 'more sinned against than sinned'.
Often, the way the HR function is structured in the organization increases the possibility of a wrong diagnosis. This happens mostly in those organizations where the Learning function separate from the Organization Development and HR Business Partner functions. In these contexts, when a business leader directly contacts the Learning specialist supporting the unit with a 'capability problem' (or even with the request for a particular training program), it is highly possible that the Learning specialist just carries out the request without spending much effort to check if the problem has been diagnosed correctly and if a training solution is appropriate. Sometimes, this happens because the Learning specialist does not have sufficient understanding of the entire business/people context in the unit or because the training specialist does not have the requisite diagnostic/consulting skills. In these cases, 'training need identification' becomes no more than 'order taking'. Also, if the training specialist is measured mainly on the number of training programs/number of person-days of training, then there might not be much incentive for the training specialist to 'refuse an order' or even to 'question an order'!
Hence, a close partnership between the Learning function
and the Organization Development/HR Business Partner functions will help in
making the diagnosis/need identification more accurate by bringing in the
requisite diagnosis/consulting skills, enhanced understanding of the context
and greater credibility/influence with the business leaders (see OD Managers as Court Jesters). This
would also make the 'solution' more appropriate and enhance the effectiveness
of implementation by being able to manage the change better. Of course, defining
the mandate for the Learning function in a more holistic manner and using the
correct performance parameters to assess/reward Learning specialists would also
be required.
Any comments/ideas?
Note: It is interesting to note that from a psychological point
of view, 'training the victim' can be considered to be a variation (or a mild
version) of the broader theme of 'blaming the victim'. This involves holding
the victims responsible (at least in part) for what happened to them when
something bad happens. This enables others (e.g. the unit head in this case) to
absolve themselves of any blame/responsibility and also to reduce cognitive
dissonance which would have resulted if they had to admit that the 'system'
(strategy/structure/policy/process, in this case) that they were responsible in
creating/managing might be at fault. This, in turn, helps them to avoid the
need for taking the more difficult/painful remedial steps that are required to
address the real issue/cause of the problem.
Sometimes, this can also lead to
tragic-comic situations. A few years ago, I heard about a situation where there
was a proposal to conduct 'followership training' for the entire staff in
a unit. Apparently, the unit head was a very poor leader and he was making the
life of his staff miserable, leading to problems in employee engagement and
retention (that, in turn, were creating issues for the HR team). Since it was
felt that the unit head won't be open to any sort of feedback and/or training,
it was being suggested that the staff in the unit be trained in followership (as
the leader won't be/can't be trained on leadership)! This might qualify as a
classic case of 'trying to solve the wrong problem' !
6 comments:
Good point Prasad and surely not an uncommon phenomenon. At times this happens because the company sees training only as a problem solving activity and not an investment. (eg the difference between taking a medicine v/s exercising). Also at times the stakeholder just wants to 'show' that they are taking some concrete action and training happens to be the easiest one to implement.
But even assuming the right intent and positioning of training one of the fundamental questions that gets missed, leading to this kind of situation is "It this a Training Problem ?" (i.e validity of training as a solution) as you have mentioned.
Thank you very much Kedar. Completely agree! Leaders are under pressure to take decisive action (or at least do something) especially when things go wrong. Sending people for training is one of the 'easier' options!
So true. Much of organizational consulting falls in this situation often fuelled by our misplaced need for quick action and some misplaced metrics
@psychospiritual Thank you. In the case of consultants, the problem of 'solution looking for a problem' is more acute!
Training of type described here is a constructive, non confrontational solution that allows all stakeholders to look good.
The sponsor displays business orientation, results focus and people management - care, concern, capability building and support to up each ones game. The trainees get some time off worst case scenario and hopefully they do learn something. HR gets to engage and connect, organize and coordinate and produce feedback in praise of all including themselves.
The only place where status quo is lovingly preserved and protected is under the carpet. The treasures and travails remain well hidden to continue to offer such opportunities for redemption to future managers.
Hopefully this is not the story of all training otherwise we’re setting ourselves up for collective corona times.
Thank you Mala! No, this is not the story of all training! This is more of a temptation to avoid!!
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