Based
on my experience as an employee and as a management consultant, I have noticed an
interesting pattern. Some organizations are optimized for newly hired employees
(‘Type N’ organizations) whereas some organizations are optimized for tenured/'old'
employees(‘Type O’ organizations). Of course, there are organizations that are
equally good (or equally bad!) for all the employees! However, ‘Type N’ and ‘Type
O’ organizations are quite common!
One
easy way to determine the type of the organization is to see how employee
engagement scores vary with tenure. Yes, the dividing line between ‘new’ and ‘old’
varies across organizations I have seen organizations where you become an
‘old employee’ as soon as you complete one year and I have seen organizations
where you will be considered to be a ‘new employee’ till you complete about
five years. While the median tenure of employees in the organization has some
impact on this ‘new-old dividing line’, it is usually a matter of organization
psychology and is not directly derived statistically!
In ‘Type
N’ organizations, 'not being burdened by the past' is a great advantage. So, the
new hires, especially new leaders, have the advantage. These tend to be
organizations that believe that new employees are hired to solve particular
problems or to seize particular opportunities that the existing employees have
failed to do. In these organizations, ‘tenure’ seems to have psychological association
with ‘inability to drive change’. They might even consider many of the existing
employees to be part of the problem! Hence, new hire has an advantage, so long
as he/she is considered ‘new’. The difficulty is that the ‘new’ employee can
move to the ‘old’ category quite quickly (and even get fired fairly quickly).
If this happens mainly because of an underlying/unstated assumption that ‘new
is good’, this ‘new-old-out-new’ cycle can repeat!
'Type
O' organizations tend to believe that one needs to understand the organization
context deeply before one can really contribute, especially at senior
levels. So, tenure is valued. These also tend to be organizations
where it takes quite a bit of time for a newcomer to figure out how the
organization really works. In these organizations, often the effective style of influencing tends to be ‘indirect’ (almost like billiards- you hit something so that it goes and
hits the target as compared to hitting the target directly)! This doesn’t mean
that ‘Type O’ organizations don’t value performance. It is more matter of a
newcomer taking time to figure out how to perform better. Things get
progressively easier as you spend more time in the organization. In a way, it
is like batting on a difficult wicket. It takes time to ‘get your
eye in’ but things become much easier after that. It becomes so wasteful to 'throw your wicket away' (leave the organization) after having done all the hard work
to 'get your eye in'.
Now,
let’s look at an interesting question : “Can
the organization type change?” The answer is ‘Yes’. This happens mostly when
there is a leadership change at the CEO level and sometimes at CXO level. A new
leader, hired with a transformation agenda, can view most of the tenured
employees as ‘part of the problem to be solved’ and hence might replace them
with external hires. If a critical mass of ‘new people’ are brought in (and ‘old
people are vilified), the organization can move from Type O to Type N. Now, two
scenarios can happen. The first one is that newly hired people and the CEO/CXO
stays on for a long time and the organization starts drifting towards Type O.
The second scenario is that the new CEO/CXO keeps on replacing may of the
people (including many of the newly hired people) as soon as they become ‘old’
(e.g. after 1-2 years) and hence the organization continues to be Type N.
In 'Type
O' organizations, the leadership (especially at CEO/CXO levels) tend to remain remarkably stable and that increases the
probability that the organization continues to be 'Type O'. It is when a 'Type O' organization under-performs for a long time that a 'Type N' CEO is brought in, and
the possible shift to being a 'Type N' begins. If
the new 'Type N' CEO doesn’t have sufficient powers, he/she can easily get lost
in the system or the system might even reject him/her. This ‘reaction’ of the
system can be one of the reasons why the new CEO might be tempted to make a
lot of people changes. Of course, there are indeed wise 'Type N' CEOs who are
very selective and fact-based about the people changes!
So
what does this mean? It definitely makes sense to figure out if you are joining
a 'Type N' or 'Type O' organization. It is part of the psychological alignment required on what good looks like! Obviously, it makes sense to join a Type O organizations only
if you are willing to sweat it out for a long period – significantly beyond the 'new-old dividing line' in the organization. Since they are optimized for new
people, it is easier to join type N and to come up to speed faster. But the
danger is that of the transition from ‘new’ to ‘old’. So, one must join
for the right reasons (beyond the organization being 'Type N'). Remaining a bit of an outsider can definitely help, especially
in driving change. Of course, being a
bit of an outsider while being a full member of the organisation is a
delicate balancing act!
Any comments/ideas?
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