ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

download ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

of 12

Transcript of ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    1/12

    Transforming the Retail Workforce

    to Achieve High Performance

    by Teri Babcock and David L. Reed

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    2/12

    cov2

    Teri Babcock is a partner in Accentures

    Retail practice. She has worked with

    clients in the human performance,

    talent management and learning

    space for more than 17 years.

    Teri can be reached at

    [email protected].

    David L. Reed is a senior director in

    Accenture HR Services. He has led

    Accenture's external and internal

    recruitment business for 17 years.

    He posseses extensive experience

    across all strategic and operational

    aspects of recruitment across multiple

    clients, industries and geographies.

    David can be reached at

    [email protected].

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    3/12

    Hiring the Right People:

    Human Capital Sourcing and Staffing

    1

    Retailing is the preeminent day-to-day

    business enterprise. The focus on the

    latest numbers is intense: How many

    associates are available next shift?

    What was store traffic last weekend?

    How will we train associates on the

    new products that arrive tomorrow?

    What are our sales this month? Store-

    level execution moment-by-moment

    makes or breaks the enterprise.

    What, then, should retail executives

    make of these decidedly long-term

    data points?

    The workforce in the United States

    will expand by only three percent

    from 2000 through 2020, as com-

    pared with a 53 percent increase

    over the 20 years from 1980 to 2000.

    The number of young European

    workers, those aged 20 to 29, will

    decrease by 20 percent over the

    coming two decades, while the

    number of workers approaching

    retirement (aged 50 to 64) will

    grow by more than 25 percent.

    Japan expects to lose 10 million

    workers, or 16 percent of its work-

    force, over the coming quarter-

    century. One in five Japanese is over

    the age of 65, the highest ratio

    of seniors to citizens in the world.

    These statistics suggest that one of

    retailings most venerable fixtures, the

    retail workforcethe people behind

    the counter, at the checkout station, in

    the stockroomis already undergoing

    dramatic change. This change may

    threaten or undermine many retail

    enterprises. Accenture believes,

    however, that for visionary companies,

    the unique workforce dynamics at

    work in the retail marketplace create

    a significant opportunity to achieve

    high performance.

    Accenture High Performance Business

    research shows that small improve-

    ments in key talent management

    performance indicators such as

    attrition, speed to competence and

    associate performance can drive

    disproportionately large improvements

    in customer satisfaction and financial

    performance. This paper exploresopportunities for transforming retailing

    associates into a high-performance

    retail workforce by focusing on

    three key talent management levers:

    recruiting, learning and performance

    management.

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    4/12

    2

    Selection processes

    of high-performance

    companies

    Successful retailers have human capital

    strategies designed to ensure that the

    right people and the right capabilities

    are in place to execute the businessstrategy effectively. What all effective

    enterprises have in common is a

    mature process for formulating and

    aligning human capital initiatives with

    business strategy. These organizations

    make clear priorities and track their

    people and workforce programs based

    on the business value they create.

    Imagine a manufacturing process

    where companies had to manufacture

    150,000 parts in order to end up with1,700 parts of acceptable quality. Yet

    this is exactly the yield from most

    recruitment processes. Even in the face

    of this extremely inefficient process,

    HR departments often feel manage-

    ment pressure to increase the pool of

    potential workers. We believe that

    smart hiring is not a recruiting prob-

    lem; it is a selection problem.

    Companies do not need to increase

    the pool; they need a better yield.

    One of the biggest hiring challenges

    retailers face today is the disconnect

    between new job profiles and a

    recruiting process that too often hires

    based on old profiles and inconsistent

    selection techniques. For HR depart-

    ments in retailing enterprises, new

    selection techniques and technologies

    offer significant opportunities. Instead

    of relying on the hit-or-miss tactics of

    traditional recruiting, these new tech-

    niques and technologies can be used to

    match new job profilesand the per-

    formance characteristics of the workers

    who are the highest achieversagainst

    potential worker pools.

    Some retailers are creating simple yet

    ingenious responses to the challenge of

    smarter selection. Consider the practice

    of one European retailer that requires

    that a prospective employee must work

    in the store he or she will be assigned

    to for one trial day before being hired.

    Expectations are explicit, and after

    the trial is complete, the staff of the

    store votes on whether the prospect

    gets the job. The approach has yieldedimpressive results for a chain that

    relies on quick, efficient service to a

    high-end clientele for its success.

    Basic hiring practices for retailers have

    not kept pace with the actual perfor-

    mance environments in which workers

    find themselves. As a consequence, HR

    departments searching for the best

    people are getting false positives:

    workers that appear on paper to have

    the skills to succeed, except that the

    paper contains out-of-date perfor-

    mance criteria. Just as worrisome,

    HR professionals are also getting false

    negatives: they are failing to hire

    workers with the right backgrounds

    and skills to perform optimally, because

    the HR department is not aware of

    the change in the definition of optimal

    work performance.

    Accenture takes the view that retailers

    should:

    Re-tool their recruitment and

    selection profiles based on analyses

    of the performance of the most

    successful workers in the current

    work environment.

    Apply that profile and those perfor-mance characteristics across the

    companys basic core processes.

    Use next-generation technologies

    and tools in the selection process to

    reduce both false positives and false

    negatives among potential workers.

    Push the biggest part of the filtering

    to the front end of the process

    before more costly human analysis

    is applied to selectionand let

    insight-based applications help pre-dict those applicants most likely to

    respond to and perform well under

    updated performance conditions.

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    5/12

    3

    A simple start toward high performance

    Many retailers are challenged to identify the specific problem

    areas for their key workforces, or to prioritize initiatives to

    address workforce issues. Based on our extensive experience

    with companies around the world, Accenture believes that

    when organizational energy is focused on two to three criti-cal workforces, even slight improvements can make a 10 to

    15 percent difference in the companys bottom line.

    For example, the retail division of a major US bank calcu-

    lated that every time it cuts a single second from call

    handling time, it adds up to US$1 million in savings for the

    bank. A global insurance company with 16,000 life planners

    in Korea found that a one percent change in a single measure

    growth in written premium per life plannertranslated

    into a US$16 million improvement for the company, most

    of which was pure profit. These incremental improvements

    are the quick hits that will put the enterprise on a pathtoward high performance.

    While each retail organization will have its own challenges

    and opportunities, consider these six steps for getting

    started:

    1. Identify the two or three most critical workforces

    for your organization.

    While retailers have a number of critical workforces, the

    customer-facing frontline associates may provide the great-

    est opportunity. In high turnover environments, explore

    recruitment and learning strategies to improve speed to

    competence. A floor salesperson who gets up to speed five

    percent faster yields significantly superior performance in

    terms of product knowledge and customer satisfaction.

    Another critical workforce in retailing is buyers. No matter

    how good a workforce is, if the wrong products are on the

    floor, the store will fail.

    2. Define what optimal performance looks like for

    those positions.

    Evaluate your top performers for each key position. What

    skills and experience do they bring that differentiates

    them from poor performers? From which recruiting pooldid they come? What previous positions did they hold in

    your company?

    3. Assess where capability gaps exist between current

    and optimal performance.

    Understand the gap between your top performers and others

    to (1) identify better candidates and recruiting channels

    and (2) tailor learning and development programs for entry-

    level employees along a more cost-effective path to high

    performance.

    4. Develop a set of integrated talent management

    solutions to address the workforce gaps.

    Fundamentally changingand sustaininghigher workforce

    performance is a complex undertaking. Look first at how

    selected HR programs can be integrated for a specific work-

    force, rather than rolling out individual programs across

    the organization. Results will likely show significantly higher

    performance for that selected workforce than when programs

    are implemented independently.

    5. Define an overall human capital roadmap that will lead

    to fundamental, lasting change in your workforce.

    Include both quick hit initiatives, like targeted learning

    programs, and long-term investments, like technologyor store infrastructure. Evidence suggests that quick-hit

    savings used to fund long-term investments create

    sustainable change programs that are more palatable to

    company executives.

    6. Implement and measure return on investment, making

    calculated adjustments along the way.

    Implementation raises several practical questions. What is

    the appropriate frame of referencethe entire enterprise

    or all retail locations? In Accentures view, retailers should

    start with the box, the four walls of the retail location.

    Start building a better workforce inside the box, which is

    ultimately the profit-and-loss entity that counts. Measuring

    progress and adjusting along the way is critical. Human

    metrics are often perceived as soft and in a tight margin

    business, CEOs do not invest where they cannot prove

    a return.

    Each organization will have its own unique journey. Yet

    leaders in the human capital management arena display

    certain characteristics in common, as shown by the

    Accenture High-Performance Workforce Study, a compre-

    hensive research program conducted approximately every

    18 months with executives globally. For instance, the leadersthat emerged from this research tend to value human

    resources and training more highly than do other companies.

    The example of these human performance leaders suggests

    that the integration of initiatives in recruitment, learning

    and performance managementwith a particular focus

    on support provided to critical workforcesis the key to

    transforming employee performance.

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    6/12

    4

    Once the right talent has been identi-

    fied and recruited, how do you equip

    them with the critical knowledge

    needed to be high performers?

    Consider the second key talent man-

    agement leverlearning.

    Learning has moved from the periphery

    of public and private enterprises to the

    center over the past decade. Individ-

    uals know that their careers depend

    upon their willingness to engage in

    lifelong learning that can help them

    advance to meet new challenges.

    Retailers realize that unless theirpeople are fully competent to execute

    strategy today and tomorrow, they

    cannot achieve high performance and

    sustain their competitiveness.

    The transformation of the learning

    function from a cost center to a

    value creator can be seen in recent

    Accenture Learning research, The Rise

    of the High-Performance Learning

    Organization. The study, which sam-

    pled opinions from chief learning offi-

    cers and other learning executives at

    285 cross-industry organizations,

    reveals in vivid detail the new demands

    being placed on learning functions

    today. The learning functions at most

    of the organizations participating in

    the Accenture Learning survey clearlyface heightened expectations to deliver

    business value and prove the business

    impact of learning investments. When

    asked to name their most pressing

    challenges, learning executives made it

    clear that business impact was their

    primary concern:

    Aligning learning activities with

    the most pressing and important

    business or operational needs.

    Measuring the effectiveness and

    impact of learning on the perfor-

    mance of the business or agency as

    a whole.

    Proactively communicating the value

    of learning to all stakeholders.

    The Accenture Learning study contains

    provocative evidence about the impact

    learning can have on the business.

    About 10 percent of the learningorganizations surveyed had levels of

    performance that earned them the

    title, High-Performance Learning

    Organizations. The reason? Every

    enterprise utilized innovative

    approaches to learning, approaches

    that tracked the impact learning has

    on the business.

    Learning and Knowledge Management:

    Skills and Behaviors

    that Drive High Performance

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    7/12

    5

    Analysis of survey data, coupled with

    additional financial data from other

    publicly available sources, has demon-

    strated that companies with high-

    performance learning organizations

    returned better revenue and profit

    growth compared to their competitors

    and industry peers:

    Productivity (as measured by sales

    per employee) was 27 percent

    greater.

    Revenue growth was 40 percent

    higher.

    Net income growth was 50 percent

    greater.

    These high-performance learning orga-

    nizations show mastery in a number of

    important capabilities, including:

    1. Investing in learning according to its

    impact on the business: aligning learn-

    ing initiatives to business goals, mea-

    suring its impact in business terms and

    running the learning function itself in

    a rigorous way.

    2. A healthy percentage of technology-

    delivered learning, with an emphasis

    on blended delivery approaches that

    include classroom as well as electronic

    learning, and learning solutions that

    build upon knowledge management

    and performance support functionality.

    3. Movement of learning outside the

    four walls of the organization to

    include other members of the overall

    value chain such as customers and

    channel partners.

    4. Involvement of learning and perfor-

    mance-enablement efforts during

    major change programs and in support

    of business initiatives.

    Accenture Talent Interlock:

    Executive leadership

    and governance that keep

    learning on track

    Armed with evidence of the link

    between world-class learning strate-

    gies and business results, leading

    retailers are looking for ways to ensure

    close collaboration between those

    responsible for the development and

    delivery of learning content and the

    companys senior management respon-

    sible for establishing business goals

    and objectives. This collaboration is

    too important to be left to chance, or

    to simply keeping management

    informed. Retailers need a more

    formal organizational structure andsystem of governance to ensure that

    strategy and workforce enablement are

    locked in. Accenture has developed

    this reporting and governance process

    in Talent Interlock, a proprietary

    process with services, interactions,

    metrics and application capabilities

    that link learning outcomes to business

    objectives.

    Accenture Talent Interlock operates on

    a few critical guiding principles:

    Ensure the involvement of senior

    executives in the planning process

    regarding the specific learning

    programs that can achieve the best

    business results.

    Facilitate an annual planning process

    and quarterly demand forecasts

    around learning demand, capability

    and affordability.

    Establish a single point of contact

    for all learning and performancerequests from the business.

    Structure more effective communi-

    cation channels between the

    business and the corporate learning

    organization.

    Ensure participation of the learning

    organization in the overall gover-

    nance process.

    Accenture Talent Interlock does not

    simply add another step in the learning

    supply chain of content sourcing,

    cataloging, delivery and administration

    It transforms it in the same way that

    new processes transformed the manu-

    facturing supply chain to enable just-

    in-time (JIT) manufacturing. In fact,

    that is one of the goals of Talent

    Interlock: a JIT approach to talent

    management, where a streamlined

    learning supply chain delivers support,

    when and where it is needed, to sup-

    port real-time performance needs of a

    companys most critical workforces.

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    8/12

    6

    Thus far we have talked about (1) how

    to get the right people through the

    human capital supply chain more

    rapidly to increase the supply of

    employees optimally equipped to serve

    the needs of the business; and (2)

    providing people with the skills and

    knowledge needed to perform optimal-

    ly at all times. Performance manage-

    ment addresses the issue of keeping

    those people aligned with the needs

    of the business, and keeping them

    engaged and interested in their work

    so the investment in them pays off forthe entire organization.

    Effective performance management

    begins with understanding that perfor-

    mance has two dimensions: behaviors

    and results (see chart). Too often,

    companies take a view that what really

    matters is just resultsthe productivi-

    ty of a worker. In fact, that approach

    can blind executive decision-makers

    to the specific behaviors that drive

    those results.

    Low High

    Low

    Hig

    h

    Behaviors

    Results

    Consider the four options implied in

    the accompanying figure, a matrix

    plotting results vs. behaviors. Workers

    who fall within the high behaviors/

    high results quadrant obviously

    challenge a company principally from

    the perspective of retention: these are

    staff that retailers want to retain for

    as long as possible. In a different way,

    low behaviors/low results are also

    fairly straightforward: these people

    should be offered remediation but, if

    performance does not improve, should

    be moved out of their jobs and/or thecompany.

    Performance Management:

    Alignment with Strategy

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    9/12

    It is those two other quadrants that

    pose the challenges. One group appears

    to be doing all the right things but is

    not being productive. The other group

    is delivering results month after

    month, but only through behaviors

    that one might not want replicated

    throughout the company. For example,

    consider the president of one majorcompany who kept hitting his perfor-

    mance targets time after time. Only

    after close scrutiny did the executive

    team find that the consistency of this

    executive was being achieved only

    at great cost to the rest of the organi-

    zation: morale was nonexistent and

    retention was extremely low.

    By giving attention to which specific

    (acceptable) behaviors lead to the best

    results, companies can design roles,find the right individuals to fill those

    roles, train them to successfully per-

    form in them and manage individual

    performance against the desired

    behaviors. If companies do not have

    the measures in place to assess

    progress toward the desired behaviors,

    people probably will not produce those

    behaviors consistently.

    Think this is obvious? Not in practice.

    Companies can often send mixed mes-

    sages about results vs. behaviors. For

    example, they tell sales staff to take

    the time to understand what the cus-

    tomer really needs. But, for the most

    part, the single-most critical measure

    of performance for these employees

    will still be total sales.

    The solution here is for retailers to be

    clearerto themselves and to their

    employeesabout roles and metrics.

    Set clear performance goals and mea-

    sure toward them. Do not be afraid toset stretch goals. Retailers that really

    optimize the performance of individu-

    als have a systematic way of setting

    expectations that create a challenge.

    Much of the time these are goals that

    the individuals themselves do not real-

    ize they can meet. Average to low-

    average workers tend to set goals that

    are either too easy or too

    hard, and in either case are misaligned

    with the goals of the organization. In

    light of this, they require a different

    level of management. Given the right

    set of supportive environments and

    appropriate mentoring, many of these

    workers can achieve goals and perfor-

    mance beyond their own expectations.

    High-performance retailers also know

    how to handle turnover properly; they

    know how to address that portion of

    workers who most often fall into the

    low behaviors/low results quadrant.

    Employee turnover can be a good

    thing, if it is properly planned and

    managed. Organizations that have

    consistently high business or financial

    performance also have some sort of

    planned or managed turnover program.

    They have taken conscious steps toroutinely upgrade their workforces.

    There are two parts to this upgrade.

    One is using turnover as a reason to

    shuffle people and roles, often to

    match underperforming employees

    with roles that might be more appro-

    priate to them. Many managers have

    had the experience of watching people

    blossom from average to superior

    workers simply because they were

    finally matched to the right jobs or

    roles. How many times do companies

    let go of someone with potential, not

    because of the individuals short-

    comings, but from the organizations

    or leaderships lack of insight about

    what that person is really good at?

    The other part of turnover manage-

    ment, though, is systematically plan-

    ning to move out of the organization

    the bottom 10 percent or so of its

    workforce, based on well-defined

    performance criteria documented inperformance reviews. This is not a

    heartless program. If reasonable efforts

    have been made to find the right role

    for a person in the organization, and if

    performance is still not strong, it is

    likely that the fit just is not right.

    Every employee termination comes

    with emotional pain, but this short-

    term pain can be understood as having

    long-term benefits for all.

    Performance management

    and employee engagement

    Effective performance management is

    a huge contributing factor to increasing

    the engagement of employees in their

    work and, therefore, improving reten-

    tionespecially of high behaviors/

    high results employees. Solving the

    employee engagement puzzle is partly

    a matter of putting people into roles

    for which they are not only competent

    (or potentially so), but for which they

    feel some passion. It is possible to

    overstate the passion point, but more

    often than not, the problem is ignoring

    it. An executive at one company said it

    well: If, in the course of fulfilling an

    individuals passion, they also fulfill the

    organizations passion, superior perfor-mance overall will result.

    From one perspective, the employee

    engagement problem is reaching crisis

    levels. Another survey by Gallup of

    more than three million employees

    found that 71 percent describe them-

    selves as disengaged or actively

    disengaged from their workthe

    fourth straight year that workforce

    engagement has declined. For the retai

    industry, where customer loyalty and

    retention is so dependent on effective

    interaction with competent workers,

    this is a big danger sign. On the upside

    however, a fully engaged workforce

    can pay big dividends. In fact, research

    has shown that the more engaged

    the workforce, the more innovative,

    productive and profitable the company

    7

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    10/12

    8

    Sourcing

    Screening & Selecting

    Hiring

    Onboarding

    Scheduling &

    Deployment

    Contractor & Contingency

    Management

    Recruitment Services

    Talent Interlock

    Knowledge Management

    Content Delivery

    Content Development

    Learning Administration

    Content Sourcing

    Integration & Orientation

    Learning Services

    Performance Management

    Career Development

    Succession Planning

    Performance Management

    Services

    Competency Modeling

    Job Design

    Workforce Analytics

    Certification/Accreditation

    Learning & Career Needs

    Assessment

    Resource Demand

    Management

    Program Management Infrastructure Platform Management Service Center

    Support Services

    The Accenture Integrated Approach to Managing

    the Retail Workforce for High Performance

    An integrated, technology-enabled solution can deliver

    breakthrough increases in workforce performance. The

    Accenture approach wraps recruitment, learning and

    knowledge management, performance management and

    support services around a core workforce dynamic called

    Talent Interlock to achieve high performance.

    Recruitment Services

    Technology-enhanced services

    to enable more efficient

    sourcing, screening, selection

    and onboarding of retail staff.

    Talent Interlock

    Implementation of tools and

    processes to support and

    integrate recruitment, learn-

    ing and performance support

    services.

    Performance Management

    Services

    Technology-enabled

    performance management

    capabilities that include

    measurement of individual

    performance and implemen-

    tation of the performance

    management cycle.

    Support Services

    Process and technology

    infrastructure.

    Learning Services

    Transformed delivery of

    learning to new and experi-

    enced staff through imple-

    mentation of a learning

    technology platform,

    eLearning migration, instruc-

    tor-led training contentenhancement and co-sourced

    delivery.

    8

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    11/12

    Building the High-Performance

    Retail Workforce

    Building the High-Performance

    Retail Workforce

    9

    Fundamental forces are driving the

    restructuring of retailing to a greater

    or lesser extent in virtually every major

    market. The dominance of discounting,

    the rise of online shopping, as well as

    the demographic trends discussed at

    the beginning of this paper, guarantee

    that retailing in the 21st century will

    scarcely resemble the industry pio-

    neered in the 20th.

    Amidst all these changes, one thing

    will inevitably remain constant: the

    power of a positive interaction

    between your customer and the personbehind the counter. Retailing in the

    future will be a game of survival of the

    smartest. The retail enterprises that

    figure out how to collect the organiza-

    tions accumulated wisdom on what

    sells and how to sell, and then transfer

    that wisdom quickly and efficiently to

    new generations of workers, are the

    organizations that will thrive. In the

    increasingly demanding retail environ-

    ment of the future, many may survive,

    but it is virtually certain that only

    high-performance companies will suc-

    ceed. Accentures concept of Talent

    Interlock is a proven process for identi-

    fying, training and managing critical

    retail workforces so that retailers can

    consistently deliver on a differentiated

    value proposition, aggressively expand

    market footprint into favorable seg-

    ments, drive organic growth from their

    existing networks, increase average

    product sales per person per day and

    minimize customer churn.Accentures High-Performance Business

    initiative has shown that high per-

    formers are more effective than their

    competitors at exploiting the collective

    intelligence and motivation of their

    workforces. There is a strong correla-

    tion between financial performance

    and the priority organizations place on

    human capital development. Leading

    companies are far more likely than

    others to regularly measure the link

    between investments in people and

    business results. Moreover, their CEOs

    take a much more visible and direct

    role in the initiatives to develop their

    people. In this way, high performers

    create a talent multiplierbetter

    results per dollar of investment in their

    workforces. This multiplier serves as a

    real and hard-to-imitate competitive

    advantage.

    If retailers are to meet their most

    important competitive challenges

    todayfight off competition coming

    from few players and successfully exe-cute a growth strategythey must

    increase the energy and focus with

    which they address the workforce

    capabilities necessary to succeed.

    Retailing success today requires a

    highly engaged, skilled and productive

    workforce: the right people, with the

    right skills, doing the right things to

    contribute to the long-term success of

    the business.

  • 8/6/2019 ACN Transforming Retail Workforce

    12/12

    Copyright 2006 Accenture

    All rights reserved.

    Accenture, its logo, and

    High Performance Deliveredare trademarks of Accenture.

    About Accenture

    Accenture is a global management

    consulting, technology services and

    outsourcing company. Committed

    to delivering innovation, Accenture

    collaborates with its clients to help

    them become high-performance busi-

    nesses and governments. With deepindustry and business process exper-

    tise, broad global resources and a

    proven track record, Accenture can

    mobilize the right people, skills and

    technologies to help clients improve

    their performance. With approximately

    140,000 people in 48 countries, the

    company generated net revenues of

    US$16.65 billion for the fiscal year

    ended August 31, 2006. Its home page

    is www.accenture.com.

    For additional information, please

    contact:

    Teri Babcock

    [email protected]

    David L. Reed

    [email protected]