According to an annual survey conducted by the largest industry group for CHROs, the HR Policy Association in the United States, top CHRO concerns over the years fall roughly into three broad categories: talent, capabilities, and culture.
Talent Talent management includes building the quality and depth of talent, including a focus on succession and leadership/employee development. In a separate survey of over 200 U.S. and European CHROs,
University of South Carolina professor Patrick Wright found that nearly all participants cited 'talent' as the top priority on their CEO's agenda for HR.
Capabilities Managing corporate capabilities includes dealing with rapid changes in technology, globalization, and the increasingly complex external context of government regulations and public policy (impacting union and employee relations, executive compensation, health care, retirement programs, health and safety, etc.). The key capabilities required are expected to vary by company based on business strategy and the competitive global environment. Adapting to new technologies and sources of information and communications are essential to success for all companies. Other capabilities the HR function must help the company develop include: managing the external context, managing a multi-generational workforce, adapting to change, and operating effectively in different cultures and business structures.
Culture Cultural issues include organizational change, agility, social networking, ethics and values, innovation, customer focus,
employee engagement, diversity and inclusiveness, and multiculturalism. The human resources function has a leadership role in helping shape the culture of the company. Ensuring that the values of the company are communicated and understood at all levels, providing clarity as to the expected behavior of all employees and the development of a high performance culture are important aspects of the CHRO role. When an employee's behavior is inconsistent with the values of the company, the human resources function is responsible for ensuring that such situations are dealt with fairly. The HR function also helps the organization establish and maintain high levels of employee engagement and commitment. Increasingly, companies are relying on external partners, joint-ventures, as well as merged and acquired companies as sources of innovation, capabilities and growth. Establishing a culture that is supportive of such external partnerships is an area where the HR function plays an important role. Summarizing the findings of a recent study of HR leaders, Randy MacDonald, former CHRO for
IBM, indicated that the three key workforce gaps CHROs cite as the biggest opportunities for HR are: • Cultivating creative leaders who can more nimbly lead in complex, global environments • Mobilizing for greater speed and flexibility producing significantly greater capability to adjust underlying costs and faster ways to allocate talent • Capitalizing on
collective intelligence through much more effective collaboration across increasingly global teams. == Path to becoming a CHRO ==