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Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Josh Rock, Nuss Truck Group, and Jessica Miller-Merrell, Workology

September 22, 2021 by John Ray

Josh Rock
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Josh Rock, Nuss Truck Group, and Jessica Miller-Merrell, Workology
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Josh Rock

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021:  Josh Rock, Nuss Truck Group, and Jessica Miller-Merrell, Workology

Josh Rock, Talent Acquisition Manager at Nuss Truck Group, and Jessica Miller-Merrell, CEO of Workology, had a lively conversation with host Jamie Gassmann about connecting with talent, going where the talent is, global HR issues as the workforce is remote, the Workology podcast, and much more. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2021 SHRM Annual Conference held at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Josh Rock, Talent Acquisition Manager at Nuss Truck Group Inc.

Josh Rock, Talent Acquisition Manager at Nuss Truck Group Inc.

After nearly a decade in recruiting with healthcare companies, Josh Rock moved the Nuss Truck Group as their Talent Acquisition Manager.

Josh holds a degree from the University of Minnesota-Duluth and is an active alum. He is the recipient of the 2001 Sieur du Luth Award Winner, given for the highest level of involvement and service to the university community.

LinkedIn | Twitter

Nuss Truck Group

With eight locations in the midwest, Nuss Truck & Equipment is proud to carry the best lines of trucks, trailers, and construction equipment. Their sales and service teams are highly trained to deliver and maintain the right truck or machine for your application to ensure maximum productivity and efficiency. You and your business can rely on Nuss.

Company website | LinkedIn

Jessica Miller-Merrell, SHRM-SCP, SPHR, CEO & Founder, Workology

Jessica Miller-Merrell, SHRM-SCP, SPHR, CEO & Founder, Workology

Jessica Miller-Merrell is the Founder of Workology, a workplace resource for HR, recruiting professionals and business leaders. The site was listed twice as a top 75 career resource by Forbes Magazine. Jessica is the president and CEO of Xceptional HR, a human capital strategy and consulting agency, and a published author of Tweet This! Jessica is listed by Forbes as a top 50 social media power user. Because of vast industry expertise and knowledge, Jessica’s professional opinions and expertise are sought after and sourced by publications and media including: the Economist, Forbes, CIO Magazine, CBS, Entrepreneur Magazine, and SHRM’s HR Magazine.

LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

Workology

Workology is a destination for the disruptive workplace leader discussing trends, tools, and case studies for HR, recruiting professionals, and business leaders. The site and community are designed for those who are tired of the status quo and are compelled to change and transform not just their organization but the world of work and the human capital industry. If you are interested in contributing, please click here. If you are interested in advertising, click here.

We reach a half-million HR and Recruiting leaders each month with our website, newsletters, and podcasts. Workology and its community are founded and managed by XceptionalHR Consulting. XceptionalHR Consulting is a workplace consulting company focused on developing resources, training, and content for HR, Recruiting, and Workplace Leaders.

Workology and Xceptional HR Consulting is led by our Founder and Chief Innovation Officer, Jessica Miller-Merrell. She’s available for speaking, consulting, writing and research opportunities. If you are interested in advertising opportunities, visit our advertising page.

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the SHRM 2021 Conference at the Las Vegas Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and, security solutions. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:17] Hey, everyone. Jamie Gassmann here, your host of Workplace MVP. And we are broadcasting our episode today from the SHRM 2021 Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada. And I have two wonderful guests with me today. I’ve got Josh Rock from Truck & Equipment. He’s the Talent Acquisition Manager. And from Workology, I have Jessica Miller- Merrell, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer. Welcome to the show you two.

Josh Rock: [00:00:48] Thanks, Jamie.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:00:49] Awesome to be here.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:50] So, I’m going to start out by talking with Josh, because I know you’ve kind of waited a little bit to connect with us on our show.

Josh Rock: [00:00:57] We’ve been chatting here and hanging out, and talking with your guys online via Twitter, you know, here at the show, just having a good time.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:02] Awesome. So, tell us a little bit about your background, how you got into talent acquisition, and just share with our audience a little bit more about you.

Josh Rock: [00:01:10] So, if any of your listeners are familiar with the cartoon Family Circus, where the kids would walk around a lawn and the whole yard and they have the dotted line, that’s how I fell into H.R. I started going to school for law, of all things. I fell into advertising for 16 years. And through that, I did ten years of recruitment advertising and trying to be a trusted advisor to H.R. professionals across the country and across the globe. And left that organization and went to work for my clients to teach them what I was doing outside but then within their walls, give them back control, back their budget, back to the power, instead of putting it in the hands of agencies. And I’ve been doing it ever since.

Josh Rock: [00:01:47] I went to work for a couple of health care organizations. I recently left a 36,000 employee health care group out of Minneapolis to join a truck dealership of nine locations, with now almost 400 employees. So, a huge paradigm shift, not only in the industry, but employee size, to lead their talent acquisition efforts and just have a good time every day.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:08] Yeah. Wow. And, obviously, now, hiring concerns and issues, how has that impacted the truck industry that you’re in?

Josh Rock: [00:02:17] You know, there’s impact. There’s not enough students going into the heavy duty diesel programs. And so, connecting with the schools, helping build curriculum to make that a more profitable venture for not only the schools, but the students, obviously. So, that way, we can continue to drive great business for us and then our customers. So, it’s going full cycle. It’s not just opening up a requisition, posting it on Indeed or any other partner just to wait for candidates to come in. We’ve had to be more holistic in our approach of finding, acquiring, and hiring great talent.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:51] Right. And so, talk to me a little bit about that approach. Are you going out to actual universities? You live in the St. Cloud area, I know there’s a big university in St. Cloud. I know I’ve been talking to you a little bit already. I know you’re a big Duluth.

Josh Rock: [00:03:06] Go Bulldogs.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:03:07] Go bulldogs.

Josh Rock: [00:03:08] Shane here from R3, he’s also a UMD Bulldog. We connected on Twitter because of our alumni association with UMD. So, yeah, I mean, I actively go out. Even in a post-pandemic world, I’m out visiting colleges already. I was down in Dallas recently. I was down in Denver. I’m now here going out and talking to students about how their careers could go well in diesel truck repair. And, you know, finding great ways about, not only who we are, what we do, and how they can grow with us, and set themselves up and maybe their families up for great success through careers in this venture. So, it’s fun.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:45] Yeah. Absolutely. And that’s such an impressionable age, right? I’m guessing you’re really looking at all students. But, you know, when you’ve got somebody who’s going through their program and they’re trying to figure out what they want to be when they get older, you can really have an impact. So, if another employer was looking at taking that same approach, you know, what are some kind of your advice, if you will, on how you would approach that?

Josh Rock: [00:04:13] You know, for me, it’s all about engagement. And engagement comes in different forms. Through active questioning of the people that you’re talking to, whether it’s a student or a student’s parents, about where do they want to take their career, where do they want to go, what do they want to achieve. You know, those things, layering those questions in to create a picture, a painting, of what that could be. And then, finding your organization – like mine here at Nuss – where that resonates. For some, it’s time off. For some, it’s paid. For some, it’s advancement.

Josh Rock: [00:04:46] You’re going to find those threads just in genuine conversation and questions with those students or alumni from the schools or parents looking at how do I help set my child up for a successful career. And then, just finding those threads. It doesn’t have to be, “Hey, we’re offering a $10,000 sign on bonus and you can start tomorrow.” It’s more about what do you want? And then, finding that lane of the value proposition from your organization and going through that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:15] Yeah. Well, and it’s interesting you mentioned, like, finding that lane and kind of having that engagement opportunity. Because, you know, I’ve read job descriptions over my career. I think we all have.

Josh Rock: [00:05:25] Unfortunately.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:25] And sometimes you’re left going, “I don’t get it. I don’t know. Maybe I like this job, but there was one word that kind of threw me off.” So, it’s almost like how can that employer step out of that job description. How can they empower themselves to take that different approach? What’s worked for you?

Josh Rock: [00:05:43] So, a great story. I had a local – or, actually, a national job board reach out to me and say,” Hey Josh. You need to invite people through our portal to apply for your positions.” And I told him he was wrong. Straight up I said, “You know what? Actually, what I need to do is when somebody voices interest in one of our jobs through your portal, I’m going to call them. I’m going to text them and say, ‘Hey, you know what? I found your information. I want to talk about where your career is going and what we can do together.'”

Josh Rock: [00:06:14] Because my job is not a gatekeeper. There’s a lot of recruiters, unfortunately, in the United States that act like gatekeepers. Actually, what you should be doing is being dance partners. Helping them navigate to their career within your organization. And so, instead, what I told this vendor, I said, “What I’m going to do is you guys are going to bring me information. I’m going to digest that information. I’m going to actively reach out to them on my own, through my own information, my own tools and technology and say, ‘Hey, I’m interested in you because. Now, I want you to join me because.'” Instead of saying, “Hey, do this for me, do this for me.” Because they’re getting the information. They’re holding the power. No.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:52] No. I need to hold the power, right?

Josh Rock: [00:06:53] Exactly. Exactly. I’m the customer. I need to do what works for me. Not what works for you and your technology. And what you can then put on your advertisement to say you had this many candidates to customers. That doesn’t matter to me. What matters to me is that Paul Alexander from Sheboygan, Wisconsin applied for my position, has an interest in my role, was in the U.S. Military, now wants to come work for me. I want to get him on the phone as quickly as I can and find a way that maybe this is an opportunity for him to drive his career forward.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:24] And so, you’re very active on social media with the Twitter, because that’s how you found us.

Josh Rock: [00:07:30] Kind of. Yeah.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:31] So, talk to me how do you leverage Twitter or how do you leverage LinkedIn? How do you empower even Facebook, potentially, I’m guessing, could be a really good avenue for you? How do you leverage that in a way that’s helped you to get good candidates to reach out to?

Josh Rock: [00:07:45] So, in my current industry in transportation, I’m not going to find a ton of diesel technicians on Twitter. It’s just not going to happen. I can do it on Facebook. I can do searches by putting in diesel technology. I can look for trucking. I can do keywords to find people that have similar similarities or have posted something about it, and then reach out to them that way.

Josh Rock: [00:08:07] In my previous industry in health care, I could do it much easier. Because I could go on to Pinterest and find a female in Atlanta, Georgia looking at recipes for something. But she also posted on her Pinterest wall scrubs that she really liked.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:25] Interesting.

Josh Rock: [00:08:25] And I can say, “Oh, I see you’re a nurse. We’ve got opportunities here in Minnesota. What’s your specialty? Are you an ED? Are you in transplant?” Strike up a conversation, say, “Hey, you know what? I work for this organization. We have this many openings. I’ve got these many hospitals, depending upon the kind of community you want to be in.” I can do those types of things that way.

Josh Rock: [00:08:40] You can do a lot of different things on social channels based on what somebody is interested in. It doesn’t have to be just the resume on LinkedIn or that they’re looking for a job that they posted on Twitter. That stuff’s easy. You can do that really quickly. But sometimes it’s just as simple as finding that moment in time post about what they liked and then find the correlations. It takes time. It’s sourcing. It’s active sourcing. But you can find really good talent.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:07] Yeah. And sometimes going out of the script of, like, this role helps you to kind of get that engagement that you’ve been mentioning.

Josh Rock: [00:09:15] Well, you talked about social media so a great story about SHRM. We’re sitting here in Las Vegas. We all flew here Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. And I’m on the flight from Minneapolis here and I’m sitting by four people in my row. I’m like, “Hey, are any of you guys going to the SHRM Conference?” All four of them said yes. I said, “Anybody staying at Resorts World, the new Conrad Hotel?” It’s where I’m staying. By the way, if you haven’t been to Las Vegas’s brand new hotel, it’s fantastic. There’s their plug. I love those guys. It’s good.

Josh Rock: [00:09:45] But this young man, his name is Ethan. He’s from Minneapolis. He was sitting with his mom. And they’re like, “Yeah. We’re staying there too.” I said, Well, why don’t we ride share? Save each other some money. Maybe we could put it on gambling, or food, or something like that later on.” Come to find out he’s a senior at a local college back in Minnesota looking to, you know, build upon his career. And I said, “Are you on social media?” “Well, yeah. I’m on Twitter.” I said, “Well, here. We’re going to do something while we’re in the car.”

Josh Rock: [00:10:08] So, I took a photo, tagged him in a post. I said, “Hey, all my SHRM social influencers, I want you to meet Ethan. All H.R. leaders here at SHRM, I want you to meet Ethan. He’s looking to start his career in the next year. Let’s connect with him, and help build him, and get to network with him, and connect with him.” He has over 50 followers now. When I talked to him, he was at 18 on the flight. He’s over 50. And these are all H.R. leaders. These are people that could offer him an opportunity, could give him tips towards connecting with other leaders. It’s endless.

Josh Rock: [00:10:36] We’re walking through the hall and I run into Ethan. We’re sitting with the other students. I said, “Hey, Ethan. How’s it going for you so far?” “It’s great. I met these people. I got invited to these dinners. I’m going to this social. All because you shared who I am at this conference.”

Josh Rock: [00:10:50] And there’s this young lady from University of Tennessee, Knoxville, sitting behind me. Her name is Stephanie. And I said, “Stephanie, can we blow you up on Twitter too?” “Sure.” The next thing you know, people are following Stephanie. Her dad followed me on Twitter yesterday and said, “Thanks for expanding my daughter’s networking world.” These are the things that we do.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:09] I love that.

Josh Rock: [00:11:09] You know, it may not benefit me as a recruiter at Nuss. But if I can give back, I’m happy to do it. And that’s part of the reason of one of the things we talked about earlier before coming on the show was #JobHuntChat. We’ve been doing a job advice chat on Twitter for over 11 years every Monday night. I don’t do it because I’m getting paid off it. I do it because I enjoy it. I love to give back, because if one little bit allows somebody to leverage their career, provide for themselves or their family, good karma for the day.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:36] Yeah. Absolutely. And engagement is the key. Not being afraid to strike up that conversation and start just, you know, getting to know people. I mean, it’s amazing what you can find out and what you can learn, which is obviously what we’re doing today, which is great.

Josh Rock: [00:11:48] Exactly.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:48] Well, thank you so much, Josh. It has been great chatting with you. I’m going to shift over to our next guest from Workology, Jessica Miller-Merrell. Welcome. She’s the Founder and Chief Innovation Officer. Talk to us, Jessica, how did you get into this?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:12:03] I started a blog. I started a blog in 2005. It was a job search blog originally called Blogging for Jobs. And I was an H.R. director at a Fortune 200 company, and I was trying to fill inside/outside sales positions and supporting roles. And I started the blog to be able to build a pipeline of candidates. And it’s now became a business. I have a team of 11 and we provide resources, information, support, and training for H.R. And workplace leaders. We reach over 800,000 every single month. It’s amazing.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:37] That is amazing. Fantastic. So, now, you’re here at SHRM, obviously, probably been here multiple times. How do you leverage this conference for building on maybe your content or learning about what’s kind of trending within the H.R. space?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:12:53] So, it’s my first conference in – what? – two-and-a-half years or whenever the world stopped, right? So, it’s been great to hug people, shake hands, masked of course. But just connect in person and have a conversation that doesn’t involve screens. I mean, my business is predominantly online, and the work that we do is mostly digital. But it’s nice to just be able to randomly connect with somebody on Twitter or in a session and then learn more about what they’re doing and what’s important to them.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:13:27] I have a lot of access to different resources information in people. And so, for me, it’s all about connecting those people to other people or those other resources. And sometimes the best way to do that is in crazy atmosphere like this, where we’re all kind of the same, but we’re all different, but we all have that thing in common which is working and loving the human resources industry.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:49] Absolutely. And so, for content, I mean, you mentioned it’s kind of a resource hub. You’ve got different elements that help H.R. leaders. I got to imagine you’ve just been pushing a ton of content out over this last year helping them with how to guide through the pandemic and others. So, how do you create that and how are they accessing it?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:14:09] So, predominantly, there’s four different ways that H.R. leaders get access to our resources. We do have a number of trainings. We provide H.R. certification prep for HRCI and SHRM certification resources that’s all digital and on demand. And then, we also have a membership that allows H.R. leaders to get access to our library of resources, connect with me, connect with others. And then, be able to just have aggravated customized content delivered to them or training or information. So, training is number one.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:14:39] And then, we also have a newsletter that reaches over 500,000 H.R. leaders at Workology every single week. And we organize and deliver similar stuff – like, the Biden press conference will probably be on our next newsletter – just providing information to help them do their jobs better and to spend less time searching the internet for it, like we just deliver it out for them. So, I’m like their trusted friend that knows all the things over cocktails or coffee that’s like, “Here’s everything that you need.”

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:15:09] We also have a podcast ourselves. It’s called the Workology Podcast, over seven years going. So, that’s been a lot of fun. And then, of course, my blog, and we have over 8,000 articles and information there. It’s this living embodiment and a testament to how vast, and interesting, and amazing the human resource industry really is.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:30] Yeah. Well, there’s so many different facets. You know, there’s the legal side, regulation, talent and acquisition that we talked about, and there’s also the hiring part of it. So, one part of HR that’s your favorite that gets you just all giddy, what would that be?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:15:48] Right now, I’m really fascinated with the evolution of the chief human resources and the chief people officer. I was telling Nicole as we were waiting that we have been doing a podcast series, really, since the beginning of the pandemic that’s just focused on talking to CHROs, and understanding what has their attention right now, maybe an initiative or program. What’s their HR organization like? How do they talk to their executive team? And it has been amazing. We’ve talked to companies that are, you know, Fortune 5 CHROs. And then, we’ve talked to companies that have 57 employees that are chief people officers in their organization.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:16:29] So, it’s really interesting to see how that’s evolving and changing. And then, the kinds of resources that we need as CHROS, regardless of the company size, need, tools, information technology is really evolving. And it definitely has increased in the speed with the pandemic, because we have to be able to be more flexible and pivot and agile. And that’s different than it ever has before because we don’t know – well, we always didn’t know what tomorrow is going to be. But we really don’t know what tomorrow is going to be in the workplace.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:17:02] Yeah. Even still today, right?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:17:04] Yeah. Every single day, it’s changing. And, especially if you’re a global H.R. leader, if you have a global organization, maybe you’re in the U.S., maybe you’re in India, maybe you have a team in Pakistan or Mexico, you have to be able to lead not just to your core team or your team in the U.S., but you have to be able to support those employees everywhere.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:17:25] And now that so many people are remote, you might have Susan who decides to move to Portugal and now you’re faced with a whole another challenge as the head of HR. Like, how do I set a payroll and taxes and all these things for Susan who didn’t tell me for the last eight months that she relocated to Portugal. And this is happening a lot. I’m seeing it. I’m getting emails, DMs, text messages of, you know, freaked out H.R. personnel like, “I need help.” And I have been drowning for the last two years. And now here’s another just pivot or thing that we have to become an expert on and support the organization and our employees in.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:06] That’s fascinating. Because when they move, everything changes in terms of their employment. So, I mean, how an employee doesn’t share that with them, but you know [inaudible].

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:18:15] Well, they wanted to work remotely. I think the pandemic, like for me, I’ve had to really sit back and think about my life. And I think a lot of people have taken stock, like what is really important, what matters. And I hope that if you haven’t done that as an H.R. leader, you are doing that. And then, also, thinking about who you want to be in 18 months, two years or five years. Not just who you want to be as a person to your family and your friends, but as a leader in an organization supporting the business.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:18:44] And employees are making decisions and saying, “Hey, you know what? YOLO. I’m moving to Portugal. And right now everybody’s working from home, so nobody knows because I can do it over Zoom.” But they are just thinking about, “Okay. My boss, I just want to show them, him or her, that I can do this here. Or, you know, they’re probably never going to know.” They’re not thinking about the things that we have to deal with as H.R. leaders, employment laws, payroll, taxes, all the fun things. And, now, it’s not just somebody moving from Texas to Minnesota, it is somebody moving from Texas to Portugal or, you know, wherever else.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:19:21] So, quick question, because I had not heard that yet, but it makes total sense when you bring that up that an employee would do that because why not, right? How can an employer be proactive in saying, “If you’ve got ideas of doing this,” I mean, is there a way they can gently put that out there without maybe showing that they’re encouraging, but maybe is there communication that can be done?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:19:44] It starts with a culture of trust and conversation. So, H.R. leaders – and they should be. And I know we have got a lot on our plate, so I hear you because you’re going to groan when I make this recommendation – you need to be investing as much time as you can talking to your people. And I don’t mean your managers and your frontline managers and your executive team. I mean, your actual people. And so, that means popping into Zoom calls, scheduling appointments, scheduling meetings, in-person or remote, however you’re going to do it. But the majority of your time should be spent with the people in the organization, and building that trust, and leading by example.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:20:23] So that when Susan decides to relocate to Portugal, she sees us as a human being, Josh or Jessica, “I might need to let my boss or Josh or Jess know what’s going on.” Just to check in.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:20:38] I think a lot of times we just look at someone who is in a position of management or leadership as a logo, not necessarily a person. So, as H.R. leaders, we need to lead with the humanity side of things. Go out there and build those relationships, set the tone for the rest of the organization.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:20:57] So that when Susan has a question because she’s probably just like, you know, no news is good news, right? So, she hasn’t heard anything about it, so she thinks it’s okay. But then, we can start to have those conversations because if there’s one person that’s done it in your organization, I guarantee you, there’s probably 15, 25, 45 more.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:21:17] I mean, personally, my goal is to move to Belize. I want to be, like, part time. I want to be in Texas. I want to be in Belize and wherever. My husband, he’s a little bit different. He just wants to relocate to wherever my daughter goes to college. Which I’m like, “Okay. We can own a house. But I’m moving to the Caribbean somewhere. I’m going to be snorkeling on my days off and when I’m not podcasting or speaking.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:41] Like, this is going to happen.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:21:41] Yeah. And I think a lot of other people are wanting to do this. But if we don’t plan or prepare or at least consider this might be happening, because if it’s not moving to Belize or Portugal, it is mental health conversations or PTSD, or I’m having a lot of financial problems right now, or other things. This year has been hard for so many people, and so they’re just grabbing onto the one thing that brings them some happiness and just fills up their cup. And for Susan, that’s moving to Portugal. For me, it is Belize. And I’m going to talk about it on every podcast. I am moving there because I’m going to manifest and make it happen.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:22:21] Yeah. And then, you’ll do a podcast on living in Belize.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:22:24] Yeah. There’ll be a whole blog and a business. It’s going to be a whole thing.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:22:26] I can see it now. Fantastic. No, I’m glad we’re having that conversation, and I know you said people will groan at that. But you’re not the first person that I’ve talked to at the show that has mentioned that, about that senior, that executive level leadership needing to have more visibility kind of with employees. And that is a struggle, right? Because some of them are feeling the burn. They’re trying to balance all the shifts and turns and keep that organization strategically running forward.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:22:52] It’s the reason that I’m here to connect with the H.R. community. Because I’m providing resources just like H.R. leaders are providing their employees and organizations resources. If I don’t invest the time, like H.R. leaders are not investing time in their people, I might go somewhere else and start writing about Alaska when I should be writing about Belize or whatever resource that I’m providing. I want to make sure that we’re connected together and that I’m able to do my job and what my superpower is.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:23:22] Just like as H.R. leaders, we need to be able to do that. And that’s really that human connection piece that people focus first. That is so important right now in moving forward, because we will continue to be a hybrid workplace, whether our organizational leaders want it or not. The employees are speaking, and they are walking out of jobs, and making decisions, or moving to Portugal and not telling their organization because it is such an important thing. It doesn’t mean that working remotely is less productive, but it allows for some work-life flexibility that they maybe didn’t have in the same way before.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:24:03] Yeah. And are so appreciating that aspect over the last year of that work-life, you know, they don’t want to give that up so they’re really holding on to it.

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:24:10] As someone who has worked remotely for over 12 years, it’s good and bad. I do like going to the office because I can leave my work at work.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:24:22] Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Well, if anybody wanted to get a hold of you, Jessica, how would they do that? Or how would they access Workology so they can get those great resources that you talked about?

Jessica Miller- Merrell: [00:24:34] workology.com is the best place to go. If you want to connect with me one-on-one, all the places and all the social medias. Facebook is great. Twitter is excellent. Linkedin, you can connect with me there as well. You can also send me an email, you know, if you’re not on the social medias. And that’s jessica@workology.com. I’m here to support H.R. leaders and help empower them to be better at their jobs and also better at just life. I mean, this is all that we have. That’s one opportunity. So, we should make the best of it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:25:09] Absolutely. I love that. And, Josh, if they wanted to get in touch with you, how would they get in touch with you?

Josh Rock: [00:25:14] Easy. You can find me on LinkedIn, just like many other H.R. pros that are here. Twitter, JRock96, the hockey number follows me everywhere I go. But if you’re looking for a job or seeking advice, you can always check out #JobHuntChat Monday nights 8:00 p.m. Central, we’ll be there. And you can contribute if you’re an H.R. pro and you want to help job seekers. Or if you have other job seekers that want to know more, tell them to jump on Twitter and follow us along.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:25:43] Awesome. Well, thank you both for joining us. It’s been great to chat with you.

Josh Rock: [00:25:46] Awesome. Thanks, Jamie.

 

Tagged With: find talented people, hiring, Human Resources, Jamie Gassmann, Jessica Miller-Merrell, Josh Rock, Nuss Truck Group, SHRM 2021, talent acquisition, Workology, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Nicole Roberts, MVAH Partners and John Baldino, Humareso

September 22, 2021 by John Ray

Humareso
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Nicole Roberts, MVAH Partners and John Baldino, Humareso
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Humareso

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Nicole Roberts, MVAH Partners and John Baldino, Humareso

Nicole Roberts with MVAH Partners and John Baldino with Humareso joined host Jamie Gassmann on this live edition of Workplace MVP. Nicole spoke to the steps her company took to support their workforce, employee, and HR burnout, and how to be there for each other. John Baldino shared his work at Humareso, the HR consulting firm he founded, the unprecedented pace of change in compensation, and much more. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2021 SHRM Annual Conference held at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Nicole Roberts, SHRM-CP, PHR, Vice President of People & Culture, MVAH Partners

Nicole Roberts, VP of People & Culture, MVAH Partners

Nicole Roberts is Vice President of People & Culture for MVAH Partners. She started in March, 2020, three days before the pandemic affected their business. She went right to work figuring out how to help employees feel supported and finding solutions such as Support Link, a 14 touch point EAP service to employees.

Nicole started in human resources in 2004.

LinkedIn

MVAH Partners

MVAH began developing affordable housing in 1993. Since then they have developed more than 7,000 affordable housing units ranging across a broad spectrum of housing types: multi-story apartment properties for families and seniors, villas, single-family developments, rehabs, adaptive reuse of existing buildings in large and small communities. MVAH has a singular focus on developing quality affordable housing for those who need it most. This includes over 100 affordable housing properties in 15 states.

MVAH provides development services for their own long-term ownership as well as for other companies. MVAH values long-term partnerships and relationships with non-profits and public agencies and will continue to try to build relationships like those with others.

Company website

John Baldino, MSHRD SPHR SHRM-SCP, President, Humareso

John Baldino, MSHRD SPHR SHRM-SCP, President, Humareso

John is an SPHR, SHRM-SCP certified professional with 25+ years of HR experience in strategic planning, organizational development, coaching, leadership development, training, curriculum development, compensation analyses, employee relations, policies & procedures, business development, payroll & benefits administration.

He delivers keynote addresses across the US and in the international community. John was the 2012 Delaware Valley (Philadelphia Metropolitan Area) HR Person of the Year.

John started Humareso in 2012. He has a Master’s in Human Resource Development from Villanova.

LinkedIn

Humareso

Humareso is able to strategize with your company and develop plans to manage talent, recruit for skill gaps based on employee inventories, assess markets for growth, develop long-range succession plans and influence a culture of enthusiastic buy-in. Humareso handles all facets of employee engagement and business development. Humareso provides HR solutions and administration for small businesses trying to manage budget and growth.

Humareso sits strategically to support an organization’s vital talent needs. Talent is what they believe in cultivating. They look to drive organizational health through true employee engagement, strategic workforce planning and invested management training. Having a culture that values people, policy, and performance in the right measures is the differential needed to stand apart from other organizations. Whether your organization has 10 or 100,000 employees, dynamic human resources will build corporate strength and recognize talent contribution.

Company website | LinkedIn

 

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:07] Well, I think you hire veterans. I’m going to totally play off of that. So, I watch for my little clues of good convo.

Nicole Roberts: [00:00:17] I love it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:17] Awesome.

Male Speaker: [00:00:18] So, let’s do a real quick soundcheck. I want to make sure we’re good. Nicole, pull that mic in, if you will, just a little bit. Awesome. And, these are directional mics, meaning if you’re back here or off to the side, you can hear the difference. So, we want you in there loud and proud. So, Nicole, just give your name and company affiliation.

Nicole Roberts: [00:00:36] Nicole Roberts.

Male Speaker: [00:00:38] Perfect. John?

John Baldino: [00:00:39] John Baldino.

Male Speaker: [00:00:42] Awesome. Okay. I think we’re ready to go.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:45] I think we are.

Male Speaker: [00:00:45] Okay.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:46] Awesome.

Male Speaker: [00:00:46] Here we go. You all have fun.

Intro: [00:00:53] Broadcasting live from the SHRM 2021 Conference at the Las Vegas Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:12] Hello, everyone. Jamie Gassmann, your host here for Workplace MVP. And I am broadcasting from SHRM 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. And really exciting. I have three guests for this episode. So, I’m going to start out with our first guest, Nicole Roberts, who’s Vice President of People & Culture from MVAH Partners. Welcome to the show, Nicole.

Nicole Roberts: [00:01:34] Thank you very much.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:35] So, why don’t we start out with you telling us a little bit about your H.R. background, how you came into H.R., and a little bit about MVAH partners?

Nicole Roberts: [00:01:45] Sure. So, I started in H.R. in 2004 and started out in benefits and then moved into employee relations and was a department of one a couple of times and really just moved into more amplified roles throughout my career until I got into, you know, executive leadership and building and developing teams. And, currently, my role as vice president at People & Culture, I am able to set the strategy and be really intentional in how we want to show up and how we want to take the best care of our people and to really be intentional with our culture.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:24] Awesome. So, over the last year and looking at going now into 2021 and I know it’s hard to not talk about over the last year because H.R. has been impacted so much. And, from a cultural perspective, what have been some of the challenges that you’ve seen that you’ve had to get really strategic and kind of overcome over that last year?

Nicole Roberts: [00:02:42] So, when I started with MVAH partners, my first day was March 9 and as we know the kind of beginning, so to speak, of the impact of the pandemic on our cultures and on our workplaces was March 11. So, the traditional aspect and the traditional approach of, you know, get in, learn the culture, learn the people, all that, like all of that went out the window. And it was, what is most important to the business? How can we best support our people?

Nicole Roberts: [00:03:12] We are in 15 states and we have 100 locations. And, because we’re affordable housing, it’s essential that people have a place to live. So, we have not stopped through the entire pandemic. And so, our major focuses were making sure that our people who were working, you know, at front lines, so to speak, really felt supported and that we see you and we understand and we acknowledge that you are right there public-facing.

Nicole Roberts: [00:03:40] And, one of the things that we’ve done recently is we implemented Core Links…. It’s called SupportLink. And, what it is is it is what I would call an EAP on steroids. And, it is a 14-touchpoint EAP program. So, it really just meets people where they are if it’s an app, a phone number, a website. And, it really just was one of those benefits where we looked at it and we said we really can’t afford not to do this.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:13] Yeah. It’s almost like giving them access to something in the way that they want to receive that information. And, what kind of difference have you seen within the employees, maybe from a utilization perspective, by implementing something different like that?

Nicole Roberts: [00:04:25] So, one of the main things is during the pandemic, there were so many people that were reaching out and saying, “Hey, does our benefit program cover mental health? Do we have tech support? Do we have phone calls? How many visits is it?” And all of that.

Nicole Roberts: [00:04:41] And so, even before our renewal of 10/1, I started to talk to our broker and, like, what can we do? What solutions are out there? And so, we looked at four or five different companies and we decided that SupportLlink was perfect for us because it met people where they were and we’ve gotten so much positive feedback from that that not only do you have access to the care, but it is a licensed professional that you speak to the first time that you call.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:09] Right. So, they’re more accessible. Fantastic. So, you know, as you kind of look at it towards the end of this year, are there any things that you’re seeing now that we’ve kind of seen this increase in cases again? You know, are there challenges that are resurfacing that you’re having to navigate? And, what is that looking like for your organization?

Nicole Roberts: [00:05:27] Well, for us, so we went through, you know, state-by-state, and in some states, it was municipality-by-municipality, where the guidance was different. The regulations were different. And, there was kind of this feeling like, okay now we can breathe and then right back into it. So, for us, it’s really just making sure that, you know, the compassion fatigue doesn’t get to a point of complete burnout and exhaustion, and that people, you know, feel supported and that there’s – our biggest thing really is making sure that they have as much information as possible so that there’s not that additional stress of the uncertainty to go with it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:13] Right. Well, and isn’t compassion fatigue and burnout becoming some of the most common things we’re hearing across multiple industries but particularly that frontline, kind of, essential worker, like here we go again kind of environments.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:28] So, when how – and I know you’ve got this program. But are there other things that you’re seeing with that compassion fatigue and burnout? And, are there ways that employers or H.R. people can be looking at and doing things to help out?

Nicole Roberts: [00:06:41] I think one thing that we really need to pay attention to as well is it’s not just our employees, it’s H.R. I mean, part of how you build resilience is you have that period of rebuilding and we just aren’t having that in this case. I mean, some of us have been, you know, just full steam ahead for so long that we haven’t even stopped to feel authentically how this actually is for us.

Nicole Roberts: [00:07:10] And so, I think from that aspect, we just need to really grant each other a lot of grace and we need to make sure that we’re caring for one another coming into situations with that positive intent, that benefit of the doubt, and asking, how are you? Not just what do you need and what can I get for you? And, you know, from a benefit perspective or anything like that. But really at the personal level, how are you? How are you dealing with this? Do you have kids that all of a sudden have been sent back home? Or, you know, what’s going on with you? And, I think that the biggest thing that we can do as H.R. is to not only be there for our employees but for each other.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:51] Oh, that’s a fantastic way, and SHRM is a great place to be able to do that. Reconnect with colleagues you probably haven’t seen for a while. Well, thanks, Nicole.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:00] We’re going to go into our next guest here, John Baldino from Humareso.

John Baldino: [00:08:06] Excellent.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:06] Did I say it right?

John Baldino: [00:08:08] Yes. Humareso.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:09] I tried really hard to punch that up for you.

John Baldino: [00:08:12] You did a great job. Fantastic.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:13] So, John, why don’t we start out with you introducing yourself, telling us a little bit about your background, tell us a little bit about Humareso, and kind of give us a little bit of background on you.

John Baldino: [00:08:22] Sure. So, I’m one of the old ones here at SHRM. Yes, I’m getting head nods. This month actually is my 30th year in human resources. And, I started out in personnel because that’s kind of what we used to be known as. And, I started out in the retail world and my career just, you know, evolved from there and leadership development and organizational design and development and H.R. stuff right over the past 30 years.

John Baldino: [00:08:51] And so, Humareso is my H.R. consulting firm that I began a little over nine years ago. And, it’s been a great ride. I mean, really, it’s been a lot of fun because we do a lot of great work with organizations of various sizes across the country, a little bit international. And so, from startups, which is really exciting, right, to watch all the startups trying to get things going, but also to organizations that are enterprise, multistate, multilevel organizations that have some of the same problems that startups have and trying to figure out a way to be customized in the approach to handle those problems because of their specific details. But there’s a lot of similar applications, right. So, it’s fun for our team to get to be a part of those things.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:32] Yeah. And, I imagine as a consulting firm, you see everything.

John Baldino: [00:09:34] I mean, unfortunately.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:37] Like everything.

John Baldino: [00:09:37] Everything. And videos. Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:40] Okay, so everything.

John Baldino: [00:09:41] Thank you. Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:41] Have to add that, right. So, talk to me. What are some of the, you know, kind of, you know, from the – I’m looking at the last year because I think that that’s really top of mind for a lot of people. But, you know, what are some of the things that you’ve seen in the consulting world that have been growing, kind of trending concerns or challenges that H.R. teams or employers have faced?

John Baldino: [00:10:01] Yeah. I mean, obviously, and then Nicole just did a great job talking about COVID response and you can’t ignore that. But there’s some residual in that as well. And so, we’re seeing some difficulty when it comes to talent management and talent acquisition. And, we’re also seeing difficulty when it comes to compensation management. How much do we pay people now? You know, the rate of pay is changing so quickly. I just was sharing this with somebody else.

John Baldino: [00:10:25] You know, again, I’ve been doing this a long time. There’s some great data that’s done from a compensation analytics standpoint that for the first time with some of the large providers of compensation data, they’re putting their hands up and saying, “We are so sorry. We’ve never experienced this kind of turnover in comp data. We can’t keep up.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:10:46] Wow.

John Baldino: [00:10:47] And, that’s absolutely unusual. Like, never have I seen this before.

John Baldino: [00:10:52] Yeah. Well, in the rate of change, just in the worlds, I mean, you know, constant in terms of what people are needing.

John Baldino: [00:10:59] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:00] So, it’s very interesting. Have you seen, you know, obviously, from your experience, in nine years of doing consulting, are there some trends that might have been starting prior to COVID? So, you already saw the writing on the wall, but due to COVID just completely sped up the rate of the change.

John Baldino: [00:11:18] Yeah. You know, I know that we’ve talked a lot about work from home obviously over the past year. And, what I would say is, pre-pandemic there already were organizations trying to figure out how to be a bit more nimble and flexible. And so, this concept, I mean, even in my own organization in Humareso, not everyone came into the office every day, not every – and they weren’t hired in the city where the corporate offices are.

John Baldino: [00:11:41] So, we already had a sense of that. But, obviously, when COVID hit and that became much more of the conversation, for some organizations, it was, you know, a little too late. They could have been planned a bit better when it came to flexibility. But for some, they really saw this as the push to make things cleaner when it comes to employee experience and to finding talent. I mean, we’re seeing organizations that are – so, our corporate offices are in the Philadelphia area and we’re seeing companies, for example in Philadelphia, that are hiring their first employees this past year in San Francisco, in Chicago, in Austin, Texas, and, you know, Topeka, Kansas, because they can.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:28] Yeah.

John Baldino: [00:12:29] Right? And that’s kind of exciting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:30] Right. Your candidate pool just expanded across the globe, basically.

John Baldino: [00:12:33] And, it needed to.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:34] Yeah. Absolutely.

John Baldino: [00:12:34] We needed it, too.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:35] But on top of that, though, how does that impact compensation? I know you mentioned the compensation numbers are off the charts. But when you live like, let’s say you have, you know, your offices are in somewhere remote Nebraska, but you’re trying to hire somebody in San Francisco. I mean, that rate of pay is like a night and day. How how does an employer navigate that?

John Baldino: [00:12:54] It’s a great question. I’m going to say they navigate it not very well and usually –

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:00] And they need to hire you, right? Yeah. They need to call John.

John Baldino: [00:13:05] And, you know, then you get into – there’s a couple of different ways to approach it. There is a philosophy around the job is worth what the job is worth. Because that’s what you’re paying for is the skill sets and knowledge to be applied to get that work done. And that is worth X, whatever that is.

John Baldino: [00:13:21] Some organizations will do that as sort of a baseline, but then you have sort of cost of living add-ons put onto it to say, you know, living in San Francisco, as an example, or San Diego, it’s a lot different than living in Lincoln, Nebraska, right? It’s a little different for a variety of reasons. But compensation being one. And so, we can do the offset from a cost of living adjustment if we needed to. This way you’re not committing yourself to something beyond.

John Baldino: [00:13:46] But I will say there are employers that are, I hope, listening, right, who have put themselves in a corner to say we will never hire anybody from California because we don’t want to pay X, Y, or Z, we don’t want to do this and that. And I get that. But I would also say we’re in a time where talent is at a premium. So, you can’t afford to be that snotty about where you’ll take people, right. It’s not someone’s fault that they grew up in California. That’s where they are.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:14:14] It’s where they live. And then, the question comes to is with the shortage of employers or employees, right, that strain on employers trying to find that talent, you know, to your point, you know, sometimes they can’t really be overly picky, but, you know, how – they got to get into a certain mindset. So, if you were going to coach somebody and can kind of consult on how they should be approaching that, especially in today’s hiring world, what would be some of those key things you would remind them to do?

John Baldino: [00:14:42] Yeah. That’s really a good question. So, one of the things that I like to do and our team does is the hiring manager or executive who is having these thoughts. We try to say to them, okay, we’re going to take out a piece of paper, right old school, grab a pen, old school, and write down the top 10 tasks that you have in your job. Your job.

John Baldino: [00:15:05] And, you know, we’ll watch them write these 10. And, I’ll say, “When you started here, could you do these 10?” And, really have a heart-to-heart about – right. Well, I could do six out of 10 of these. I couldn’t do all six as well as I do them now, but I had an understanding. Okay. If I had your resume today, you wouldn’t let me hire you for that job. Right?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:28] That just got deep.

John Baldino: [00:15:29] Right.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:30] That’s awesome.

John Baldino: [00:15:31] You’re welcome. But you caused them to have a reality check. Like, you’ve been in your role, maybe for six years. You’re very comfortable. You know what you’re doing. You’ve had job enlargement and enrichment and have grown with it. You are not looking at it with those same eyes anymore to remember. You need to do that for this person who is bringing – you know, one of the things, and I know that this is going to come up probably a little bit later, too. But when you put out these job postings with these qualifications or what’s there, we have some people in our country who will look at these qualifications and self-select out.

John Baldino: [00:16:04] The statistics are off the chart about that. Look, if there are 10 bullet points of what you need and you’re a dude, you’ll do, too. If I have two out of 10, I’m 100% qualified for this job. That’s what you think. Women will be somewhere between seven and eight bullet points, and so they’ll self-select out of. And, if you’re in the military, the statistics are almost 10 out of 10.

John Baldino: [00:16:23] Come on, right. So, what are we doing that’s precluding people from thinking that they can be a part of it? Take a look at what you’re advertising, which you’re asking for a little bit deeper. And, remember, you can grow into some things. It’s not a day one.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:16:37] Right. And I love that perspective because that’s so true. And, I’ve heard that before, where men, you know, sometimes are, “Yeah, I’m fully qualified. I’m applying for it.” And, women tend to kind of take a step back.

John Baldino: [00:16:48] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:16:48] And so, if you were going to give advice to a candidate, you know, what – you know, who is looking at those job descriptions and going, “Oh my gosh, can I do this? Can I not do this?” What would be some of the advice you would give to them that helps them to identify that “No, you can do that.” You know, you may need to grow into some of these skills. But how should they present themselves or how should they kind of build up maybe some of that confidence?

John Baldino: [00:17:10] I think that when you look at it from a talent sourcing standpoint, finding people and connecting with someone to exactly your point, and saying and listening to someone say, “You know, I can’t do this. I see what you sent me. I can’t do this,” I’ll often say, “Oh, this is just, you know, a barometer of some of what’s needed. Let me ask you a question.” And then, I’ll ask something that seems disconnected and I’ll listen to someone share success that they’ve had and how they’ve been rewarded for that success. And, I’ll say fascinating. By doing whatever that is, X, the skills you demonstrated were a B and C. Funny how that will likely apply to these couple of areas that you’re saying I don’t have that. You have it all over the place, especially, I mean, again, something that might be common to some people listening is returning. If you’ve made a choice as a woman to take some time off to raise kids and you want to come back into the workforce and you say, “Well, I haven’t been working.” “Well, what have you been doing at home? I’d like to know?” Right? Because I have three kids and I know, right?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:18] I am a mom. I know.

John Baldino: [00:18:20] But you know what I mean?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:21] Yes. Absolutely. And to be able to say to you, “Did you manage the household? How about a budget?” Right? “Did you plan menus? Like, did you get your kids where they needed to be on time?” You know, maybe they weren’t dressed, but they were there on time. Like, whatever it is to just sort of laugh with it, be a little tongue in cheek about it, but remind them you demonstrated skill sets just in a different arena.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:42] Yeah, but they’re transferable.

John Baldino: [00:18:43] And, they are totally transferable.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:45] Yeah. Yeah. And so, one additional question because I am just kind of thinking about it. You know, in today’s candidate market and to some of the points you made about when people are reading those job descriptions and kind of self-selecting out, you know, do you think some of that comes down to how employers are writing that job description and how can they write them better that helps the candidates understand, “No, I can do that job,” or that may not be required on day one but we’re going to be looking for you to expand into that. I mean, is there’s something that they can be doing to maybe kind of get a little bit more innovative so candidates understand?

John Baldino: [00:19:20] Absolutely. I mean, I think there are a couple of things that come to mind. Number one, stop going to Google and, you know, downloading a job description, for Pete’s sake. I mean, I appreciate the accessibility but it’s the wrong way to approach it, right. Should I go on Google for your job description? You know, CEO, CFO, because you may not make it. Because it depends on the one that I’ll download.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:19:44] Right, right.

John Baldino: [00:19:45] The other thing I would say is, be creative in the way in which you can vet for qualifications. Use video. Use Facetime, right? You can do pre-records. You can do lives. We should be a lot more comfortable with those things as a result of this past year, right, to your point, earlier, like what has changed. Be creative in that way, too.

John Baldino: [00:20:05] I recently was working on a marketing specialist at our organization and the key to entry was, where’s your link to your portfolio, your online portfolio? Just send the link. I don’t – well, I have to get my resume together. No, thank you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:21] Yeah. I want to see actual work.

John Baldino: [00:20:23] Right. No thank you. I’ll get the resume later. I need your name and email address. Can I just have the link to your – are you sure? Yeah. Actually, I know, I run the company. I’m pretty sure. Just sent it to me. It’s okay.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:36] Are you questioning me? Are you questioning me? Really?

John Baldino: [00:20:40] And, you do that and someone is – the interesting thing about that in that particular role is that’s their bread and butter.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:47] Yeah.

John Baldino: [00:20:48] The creative, innovative approach to design and development. So, start with the best foot forward. Why wouldn’t you want to?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:55] Yeah. What is your LinkedIn look like and is you have a picture on it? I mean, that’s –

John Baldino: [00:20:59] Right.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:20:59] Honestly, I mean, that’s going to be – you’re going to be expected to do that and so –

John Baldino: [00:21:03] Right.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:03] Fantastic. Yeah.

John Baldino: [00:21:03] So, to have that kind of different approach, I would say for employers, look at the job, and I know we’re going to hear some more about that from a talent acquisition standpoint. But what does this job ask for? Is there are different ways that you can find out that information than just a sheet of paper?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:15] Yeah. Fantastic. Well, thanks so much for joining us, John.

John Baldino: [00:21:18] Thank you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:21] So, yeah, thank you for joining us. Sorry, I just got a little bit distracted from the show floor here. Lots of people coming by. Very exciting. But we’re going to – if anybody needs to get a hold of you, John, how would they do that if they wanted to get in touch with you and reach out for more information?

John Baldino: [00:21:37] So, certainly the website @humareso.com, H-U-M-A-R-E-S-O .com. And you can connect with me there, or I’m on Twitter all over the place @bjalive, like not dead, but alive, jbalive.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:51] Fascinating. Well, it’s been great to have you on the show. Thank you so much. And, thanks to Nicole as well who did have to step away because obviously, these are working, you know, H.R. folks trying to get all their education here at the show. And, if you are in the area, stop by Booth 4076 and check out R3 Continuum’s booth, our show sponsor. And, thank you again. Have a great day.

 

Tagged With: Affordable housing, HR Consultant, Human Resources, Humareso, Jamie Gassmann, John Baldino, MVAH Partners, Nicole Roberts, R3 Continuum, SHRM 2021, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Tammy Worley, Adare Pharma Solutions

September 21, 2021 by John Ray

Tammy Worley Adare
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Tammy Worley, Adare Pharma Solutions
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Tammy Worley Adare

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Tammy Worley, Adare Pharma Solutions

On this live edition of Workplace MVP, Adare Pharma Solutions Sr. HR Manager Tammy Worley related not only her path to HR but shared how the SHRM 2021 conference has reaffirmed her belief that the whole person comes to work. As she shared with host Jamie Gassmann, employees aren’t looking for another newsletter; they are looking for better communication and connection. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2021 SHRM Annual Conference held at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Tammy Worley, Sr. Manager, Human Resources – US, Adare Pharma Solutions

Tammy Worley, Sr. Manager, Human Resources – US, Adare Pharma Solutions

Tammy Worley fell in love with HR in 1996. She realized it combined her love of compassion for people and education. Tammy has been with Adare since 2017 and in 2020 became the Senior Manager of Human Resources in the US for Adare.

 

LinkedIn

 

Adare Pharma Solutions

Adare is a global specialized CDMO company with a long history of success from concept through commercialization. We use our unique combination of experience, proprietary capabilities, and resources to create meaningful products for our customers. Our ability to create differentiated drugs guides the identification and development of the novel products in our pipeline and our acquisition strategy. Our dedication to developing strong, collaborative partnerships provides significant advantages in competitive markets.

Company website

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the SHRM 2021 Conference at the Las Vegas Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:00:22] Hello, everyone. Jamie Gassmann, your host of Workplace MVP, and we are broadcasting from the SHRM 2021 Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada. And, with me today is Tammy Worley from Adare Pharmaceuticals. Tammy is the senior H.R. manager for the U.S. region. Welcome to the show, Tammy.

Tammy Worley: [00:00:44] Thank you. I’m happy to be here.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:00:46] So, Tammy, tell me a little bit about your career journey and how you came to be the senior H.R. manager for Adare Pharmaceuticals.

Tammy Worley: [00:00:54] Wow. What a journey. I started out in a manufacturing company that was a glass factory and I was asked to volunteer to help to rewrite an employee handbook. And, from there, I fell in love with H.R. and I have been in it since 1996.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:01:14] Wow. So, all from being a volunteer to writing an HR handbook. Fantastic. How did you navigate that task?

Tammy Worley: [00:01:22] It was a lot of work, a lot of talking to people, a lot of typing because back then we did not have word processors like we have today so there was a lot of manual typing. And, it was communicating with a lot of people and having to collaborate with different groups. And, I found that when I was a child, I wanted to be a teacher and this started that journey where I could be a customer service person without having to be a teacher of young children. And, I also, at one point, wanted to be in adult care, and I knew that from my wearing my heart on my sleeve that I wasn’t going to be probably good in that arena. And, when I volunteered in H.R., it just was like, I think I found my home.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:02:19] It’s amazing. Well, it definitely brings those two, kind of, passions that you had as a child into one career opportunity because H.R. definitely does that. There’s definitely that educational component to it as an H.R. leader within an organization, and you really have to have that compassion for people, too. So, that’s fantastic.

Tammy Worley: [00:02:38] Yeah. And, it was just a way that, you know, if in the adult care, elder care, you know, you’re going to be looking at the loss of individuals. Not that I don’t see a loss of people, but it’s on a different scale. But it’s a way for me to connect with people, do all I can to support them because I heard it during the session, the general session, it’s the whole person comes to work, and I heard Chipotle mentioned that. And, that has actually been a belief of mine for as long as I can remember. The whole person comes to work and the whole person goes home. And how can you ask people to differentiate from that? And I can’t because I am the whole person that comes to work and I’m the whole person that goes home. So, how can I ask people to be different from me? I can’t.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:03:37] That’s a fantastic takeaway. I love that. And it’s true. You got to look – it’s all of it. It’s the physical. It’s the psychological. You got to look at that entire person and how you’re supporting them.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:03:48] So, having that belief and then hearing that in one of the pre-conferences, oh, actually, it was the general session, was like, opening keynote. Is there something that you are taking back that’s different than what you might have been doing already, or is it going to enhance some of the things that you maybe have done already in your role?

Tammy Worley: [00:04:06] I think it’s an affirmation that what I have believed all along is accurate. You know, I’m a person entering the H.R. arena in the ’90s, and that was a whole different world. And Brian spoke about, you know from Chipotle, that there was one person who said a new normal. And, I agree with him that our new normal is changes daily.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:04:41] Absolutely.

Tammy Worley: [00:04:42] And, as an H.R. professional how do we recognize that that new normal is going to change daily but we answer to different people who don’t necessarily agree that the new normal is daily. I love the fact that he, as a high-level leader within the organization, recognizes that.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:05:01] Yeah. That’s fascinating because, you know, it’s a new normal at work daily. It’s also a new normal at home daily for some of these employees. So, they’re bringing that on their sleeve when they’re coming into that workplace. They’re trying to balance the challenges that they’re experiencing on their daily at home with the challenges they face daily at work. So, what a great takeaway.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:05:20] And so, you know, how, you know – from your perspective, if you’re going to be looking at, like, maybe a senior leader in your organization that you’re having to kind of talk about that with, you know, how would you approach that?

Tammy Worley: [00:05:39] Well, it’s really a cultural difference. We went from an autocratic organization, most organizations are autocratic, to more of a demographic or democracy, if you will, asking employees. What do you think? What do you feel? Where do you want to see things? Having focus groups.

Tammy Worley: [00:06:01] I mean a lot of organizations were breaking that ground and other organizations were not jumping onto that bandwagon. They were still in a this is what we have to do and we’re very controlled environment and it’s black and white but now we’re in a gray environment. We have remote workers and these remote workers want to stay remote. We had to introduce flexible work environments because we have people that are taking care of their children at home.

Tammy Worley: [00:06:37] And so, that new normal became a different demographics for us, and we had to rethink how we administer policies, how we administer compassion, how we integrate communication, you know. So, it was a divide and conquer, but at the same time thinking about how do we re-engage people because engagement is important. And I know every pulse survey every company does, it comes out communication. But employees are not asking for us to give us another newsletter. They’re not asking us to send another email. They’re not asking for another video. They’re asking for us to bridge the gap from department to department. And, they want to bridge that gap of communication.

Tammy Worley: [00:07:33] And so, when you have remote workers, there’s a delay in communication. It’s not real-time anymore. So, we have to figure out how to engage the employees to recognize that if you’re asking for email, you’re asking for teams meetings or Skype meetings or whatever the case may be, that we’re no longer asking employees, send me an IM, let’s open up the door to give me a call, and have a real-life conversation because I think email has become the norm communication and there’s something lost in that.

Tammy Worley: [00:08:15] Because I know from my own personal experience. I send an email. I can be short and sweet. And then, the person reads that, and then they interpret something different than the message I wanted to present. If we had just picked up the phone and called that person or said let me call you on teams or IM or Skype, we could have eliminated all of that confusion. But I think that the bridge is communicating interdepartmentally and silos have been built, and we’ve got to get the silos back down.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:08:50] Oh, I think that’s such a great point. I always say things are lost in translation and in email. And on top of that, you know, people are, they’re burned out. They’re stressed and they’re getting a lot of emails from a lot of different sources. And so, I would agree with you. Like, they’re probably skimming it, you know, and not really reading it. And, you know, it’s kind of like when you hear communication with when you talk and listen to someone like that active listening skills. It’s almost like you have to have active reading skills. And, when you’ve got so many things coming at you, I could see where some of those employees are struggling with that, which does create kind of some divides because – and those silos are hard to break down once they’re formed.

Tammy Worley: [00:09:32] Yes, and we have, in the past, you could just get up from your chair and go to the other office and talk to the person if you were not understanding. We can’t do that so much today, right?

Jamie Gassmann : [00:09:45] Right. Yeah.

Tammy Worley: [00:09:45] Because their office is at their home where the dog is barking, the cats walking across their keyboard, or the child is crying in the background. And so, we need to remember that.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:10:00] Wow. That sounded like a school bell here. Speaking of interruptions during different work and events. I’m not sure what that was, but, yeah, no, absolutely there are a lot more distractions sometimes with people working from home.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:10:16] So, in your opinion, if an organization is going to, you know – that’s a cultural thing, right, and I’m always a firm believer that cultural changes and things of that nature start at the top and then they kind of, you know, move their way through the organization. And so, as leaders, do you think that it has to be like a program implemented or is it something that you just have to get that buy-in from your executive team or your leaders and kind of saying this is now the expectation culturally that you pick up the phone and you make that phone call.

Tammy Worley: [00:10:51] I think it has to be a top-down.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:10:53] Absolutely.

Tammy Worley: [00:10:54] Because I find that our executive leadership is leading from an email. And, they do town halls, they do the pulse surveys, they do all of that. But it’s still disengaged, right? It’s not personable. Where is the personable touch to that?

Tammy Worley: [00:11:15] So, our organization is trying to do more onboarding, calling, welcoming the person to the organization from a one-on-one standpoint, and then asking them, what would you like to see differently? And then, we are actively looking to make changes based on that critique. So, that feedback is important to us. But I think there’s a lot of work that still needs to be done from the top down.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:11:43] Yeah. Interesting. I know it’s – I heard one time from an executive leader that making rounds on the floor to check in on people just to see how they’re doing, like building that into your day. It’s almost like you got to find a way to do that virtually, you know, whether it’s joining in on a team meeting. That’s not a town hall but, like, kind of individual department team meetings just to kind of show that face and let them know that you’re there and you care.

Tammy Worley: [00:12:10] Yeah. But when you have an essential workforce, they have to be there day in and day out. And then, you’ve identified those people that are not essential to the day-to-day operation. And, I almost guarantee you that’s been H.R. folks, customer service folks, maybe finance, and maybe even your individual site leadership people that don’t have to be there on a day-to-day basis. How do we get them to reengage to do as you’re pointed out to walk on that floor? Because I’m sorry, I can take my phone out there and I can video. That’s not the same. It’s not an engagement activity.

Tammy Worley: [00:12:54] So, we have to get them back to the workforce and realize that their presence is this key to every essential employee to be there. Because for me, even when I was told I was not an essential employee, I still came to the site almost every day. Why? Because I’m H.R. My title is human resource manager. How can I take the human out of the resource? And so, I still came to the site because they needed to know that I cared enough to be there, that you had to expose yourself every day to be there on-site. I had to be there too because you have questions. And, how am I supposed to answer those questions remotely from an email? Send me an email. For employees that are still using flip phones and don’t understand the email system. So, I came on site because I felt like it was my job to still include the human in the resource that we provide because are we not a customer service?

Jamie Gassmann : [00:14:02] Yeah. Absolutely. Like an internal customer service. Love that point of you’re the human in the resource. That’s fantastic. So, now, I know this is your first SHRM that you’ve attended.

Tammy Worley: [00:14:14] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:14:15] And so far, obviously, it sounds like you’re getting some great pointers from the presentations.

Tammy Worley: [00:14:21] I love it.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:14:21] So, are there any other topics or exciting presentations you’re looking forward to attending over the next few days?

Tammy Worley: [00:14:28] The Michael Phelps is really interesting to me. A couple of years ago I really wanted Adare to change their EAP benefits and we promoted a new EAP benefit plan and I have noticed over the last year we had more utilization of that. And, it’s a very – it’s a big, passionate part of being a human resource department is providing that resource.

Tammy Worley: [00:14:54] And, I knew a couple of years ago, actually I would say almost five years ago I had an employee who lost her spouse. And, she went to use our EAP benefits and she struggled finding a counselor. That was not acceptable to me because she needed real-time assistance. And, our plan that we had in place at that time was what we want to call like “free benefit,” but it didn’t provide real benefit, real-time benefit. And so, I promoted and we utilized putting in a real-life, live online help that they can get immediately for EAP benefits. And, I have noticed an increase in the utilization of our benefits, not just from our employees but their families, and we opened up that door to our EAP benefits to being anyone living in the household.

Tammy Worley: [00:15:59] So, we know that in this modern-day, it’s not just your spouse, you as an employee, and your children, but you might have a grandchild living with you. You might have a grandparent living with you. You might have parents living with you. And they may need help, too. And so, for me, an EAP benefit isn’t just about acknowledging our employee but acknowledging their home and who might need help in that home.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:16:31] Yeah. Going back to that whole person you mentioned earlier in the conversations. Great pointers. Great information. Well, I hope you get some wonderful sessions that you take some more great content from. And, I just really want to thank you for being on our show today and appreciate you stopping by the booth.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:16:50] For all those listeners listening in, we are at Booth 4076 here in the SHRM Conference. It’s our R3 Continuum’s booth, our show sponsor. And, thank you again. Enjoy the show.

Tammy Worley: [00:17:00] Thank you. So, I have enjoyed it and I hope that somebody will take something away from this, too.

Jamie Gassmann : [00:17:06] Wonderful. Appreciate it.

 

Tagged With: Adare Pharma Solutions, Human Resources, Jamie Gassmann, R3 Continuum, SHRM 2021, Tammy Worley, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Michelle Raines, DeKalb County (Georgia) Board of Health

September 20, 2021 by John Ray

Michelle Raines
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Michelle Raines, DeKalb County (Georgia) Board of Health
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Michelle Raines

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021:  Michelle Raines, DeKalb County (Georgia) Board of Health

On this live edition of Workplace MVP, Michelle Raines, Human Resources Director at the DeKalb County (Georgia) Board of Health shared with Jamie how they show appreciation to their employees, how they navigated (and still are) keeping the department staffed during COVID, and how they all work as a team.  Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2021 SHRM Annual Conference held at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Michelle Raines, Human Resources Director at DeKalb County Board of Health

Michelle Raines, Human Resources, Dekalb County Board of Health

Michelle Raines began her Human Resources career in the hospitality industry and then moved into state government in Georgia. in 2018 she became Human Resources Director for the DeKalb County Board of Health.

LinkedIn

 

 

The DeKalb County (Georgia) Board of Health

The Board of Health works to protect and improve the health of those who live, work and play in DeKalb County.

DeKalb County’s most striking characteristic is the diversity of both its communities and its people. Although the county is mostly suburban, it includes an urban area (part of the city of Atlanta) as well as rural areas. Also, DeKalb’s more than 660,000 residents represent more ethnic groups than any other county in the southeastern United States.

The Board of Health continually strives to meet the varied health needs of all the residents of DeKalb County. However, they know that creating healthier communities involves what everyone does collectively to assure the conditions in which people can be healthy.

Website

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the SHRM 2021 Conference at the Las Vegas Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:21] Hey, everyone. Jamie Gassmann here, your host of Workplace MVP. And I am broadcasting from the SHRM 2021 Conference here in Las Vegas, Nevada. And with me today is Michelle Raines from DeKalb County, Georgia, Board of Health. Welcome to the show.

Michelle Raines: [00:00:38] Thank you for having me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:40] So, tell us a little bit about your career journey and a little bit about what you do at the Board of Health.

Michelle Raines: [00:00:45] Okay. So, I began my career in H.R. back in ’93. I used to work for Marriott International for actual hotel, which if you can learn H.R. there, you can learn it anywhere.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:59] I like that. I can only imagine.

Michelle Raines: [00:01:01] Turnover is just off the chart. We literally had new employee orientation every week. So, I developed H.R. skills, training skills, and then I advanced. One of my coworkers, her daughter worked for the State of Georgia, and she told me about a training position. I applied and interviewed and I got that position. So, I was a trainer for about seven years, it used to be called Department of Human Resources for the State. Then, our director retired and they did some – they called it reorganizing. It was more like a hostile takeover. So then, they merged training and H.R. together, so then I got back into H.R.

Michelle Raines: [00:01:47] At the time, they made all trainers travel. I had a small two year old daughter, so traveling all the time wasn’t going to work. So, they said, “Well, the only job we have is class and compensation.” I said, “Well, sign me up.” So, I did that for about a year. Then, I moved on to another state position where I did more like consulting, workforce planning, succession planning. I would sit with different agencies and I was their consultant to work on their plan for their agency. That was required every year that they had to turn in a workforce development plan and succession plan to the State. So, I helped them do that.

Michelle Raines: [00:02:27] Then, we moved into – it’s called Eperformance, the performance management system that became electronic. And so, I was on the original charter team for that. So, I got some good training with that. And then, we went out throughout all the State of Georgia and trained everyone on how to use the new tool and how it worked. And so, I got recognized, and someone recruited me from another state agency to be their H.R. Generalist, so I did that. Then, the crash of 2009 happened.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:01] Yes. We remember that.

Michelle Raines: [00:03:03] So, I was laid off. So, you can get laid off in state employment, believe it or not. So, I was laid off, so I was out for about a year, a-year-and-a-half, and interviewed because I wanted to come back with the State. I had reached my ten years with [inaudible] with Georgia. And then, I came back in and the job posting looked just like my resume, so I applied. And sure enough, I got it within, like, a week or two. And I came back as an H.R. Manager, I did that for about five years. Then, transferred again to be a deputy director, I did that for three years. And then, DeKalb had a position for director, so I applied for that and I got that, now, I’ve been there since 2018.

Michelle Raines: [00:03:45] Fantastic. So, you really got kind of a well-rounded résumé.

Michelle Raines: [00:03:49] I do.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:49] I can imagine that is really helpful as you’re navigating, you know, potentially different challenges and things of that nature.

Michelle Raines: [00:03:55] Yes. Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:56] So, it’s interesting going from, like, the hospitality industry and rolling into kind of a government agency, are there differences in that? So, talk to us a little bit about that. You know, if there was somebody listening to the show and they’re looking at switching industries, talk a little bit about what were some of the changes or things you had to learn when you switched over to the government sector?

Michelle Raines: [00:04:19] Well, coming from private sector, of course, is different going into government sector. But we worked in hospitality, which is a lower paying industry, so they did a lot for their employees. Like, we got to spend $25,000 on the Christmas party, and we had one every year. We had, you know, full bar, full food and, I mean, nice stuff people pay the hotel for. But we have access to the ballrooms, to the staff, to the food, so that kind of stuff. You know, being able to have the money to reward employees, we cannot use government funds for anything like that because it’s a conflict of interest, taxpayer money. So, that is a challenge.

Michelle Raines: [00:05:00] Because government workers work hard and there’s limited things that you can do to really reward staff. Of course, the State, again, limited funds, limited budgets. There was a period of time we went almost, I think, eight years with no raises because it wasn’t in the State budget. So, that’s a big difference. And, again, recruiting and retaining that top talent because we are competing with people who have money.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:31] Yeah. Well, and that’s got to be challenging. And I think some other businesses that maybe are private that are smaller might exhibit or experience some of the same restrictions. So, how do you kind of engage those employees to the point where they – like, what are some of the benefits that they would be able to get? Or how do you navigate that, I guess, to create that culture that they want to stay?

Michelle Raines: [00:05:52] Well, they’ve always had the 12 paid holidays, so we get holidays that other people don’t get. The benefit package, when I first started with the State back in’99 was more competitive than it is now. Now, it is a little bit more expensive. We have telework. We’re putting together now strategies that we can advance people because career growth, salary, those are the number one reasons why people leave, and also a sense of purpose.

Michelle Raines: [00:06:23] So, working with Board of Health, especially during a pandemic, a lot of people don’t come for the money, they come for the purpose and giving back to the community, and that’s how we engage. Then, we try to reward, like, as we can. And it’s not always money. Sometimes it’s an event. Sometimes we do staff appreciation every year. You know, we might have a luncheon, get a speaker because we can pay for training. We just have to stay within the bounds of the rules. We have a lot of long time employees. Of course, the retirement. We still have a pension plan. So, that’s a big draw.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:03] Yeah. That’s not very common nowadays.

Michelle Raines: [00:07:04] No. It’s not common. People have to actually save their own money, which, you know, a lot of people don’t do. So, that’s a draw. And, again, we try to create an environment that people want to work. We try to be flexible. We try to have work-life balance when people are in school. We try to do individual things case-by-case as to where, you know, the flexibility allows. Because sometimes with that higher pay, when I worked at Marriott, all managers were required to work 50 hours a week.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:38] Yeah. Right. You’re going to get a higher salary, but you’re going to put in the time that way.

Michelle Raines: [00:07:42] But you work for that. Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:42] So, that’s fascinating. So, you kind of have to get creative and you almost kind of have to look a little bit out of the box in terms of, “Well, this could be a training and they’re going to learn something from it.” You know, that’s very interesting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:58] So, in talking of the pandemic and looking at it over the last year, what have been some of the challenges that you’ve had? Because, obviously, as a frontline essential worker working in Board of Health, you had to be on. I mean, they’re leaning on you. So, talk to me a little bit about some of the challenges you had over that last year.

Michelle Raines: [00:08:17] Well, the first one was with, of course, childcare, because that just kind of hit and schools just dropped out. And we actually had to do a survey with all managers to survey all their employees to ask, Who has childcare issues? Who cannot get childcare for their children? And we worked with those employees. So, we had some employees that could telework, and they did. Some who, for a period of time, they could not work. And then, the rest of us, we just kind of picked up the slack so that business kept moving. Then, we had, of course, the medically fragile, so those people due to their underlying health conditions who it was a danger for them to come to work, so we had that group of people.

Michelle Raines: [00:09:07] And then, of course, immediately they passed the FFCRA, but we had to manage all of those things, all the different pockets and pots, and make sure people knew how to apply what they needed to present to us. We had to track them while they were out. You know, we had some that had leave, some that didn’t. Some that were hourly staff that typically don’t get leave or anything like that. So, we had a lot of that going on. I have a staff of five people, including myself. So, we just made it happen. And then, in between, you still had your regular normal H.R. things to do.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:46] Yeah. Wow.

Michelle Raines: [00:09:47] Yeah. Employee relations didn’t get any better during that time.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:50] And in terms of, like, your team now looking at it a year later, obviously we have some of the same challenges we’ve had over this last year, how have you sustained kind of that supportive culture taking care of them? How do they keep going, basically?

Michelle Raines: [00:10:05] So, in H.R., what we did was, when everything first broke out, we got to telework three days and come to the office two. So, we had staggered schedules. You know, it’s H.R., so people will wander up to the floor and they want to see somebody physically there. So, we made sure we had coverage and we worked with each other. So, you know, you had an issue and you needed to switch, we were flexible with one another so that we can continue to work-from-home three days. That’s how we started.

Michelle Raines: [00:10:38] Now, we have two days, so it’s the same thing, and we get two days a week with a small staff, but we make it happen. We had recently an employee whose son was going to college, so she asked her coworker, “Can you switch with me?” We want to keep that privilege to where we’re not coming back five days a week. But, also, it helps from a safety standpoint. It helps people feel more secure because they’re not exposed to people. Now, we have a vaccine that’s available. Back then, we didn’t have that. So, it made people feel more comfortable because we went to a staggered staff across the whole agency.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:18] Interesting. So, like, half the staff on, half the staff off.

Michelle Raines: [00:11:21] Yeah. More like a third.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:23] A third. Okay. Interesting.

Michelle Raines: [00:11:24] Yeah. Because we had those teleworking, those medically fragile, we made sure everybody had access to laptops, VP, and there was a lot of technology. You know, I always had a laptop, but certain departments didn’t have one. So, we switched from desktops to laptops. So, now, probably 95 percent of the agency has laptops. And those that don’t are because it’s a stationary desk.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:50] Right. It’s a different type of work.

Michelle Raines: [00:11:51] It’s a different type of work.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:52] So, looking at it now, it’s been a year, and obviously, back in the early kind of timeframe last year, everybody kind of went remote, I’m guessing. How is the staff now? Are they fully back into the office? Is it more of a hybrid situation? Is it more of a case-by-case?

Michelle Raines: [00:12:10] Well, let’s just say, we’ve gone fully back multiple times. So, the first bringing back to people to work was in June. And then, because of summer so some people with childcare issues didn’t have that issue because it’s summertime, so those people came back. Then, of course, it hit again in August in Georgia, that’s when school starts. So, certain people had to go back out or work remotely because of that. Then, in December, we sent out notification for a hard return when school started back in January. And we still had some that, you know, we did a case-by-case, but the majority came back. And, again, we take it as it comes in.

Michelle Raines: [00:12:55] Some people test positive and there’s a whole quarantine process, and all of that. And we just managed it as it comes. So, I’d say right now we probably have 80 percent of the staff back. There are still some that are still medically fragile, who they telework 100 percent. Some have a hybrid method. In clinical operations, of course, it’s difficult to see a nurse and the nurse is at home, so they have to be on site. We’re still doing testing. We’re still doing vaccination sites. We still have all of those things.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:34] Wow. Your hands are full, I’m guessing, a little bit.

Michelle Raines: [00:13:38] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:38] And managing all those different employee requirements or needs, really, and balancing it in a way where they feel comfortable and safe and sure is kind of a main priority. That’s so interesting. So, if anybody listening wanted to get a hold of you, kind of just touch base, networker, or any of those different things, how could they do that?

Michelle Raines: [00:14:00] Email me. My work email is michelle, M-I-C-H-E-L-L-E, .raines, R-A-I-N-E-S, @dph, D as in Dog-P as in Peter- H as in hello, .ga.gov.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:14:19] Wonderful. And thank you for all of the work that the Board of Health has done, and for you, and supporting those employees that were able to help out your county. And thank you for joining us today.

Michelle Raines: [00:14:31] Thank you for having me.

[00:14:31] And if you are in the SHRM area listening in on our show, definitely stop by our booth, we are in R3 Continuum’s booth. The Workplace MVP podcast is broadcasting from the SHRM Conference in Booth 4076. Thank you again, and it’s a wrap.

 

Tagged With: Dekalb County Board of Health, Human Resources, Michelle Raines, R3 Continuum, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Cassondra Halpin, VertexOne

September 20, 2021 by John Ray

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Cassondra Halpin VertexOne

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2021: Cassondra Halpin, VertexOne

On this live edition of Workplace MVP, Cassondra Halpin, Human Resources Manager at VertexOne, shared with Jamie Gassmann how her company went virtual in 2020 and how they managed to keep communication flowing. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2021 SHRM Annual Conference held at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Cassondra Halpin, JD, SPHR, SHRM-SCP, Human Resources Manager, VertexOne

Cassondra Halpin, Human Resources Manager, VertexOne

Cassondra Halpin, JD, SPHR, SHRM-SCP is Human Resources Manager at VertexOne. She began her career in employment law and transitioned to working in Human Resources at start-up and technology companies.

Cassondra has a JD from the University of San Diego Law school and an MBA from Keller Graduate School of Management.

LinkedIn

 

VertexOne

At VertexOne, helping utilities provide the best customer service experience is what they do. It’s been in the DNA of the company, but also in all their people, too, since they started supporting utilities’ customer experience needs over 20 years ago. And that commitment continues to this day.

VertexOne partners with utilities and energy service providers to deliver world-class customer experience by reducing risk and maximizing value through improved customer operations. Their culture rewards innovation, personal and professional development and inspires a passion for their customers’ missions.

Company website

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting live from the SHRM 2021 Conference at the Las Vegas Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:21] Hey, everyone. Jamie Gassmann here, host of the Workplace MVP podcast. We’re broadcasting from the SHRM 2021 Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada. And with me today is Cassondra Halpin. She’s H.R. manager for VertexOne. Welcome to the show.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:00:39] Thank you very much.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:40] So, tell us a little bit about yourself.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:00:42] Well, I have been in H.R. for 15 years. I started out as an employment law attorney and decided I didn’t like that, but I had a real passion for H.R.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:54] Wonderful. I’ve got to imagine that employment law background comes in handy in your daily work.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:00] Very much so.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:01] Yeah. So, I got to imagine, like, do you leverage that with the staff at your organization in, like, helping them to kind of understand it from that legal perspective?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:10] Definitely. It’s been very helpful.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:13] Yeah. So, looking at this SHRM Conference, so you’re attending this year.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:20] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:20] Is this your first time coming to the conference?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:22] No. I’ve been to about five conferences.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:26] Okay over the last – well, obviously last year.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:29] Yes. I was supposed to be here last year.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:31] Yeah. You’re like, I planned on it. So, tell me a little bit about your background. I know you said employment law and you had 15 years of H.R. Have you always been at VertexOne or have you kind of moved to different lines?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:42] No. I’ve been mostly startup companies.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:47] Okay.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:01:47] So, I’ve been with several software startup companies. VertexOne is the company that’s been around the longest and isn’t a startup but is still a software company. So, I really enjoy working there.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:00] Great. And so, looking at over this last year from an H.R. perspective, can you share with us what were some of the challenges that you’ve had to navigate and how did you get through them?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:02:12] I think the biggest challenge for us was going virtual. We decided to shutter all five of our offices and go completely virtual. And, the challenge comes in with engaging employees and making sure that they still feel connected and have a strong culture.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:02:29] And, some of the things that we’ve done- we started a project called Virtual by VertexOne, which we have nine areas of the employee lifecycle that different employees come up with suggestions for, and then H.R. kind of make sure that those don’t fall through the cracks. And, we have small group discussions that we do. We have virtual team building, so just a variety of things to really help people feel connected to the company.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:00] Wow. I know the struggle I’ve heard from other H.R. leaders is that keeping that culture intact when you’re so far away, you know that lack of the water cooler chat, if you will, that we’ve lost over this last year. I know a lot of people crave that. As a social person myself, I totally get it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:19] Today was the first day of the conference. Did you attend some of the pre-conference sessions that they had?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:03:24] I didn’t attend the pre-conference sessions this year. I have been to one general session and then one of the concurrent sessions.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:32] Okay. So, this expo event right now is kind of your first, like, you know, intro into the SHRM 2021, right?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:03:40] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:40] Awesome. So, looking at the agenda, what are some of the areas of interest you have from the sessions that they’ve got scheduled?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:03:49] I am really excited about the diversity, equity, and inclusion sessions. That’s one of our areas of the employee lifecycle that we’re working on in Virtual by VertexOne. So, I want to come back with some good ideas, how we can become a more inclusive environment.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:04] That’s fantastic. I’m sure they’ve got a number of sessions that are focused around that.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:04:08] Yes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:08] To kind of help navigate that for you. Wonderful.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:11] Well, you know, if any of our guests were going to want to get a hold of you and kind of be able to share, either swap ideas or suggestions or just to connect with you, how would they go about doing that?

Cassondra Halpin: [00:04:23] They can email me at cassondra.halpin@vertexone.net.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:29] Great. And, thank you so much for joining us today, Cassondra. It was great to chat with you and I hope you have a great rest of your SHRM show, and we look forward to broadcasting this and sharing your great information, especially with the virtual environment that you created for your team. That sounds absolutely fascinating.

Cassondra Halpin: [00:04:45] Thank you very much. It’s been a pleasure.

 

Tagged With: Cassondra Halpin, Human Resources, Jamie Gassmann, R3 Continuum, VertexOne, Workplace MVP

Workplace MVP: Erika Lance, Chief Human Resources Officer, KnowBe4

July 22, 2021 by John Ray

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KnowBe4

Workplace MVP: Erika Lance, Chief Human Resources Officer, KnowBe4

Recently named 2021 OnCon HR Professional of the Year, Erika Lane, Chief Human Resources Officer for KnowBe4, joined host Jamie Gassmann to discuss her career journey and share her experiences and ideas on hiring the right person for the job and the culture, holding the hiring individuals responsible for the quality and fit of that hire, and how KnowBe4 retains and supports their “Knowsters.” Erika also explains KnowBe4 initiatives like Project Restart, for workers stuck in careers they don’t enjoy, and Project New Start, for veterans and first responders who are changing careers. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

KnowBe4

KnowBe4, the provider of the world’s largest security awareness training and simulated phishing platform, is used by more than 35,000 organizations around the globe. Founded by IT and data security specialist Stu Sjouwerman, KnowBe4 helps organizations address the human element of security by raising awareness about ransomware, CEO fraud and other social engineering tactics through a new-school approach to awareness training on security.

Kevin Mitnick, an internationally recognized cybersecurity specialist and KnowBe4’s Chief Hacking Officer, helped design the KnowBe4 training based on his well-documented social engineering tactics. Tens of thousands of organizations rely on KnowBe4 to mobilize their end users as the last line of defense.

Forrester Research has named KnowBe4 a Leader in the 2020 Forrester Wave for Security Awareness and Training Solutions. KnowBe4 received the highest scores possible in 17 of the 23 evaluation criteria, including learner content and go-to-market approach.

The KnowBe4 platform is user-friendly and intuitive. It was built to scale for busy IT pros that have 16 other fires to put out. Our goal was to design the most powerful, yet easy-to-use platform available.

Customers of all sizes can get the KnowBe4 platform deployed into production twice as fast as our competitors. Their Customer Success team gets you going in no time, without the need for consulting hours.

They are proud of the fact that more than 50% of their team are women, where the average in cybersecurity is just 20% of employees.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Erika Lance, Chief Human Resources Officer, KnowBe4

Erika Lance, Chief Human Resources Officer, KnowBe4

With over 25 years of experience and prestigious awards such as the 2021 OnCon HR Professional of the Year Award and the 2018 Tampa Bay Business Journal’s People First Award, Lance is a distinguished leader in the Human Resources field. She has been promoted to chief human resources officer at KnowBe4 where she is responsible for leading the global HR team and developing new initiatives for recruiting, retention, company culture and diversity. Under her leadership throughout the last few years, the People Operations team has grown from 10 team members to over 50 team members in 11 countries across six continents. Lance is most well known for her radical transparency and her people-centric approach to Human Resources.

The OnCon Icon Awards recognize the top HR professionals and HR vendors in the entire world. Finalists were voted on by peers to determine the winners. Voting on finalists was open to the public and was based on the following criteria:

  • Made a considerable impact on their organization and/or previous organizations.
  • Made strong contributions to their professional community through thought leadership.
  • Innovate in their role/career.
  • Exhibit exceptional leadership.

“As HR leaders we’ve dealt with a lot of changes this year, and I’m sure there are still more to come,” said Lance. “The fact that we’re talking about and awarding the successes from this year just shows that we’re doing something right. We all adjusted to working from home. We all had to get used to this new way of life and hopefully we’ve all figured out ways to keep our employees happy, healthy and engaged while working remotely.”

Lance was recognized for spearheading new employee initiatives during COVID-19 pandemic to keep energy and morale high. Her leadership has directly positively influenced KnowBe4 and its employees.

LinkedIn

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Workplace MVP is brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:24] Hi, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann, here and welcome to this episode of Workplace MVP. So, picture this, you have an open position, you’ve crafted what you believe to be the best written job description you could possibly write, and you’re now navigating the various candidates who have applied. As you comb through the numerous resumes, looking at the talent pool options who have expressed interest in your position, you identify some standout candidates that on paper seem to have most of the skills and experience you are seeking. The interview is scheduled and it’s time to meet the candidate in person.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:02] But how do you ensure you are asking the right questions to truly gauge if they are a cultural fit within, not just your organization, but the team they will be working with? Also, they may not have 100 percent of the skills and experience you are seeking. How much of the job description are you willing to accept as enough? Or which of the skills and experience are non-negotiables, they have to have them? These are questions that leaders likely face every time they venture into the hiring process. How can they create an approach to hiring or promoting within that not only ensures they make better hiring decisions, but that they are setting the employee and the organization up for a better chance at success.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:46] With us today to share her approaches that have delivered proven results to her organization is award winning Workplace MVP Erika Lance, Chief Human Resources Officer for KnowBe4. Welcome to the show, Erika.

Erika Lance: [00:02:00] Wow. Thank you for having me. That was an amazing intro. I appreciate it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:05] And congratulations to you on your recent promotion to Chief Human Resources Officer. What an incredible honor. And I really like to have you walk me through your career journey and tell us a little bit about how you got to this role.

Erika Lance: [00:02:18] Well, I have a very interesting career journey. I will say it actually goes back to when I was very young. I’m not going to mention my age because of my fabulousness. But when I was younger, I had a job working in administration at a stock brokerage firm, and I had helped come through a couple resumes with them with no training. I do tell people this story that I actually got my GED. I didn’t finish high school. I just start working for my family when I was about 14 years old and didn’t go to college for this. So, I had an administrative job and did that.

Erika Lance: [00:02:54] So, when I was looking for my next job, I put on there that I did some recruitment. And that next job saw that and they’re like, “Oh, you know how to do hiring? You know how to do H.R.?” And, of course, I was like, “Yeah. Absolutely. I did all of those things,” which I had not. So, it was a little bit of trial by fire to do that. But I’m a firm believer that you can take on any challenge you want if you’re willing to do the learning and the research necessary to do that.

Erika Lance: [00:03:22] So, I’ve had a very interesting career that has then taken me from that moment of, maybe, overstating my resume a little bit to where I am today, which has been very, very fortunate. And I consider kind of an exception to the rule, generally, when you have that kind of background. But I was fortunate that they believed me and that I was able to rapidly compensate for that lack of knowledge to be able to move forward.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:51] It’s very impressive. And in addition to the promotion, you recently were awarded the 2021 OnCon HR Professional of the Year Award. So, tell me a little bit about receiving that honor.

Erika Lance: [00:04:02] That was super exciting. Why it was most exciting to me is, it’s voted on. People have to vote for you. Obviously, any award is voted on. But I mean, it’s not like a committee vote. Like, people sign in and vote for you. So, when I got nominated, I was super excited, so I let my Knowsters – that’s what we call our KnowBe4 employees – know that I was nominated, if they felt like they wanted to put in a vote. And then, I posted it on LinkedIn and also on Facebook.

Erika Lance: [00:04:35] And when it came time, they asked for us to have some speeches ready and I’m like, “Why are they asking me to have a speech ready?” So, I had a speech ready. And then, I went in there, like, they’re going through the categories, and I kept thinking I missed my name because they were listing a lot of people. And no, no, I received it. And, to me, it was just such an honor because it was voted on by people for me. And so, they think that I’m good enough to receive that award, which is really the difference you want to make as an H.R. person, is, you want to have that impact on employees, whether it’s current employees or former employees.

Erika Lance: [00:05:16] And a lot of the messages I got on LinkedIn and stuff when I had posted it was like, “I voted. You’re fantastic. Thank you for everything.” And there are people I don’t work with anymore, like they were at previous jobs and they were saying that. And as an H.R. professional, that’s the impact you want to have, is that, you’ve made enough of a difference in people’s lives. That something like this comes up and they’re like, “Absolutely. I’m putting your name in.” So, that was wonderful to me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:43] Very amazing and validating that taking on that role so many years ago has really paid off and kind of created this incredible journey and opened doors and opportunities for you. That’s fantastic.

Erika Lance: [00:05:54] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:56] So, now, since you’ve been at KnowBe4, you’ve really grown your H.R. team quite a bit. And how have you supported your employees as you’ve gone through that growth? Because, obviously, growing departments and that change that can take place can kind of sometimes create challenging environments or challenging times. So, talk me through a little bit about how you navigated that.

Erika Lance: [00:06:21] Absolutely. One of the things that I’m a firm believer in is you have to build people to what they want to do when they decide what they want to be when they grow up again. Everybody talks about decide what you want to be when you grow up. I think we get to decide that a hundred times in our lives. We get to keep changing what we want to be when we grow up again.

Erika Lance: [00:06:41] And so, when I bring on people to the team – and I know we’re going to talk a little bit about this culture adds – is I find people that have backgrounds that can add to what the team already has, but really, really make sure my team is getting trained and certified, any mentoring or coaching that they need, so that I can grow people to grow up within the team. Because the institutional knowledge your team members get is so vital that they can just help with that.

Intro: [00:07:15] And I’ve been growing in 11 different countries, so we’re a global group. But that, along with radical honesty and radical transparency and making it super safe for employees to communicate. And when there are problems, if you make it safe for employees to communicate, they tell the problems instead of hoping nobody finds the problem. Which, unfortunately, some companies foster that, that you can’t put your arm up and say, “Hey, I created this problem and sometimes I don’t know how to solve it.” Because if they do that, they could get fired or something like that versus realizing everybody’s going to make mistakes. So, I really foster that environment.

Erika Lance: [00:07:59] And a lot of the people that worked for me, not only at KnowBe4, but in other jobs have been promoted up. And some have moved into other areas of the company to be successful there. I had one gentleman who moved from our employee relations and he’s now in our HRIS area because he loved the technology, love that, had all the H.R. experience. That worked out for me because, now, the person is working on our HRIS and IT knows H.R. instead of just an I.T. person who doesn’t know H.R. So, that’s what I do, is, I grow people because I want them to continue to expand and move up. But, yeah, we started with around eight, I think, and now I have over 60 in three-and-a-half years.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:46] That’s incredible growth. That’s a lot of hiring. And I’m going to touch on kind of your hiring process and kind of the approach that you use, but quick question on creating that culture of allowing people to own when they’ve made a mistake or create a problem. How do you approach that? How do you create that environment with your individuals? Do you do that by being transparent when you yourself make an error? Or is it through conversations you have with them to create that comfort level? How do you go about that?

Erika Lance: [00:09:24] Well, first of all, anything like that has to start at the very top of the organization. I’m very, very fortunate that Stu Sjouwerman, who’s the CEO of KnowBe4 and who I report to, does the same thing. If he makes a mistake, we have a morning meeting every morning with all employees, and he’ll own up right on the morning meeting if something happened and then it wasn’t correct. And we use the term extreme ownership.

Erika Lance: [00:09:50] We have a reading list of books for our company, and there’s one called Extreme Ownership that was written by two Navy SEALs. Amazing. And it talks about just taking ownership. If you’re over an area, you never throw your employees under the bus even if a mistake is made. It’s your area, you’re responsible for it. So, any mistake made beneath you, you have to own that mistake and resolve it correctly. So, we say extreme ownership there.

Erika Lance: [00:10:18] And the book, Powerful, by Patty McCord talks about radical honesty and radical transparency in your workplace. And so, we tell people that we start with that when they’re onboarding. We have a whole onboarding process that has a Welcome to KnowBe4. It used to be in-person. Obviously, COVID changed things. But we have a video now of all of us that they met in person giving our little tidbits of advice on things.

Erika Lance: [00:10:45] And I find the employees are waiting for another shoe to drop when they start at KnowBe4, because you say, “We have this. It’s safe. You can talk.” And their immediate thing is, “I’m not saying a word. I’m not going to say anything.” Because you’re so used to people going, “Oh, yeah. We have an open door.” But then, there’s another open door behind the person, and you go right out the open door, and you don’t have a job anymore. So, we show them by the actions that we take that it’s safe. We let it come up. We let it come up naturally.

Erika Lance: [00:11:16] Even if something happens and you go, “Hey, did this happen?” And they’re maybe a little skittish and going, “Yeah. But -” and they try to explain that. I always tell, “Stop. Stop defending. Just explain what happened. Okay. Cool. Do you have a solution for it or do you want some advice?” And then, the first time it happens, they aren’t fired and they aren’t on a disciplinary warning for something silly. Because we’re all going to make mistakes. I make mistakes. I started with, “Hi. I have a ton of major experience. I know what mistakes are.” But you have to be willing to go, “Okay. That happened. Let’s see if we can prevent it from happening again.” If it’s the same mistake over and over, that’s a different situation. But, you know, it’s Jurassic Park, we’ve got to make all new mistakes.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:02] Yeah. Absolutely. You learn from them is kind of some of the advice I give to my employees who are afraid to make that mistake. So, looking at your hiring practices, you have some best practice approaches that you use in navigating that process that helps you, especially within this level of expansion that you had. Can you share those with our listeners?

Erika Lance: [00:12:27] No. They’re top secret. Nobody can know anything. Just kidding. Of course. I believe in sharing knowledge. It’s a huge thing for me, because the more we share successful things in H.R., the more we can help each other expand an organization. So, how it works at KnowBe4 before is, we have, obviously, our expansion team, which are our recruiters. So, I’ll say the term recruiter, even though we call it something different, just so that everybody understands. And we also have the hiring managers.

Erika Lance: [00:12:53] The biggest thing is we created training for hiring managers that explain what their duties, what their role is in this. And one of the key components for both the recruiters and the hiring manager is that – I stated it and this is my firm belief – both of those people are 100 percent responsible for the human that they hire. So, if they hire them and something goes wrong or is off, we do a lot of look backs to go, “Was there something we missed in the hiring process? Was there something we missed in the onboarding? Was there something we missed in training? Like, how do we avoid not having that situation happen?” Obviously, if somebody had a family emergency and their mom was terribly sick and they had to leave, there’s no look back. Like, you can’t know that the mom was going to get sick. We’re not quite to that stage of Jedi mind powers yet.

Erika Lance: [00:13:44] But we could say that, if something goes wrong and the employee doesn’t work out, both of these guys are 100 percent responsible and they should be defending their choice to hire this. So, if either one of them don’t feel like this person is a good fit, they’re allowed to say no during the process. Either side, both the hiring manager and the recruiter, are both allowed to do that.

Erika Lance: [00:14:07] We also firmly believe in using – I call it – Spidey senses, because Spider-Man talks about it when his hair stands up on him. But if you get a gut feeling during the interview process, either in a positive way or a negative way, you can utilize that because sometimes that’s all you get. You can’t exactly pinpoint what the problem is, but you know there’s something wrong. The agreement is we stop the process and you just have to go, “I don’t feel like they’re the right candidate.” And it’s okay, we don’t have to justify the reason they don’t feel like it’s the right candidate.

Erika Lance: [00:14:41] But we go through a series of things, like, for a lot of the positions. First of all, we do not let our ATS filter for us. I think ATSs, which is Applicant Tracking System, is filtering your prospects based on 25 key words or phrases. You lose the humans in that. You completely lose the humans because a lot of people don’t know you have to write your resume to that. Or they go in and they write their resume to that, but they still might not be a qualified candidate. They just figured out the the glitch in the ATS matrix, so to speak.

Erika Lance: [00:15:17] So, we have them reviewed. We have sample questions – that’s usually the first step – about their experience in that particular kind of role to ask back. They have a phone interview with the recruiter to see how how they answer a series of questions and how the recruiter feels about them. And then, the recruiter will move them on to the hiring manager. And the next would be, potentially, a series of tests depending on the role. Like, our developers do a whiteboard test on some development skills just to see.

Erika Lance: [00:15:51] Because, obviously, resumes can say anything. I mean that evident by my resume previously. They can say anything, it’s just what is the actual experience that that person has. And maybe they’re not even saying enough about their experience on the resume because we’re not the greatest at teaching people how to write resumes in the world. I know there’s classes and people who write them for you, but this is an art form that isn’t always done correctly.

Erika Lance: [00:16:18] But they get a chance to do that, do a face-to-face, depending on the level of the employee. They might do a few more if they’re an executive and stuff. But we have key questions around being a manager. We have some trick questions about being a manager and stuff. But it allows the person to go through the process. And we also talk a lot about what the company culture is like.

Erika Lance: [00:16:41] One of the things at KnowBe4, for instance, is Halloween is a really big deal. Like, everybody almost dresses up for Halloween. We dress up areas. Like, this is a huge deal. So, we ask every applicant what their favorite Halloween costume is or what do they think of Halloween and stuff like that. And if somebody is like, “Oh, my gosh. It’s the worst holiday in the world. I think it’s so dumb, blah, blah, blah.” Regardless of anything else, they are probably not going to be a fit for KnowBe4. For them as well, because we do so many things that are like that, that are inspired by things and are fun and party like.

Erika Lance: [00:17:20] We used to do quarterly mingles before COVID, and we had a bowl, and a rock climb. Like, do you want to participate in these things if you seem to want to be very conservative or something? Maybe you won’t be a great fit for that or that team if that team is really playful. And I think it’s both the company and what is the culture of that team like? What do they like to do? We all have different managers. Some are, like, the very Care Bears kind of managers. And some are the very, like, let’s do a team sport kind of managers. And will they fit in with that as well?

Erika Lance: [00:18:00] So, I think you have to find people that our culture adds and culture fits, but you have to be very good at telling them this is what it’s actually like. Every one of our interviews, too, is, we’ll explain what the day-to-day is like for the person instead of very generalities. And the worst question I think you can say to an employee is, “We move really fast here. This is a fast-paced environment,” without defining what that means. Because if they go, “Oh, yeah, no. I’m really good in fast-paced environments.” And, say, you want them to do data entry and you go, “Well, you have to enter 200 files a day.” And to them, fast-paced is 50 files a day, you’re not going to have a fit for an employee. But you’re not going to know that because you didn’t ask them what that means, like what is it actually like.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:49] So, you’re kind of touching on it a little bit, that cultural fit. Can you define for the audience what you mean by that? Like, when you’re in that hiring process, what is culture fit?

Erika Lance: [00:19:03] For us, cultural fit is somebody who is looking for more than just a job. They’re looking for a place that they can grow and expand in, that they can be their own self in. And that they want to be a part of the team. And that’s a key part, does a person really want to be part of the team? Because all of our activity center are around a team.

Erika Lance: [00:19:30] Another thing is, we have metrics for every single position within the company. We do metrics on it, so we keep numbers. Are they fine with that? Are they fine with having the numbers thing? Are they fine with a very open work environment? Meaning, we have an open floor plan. Obviously, COVID, a lot of people have worked from home. But we have an open floor plan, are they comfortable with that? Are they comfortable with being held to a certain standard? Or how do they feel about, like, the fun part of the atmosphere? How do they feel about some of the activities? We do a ton of team building activities, whether it’s on a small team itself or on the larger sector area division of it.

Erika Lance: [00:20:17] And then, just kind of finding out where they feel they fit from a job standpoint or career standpoint within a company. Are they just there to punch a clock? They’re not going to be a very good Knowster. And some people can want to do that and it’s totally fine, but they’re not going to do well because the teams going to want to rally the teamness and they’re going to want to stand out, which can create in individuation for them.

Erika Lance: [00:20:43] And even if they don’t want the team thing, then the rest of the team goes, “Why does this person not want to be on the team?” And it can create a weirdness. And you avoid that by defining what that team is like and what are the fun things that you do and what is expected. And you’re expected to learn a lot. We’re constantly learning. We’re constantly reading books. Like, how do you feel about that sort of thing? Because if you’re going to be upset every time a new training course comes out, well, you’re not going to be a good cultural fit. This is going to be very stressful for you when these things come up. We have to do these courses.

Erika Lance: [00:21:20] “There’s another book to read? Waah.” Well, it sounds silly. I mentioned two books already. We have a reading list of about 20 books that are recommended. Not everybody has to read them, but some team do. Like, there’s a book called Never Split the Difference that was written by an FBI negotiator. And that’s something our sales team has to read. Well, if you’re like, “No, I hate reading. I’m not going to read.” You may have a problem when we have these books. So, it’s little things like that that can create great divides between areas.

Erika Lance: [00:21:57] And sales, we have goals every month. And you have to want to play that game of getting that goal. We have lots of fun things around that. But if you’re not into that, you’re going to not be a cultural fit or a cultural add.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:22:08] I love that you guys have very defined kind of cultural nuances that are important to the overall success of the organization. So, for other organizations, is there a way that they can train or empower their leaders to understand their own culture to be able to leverage cultural fit when they’re doing their interview process? If you were going to give recommendation for that, what would you give?

Erika Lance: [00:22:37] I would say get it defined from the top of the organization what the culture needs to be. Then, secondarily, train every single person in an executive or management capacity on what that is and how you do that. Meaning, if you have a process, like we have a process where our managers are responsible for their humans. H.R. does not do disciplinary actions. We assist and guide on how a warning needs to be written or said just because there are so many nuances, as we all know in H.R., about what is right versus what is correct for an area to be in.

Erika Lance: [00:23:15] But we have the managers for the discipline. They’re fully responsible. They get all the good and the bad with the people. But they have to understand how the overall management philosophy, aka culture, needs to run. How do we all agree and define those cultural points and then make sure everyone is adhering to them?

Erika Lance: [00:23:37] Like, we have a policy called Say It To Your Face. If you have a problem with somebody, you don’t get to go complain to somebody else. You have to say it to them. Now, if you don’t feel comfortable, you can ask for assistance to do that. But we really hold our employees responsible. We’re adults. And it’s very different, obviously, if you’re being sexually harassed or something like that, please report that correctly. But if somebody just said something to you the wrong way or sent an email that seemed snarky, go over to them and go, “Hey, Bob. Listen, I got your email and I don’t know if you’re upset or what, but can we talk about whatever this is?” If you don’t do that, it creates separation.

Erika Lance: [00:24:18] So, that’s like a philosophy we have. So, every manager, if somebody comes and goes, “I’m really mad. Sally said blah to me.” They’ll go, “Okay. Did you say it to Sally’s face?” That will come out of every single manager’s mouth because that’s how we operate. And if they don’t have the strength to do it themselves, we go, “If you want some help, we can help you. But if you just choose not to do it, then that’s on you.”

Erika Lance: [00:24:43] I think a lot of organizations have forgotten somehow that all of the people that work for them, besides when they’re certain, are adults. They’re adults and you should treat them like adults, but they should be responsible for themselves. And H.R. shouldn’t be this really scary thing that has to come thundering in to solve all these problems that can be solved with open communication. And so, we started at the top and then we filtered it all the way down through our training and everything, so that’s all the case. And it’s defined for the employees what’s expected. And if you treat them all the same way, you get sort of a lot.

Erika Lance: [00:25:20] I’m going to use the analogy of a beehive. If something tries to go into a beehive that will mess up the beehive, the rest of the bees will solve that problem. So, it’s not H.R. or manager that has to solve the problem. Because if somebody goes to somebody else and goes, “Sally said blah, blah, blah to me today.” They’ll go, “Well, did you tell it to her?” Because they know that that’s the Say It To Your Face mentality that the whole company has. So, you get less problems.

Erika Lance: [00:25:46] We have less than a one percent situation rate with employees at our company, which, to me, is unheard of to have that. A lot of companies have up to a 20 percent issue rate, whether it’s investigations or disciplinary actions and stuff like that. And I think it’s because they’re not putting the responsibility from the top of the organization down that everybody’s operating with a set of defined guidelines – not rules. People don’t like rules – and guidelines as to how the company is to operate. So, they can get in trouble even unknowingly because stuff can fester.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:26:23] Absolutely. Especially when you’ve got those conflicts that aren’t resolved directly with the parties that are involved in those conflicts. So, in looking at, you know, gauging somebody as a culture fit, why is that so important? You’ve kind of touched on this a little bit, but diving into it a little bit deeper, you know, what can happen to an organization when they aren’t hiring somebody who is a fit to that company? Productivity wise or financially, what might be some of the things that they may be experiencing now as challenges that they need to think about?

Erika Lance: [00:27:04] Well, I think the more a positions open, the more desperate a hiring manager or a manager of that area gets. I make the joke sometimes, it gets to the point where they’re like, “Can you breathe on a mirror? Okay. You’re qualified. Let’s go. Let’s do it. We just don’t want zombies.” The problem with that is that, if you bring somebody in to the company that is not a fit for the company, not a fit for that team, they’re not going to work out. So, depending on how long it takes us all to come to this realization or the great “I told you so they’re not going to work out,” you’re losing money. You’re not getting the correct fit for that position. So, you’re losing money with every second that person’s on the team.

Erika Lance: [00:27:45] Then, when they leave, with all the institutional knowledge or effort you put into them, you’ve literally just lost potentially tens of thousands to millions, depending on the position. Like, you take somebody who’s an enterprise level salesperson for your organization bringing in millions of dollars. And you’ve had that open and they’ve established relationships with consumers that somebody has to start again from scratch to do. That’s potentially millions of dollars out the door because you did not make sure that person was a fit for the team. Because a person who is not a fit for the team will eventually not want to be there.

Erika Lance: [00:28:23] They can also cause problems if there are personality conflicts. Because certain personalities – and not everybody has to be the same. This isn’t a lemming thing – will not work well with other personalities. It is just hello, human nature. And we all have that in even our family lives. As much as we all love family, there are certain family members that you’re like, “Do not sit next to Joe and talk about politics because it will end badly.” So, if you don’t find those personalities that it will go well and have the right view of how work should be, then, eventually, they won’t be there anymore. They won’t be happy.

Erika Lance: [00:29:08] You have to hope they do not create a huge problem on their way out in the form of investigations or whatever. Because if somebody feels slighted – and we’re talking a little bit about this earlier when we were talking about the conflicts with people – the moment somebody has a conflict with somebody or think somebody is bad, they put on a different color glasses and they’re not rose colored in the nice pretty way. They are different. Every communication then received by that person is in that vein.

Erika Lance: [00:29:34] So, even if it’s not intended to be snarky or mean or whatever they think, they’re going to be defensive and think it’s there and a problem can build and build and build. And if it builds in a certain way and the manager doesn’t realize what’s happening and all of this stuff, then you could potentially have a lawsuit on your hands because nobody knew that this cultural fit problem was occurring. And the person ends up saying they felt harassed or singled out or whatever. And by default they were because they weren’t part of the team to begin with.

Erika Lance: [00:30:11] So, it is so important that you have that piece, but that that piece is so defined for your organization. But you have to sort of put the rules. We have a policy we have in our handbook, which is the Welcome to KnowBe4. It was written by Stu on his whole, like, how KnowBe4 came into being, this is what it is. And then, I wrote one called The Common Sense Guide to KnowBe4. Like, here are the little things that you need to know to be a Knowster at KnowBe4 and to get you out of trouble. Those are the first steps to how to agree with things.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:30:45] Great. Great information. So, in talking about, like, they get desperate for hiring, as you’re probably aware, that some industries right now are really having difficulty in hiring employees for various types of roles, you know, trying to get that right level of experience, maybe that right of level of education based around how they’ve crafted that job description for who they feel is the ideal candidate. Are there things that they maybe should be looking at or considering maybe changing in that job description that might open up possibilities for a different channel of candidates or a different level of candidates that maybe they hadn’t originally thought would be the right fit, but maybe opens up opportunity for them to expand that candidate pool?

Erika Lance: [00:31:37] Yes. I feel a lot of times people write job descriptions like they write perfect dating apps, where you’re looking for this perfect person and they need to be X tall, and this built, and this kind of career, and you have chiseled jaw, and dark hair, and blue eyes. And like you’re writing a job description as if you’re looking for a unicorn. And fantastic for all the humans out there that write a job description or a dating profile and get that unicorn to show up.

Erika Lance: [00:32:06] But the problem is, you have candidates out there that are looking at this job description and go, “I don’t qualify.” Well, do you actually need all those things? Because if you don’t need the level of education, there are a lot of people that have experience that don’t have the education. And no offense to everybody who went to school, but sometimes those people are better than the people that have the education because they’ve been there, they’ve done it, and they have all the t-shirts from doing it. So, if you limit your pool to where you’re looking for only Pegasus’ and unicorns or whatever, dragons and unicorns – I can make a lot of fantasy analogies – if you’re only looking for that, then you’re going to have a hard time finding the person.

Erika Lance: [00:32:53] Also, you need to go look at hiring managers. You need to go on LinkedIn. You need to go out there and go to the different – like, there’s a lot of, for instance, developer meetups or salespeople meetups. There’s all these meet ups in the communities, H.R. meetups. Like, if you’re an H.R. professional, trust me, you can find eight million meet ups to go to, to be the H.R. professional. But you need to go as the hiring manager and find some people and look for your own humans. You know what you’re looking for, so go look for them as well. But you got to lower your expectations, not for what you genuinely need, but go what would lead to a good candidate.

Erika Lance: [00:33:32] And I’ll give an example. I have hired several people into H.R. that have done retail management experience. They’re not H.R. professionals at all. But guess what? When you do retail, like all of us who have been lucky enough to also do fast food and stuff, you get a level of patience and understanding with the weirdest things that can happen. And in your retail, especially if you’re a retail store manager – which they escalate a lot of people interior to the retail store managers – you have had experience dealing with pretty much anything an employee can do and come up with – you know what I mean? – to be a part of it. So, do you want to be an H.R.? Do you want to train? Because you’ve got the experience of being calm, cool, collective in dealing with some of the stuff that comes up from an employee relations standpoint.

Erika Lance: [00:34:24] It’s been wildly successful for me to have that because I was willing to go, “Let me look beyond what I’m looking for, for that person who does good customer relations, who does customer service.” What are other professions that do that where the person maybe didn’t have the chance, but you have this much experience dealing with customers. Are they a good fit? And here’s the thing, too, is you help somebody advance and change their career path. They are going to be some of the most loyal employees you ever have because of what the company has done for them to help them out. And it’s the right view. So, if you can take something different, do that.

Erika Lance: [00:35:09] And go look, part of your responsibility as an executive or manager is to go find your own people. Go find them, meet them, get them to apply, get them in the door because you’ll meet them and see if they’re qualified. You get to do a pre-screening with them.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:35:24] Right. Kind of looking for those transferable skills, maybe not necessarily the experience background, but experience around areas that could be applicable in that role. Very interesting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:35:37] So, real quick, we’re going to just get a word from our sponsor. Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a global leader in providing expert, reliable, responsive, and tailored behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions to promote workplace wellbeing and performance in the face of an ever changing and often unpredictable world. Learn more about how R3 Continuum can tailor a solution for your organization’s unique challenges by visiting r3c.com today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:36:09] So, you had mentioned in a previous conversation that employers need to also look within the organization that there may be employees with strong institutional knowledge who might be afraid to speak up about movements and career advancement. So, what kind of tips or advice would you give to leaders to help them in identifying employees that are probably sitting there waiting to be asked to move up or waiting to be asked about their career and maybe aren’t quite as confident to bring that up in a conversation. What advice would you give?

Erika Lance: [00:36:44] I think it’s very important for managers to have one-on-ones around what the career path for the employees that are working for them is and what they want to do. And make it very safe that maybe they want to do something in another part of the organization. Another thing is, we have a dedicated career team. Team employee gets to interact with them. They get to meet the career person on onboarding. We have the career person has an entire part of our intranet that they talk about things. They have different seminars. They have also gotten with every leader and mapped out the career tracks for the person and where they end up needing to go and stuff like that.

Erika Lance: [00:37:22] So, like, what steps do they need to take? What knowledge base do they need to have in order to move up into roles? And we have a tuition reimbursement and a certification policy where we help pay for the certifications that the employees need. And we have training courses so they can train. And we believe employees should have about five hours a week to train, whether it’s on their own position or other things. And they can train so they can be ready to move into maybe the junior role in that area they want to move into. Or we have manager training. So, maybe they weren’t a manager before, but they want to move up into leadership, here’s a manager training and this is how you do it.

Erika Lance: [00:38:01] I think that we promote from within between 20 and 30 percent every year of people. We do that because those are Knowsters – that’s what we call them – that want to be a part of something bigger and help the organization. And because of all the knowledge they have, they just bring that to the next area. Like, my story in the beginning about the person who moved from my employee relations over to I.T, they took all that H.R. and KnowBe4 knowledge, so when it comes up to why does H.R. need this program this way? We don’t have to go through a back and forth. He is just going to go, “They need a program this way because A, B, and C, this is what they do with it.” That’s invaluable.

Erika Lance: [00:38:45] But guess what? I couldn’t hire that because nobody has done the H.R. in my H.R. area to know the answer to that question. And that happens over and over again. Plus, that loyalty thing, if you bring somebody up within your ranks of your organization, they know there’s a loyalty. Gone are the days where people are staying at companies to get the gold watch and the retirement fund and stuff like that. I say that all the time to younger people and they have no idea what I’m talking about when I say the gold watch thing, but it’s very funny to me. It was in the movie Speed. That’s gone.

Erika Lance: [00:39:20] We don’t have that anymore where people want to stay to retire at a company. If they want to continue to grow, they’re going to leave and then potentially leave and then apply back at your company. And they’re going to come back at a much higher rate and whatever, where you could have had them this whole time growing them up into that thing. It always makes me sad when I see somebody leave a company for another job that you have within the company. You’re just not willing to give them a shot and they’re super successful. It’s silly to me to lose that talent.

Erika Lance: [00:39:52] So, I think you have to remember to put those things in because every person who walks out the door, if you only even just lose their annual salary, that’s tens of thousands of dollars that walk out the door. Just pay somebody to help get them to a higher spot within your organization.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:11] Yeah. I imagine this approach that you’re describing about helping them with that career growth. It impacts retention in a very positive way within an organization. Well, in even just knowing that the support that you’re providing, even if they just want to have education but maybe are comfortable where they’re at, I can imagine that also can create some retention benefits, too.

Erika Lance: [00:40:38] Oh, absolutely. Yeah. You have to want to have those people be there, and it shows the employees. And then, they refer their friends that are very qualified. Like, they talk about it. How do you get a great place to work? Like, all the awards and everything like that, we’ve gotten a ton of awards. And I really love that we’ve gotten a ton of awards. But it’s because our employees were surveyed and they love working for us. We don’t get those awards just because anybody believes that. You can’t nominate yourself and somebody just look and go, “Oh, KnowBe4 is cool. We’re going to give them an award.” It’s based 100 percent on what your employees are saying and thinking about you. That’s how you create that part of the culture and that they want to work there. And then, you’re a best place to work and then you get more employees that want to work there.

Erika Lance: [00:41:29] You’re talking about earlier recruitment things, well, how about creating an environment that is so amazing that people are beating down the door to be a part of your company. That helps solve some of the recruitment things, not all of them. Trust me, there are still unicorns you got to find out there. But it makes a huge difference.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:41:49] Definitely. And so, you mentioned the advantages in creating a foundation that feeds future success of the organization. I think you’re probably touching on it a little bit. But can you share about how that works within the organization? And I think maybe you’ve already touched on that a little bit. But if there’s anything additional that you can provide around that foundation that you’ve created.

Erika Lance: [00:42:17] I think it’s, again, creating the foundation from the top. The very top of the organization has to have the same belief and understanding that the rest does. And then, define it and promote it, and promote it constantly. And constantly remind employees about the different parts. You can do word walls, you can do meetings, however you do that, letters from the CEO. I know at some points having an all company meeting is out of the question. You have one hundred thousand employees, you probably will have a hard time doing that. But you have it filtered through the managers. You make it so it’s scalable. But you keep it going and you do not change it. You enhance it.

Erika Lance: [00:43:02] Don’t change the rules on the employees unless you’re giving them a benefit. Because if you make it harder to do something, you’re going to lose some of that feeling that the company is on their side during the process. And, remember, it’s a team activity. I don’t care if you’re at the very top of an organization, you’re built on every single person that works for you and every single thing they’re doing.

Erika Lance: [00:43:28] I worked at a company previously that had a huge mailroom. And it was a document processing company for mortgages. And people would say derogatory things about the mail room. And I was like, “Hey, so the documents don’t go in or out of this organization without the mailroom doing their job correctly and on time. We don’t meet any deadlines without this part of the organization. So, before you berate or think less of this part of the organization, it doesn’t matter how many files you produce, if they don’t ship them, it means absolutely nothing.” And it was very eye opening when that actually got circulated what each of the areas do that contribute to the overall product.

Erika Lance: [00:44:19] And that’s true even in a company that, say, makes computers. If the place isn’t shipping them out correctly and the mailroom doesn’t want to do their job or they don’t care, well, it doesn’t work out. I mean, look, in the airline field, when all the mechanics go on strike, for instance, guess what? There is not a single plane flying because the pilots aren’t going to fly a plane that the mechanics haven’t done. Or if the baggage handlers say they’re not participating anymore, they’re going on strike. A baggage handler will stop the entire airline thing from going. It stops all flights from happening. And you can go, “Well, they just move the luggage around.” Well, guess what? Your plane is not taking off now because they just move the luggage around. So, it starts from the top, but has to filter to the bottom. And everybody has to understand that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:45:07] I love that. Everybody plays a vital role. It might be a different role, but they are definitely key to the overall success of that organization.

Erika Lance: [00:45:15] Exactly.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:45:16] So, you mentioned in a previous conversation and I just wanted to share, it was just such a creative approach that for the diversity and inclusion, you have a program that you utilize where you are providing or creating opportunities for individuals. Where, maybe on paper they may not have the experience or the skills that are needed for the job. But through this program, you provide them with education and training that builds on those skills and experience. I think you mentioned something with kind of like a smart start or like a restart. Can you talk a little bit about that structure? Because I just thought it was so innovative and a great way to identify candidates that maybe would, typically, get overlooked or maybe not considered for a role.

Erika Lance: [00:46:04] Absolutely. So, I worked a lot with local high schools, helping with some of their career committees and stuff like that. And I found that a lot of times people coming out of high school, especially in underrepresented communities, they don’t always have an option. It’s not always an option to go to college. It’s not free. There’s not an option. And some don’t have the availability to do it. And they have to just start working. It’s the the snake eating its own tail. You want somebody to come into the area, but they can’t come into the area unless they have experience, but they can’t get experience until they’re let into the area.

Erika Lance: [00:46:44] And so, if you don’t go, “Okay. Wait. We have to break this cycle. This doesn’t work.” So, we have three programs that we’re doing, but the first one was called Jumpstart. And we’re taking kids that have either graduated from high school or gotten their GED that want to move into a technical type role but have no experience. And we didn’t expect them to have any work experience at all. Instead, we got references from teachers or volunteer groups they worked with or potentially religious leaders that they had that they maybe did some work with, that’s where we got our references.

Erika Lance: [00:47:23] And we’re starting from the beginning. It was supposed to be a program of six, we had seven because our recorder got very excited and hired more than six. But we were like, “Okay. Let’s do this.” So, they’re all doing really, really well. So, that’s our first program, where we’re bringing them in. They’re coming in at a slightly lower salary than our tier one tech support because we’re seeing if they can move up to that. But at the end of the program, which is within six months, is, they get to apply for one of our tech support positions. And they will get paid what our tier one tech support get paid, because we believe in pay banding for a position, not the person.

Erika Lance: [00:47:57] And the other thing they get is, if they stay with the program, we’re giving them a two year degree. They can get an AA or an AS. And we partnered with our local college to get that to happen. And it can be in whatever they want to be when they grow up. But we want to give them the opportunity to expand their life.

Erika Lance: [00:48:15] Similarly, we had a bunch of people that applied for this program that we’re doing things like trucking all their life or cashier or something. And I went, “We should have a project Restart,” which is people who have been stuck in careers that they don’t love, but they’ve just been stuck there because they don’t look like they can do anything else. And we’re going to bring them in similarly and move them through the system to give them a different type of career path if they want to. And that’s going to be in our technical area, our customer success area, or our sales area.

Erika Lance: [00:48:45] And we’re doing a project New Start, which is for people coming out of the military or first responders. Because the military – my daughter is a combat medic. She’s very fortunate. She got her degree in health care and a bachelor’s in science. But her husband, for instance, was an MP and he came out and he could go be a police officer or work in security. That’s all they trained him to do. They have friends that work in artillery. They can fire bombs and stuff like that, which is not a transferable skill, generally – unless you’re an action movie star – to the real life.

Erika Lance: [00:49:21] So, it’s an opportunity for them to, again, come into the workforce because they have valuable skills. They have a lot of stuff that they can present. They show that they can get education and they can meet with work requirements, but they walk out and go, “Okay. What do I do next?” And we feel that this is how you are able to increase diversity in your organization.

Erika Lance: [00:49:45] Because if you’re like, “I’m okay. I’ll hire a diverse college graduate,” that, unfortunately and very sadly, is not the biggest pool of diverse candidates that you’re going to get. It’s terrible that I can say that. I don’t like having to say that, but it’s true. So, we need to open it up and companies need to go, “How do I grow my talent? And how do I grow my diverse talent to move up within the organization?” Because you cannot effectively make a change in an organization unless you’re willing to go, “Where does the problem begin?”

Erika Lance: [00:50:21] And we’re also doing a lot of education initiatives in schools and partnering with schools, so that kids growing up know that there are alternative options to being a doctor, or a lawyer, or a nurse, or whatever you’re taught in school. Like, “Hi. This is cybersecurity. This is a whole field. Here are the options. This is what you can do to get into that field. Here are the steps.” Kind of like we talked about with the career path, give kids the steps so they know what to do. Because if you only go, “Well, you can go to college.” Well, if they can’t, you know, “Okay. What’s option B? Is there an option B for them?”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:51:01] Or go to college and not really quite know what to major in, and maybe get a degree in something that, when you get done, isn’t really what you want to do, which you see that happen too.

Erika Lance: [00:51:12] A lot. And a lot of people get degrees and things, that doesn’t mean you’re going to get hired. That’s a double edged sword. I had a lot of people that work for me in data entry that had business degrees and architect degrees and stuff. Because what do you do? Just because you have a business degree doesn’t mean you know how to do business stuff. Unfortunately, it doesn’t necessarily translate.

Erika Lance: [00:51:37] Some degrees are luckier, like medical. Like, you go to business school, they don’t have a practical application set like you do when you go to medical school. They make you go do the things they’re teaching you. But business doesn’t do that. They’re like, “Here’s the thing. You’ve learned the things. Now, go. Fly. Be a bird.” And, you know, there’s a lot of falling out of the nest kind of situations that happen there.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:52:03] Definitely. So, thanks for sharing that about that program, because it just sounds like such a great innovative way of kind of thinking about the hiring process from a different perspective. And taking a different approach to getting potentially some long standing employees that can grow within your organization based on just being given that opportunity.

Erika Lance: [00:52:23] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:52:24] So, if you were going to give one piece of advice or piece of information that you want the listeners to be left with today, what would that be?

Erika Lance: [00:52:35] I think my main piece of advice I like to tell anybody is, you need to take ten steps back and actually look at every situation from a panoramic view. Because if you’re stuck in it and you can’t really see out of it, you’re never going to find the right solution to it. And you need to encourage others to take steps back, really look at the situation, and look at how you solve it. Not on an immediate basis, but how you come up with a long term scalable solution for the problem. And you have to be willing to put the effort in to make whatever that solution you come up with occur. And that’s part of being in H.R. It’s part of being a manager. It’s part of being anything.

Erika Lance: [00:53:22] Like the Jumpstart program we talked about, for example, we had to dedicate resources to make that happen. Well then, you need to do that, and be willing to do that, and be willing to put the effort into the one side for the positivity on the other. But I think if you don’t take steps back from a situation and look at what the best results will be, and the best result for six months, a year, five years from now, you do yourself an injustice by trying to do a quick solve to a situation or saying it absolutely has to be this way or else, because very little in life has to be absolutely to a solid.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:01] Great advice. So, you’ve shared a lot of great information. If our listeners wanted to connect with you further, what would be the best way that you would want them to connect with you?

Erika Lance: [00:54:08] LinkedIn is a great way to connect with me. I respond to my things. Please link with me. I won’t say put a friend request, but that’s not right. Different app. But do link with me on LinkedIn, Erika Lance, E-R-I-K-A L-A-N-C-E. And I’m at KnowBe4, and you’ll see that in my profile. So, please feel free to connect with me. I love helping people. So, if you have questions or need advice on anything or want to share something successful you guys have done out there, please do that. Because I think we all learn from each other. I didn’t just think of all this stuff. A lot of it is stuff over years of seeing people do things has caused me to be able to go, “Oh, that’s how you do that correctly.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:53] That’s wonderful advice and exactly why we have you on the show today, because that’s what Workplace MVP is all about, is showcasing Workplace MVPs like yourself and the great work that you do. And thank you so much for being a part of our show and letting us celebrate you and your successes that you’ve had, for sharing your stories, and all of your great advice with our listeners. We really do appreciate you. And I’m sure your organization does as well, as well as your staff. So, thank you. Thank you.

Erika Lance: [00:55:21] Thank you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:21] And we also want to thank our show sponsor, R3 Continuum, for supporting the Workplace MVP podcast. And to our listeners, thank you for tuning in. If you have not already done so, make sure to subscribe so you get our most recent episodes and other resources. You can also follow our show on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter at Workplace MVP. If you are a workplace MVP or know someone who is, we want to know. Email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. Thank you all for joining us and have a great rest of your day.

 

Tagged With: Erika Lance, Human Resources, Jamie Gassmann, KnowBe4, OnCon HR Professional of the Year 2021, Project New Start, Project Restart, R3 Continuum

Veronica Burns and Karen Williams, MGMTinsight

June 29, 2021 by John Ray

MGMTInsights
Nashville Business Radio
Veronica Burns and Karen Williams, MGMTinsight
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MGMTInsight

Veronica Burns and Karen Williams, MGMTinsight (Nashville Business Radio, Episode 21)

The human resources side of the business presents complications for most owners, and it’s the mission of MGMTInsight to make it easier. As HR and legal professionals, co-founders Veronica Burns and Karen Williams joined host John Ray to discuss the maze of HR issues facing businesses currently and how MGMTInsight helps them avoid costly mistakes. Nashville Business Radio is produced virtually from the Nashville studio of Business RadioX®.

MGMTinsight

At MGMTinsight, their business is your people. They are passionate about providing focused, customized solutions to your unique employment challenges.MGMTInsight Their goal is to partner with you to help create a culture that maximizes productivity and meets compliance requirements.

Whether it’s employment selection, retention, workplace law, interpersonal conflicts, sexual harassment, or other workplace issues, MGMTInsight has the experience and the expertise to help you build and sustain a positive, diverse workplace culture. Your company’s culture reinforces your commitment to equity and inclusion while setting expectations for optimum productivity.

At MGMTinsight, they solve the day-to-day problems and operational issues that take you away from focusing on the work you love, helping you manage and improve your biggest investment – your staff.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Veronica Burns, Co-Founder and Partner, MGMTInsights

Veronica Burns, Co-Founder, MGMTInsights

Veronica Burns is a Chicago native.  She moved to Nashville in 1999. Veronica created an expert and influential Human Resource career in both cities.

 For twelve years Veronica Burns headed core functions of the Human Resources Department for Vanderbilt University and Medical Center. Her role was instrumental in restructuring the department and Veronica assumed leadership of Employee Relations, Recruiting, and Training. Veronica’s responsibilities were consistent with her strategic approach of developing a human resources partnership and business relationships.

Veronica has held influential human resources leadership positions across healthcare, finance, academia and non-for-profits for such esteemed organizations as: Mount Sinai Hospital in Chicago, Northwestern University, Harris Bank/Bank of Montreal and the United Methodist Pension Fund. Veronica Burns has a reputation as a problem-solver and a “go-to” professional. Her career has included coaching organizational leaders and guiding the success of many Human Resource professionals.

LinkedIn

Karen Williams, Co-Founder and Partner, MGMTInsights

Karen Williams, Co-Founder, MGMTInsights

Karen Williams is an attorney and experienced human resources professional with a deep appreciation and understanding of the rewards and struggles of running a small to medium-size business.

Her career includes paralegal work at Bass, Berry & Sims and attorney positions at the Tennessee State Employees Association, the Department of Safety, and the Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts. She then moved to Vanderbilt University’s Human Resources division, followed by an HR position in Vanderbilt Medical Center’s Department of Pathology. After Vanderbilt, she took a leading human resources role at DCI Donor Services. These experiences provide Karen with expertise in working with professionals across industries. 

Karen enjoys building strong teams and partnerships. She works on resolving conflict as she has done throughout her career.

Karen earned her Bachelor of Arts at Vanderbilt University and her law degree from the University of Georgia.  She is also a mediator (Rule 31 listed General Civil Mediator under the Rules of the Supreme Court of the State of Tennessee).

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics in This Interview

  • What they enjoy doing and why they do this type of work, along with their backgrounds.
  • Why do entrepreneurs need your services?
  • While people (employees) are one of the most valuable assets of the business, people-related expenses are one the biggest costs to the bottom line. In addition to payroll, what other costs impact the bottom line?
  • Constantly changing HR laws and compliance issues small businesses don’t have time to track.
  • HR issues can be very time-consuming. When issues arise, how do small businesses find the expert resources to make the employment decisions that protect the company?
  • Nashville, like most of the country, is experiencing a tight job market. What factors affect turnover?
  • Diversity and Inclusion. What are they and why is it important?

Nashville Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and produced virtually from the Nashville studio of Business RadioX®.  You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

Tagged With: HR Compliance, HR consulting, HR Law, HR services, Human Resources, Human Resources Consulting, Karen Williams, MGMTInsights, Veronica Burns

2021 HR Internal Audit Checklist

June 18, 2021 by John Ray

DLREpisode10DSOsAlbum
Dental Law Radio
2021 HR Internal Audit Checklist
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DLREpisode10DSOsAlbum

2021 HR Internal Audit Checklist (Dental Law Radio, Episode 9)

Does your dental practice have an employee manual with up-to-date provisions addressing bullying? Workplace violence? Do you have a cell phone policy? An internet policy? Have these policies been examined and updated recently? If not, your practice is at risk. Host Stuart Oberman offers a checklist all dental practices should review to ensure their HR processes and policies are adequate. Dental Law Radio is underwritten and presented by Oberman Law Firm and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, it’s time for Dental Law Radio Dental Law Radio is brought to you by Oberman Law Firm, a leading dental centric law firm serving dental clients on a local, regional and national basis. Now, here’s your host, Stuart Oberman.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:27] Hello, everyone, and welcome. Today’s topic, HR, the favorite topic within a dental practice, human resources. So, a couple of things I want to talk about. As COVID-19 has involved, and I know everyone’s sort of getting COVID-19 out, if you will, but from an HR standpoint, it has taught us an invaluable lesson of how unprepared our dental practices were.

Stuart Oberman: [00:00:52] So, what we’re going to do is we’re going to go through this topic of 2021 internal audit checklist. What do our doctors need to know from an internal HR standpoint? There’s a couple of things that we want to take a look at. First and foremost, employee files and records, critical. Every HR starts with employees’ files and records. So, some basic information, and I know this sounds elementary like, “Yes, I know we do this,” but I will tell you, when things come about, and things hit the fan with the employees, our doctors are missing this information, and sometimes it is absolutely critical.

Stuart Oberman: [00:01:36] So, what do we want to do? First off, employee files and records. First and foremost, employees never, ever in a million years have control of their own personnel file because what happens is employees are terminated, they’re fired, they quit. And I will tell you, the first thing that goes is their own personal records, especially if they have disciplinary problems.

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:00] So, what do we do? So, what should be included in our basic employee files and records? First, from a basic standpoint, we have to review and update the person employee information. What does that include? Home address and mailing address. So, what happens is if you’ve got to send out a termination letter, we’ve got to send out a separation notice, and you have the wrong address. Then, employees complain. 30, 60, 90 days later, they report you because they haven’t received their separation notice. And now, you get a notice from the government, the Department of Labor, that, “Hey, you haven’t said the separation notice out.” Basic information.

Stuart Oberman: [00:02:36] Phone numbers, how do you get a hold of your employees? We have some doctors that their employees, you change your number seem like every week. So, again, if they’re fired, discharged, whatever, how do you get hold of them? So then, take a look at your insurance benefits, your 401(k) benefits and other benefits. Are you in compliance? Are they offered to your employees? Is there a name change?

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:05] We were doing an estate planning the other day and a particular client didn’t realize that she doesn’t know if the Social Security Administration ever changed her legal name. So, we did a will based upon her maiden name, and she’s been married for 20 years. And our client couldn’t tell us what was on file for her legal name. So, those are the simple things that we need to take a look at.

Stuart Oberman: [00:03:39] Emergency contacts. What are you going to do, who are you going to call if one of your employees has a stroke in your office, has a medical issue? Who are you going to call? Dependent information, children. Basic file information. Is this elementary? Yes. “Well, I’ve got all this information,” but you’re going to be surprised of what you don’t have should this case arise.

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:02] So, HR. HR starts – I can’t stress this enough, every HR has to start with a foundation, which is employee manual. I talk about this all the time, I talk about it for years, and it’s amazing to me that our doctor manuals are 15-20 years old. They’re put together because the practice that they purchased 15 years ago, all they did was change the name, they bought it from a friend, they got it online on the Internet, and they paid a couple of thousand dollars for something that’s 25 pages. So, HR is absolutely critical.

Stuart Oberman: [00:04:40] One thing you have to do in today’s world is confirm that you’re manual is up to date, federal and state law. We get calls all the time, the office manager will say, I’ve been working on this manual for six months. I need help. Can you put it together?” And we say, “Within 10 to 14 days, you’ll have it. It’ll be up to date. It’ll be in compliance.” So, if you’re working on putting a manual together for six months to a year, how in the world is your office manager keeping up to date as to what’s going on? The answer is they’re not.

Stuart Oberman: [00:05:18] So, another important issue is dress code. Do you have a dress code policy? Is it defined and acceptable? How do you address tattoos? How do you address non-traditional hair colors? How do you address body piercings? What’s going to happen if you tell that one individual, “Well, you can’t do this. You can’t do that. You can’t wear this. You can’t have that,” now, you’ve singled out an employee. Now, we’ve got all kinds of problems; where if we have it on employee manuals, it’s across the board. Everyone has to comply with it. And if they don’t, then you’ve got a problem, and it’s something you need to address. Or what happens if they choose to, one day, violate it and you have no company policy? How do you handle that?

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:11] Do you have a cell phone policy? I know we talked about this on a previous podcast. What happens if you have data on your cell phone that needs to be destroyed? Can you say whether or not your employees are actually taking pictures of you on their phone that eventually is going to be published? Or are they recording your conversations? What’s the policy?

Stuart Oberman: [00:06:39] Social media policy. Is there restrictions? Internet policy? A pipeline was just hacked. Do you have a policy in place for your employees to log in remotely. Is it a separate computer? Is it a separate line? Internet line. Do you have a policy where they can’t check their emails on your desktop in your practice? Is there a dating policy in the workplace? What’s the policy? If you don’t have a workplace policy, are you setting yourself up for sexual harassment issues?

Stuart Oberman: [00:07:26] And that brings us to the next point. All policy manuals should have an anti-harassment, anti-discrimination, anti-bullying provision. How do you handle workplace violence? And how do you handle drug and alcohol in the workplace? What are you going to do if one of your employees comes back from a state that allows the uses of marijuana but violates your policy? What are you going to do? What are you going to do with violence? You have an employee, male or female, their spouses constantly coming up, their boyfriends coming up, their girlfriends coming up and harassing them in your office, harassing your staff, what are you going to do? Do you have a policy and procedure for that?

Stuart Oberman: [00:08:19] Bullying. Some employees are very aggressive, some are not aggressive, some are overly aggressive, how do you handle it? Anti-Discrimination, do you have a policy and procedure in place where you indicate that you will not tolerate any kind of violation of Title VII, race, color, creed, sexual origin. Anti-harassment, sexual or otherwise, what’s the policy? All these are issues that if you don’t address, the state and federal government will – primarily, federal – and you have EOC issue breathing down your neck very, very quickly if you don’t get this under control.

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:03] So, these are just a couple of things that we need to address from an HR standpoint. Do you have a termination policy? Do you have a review policy? Are your employees reviewed? Do you have a probation policy? Do you have a compliance reporting policy? Do you have a policy and procedure in place where they can report to an outside third party that they have sexual harassment issues, or anti-discrimination issues, or bullying, or workplace violence? What’s the policies in place for that? How do you handle it?

Stuart Oberman: [00:09:38] So, this is a very, very short podcast. Again, I could probably talk about five hours on this entire slide, but I want to make sure that this is a very synced and to-the-point issues. These issues do not involve changing the world of a massive overhaul in your practice. These are very, very simple issues that if addressed and addressed properly, you will save yourself, your staff a lot of headaches down the road.

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:12] So, HR, you got to know about it. You got to appoint someone to oversee this, you cannot do it, should not do it. You should be reviewing your policies and procedures, at least monthly. Implement any change, any security issues that you need. Do you have a policy in place if you are hacked? What do you do? How do you do it? How do you respond? Who are the people you’re going to call?

Stuart Oberman: [00:10:42] So, again, HR, huge issue, huge concern, COVID-19 sort of brought all this out into the forefront, but these are very, very specific things that we need to take a look at. So, if anyone has any questions, concerns, please feel free to give us a call – Oberman Law Firm, my name is Stuart Oberman – 770-554-1400 or send me an email, love to hear from you, stuart@obermanlaw.com. Thank you again. And we so appreciate you listening to our podcast. And I wish everyone to have a fantastic day. Take care.

 

About Dental Law Radio

Hosted by Stuart Oberman, a nationally recognized authority in dental law, Dental Law Radio covers legal, business, and other operating issues and topics of vital concern to dentists and dental practice owners. The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

Stuart Oberman, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm
Stuart Oberman, host of “Dental Law Radio”

Stuart Oberman is the founder and President of Oberman Law Firm. Mr. Oberman graduated from Urbana University and received his law degree from John Marshall Law School. Mr. Oberman has been practicing law for over 25 years, and before going into private practice, Mr. Oberman was in-house counsel for a Fortune 500 Company. Mr. Oberman is widely regarded as the go-to attorney in the area of Dental Law, which includes DSO formation, corporate business structures, mergers and acquisitions, regulatory compliance, advertising regulations, HIPAA, Compliance, and employment law regulations that affect dental practices.

In addition, Mr. Oberman’s expertise in the health care industry includes advising clients in the complex regulatory landscape as it relates to telehealth and telemedicine, including compliance of corporate structures, third-party reimbursement, contract negotiations, technology, health care fraud and abuse law (Anti-Kickback Statute and the State Law), professional liability risk management, federal and state regulations.

As the long-term care industry evolves, Mr. Oberman has the knowledge and experience to guide clients in the long-term care sector with respect to corporate and regulatory matters, assisted living facilities, continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs). In addition, Mr. Oberman’s practice also focuses on health care facility acquisitions and other changes of ownership, as well as related licensure and Medicare/Medicaid certification matters, CCRC registrations, long-term care/skilled nursing facility management, operating agreements, assisted living licensure matters, and health care joint ventures.

In addition to his expertise in the health care industry, Mr. Oberman has a nationwide practice that focuses on all facets of contractual disputes, including corporate governance, fiduciary duty, trade secrets, unfair competition, covenants not to compete, trademark and copyright infringement, fraud, and deceptive trade practices, and other business-related matters. Mr. Oberman also represents clients throughout the United States in a wide range of practice areas, including mergers & acquisitions, partnership agreements, commercial real estate, entity formation, employment law, commercial leasing, intellectual property, and HIPAA/OSHA compliance.

Mr. Oberman is a national lecturer and has published articles in the U.S. and Canada.

LinkedIn

Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Tagged With: dental practices, dentists, HR, Human Resources, Oberman Law Firm, Stuart Oberman

Jeff Batts, Principle HR Solutions and Consulting, LLC

June 17, 2021 by John Ray

Nashville Business Radio
Nashville Business Radio
Jeff Batts, Principle HR Solutions and Consulting, LLC
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Principle HR Solutions

Jeff Batts, Principle HR Solutions and Consulting, LLC (Nashville Business Radio, Episode 18)

Jeff Batts of Principle HR Solutions joined host John Ray to discuss his firm’s outsourced HR services for small and medium-sized businesses, the importance of maintaining a culture which attracts talent, how to handle issues such as Covid vaccinations and return to the workplace, and much more. Nashville Business Radio is produced virtually from the Nashville studio of Business RadioX®.

Principle HR Solutions and Consulting, LLC

Principle HR Solutions LLC was founded on a belief that people are the key driver to a company’s success.

They believe that ensuring clients have the “Right People” in the “Right Jobs” doing the “Right Work” in the “Right Environment” is the recipe for that success. They call it R to the 4th Power. Get the principles out of balance, try to run a business’ HR on your own, and the result is paperwork and pain.  Principle HR will power a client’s small to midsize business with the partnership-like relationships large firms enjoy.

Their process follows three steps:

Launch: The HR process begins with a thorough review of current processes and level of basic compliance. Formal recommendations are made for correction and alignment with sound practices.

Foundation: Addresses gaps and risk points in a sequential process.

Build-out: Principle HR begins the build-out of substantive client HR practices that are geared toward growth and client goals.

Prnciple also offers HR Solutions including:

  • Regulatory Compliance
  • Employee Coaching & Disciplinary Action
  • Investigations into Employee Conduct
  • Candidate Sourcing & Interviewing
  • Human Resource Auditing
  • Employee Orientation and Onboarding
  • Performance Evaluation Development & Execution

Company website | LinkedIn

Jeff Batts, President, Principle HR Solutions & Consulting, LLC

Principle HR Solutions
Jeff Batts, President, Principle HR Solutions

Jeff Batts is the owner of Principle HR Solutions & Consulting, LLC. His career started in Human Resources working in a variety of HR roles at a manufacturer, CPS Corporation in Franklin, TN. There, he developed his foundations for recruiting and people management growing into the plant Human Resource and Safety Manager. Leaving there he expanded his knowledge and experience in differing industries by working at Gaylord Entertainment as the Recruiting Manager and Human Resource Manager.

Before launching Principle HR Solutions, Jeff spent the final 17 years of his corporate life in the financial services industry with Regions Bank, serving as a Senior Vice President and Human Resource Executive for both the Insurance and Consumer Lending Divisions. With 30 years of combined HR experience, Jeff provides a well-rounded view of all aspects of the HR function.

Living in Nashville, Jeff has focused his business on providing small and midsize organizations the same resources he had in his corporate roles, understanding that they needed to be scaled and tailored to each client’s specific needs. Much of Jeff’s career has been focused on working with leaders to help them solve people issues and develop the skills needed to lead at all levels. He regularly has coached owners and executive vice presidents down to front-line supervisors.

Jeff is a certified partner with the Predictive Index as well as certified to train and implement Talent Optimization practices in organizations. Principle HR Solutions is also a proud member of the Better Business Bureau of Middle Tennessee.

The foundation of his life is his family. Jeff is married to Tiffany, his wife and best friend for 28 years. They have three sons, Chandler 25 as well as 22-year-old twins, Justin and Brendan. When not working with clients or volunteering, Jeff spends his time with family.

With a passion for child development, Jeff is currently a mentor/volunteer with Nashville-based Youth Encouragement Services along with serving on the President’s Advisory Board at Ezell Harding Christian School.

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics in This Interview

  • Your history in Nashville and what motivated you to start the business
  • HR Solutions, what do you really do?
  • Biggest people challenges facing small and midsize business today?
  • How are you unique in the market place and why did you decide on this way of offering business solutions?
  • What does your typical client look like?
  • Besides retained, full-service HR services, what are your other offerings?
  • Why are you passionate about small business?
  • Do you work outside of Nashville?

“Nashville Business Radio” is hosted by John Ray and produced virtually from the Nashville studio of Business RadioX®.  You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

Tagged With: Fractional HR, HR services, Human Resources, Human Resources Consulting, human resources for small business, Jeff Batts, Principle HR Solutions

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