Monday, 9 August 2010

HR Technology, Chicago

 

   I’ve recently been posting on some the events I’ve got coming up this Autumn:

 

One of the conferences I’m not going to be able to get to (again) is Bill Kutik’s HR Technology conference in Chicago.  However, I think I’ve finally got a speaker slot for 2011, so it’s already in my diary for next year.

If you’re able to go in 2010, you’ll get the chance to see:

  • Lexy Martin presenting results of the 13th Annual CedarCrestone HR Systems Survey
  • Debate between Naomi Lee Bloom and Gartner’s Jim Holincheck
  • Oracle revealing more of Fusion HCM
  • Josh Bersin’s review of talent management systems
  • Kris Dunn’s blogger insight Panel and Laurie Ruettimann’s Twitterversity
  • Sessions on social collaboration, learning and recruitment
  • The legendary shootout
  • “Awesome” new technologies for HR.

 

For more information, download the pdf of the full conference brochure.

To get $500 off the onsite price of $1,695 and to attend at just $1,195, just use the promotion code STRATEGIC.  And let me know how you you get on!

 

 

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Tuesday, 3 August 2010

Social Recruiting conference

 

   I’ll also be chairing a panel at Social Recruiter and RCEuro’s Social Recruiting Conference in November.

“Social Recruiting Conference 2010 (SRCONF) will gather leading employers and recruitment industry professionals, to passionately discuss and practically demonstrate the power of Social Recruiting.

The conference will be unlike any other Social Media Recruiting conferences you have attended. Our aim is to take the talk from theory to practice; and shift conversations from hype and hope to reality and results. #SRCONF will focus on Social Recruiting case studies, with measurable ROIs.

Social Recruiting Conference will feature an extensive list of case studies from diverse industries and invaluable experiences from some of the world’s global organizations.

The agenda will be fully interactive with a combination of speaker presentations, Q&A sessions and panel discussions.The conference will feature speakers from forward thinking brands who will present engaging case studies of how their companies have been actively using Social Media as a recruiting and employer branding tool, and how this is becoming an integral part of their recruitment strategy.”

 

You can book for the event at http://srconf.eventbrite.com.

 

 

 

 

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Monday, 2 August 2010

Connecting HR: Networking and Community

 

   October will also see Connecting HR’s first Unconference.  You can find out more about this event on our wonderful new website (thanks Gareth!): http://connectinghr.org.

You can also find out more about the community, and about HR’s need to connect in this article, originally published in an edited form at Changeboard:

 

Why do you think there’s a need for HR networks?

Networking is important in all functions, and increasingly so, as the developed world moves ever closer to a more social, relationship based way of doing business (a bit more like the rest of the world perhaps?).

Note that I’m not writing about networking in its crude, ‘what can you do for me?’ sense. The need for networking is simply a reflection of two things. Firstly, there’s the fact that we’re all social animals born with a deep desire to connect. So, networking is about our health and happiness. Then, there’s the fact that most information is fairly meaningless and certainly uninspiring without a social context. Our rate of learning is informed more by who we know than by what we know. So networking is central to our growth and development too.

This second point is particularly important within HR. Most of what we do, at a senior level at least, is more about interpretation than it is about rules. This means that we’ll often need to talk to other people to internalise our own perspectives on an issue. And networking provides us with an opportunity for this. (I’m not saying that there’s no interpretation involved in putting together a balance sheet, but I don’t think there’s quite the same need to talk things through in Finance as there is within HR.)

You’ve then got some additional contextual factors which further emphasise the need for HR networking. HR is internally focused, so we don’t get to deal with people from other organisations so much and networking takes us out of our own businesses. Also, in my view at least, we don’t deal in quite the same space as our business colleagues. To me, HR provides most value by focusing on the organisation value chain, on the creation of human capital, rather than on final business results. I know it’s not currently ‘in’ to say it, but I still think it’s true. This reduces our ability to relate closely with our colleagues in our businesses, and emphasises our need for a third place – somewhere that’s not work, and not non-work, but is based around a community of people who share the same perspectives and interests as us.

 

How is the nature of networking changing – what new networking trends are emerging & why?

I think, or at least I hope, that networking is changing in line with the above trends. People increasingly understand that networking really only works when you approach it as something that you can be better or worse at (which is important), but for which you can’t force a result. In addition the results are likely to be quite distant in time and space. It’s not the sort of thing that I think lends itself to a ROI calculation for example.

So one main trend is about increased investment in it, and more openness and willingness in doing it. And by this I mean approaching it with a desire to help, rather than be helped. I like Tony Hseih’s comments in his new book, Delivering Happiness, that developing relationships is all about being interested, rather than appearing interesting.

The other main trend, of course, is the role of ‘online’. This has been an increasing trend over the last decade and more, initially through the use of discussion boards and online forums (perhaps less so in HR). But the opportunities for online networking have really started opening up over the last couple of years with the emergence of social media.

Although the use of Facebook still trails well behind Google in the UK, the social network has overtaken the search engine in the US. The FT referred to this event as the web becoming sociable rather than just searchable.

And we’re starting to question some old assumptions, for example, about how much, if any, relationship building needs to be face-to-face. A lot of people, me included, now argue that you can develop close and trustful relationships without never actually having met. (If you don’t believe me, ponder this: in the last year, 17% of all couples who married in the US met on online dating sites.)

Of course, this is all in the context of the recession, meaning that people are finding it harder to find the time and money to support networking. So in some ways it has become harder, but it’s still more important to do.

 

What led you to launching the Connecting HR network?

We got the network going with a couple of tweet-ups (face-to-face meet-ups for people using or interested in using Twitter and other social media). Given this, my initial reaction to this question was to respond that we’re both reasonably high users of social media and that the network provided a means of extending that interest, meeting more of the people that we exchange online comments with.

But actually, thinking about it, I don’t think it’s that at all. And I’ve not talked to Gareth about this, but I think the real answer to your question is that we’re both believers in the value of connections, relationships, networks and communities.

That’s why we’re into social media. It gives us a basis to extend our own relationships. So Connecting HR isn’t really about social media at all, it’s simply a forum for people to connect and make new / maintain and develop existing relationships.

And the reason we started by organising tweet-ups is that most of the people using social media believe in social connection too. So Twitter users are naturally inclined to participate in face-to-face networking events as well.

Importantly, Connecting HR enables people to network without content getting in the way.

What I mean by this is that for most networking we do, people think there needs to be another attraction on top – a speaker perhaps, or even a whole day of presentations. Networking is seen as a bit of a side attraction that can fit nicely into the coffee breaks. But then everyone leaves the event and the bit they remember is the coffee break, the corridor conversation, and their memory of the formal stuff, the speakers’ presentations, has soon disappeared.

At Connecting HR, we don’t do content. Or at least, we place its importance well behind that of relationships. So the next thing we’re going to be doing is an unconference. This is like, but also unlike, a normal conference. There’ll be no keynote speakers, no long presentations, maybe no power points at all. Instead, people will be encouraged to talk about things that are important to them, and that they think other people might be interested in as well. We’ll have a range of formats, from workshops to speed networking; open spaces to structured corridor conversations – maybe even a ‘HR’s got Talent’ slot as well. All designed to get people connecting and relating.

Yes, people may learn some information too – of course we hope they will. Actually, we’re sure that they’ll learn much more than they would at a traditional conference. But that’s really not the point. The point is networking. The point is community.

 

What are the benefits for HR professionals joining such a network?

Connecting HR provides an opportunity for HR professionals to network easily - online and offline. The community is mainly made up of practitioners (suppliers are welcome as well, but there are some conditions to attend.) So the networking is with other people like you. People with the same passions, the same interests, the same challenges – but with potentially different experiences and insights.

(There’s also an element of diversity built in as we’ve got people from Reward, L&D, Internal Communication, Employment Legislation, Reward etc who are part of the community.)

 

What positive feedback have you had and why are these networking events successful?

We’ve had so much positive feedback. And if your readers do an internet search on Connecting HR, they’ll find a lot of it for themselves.

It’s reinforced our belief about people’s need to connect.

I’ll admit that part of the success to date has been a shared interest, and often passion, for social media. But this really isn’t what we’ve talked about when we’ve met. Social media has provided a context, a reason why we’ve all been there. That’s all. (And the unconference will take us even further away from social media, as the agenda will be much broader than this, and many participants may not be users of, or even interested in, social media at all.)

The rest of the network’s success has been down to the lack of presentations, and allowing people to do what comes naturally to fill the gap.

 

What message would you give out to HR professionals not belonging to any network?

Simple – if you’re based in or around London, join in with ours! - you’ll be very welcome.

 

Jon Ingham is a strategic people management and organisation development consultant. He writes one of the UK’s leading HR blogs, Strategic HCM, and has been recognised as the top global online influencer in talent management. You can follow him on Twitter at @joningham

Jon’s co-founder of Connecting HR is Gareth Jones. Gareth is Leader, CourtenayHR who blogs at Inside My Head and you can follow him on Twitter at @garelaos.

 

Photo credit: David.Monniaux 

 

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Driving business success through innovation

 

HR Innovation   As well as sessions on HR and social media; international HR and HR scorecarding in September, I’ll be speaking on Innovating HR through social media at this event at Roffey in October: HR - driving business success through innovation.

I’ll be blogging about this area over the next couple of months as well.

 

 

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Sunday, 1 August 2010

Did you miss (on Social Advantage during July)

 

   Check out these recent posts from my other blog if you’ve not already seen them:

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Saturday, 31 July 2010

Three years of Strategic HCM

 

   This Strategic HCM blog has now been running for three years.  I’ll be marking the anniversary with a review during August of some of my key ideas about managing people for the creation and development of human capital.

You may also be interested in some of these posts from July 2007:

 

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Friday, 30 July 2010

HR Scorecarding, Cairo, September 2010

 

   I’ll then be continuing my own global HR activities with a session on HR scorecarding in Cairo.  There’s going to be about 70 people there so it should be great fun to do.  And, I’m sure, really valuable for all the attendees.

 

 

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Thursday, 29 July 2010

SHRM Ohio: Hairpin bends on the freeway - HR in a not quite flat world

 

   I’ll also be speaking on International HR in this session at SHRM Ohio’s annual conference in Sandusky in September.

Do come and say hello if you’re there!

 

 

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Wednesday, 28 July 2010

HR and social media - training

 

social media   I’m going to be taking some time off during August, but I’ve already got a busy September.

For example, I’m going to be delivering this open workshop on social HR through JSB in September. Do get in touch with them if you’d like to attend, or with me if you’d like something similar… (including in-house / outside the UK).

 

 

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Monday, 26 July 2010

HCI Recasts

 

   You can catch my recent HCI webcast again on Friday (30 July), or Monday or Tuesday next week (2-3 August).

(HCI executive members can view at any time).

 

Telling the European Employer Brand Story

Track: Talent Strategy in Europe
WEBCAST: Webcast Aired: Friday 25 June

We often hear about the need to continually attract, motivate and retain our employees. Many of us tie these issues to our employee brand and continually strive to become an employer of choice. But are we missing out on opportunities to utilize technology to improve our brand and solidify our place in the global market? Technologies that are already being utilized by your company can assist you in maintaining brand integrity and driving employee engagement.

This webcast will look at multiple technology platform that can work with your existing brand-- and provide big results at a small investment level. We'll look at corporate social networking as a tool to create "employee ambassadors" and see how creating relationship brands and leveraging the social web can promote grass roots brand engagement. We'll also examine best practices from companies who have leveraged their technology systems-- and find out what pitfalls to avoid.

 

Schedule

Recasts:

Friday, Jul 30 2010 12:00pm EDT

Monday, Aug 02 2010 4:00pm EDT

Monday, Aug 02 2010 8:00pm EDT

Tuesday, Aug 03 2010 12:00am EDT

Tuesday, Aug 03 2010 4:00am EDT

Tuesday, Aug 03 2010 8:00am EDT

 

View:Slides

 

 

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