CHAPTER 1

Introduction

First, thank you for buying this book. I’m so pleased that you are interested in doing HR differently and that you want to create a sustainable future for the HR profession.

When I started in HR, I was passionate about wanting to create better places to work, where I did not have to sit at the pub, or in the hairdressers’ and hear about the problems that my friends, friends of friends, and family were having at work—the difficulties they faced with managers, the long-winded and policy-driven ways of doing HR, and what I call the Monday to Friday dying syndrome, where you spend all week at work waiting for the weekend, and then, do the same the week after, and the week after that.

You have heard about it or experienced it yourself, right?

 

Monday – The dread of going to work fills you from head to toe. You drag yourself out of bed, and are already counting down the days until the weekend. You arrive at work, you cannot focus. People ask you if you have had a good weekend, and you say things such as, “Yes, great, thanks, but it wasn’t long enough.” It is not a productive day. You have got the rest of the week to get done what you need to get done.

Tuesday – Thank goodness, it is not Monday anymore; the week is moving forward. You start to really think about all of the things that you need to complete that week. Then, you spend the afternoon clearing your emails. Research has shown that marketing emails have the greatest chance of success if sent on Tuesday afternoons!

Wednesday (Or “Humpday”) – You have survived the week so far; you are halfway there and already thinking about what you will be doing at the weekend. You have a lot of meetings today; everyone must be feeling the same way. You push through.

Thursday – Mad rush. Everything needs to be completed today, or so it appears. It is a last-minute rush to achieve what needs to be achieved by the end of the week. Why does it always feel like your organizations leaves things until the last minute? You stay late as you have lots to get through (if only you had made better use of the earlier part of the week!).

Friday – Woohoo, it’s the weekend. You fly through your work, or look at what can wait until next week. Maybe you can leave the office early; after all, you have so much to plan and do for the weekend and you could do with getting out early. You take a longer lunch. You watch the clock and you can finally escape.

Saturday – What a great day—no work!

Sunday – Great day, but you cannot get the thoughts out of your head that you are back to work tomorrow. Oh, no!

 

Another week, the cycle repeats, over and over and over again.

We spend more than half our lives at work—more than half. And yet, many of us go through this cycle over and over again, and it needs to change.

The more I progressed and the more senior I got, it was more and more visible that the reasons these policies—and the Monday-to-Friday dying—were happening was because senior leaders did not trust their staff, their managers, and had little respect for the HR function. And HR functions were implementing policies and procedures in the hope of making a difference to the organization and gaining credibility from senior leaders, but usually without taking into account what managers—and more importantly, what employees—actually wanted.

When you think of the HR function in your organization, do you think of them being flexible, adaptable, speedy, and responsive?

No. Nor do many other companies, and sadly, HR is the one department that shoulders the blame and nobody bats an eyelid. “It’s HR’s fault” is common parlance.

The reality is that much of the time, it is not HR’s fault; managers are not managing, leaders are not leading, but instead of HR looking at why people are not following procedures or trying to simplify policies to make them easy to implement, much of what we have created over the years as part of our training and development—and based on the management tools designed in the 1980s—is not fit for purpose. It is not agile; it does not make things easy for people; and it does not empower anyone in the workplace.

When I was appointed as the UK’s Youngest HR Director, I was convinced I could make a BIG change in the way that HR designed and implemented solutions, and I could change the perception of the HR function. I believe that in the right company, I could have achieved this, but I realized that for me, in order to truly drive change, to start doing HR differently, and to help my clients do the same, without them wasting time or money, I needed to start my own consultancy.

In 2013, I left my corporate HR role and started my own consultancy with a passion for—and a commitment to—creating better places to work and practice HR, learning, and leadership differently.

My company has gone from strength to strength over the last 4 years, and I am now delighted that our approach and some of the new ways of thinking from Silicon Valley, other forward-thinking organizations in the UK, and consultancies such as HR Disrupted have been brought together in this book, along with our online program, workshop, and diagnostic tool.

So, what will this book cover?

We will look first at why HR needs changing, and then, I will introduce you to the AGILE model, before we move onto the employee lifecycle and see how AGILE HR fits into this.

We will then look at the overarching factors to consider before we move on to the future being Agile and how you can start to create and implement change in your own organizations.

You will also find throughout the book that you will be introduced to case studies and examples of new ways of thinking, tools and resources, videos, audios, and some questions to get you thinking.

You can dip in and out of the book at any point to suit you, although I do recommend starting from the beginning and working through it at your own pace, and then, dipping in and out as and when you need to, to help you create sustainable change.

If you have attended one of the workshops or completed the online program, then do use this book as a resource tool to keep your learning fresh, and I hope you will also learn something new as you progress through.

There is also plenty of opportunity for you to make use of the online community of like-minded professionals that are in the HR Hub to test and share your thinking and ideas, so do say Hi, interact and collaborate as much as you can. As social creatures and social learners, this can help improve your experience no end.

I hope you enjoy the book; a lot of love, thought, and creativity have gone into it and I look forward to hearing your thoughts as you move through it.

And now, if you are ready to start doing HR differently, let us get started.

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