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Bertrand Duperrin's Library tagged talentnetworks   View Popular, Search in Google

Mar
26
2009

It goes without saying that no matter how much talent a company might have, there are many more talented people working outside its boundaries. Yet all too many companies focus solely on acquiring talent, on bringing talent inside the firm. Why not access talent wherever it resides?

Some might say there's no way of doing so without sharply increasing the cost of complexity. New institutional practices can reduce these costs, however, as companies become:

talentmanagement talentnetworks talents transactions relations silos organization practicenetworks networks process

  • • Less transactional and more relational.
     • Less "hardwired" and more "loosely coupled."
     • Less focused on merely accessing external capabilities and more focused on rapid capability building for every participant.
     • Less focused on the firm and internal silos and more supportive of richer cross-enterprise interactions and collaborations among workers.
  • Companies must also participate in (and sometimes orchestrate) new organizational forms and structures called global process and practice networks.
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Mar
20
2009

Even these questions indicate a dated view of where talent is and how to get the most out of it. Sure, no one disputes the importance of talent, even in a recession. But, as a Deloitte report contends (.pdf link), companies spend entirely too much time focused on attracting and retaining talent. Moreover, as they do, they often lose sight of what appeals to and keeps hold of talent in the first place. (See John's perspectives on the report and on the mindsets that limit firms.)

talents talentmanagement attraction retention humanresources networks talentnetworks pull

  • Talented workers join companies and stay there because they believe they'll learn faster and better than they would at other employers.
  • Talented workers develop instead by:

      

    - Trying new things.
     - Experimenting with what they do in their jobs and how they do it.
     - Tackling real problems with talented people who have different backgrounds and skills.
     - Participating in talent networks, the largely invisible matrix structures that run within firms and, with increasing frequency, between and across them.

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