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A Missive to Human Resources (HR)

I built a very successful marketing career based on a three-word mission statement that I picked up from Chris Greendale, back when I was a product marketer at Ingres.  Chris always said that marketing exists to make sales easier.

I loved those three words.  I embraced that simple concept.  I made it my reductionist mission statement.  I taught it to every marketer I knew.  I loved it because it just made so much sense — if you derived a startup from scratch you’d first hire a developer and then salesperson.  Only after you had a bunch of salespeople would you then hire marketing, with the purpose of making the salespeople more effective.

Across my career, many people — ironically often from sales — challenged my “make sales easier” mission statement.  “It’s too tactical,” I’d hear.  Or, it “completely overlooks the strategic value of marketing.”  Not so, I’d counter.

Simply put, while “make sales easier” might at first blush sound tactical in nature, the clever marketer can make sales easier in both tactical (e.g., lead generation) and very strategic ways.

Once, when I was thinking about human resources (HR), I wondered if I could come up with a similarly effective, reductionist mission statement.  I landed upon HR exists to help managers manage.

Like “make sales easier,” “help managers manage” often generates instant push-back.

Finally, it begs the question, shouldn’t HR represent the employee point of view, the vox populi, to the company?  My answer is no.  If I want to know what the average employee thinks about the company, I can run a survey.  In fact, I’ll probably ask HR to run that survey.  But I do not view chatting, jawboning,  or gossiping with employees as a core HR function.  Why?

As I told marketers, “the more time a salesperson has to spend with you, the less you should care about his/her opinion” because the best people want to be out selling, not chatting with marketing.  I’d argue the same logic holds true for employees in general with HR.  As CEO, I want people focused on getting stuff done.  I care enormously about “soft issues” when they impede the organization’s progress on key goals.  When framed, however, against one individual employee’s views about how a company theoretically should work, well, I care less.

One sometimes difficult concept to grasp for support staff is that help is defined in the mind of the recipient.  HR staff, particularly those who come with a legal/compliance bent, may think that rejecting a poorly done performance improvement plan (PIP) is helping the company.  From the manager’s perspective, that’s not help:  showing them an example of  good one would be.

Alternatively, telling someone 10 reasons why they can’t terminate someone in the short-term isn’t help.  Sitting down and helping them understand the correct process and helping to make a PIP would be.

The more you are a cop who says no, the less you’re helping.  The more you are asking managers what they are trying to accomplish, devil’s advocating their viewpoints, and then helping them accomplish what they want to do, the more you are helping.

In the end, help is a way of approaching things.  So, HR, stop thinking about what people can’t or shouldn’t do and starting thinking about

Remember what’s sometimes called The Great Lie:  “we’re from corporate, we’re hear to help.”  How can you change this so that “we’re from HR, we’re here to help” instead becomes The Great Truth?

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