Views on Human Resources Management & Strategy, HR Transformation and Talent Management from Conning Towers Human Resources Consultancy. Authored by Susan Popoola
According to the Peter Principal, People are promoted to their level of Incompetency and sadly I can’t count the number of times that I have seen the Peter Principal take place and work to the detriment of both of the individual concerned and the department or an organisation as a whole.
This is particularly true, when an employee who is very good at working on an operational level is moved into a managerial role without being prepared for what it entails.
To avoid the Peter Principal and its implications there are certain questions that need to be answered before a decision is made to move them into a managerial role. Specifically are they prepared to:
If the answers to any of these questions is “no”, it is not to say that an employee should never be moved, but that time should be taken to prepare employees so that the answers become “yes”.
This indicates the need for talent management, whereby there is an extended time to prepare employees for the moves and at times to develop more creative ways of promoting and fully utilising employee skills, without giving them responsibilities that they will never be comfortable with or readily able to cope with.
Susan PopoolaCopyright 2007 This document is the specific intellectual property of the Conning Towers Consultancy. Content may not be reused or reproduced without the specific permission of the owner or a reference to the source. Opinions may be generated from content obtained from other sources and such content is referenced as appropriate.
Labels: Human Resources, Peter Principle, Succession Planning, Talent Management, Workforce Planning
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