March 2005

hiring strategy, HTP

Screening and Speed

In his post, Scary – For Real!, Hank discusses a change in the hiring climate. Turns out, there is competition, at least in some places, for technical folks. (Good news to lots of great people.) He mentions some organizations’ troubles finding people and waiting too long to make an offer (and waiting too long for […]

HTP, job analysis

No Cog Positions

Set Godin, in his The ever-worsening curse of the cog says something profound: The end result is that it’s essentially impossible to become successful or well off doing a job that is described and measured by someone else. I still think managers can describe parts of a useful, non-cog job. But jobs where a person’s

MPD, thinking

Succession Planning or Working Yourself Out of Job

In Who Wants to be a Technical Lead? I promised I’d talk about succession planning. Here’s the general idea: as someone who works for a living, your job should be to work yourself out of your current job by learning, practicing, and mastering some new skills. The less work experience you have, the easier this

HTP, job analysis

Implications of a Labor Shortage

In More on the labour shortage, Michael points to The Coming Labor Shortage. Here’s a quote : What’s interesting about Deloitte’s prediction of a “critical talent” shortage is that they’re onto the fact this isn’t about bosses alone. The biggest skills gap will be smack in the middle of the so-called creative class workforce. “Critical

management, MPD

Market-Driven Management

  Via Pragmatic Marketing, I found In Search of Overhead Heroes” by George Tillman, who advocates thinking like a business even if you’re supporting the business, not contributing directly to revenue. Certainly, you’re supposed to align yourself and contain costs. But here are the questions I felt were most important for any organization to answer:

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