Recruiting

EVP—Enron Had a Great One

Lots of companies’ EVPs (employee value propositions) have nice-sounding platitudes that are a litany of things that they aren’t, says Consultant Stephanie Tarant, PhD. Take Enron, for example.

Enron had a nice-sounding value statement that was based on four values:

  • Integrity
  • Communication
  • Respect
  • Excellence

In fact, the four values were chiseled in marble in the main lobby of Enron’s corporate headquarters, but those values had little to do with the real values of the organization, Tarant points out. Tarant, who is principal at Global Talent Consulting, offered her tips at BLR’s Advanced Employment Issues Symposium, held recently in Las Vegas.

Enron Not Alone—Failure to Deliver

Most organizations fail to deliver the benefits they promise to their candidates, says Tarant. In particular, more than half of employees indicate that their employers fail to deliver on the less tangible aspects of the EVP, such as development opportunities, respect, and manager quality.

Get real, says Tarant. What the company really values and what employees really experience are shown by who gets rewarded, promoted, or let go … as opposed to the nice-sounding platitudes.


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Benefits of a Well-Managed EVP

Companies with a clear EVP outperform their competitors, says Tarant. She quotes a 2013 Towers Watson study showing that a differentiated EVP that integrates total rewards and aligns to business strategy results in:

  • An organization that is five times more likely to have engaged employees
  • An organization that is two times more likely to report achieving financial performance significantly above peers

In addition, says Tarant, the EVP helps with attracting and retaining employees.

Attraction:

  • Reduces the compensation premium needed to hire by 50%
  • Enables 50% deeper penetration into the labor market to attract passive candidates

Retention:

  • Increases commitment of new hires by up to 29%
  • Increases commitment of employees by up to 37%

The challenge is that many companies don’t have or communicate a clear EVP, says Tarant. The EVP can’t be just an HR exercise, she adds. Think about the great employment brands: Google, Apple, IBM.

Communicate and DELIVER …

To sum up, Tarant says, be clear about your promise …and deliver on it!

From developing employee value propositions to dealing with the C-suite to routine discipline and documentation, HR never sleeps. You need a go-to resource, and our editors recommend the “everything-HR-in-one” website, HR.BLR.com®. As an example of what you will find, here are some policy recommendations concerning e-mail, excerpted from a sample policy on the website:

  • Privacy. The director of information services can override any individual password and, therefore, has access to all e-mail messages in order to ensure compliance with company policy. This means that employees do not have an expectation of privacy in their company e-mail or any other information stored or accessed on company computers.
  • E-mail review. All e-mail is subject to review by management. Your use of the e-mail system grants consent to the review of any of the messages to or from you in the system in printed form or in any other medium.
  • Solicitation. In line with our general policy, e-mail must not be used to solicit for outside business ventures, personal parties, social meetings, charities, membership in any organization, political causes, religious causes, or other matters not connected to the company’s business.


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We should point out that this is just one of hundreds of sample policies on the site. (You’ll also find analyses of all the HR-related laws and the current critical issues, plus downloadable job descriptions, and complete training materials for hundreds of HR topics.)

You can examine the entire HR.BLR.com® program free of any cost or commitment. It’s quite remarkable—30 years of accumulated HR knowledge, tools, and skills gathered in one place and accessible at the click of a mouse.

What’s more, we’ll supply a free, downloadable copy of our special report, Critical HR Recordkeeping—From Hiring to Termination, just for looking at HR.BLR.com. If you’d like to try it at absolutely no cost or obligation to continue (and get the special report, no matter what you decide), go here.

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