Sunday, July 26, 2020
Who Gives HR a Bad Name - Workology
Who Gives HR a Bad Name Who Gives HR a Bad Name? Who Gives HR a Bad Name? Allow me to share a scenario I run into regularly. âI work in HR.â Hold for sad awkward pause as the person youâre speaking with judges you. âItâs not like that. Itâs much cooler than you think.â Silence. âIâm not Toby. I swear.â Am I alone in this? Has anyone else had it at this point? The brand of human resources needs to change. Gone are the days of policing process and saying no for managers. I want the reaction I deserve when I talk about my profession but none of us can do it alone. We, as an industry, need to step up our games. Enough Is Enough We are game changers for businesses. We can make or break a companyâs success in so many ways. Letâs no longer settle for being viewed as the helpers, the doers, the people who get shit done. (Iâm cool with that last one but letâs be the people who get shit done strategically and in business altering ways!) If we behave in ways that support the thought process that weâre paper pushing event planners, weâve got no one but ourselves to blame. You Know What They Say About Assuming If we assume this lame perception will never change, it wonât. We need to make change happen. Change the perspectives of those around you by showing your major contributions every day. Donât hide those achievements. Donât be annoying about it, but highlight what you and your team are doing and donât ever forget to mention why youâre doing it. People need to understand your logic and how what youâre working on is much bigger than it may seem in the long run for the business and its employees. Partners in Crime Be true partners within your organization. Offer your thoughts in an intelligent way. Make it so that other teams are excited and invigorated to work on something with you and your team, not dragged down by it all. Thatâs not to say itâs a free for all. We shouldnât all be throwing out cash, vacation time and what have you. We can take the hard line and should when necessary. In the right way. In the humane way. In a way that makes the other parties involved respect us even more. Take It and Stop Talking About It If I attend one more webinar, conference, or read an article that says something about getting a seat at the table Iâm going to scream. Take the seat. Take it! Take it by being so good at what you do that the leadership of the organization has no choice but to include you in every important conversation. Think so big that no one will ever question your ability to do so. Show real results and do so regularly. And donât ever ever give up. My fellow HR practitioners, who are we? Are we the police? Are we guides? Partners? If we donât know, no one else will. HR, weâre better than this. I think itâs high time we showed the world what badasses we are and how impactful we are not only on businesses but on lives.
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