A More Effective OE Consultant
As organizational effectiveness (OE) consultants we make our
livings by diagnosing our organizational clients' effectiveness
deficiencies and then recommending interventions for our
clients' greater effectiveness. But, we must also consider our
own effectiveness.
As OE consultants, we must continuously engage in discussions
about how to become more effective ourselves. It is extremely
important for all of us to be involved with communities of
practice with other OE consultants, and to attend the
conferences with our peers.
I would like to share with you some of the comments expressed at
a recent LearnShare event in Ohio. I was impressed by the
emphasis on becoming strategic business partners with our
clients. As OE consultants, either internal or independent, our
job is to add value to our clients' businesses.
Barry Melnkovic, Vice President of Talent Management &
Organizational Effectiveness, said, "You can't lose your focus
on making money." He went on to say, "If you really focus on
business strategies, then I propose that you focus on the few
that really matter and drive the business." Do you know your
client well enough to know what drives the business?
Donnee Ramelli, President of General Motors University,
emphasized the importance of speaking senior management's
language. Ramelli said, "[During a downturn], training is one of
the first things to get whacked. And the reason we get whacked
is that we haven't shown how we offer enterprise value. You pass
that test by having the hard metrics that are commonly
understood by any of the general managers." You don't
necessarily need an MBA, but you do need a common language to
talk with your client.
Rick McAnally (Director of Talent Management at Deere & Company)
and Frank Persico (IBM's Director of Learning Partnerships)
spoke about how internal consultants can keep their services
in-house and also about "in-sourcing."
The concept of "in-sourcing" has received little attention in
practitioner journals. Outsourcing, on the other hand, has
received an overwhelming amount of press. Outsourcing, as we all
know, is the process of finding outside vendors who can provide
services more effectively than in-house staff can provide those
same services.
Instead of living in fear of outsourcing, several internal
consultants that I know now aggressively practice the strategy
of "in-sourcing." They actively look for services provided by
outside vendors that they can do more effectively in-house.
Bringing these services in-house improves their companies'
bottom lines. And, this strategy adds a lot of perceived value
to these in-house professionals.
IBM's Persico (an organizational learning consultant) concluded
the session with a comment that applies to all of OE consultants
who want to get to (and stay at) the top of the organization. He
said, "Previously, you were a learning professional who knew
something about business. What will propel you forward is
becoming a business person who knows something about learning."
Substitute the word "learning" with "effectiveness" and the
comment applies to all of us!