The Five Biggest Mistakes an HR Professional Can Make...From the
Client's Perspective
A number of years back I was in a meeting with two HR
representatives at my company. They were explaining to me how
the HR organization wanted to be more "strategic" with its
clients and how they wanted to help us with annual resource
planning. At the time, our biggest problem was filling open
positions with qualified candidates; a number of key positions
had been open for months with no qualified candidates in the
hiring pipeline. When I asked the HR reps about how they were
going to help with this problem, they both told me that they
didn't have time to address the hiring issues because they were
tasked with being more "strategic". Needless to say, the meeting
went downhill in a hurry because the HR reps were more
interested in fulfilling the HR organization's "be strategic"
mandate than they were in helping me with my real-life problem.
As a longtime client of numerous HR organizations, I've learned
to appreciate the value that HR professionals provide and the
times my HR partner protected me from potentially difficult
situations. When working well, the client, employees, and
company as a whole benefit. When things don't work so well,
though, everyone ultimately loses. Through my years as a client,
I've locked down on five of the biggest mistakes that an HR
professional can make in their relationship with the client, as
follows:
Not understanding the client's business - Foundational to an HR
professional's success is a strong understanding of their
client's business. What are the key products the client offers?
What does the client want to accomplish in the next fiscal year?
Is the client's product emerging, stable, or declining? What are
the client's key business challenges? Does the client face any
significant financial issues? Have the professional self esteem
to know that the client wants you to invest some time to
understand their business. Being a team player means spending
time with the team to better understand how your services can be
best applied in the client's organization.
Trying too hard to get the client to understand the business of
HR - Many HR professionals I've worked with wanted to "educate"
me on terminology, concepts, or the latest HR trends. While the
education was interesting and helped broaden my horizons
somewhat, much of the education wasn't relevant to my job or
important for me to know. If there are truly important terms and
concepts that the client is going to need to know to get their
job done effectively, then by all means educate away. However,
if the HR-ese is not material to the client getting their job
done, then skip the education session. Help the client with what
is need-to-know and keep the rest in your bag of tricks.
Not understanding the basics of employment law - My most
valuable experiences with my HR partners were situations where
my HR partner helped me to understand employment law issues and
advised me on courses of action to take to minimize legal risk.
When an HR professional understands the basics of employment law
and can recognize situations where further legal advice may be
required, potentially hundreds of hours of lost productivity are
mitigated. By not having employment law basics down, the HR
professional not only puts the client's business at risk but
also suffers a credibility hit in the client's eyes. Know enough
to advise the client and when additional legal help needs to be
brought in.
Showing bias in supporting either management or employees - A
crucial credibility factor for an HR professional is
demonstrating impartiality while dealing with HR issues. If an
HR professional has a reputation for being biased toward
management, then they get a rap for being a "company" person and
potentially legitimate employee issues may never surface.
Conversely, when the bias is toward the employee, then they can
be accused of holding "witch hunts" against management. The best
HR professionals walk this line carefully and ensure that their
thought process and advice represents consideration of sound
business and legal thinking. They also need to have the courage
of their convictions to tell either management or an employee
when and where they think they are going wrong. Don't become a
"yes man" or "yes woman" for either side.
Not establishing expectations of work to be performed -
Perceptions of the services an HR professional provides can be
radically varied from client to client. While one client may see
an HR professional as a recruiter, another may see the HR
professional as an employment mediator, while a third may see
him or her as an overall generalist. Establish a service-level
agreement or contract with the client to ensure a common
understanding of services performed, what is expected from the
client, and expected timeframes in which services will be
performed. Key to this is ensuring that the contract is mutually
understood and agreed-upon; it's not enough for the HR
professional to quote department policy about what will or won't
be done for the client. Make it clear about what you'll do for
the client, what you expect from the client, and in what
timeframe the work will be done.
An HR professional that understands the client's business,
shields the client from the HR-ese, is unbiased, delivers
against clearly set expectations, and protects the company and
employee fairly can be an invaluable partner to both the client
and the company as a whole. Avoid these five major mistakes and
you'll build a high degree of trust and credibility with your
client, be viewed as a trusted business partner, and save
potentially countless hours of lost productivity and waste.