One of the best presentations at the December HCI Conference in San
Francisco was the last one: Jeff Lackey's. The title says it all: "Creative People + Authentic Storytelling
= The Right Hires." I love such straightforward and energizing
assertiveness.
If you think you know everything about Rolls-Royce, think twice. This prestigious company produced its first aircraft engine a
century ago and generated half of the aircraft engines used by the Allies in World War I; it is now the second-largest maker of aircraft
engines and one of the top largest defense contractors in the world. Rolls-Royce would have
the perfect makeup to be somewhat conservative and unappealing to younger
generations of employees. However, many consumer brands may have a hard time
catching up with Roll-Royce's upbeat approach.
Jeff Lackey and his team addressed this potential perception problem in four
short years and transformed the organization into an employer of choice
addressing head-on what matters if you want to attract IQ and foster diversity.
You must:
- Speak the language of your sociological target (the millennials who will compose the majority of the workforce in 2015),
- Offer a career path and not simply a job,
- Identify the candidates with a calling rather than those only looking for a position,
- Reflect our societal diversity, nurture thought-diversity, and proactively cultivate the interest of veterans, students and women in STEM.
As Jeff likes to put it, "World-class
products start with world-class people." Of course, the number one requirement
to attract world-class people is a world-class sourcing and recruiting team.
Jeff raves about his game-changing squad:
- Lindsey Gamble, Global Resourcing Manager for Engineering (yes, a woman!);
- Tiffany Overton, Diversity Resourcing Leader;
- Toby Barnes, now Group Head of Resourcing at Travis Perkins; and
- The irresistible Daniel Perkins, Global Employment Brand Manager, whose contagious sense of fun ravished the HCI audience.
Thought-leadership is not a
solo endeavor: it's a shared mindset for a better workplace where people turn
into storytellers and, by becoming the company's evangelists, attract new
candidates.
Creativity is the motto of the talent
acquisition department, so much so that when you watch the videos they produce,
you want to be part of the Rolls-Royce's DNA adventure. Here is the video
presentation of this philosophy they gave to university
students across the UK earlier this year:
Employment branding doesn't start when
you opportunistically need candidates. It's an overarching motivational
message. Inspired by a young LEGO fan in Derby, U.K., Rolls-Royce made a
replica of a jet engine from 152,455 LEGO bricks. Key to the team's outreach is to appeal to new generations
and prompt interest in technology and science as a means for a more sustainable future.
Many venerable brands still stick with
the self-centered and condescending approach that people should be grateful to
be offered a job. Rolls-Royce has definitely given the cold
shoulder to these paternalistic behaviors of the past and embraced our people-centric social world: stop waiting for
candidates to come to you but, rather, proactively pave the way for them to
become your fans whether or not you currently have a job for them.
The cultural change initiated by Jeff Lackey and his
team is somewhat spectacular. Think that four year ago LinkedIn was not even
allowed behind the firewall. Today, the Rolls-Royce group has a stimulating YouTube
channel and has
garnered over half a million fans on Facebook.