Moving on and up in a pandemic
Watch our webinar to hear how you can identify and progress to the next stage of your career post-pandemic
Watch our webinar to hear how you can identify and progress to the next stage of your career post-pandemic
This webinar, part of the series Building your career 2021, provides insight on the impact of the pandemic on the jobs market and the panel offer their expert advice on how you can best prepare for your next move within the profession.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Katie Jacobs, Senior Stakeholder Lead, CIPD
0:14
afternoon everybody i'm going to get us started um i'd like to welcome you to this
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second webinar in our cipd series that's focused on helping you with your career in 2021 within the
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wonderful people profession my name is katie jacobs and i'll be hosting the next hour
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over this series we're really really keen to provide you with practical advice and tips from experts and people who
0:39
have been there done that and bought the t-shirt and we want to give you the opportunity to connect with each other
0:45
i'm going to make this session as interactive as possible you'll have lots of opportunities to ask questions and also to chat to each other using the
0:51
chat function in our first session we explored breaking into the people profession
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in this one we're looking at moving on and moving up how do you take the next step in your
1:04
career how can you find that next opportunity even during a downturn and how do you
1:09
decide what's right for you if you're still kind of figuring out where you want to go next in your career
1:16
joining me to share their insights and experiences i've got a really fab panel of experts i'm joined by laura
1:22
walker laura is founder of midlife careers and she's even written a book on the topic
1:27
louise sorrell who's hr business director at the recruitment firm baden often clarke yatunde oladipo
1:34
senior talent consultant at the department of work and pensions and tim poynter svp for people and
1:40
culture at creative artist agency global brands group i'll let tim explain what that does when
1:46
we come to the introductions thank you all for joining us today as ever let me just run through the
1:52
housekeeping quickly this webinar is being recorded it will be available on demand after the session
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apart from the slides you can see right now we don't have any others so once i'm finished doing the housekeeping and i'm telling
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you about various things you need to know about we're going to be running it as an interactive panel that means we need
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your questions so please do get them in from the start could i ask you to use the q a function
2:15
at the bottom of your screen if you want a question you want me to see and you want me to put to the panel but i really want to see you using the
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chat function and make sure you set it to panelists and attendees to talk among yourselves and to swap
2:27
tips and stories and encouragement on the last session we saw so much activity and people connecting and
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networking and it was really really great to see i think we've got over 200 people here
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so far and more joining every every minute so use the opportunity to connect you might come away from here having met
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somebody really really helpful i want to make you aware of our great cipd resources around
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careers our careers hub where you can access a host of brilliant interactive tools
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including a cv optimization tool we have a careers clinic on the cipd community where you can get
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advice from your fellow people professionals about your hardest career challenges and our amazing branch network which is
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a really great way to build your skills and to learn and to network with other people professionals
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these are really tough times especially for people who are job hunting so i want to flag our wellbeing helpline
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we're working with award-winning workplace well-being provider health assured to provide our members in the uk and ireland with free
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advice from qualified therapists you can also access the my healthy advantage app which provides wellbeing
3:30
tools designed to improve your mental and physical health and finally as i flagged this as part of
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a series so we've got a couple more webinars coming on the topic of your career in the people profession
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so do watch out for those sorry excuse me so it's pretty clear
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that the pandemic has highlighted the vital role of the people profession but the context
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we find ourselves in presents both opportunities and challenges for professionals seeking to
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develop their careers in 2021 and beyond how can people professionals take advantage of new opportunities
4:05
build on their skills during challenging times should your next step involve seeking promotion or moving on
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how can you build up your confidence post furlough or redundancy what's the best approach to virtual
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networking and could the trend towards more remote working expand your horizons and opportunities
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those are the kind of things we're going to be talking about but please do get your questions in as well so i'm going to kick off the discussion
4:29
and i'd like to start first by asking our two practitioners on the panel tim and euton day to offer some context
4:36
around their own career journeys what were the decisions that you made that enabled you to move on and up
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have you got experience of doing so during a recession or a downturn for example and tim can i start with you hello
4:48
everyone uh great to be part of this uh exceptional panel um and a really really important topic i'm very
4:54
fortunate i've had a a career which has um been in hr pretty much all the way
5:00
through um sorry that's a it's just a crow a croaky voice i haven't got covered
5:05
um and uh but part of the the joy of that has been times outside
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of hr and i would one of the first tips i would give i know that others will add to this is that
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you're given the opportunity to do something different even if you see your long-term future
5:22
in human resources grab it with both hands i've been fortunate enough to have spells in retail management in
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marketing and it's always meant that i've come back into the profession with more understanding of the business
5:35
and with greater technical now and business understanding better acumen which helps me to make
5:41
better decisions so today as katie said i sit on the executive team for cagb which is the
5:49
world's largest global brand management agency um and you know that's the experience
5:57
that i've built up all the way through helps me to sit on that executive team not just
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as the person who's responsible for our people strategy but as a business leader as someone that
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has business understanding and experience and first looks at what's right for the
6:13
business and then secondarily thinks about how we can use our people strategy to best build that
6:20
now through my career i've been very fortunate to have had a lot of global experience so i've worked in the us i've worked
6:28
out in asia pacific in fact i lived in sydney for five years and the opportunity to go to different
6:34
countries different regions and to understand more particularly if you want to have a global career to work
6:41
in international businesses to build cultural understanding again don't you that's not one of those cases
6:48
of looking for it for me it's not about looking for a promotion it's about just looking for breadth and
6:54
putting yourself forward always being the person who is curious and wants to take on that additional project
7:00
that additional responsibility um it shows that you're someone who's up
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for the um who's up for the challenge and so i've been very fortunate that i've always been fascinated by
7:11
brandy businesses i've been fortunate to work with some great branded businesses from marks
7:17
and spencer where i started out on the on the grad scheme just a few years ago when i had more hair and
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i didn't have a beard um and and then i've worked for businesses like hmv waterstones i worked for maxim which
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is a global liquor joint venture when i was out in asia pacific and i spent a lot of time
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in in the fashion industry um both with diesel the only the brave group
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penland that owns uh speedo mitre ted baker and lacoste footwear um i
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spent two years with dixon's car phone and then most recently it's uh it's global brands group where all of the
7:54
regional hr directors report into me and we work across 22 countries globally
7:59
so you have a very quick whistle-stop tour there of you know a passion for brands a fascination with
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how we set people up to achieve things in international integrated businesses and
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you know the ability to just keep asking questions keep building keep stepping forward and
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um and i've been very fortunate to have some fantastic leaders over the years and that's a theme i'll
8:23
come back to later on but i'll i'll i'll pass over on that note thank you very much tim really really great
8:30
overview um day same question to you right um hi um i work in the civil service at the
8:35
moment um and i've been as uh civil servant most of my career but before joining the civil service
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i qualified as a teacher and i was a teacher as well but i wanted to do something different
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but which will still involve um people i mean i think all jobs involve people
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but i wanted to do something different so i started to study um hrm and human resource management
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whilst and i remember before i started studying human resource management i was looking
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for jobs when i wanted to change from education into human resources i applied for many jobs
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but they didn't get through there was once one that i got through to the interview and at the interview i was told okay
9:18
you're great you're good but you're not ready for hr you don't have the experience
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so i thought okay if i don't have the experience you're not offering me the experience where do you start so that was the first hurdle
9:29
that i i had to cross so i decided to go and study human resource management at that point
9:36
and started to apply for jobs again and i remember there was one day on my birthday i attended about
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three job interviews and that's because this is i knew then this is what i wanted to do so that's
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and i'm saying that now for people who are trying to get into hr switch or you know make that career transition
9:53
it might be difficult but um you need to persevere and you know be very clear about
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you know um what you want and and keep going for it so i use different avenues i studied and while i was studying i got
10:05
a job in the in the in the benefits of this as it was known then did that one so then i was also
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looking for jobs in nature to get into hr but i think for me having that
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frontline experience of what the business does really helps me and i could see um a connection between
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the frontline service that i was working in as well as the knowledge i was gaining through studying
10:30
for my postgraduate diploma and that helped me so i started to look for jobs in nature i got
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one and um i got in there and i remember starting that job doing that for about
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six months and i thought right this is what i want to do i'm going for promotion and then
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and that maybe now was not so much now but then it was really difficult to get that promotion and i remember
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and i started thinking of different strategies and i remember my land manager at the
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time told me oh i'm not ready yet i said so i asked that what do i need to be ready
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so she told me i need to have like land management experience okay so i thought this was about many
11:10
years ago and i said okay if i don't have that can we do a real reversal so i keep that put that forward
11:16
let's reverse rule so that i'll be the line manager for uh a week and you can you know see my skills that way so
11:23
that's another method of you know building experience look for opportunities put yourself forward
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and tim talked about breath earlier on and that's really important and as i i
11:34
saw as my hr career experience began to grow and i wanted more so i started to look for more
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opportunities from being from being a generalist like hr
11:46
business partner i wanted more than that you know i did employment relations um recruitment etc
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and i remember there was a time in my career that i was ready for promotion but there was
11:58
no movement at the top people were not living and the new roads were not being created
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and i thought twice in my career i've had to leave hr to go to the front line gain experience
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of working with the business with business leaders operational leaders the chief executive
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and come back into hr on promotion so that experience that i gained outside hr
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helps me to propel my career in that regard on the second occasion when i was doing employee relations i wanted
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more but again there was no movement at the top i knew no opportunities for for for promotion at the time so again i
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left hr and i went to work at department for education as
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international relations so international research officer uh international
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so international information research manager to do that and that came at a good time
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in my career which i hadn't planned for but it was an opportunity that i had to seize
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um because i just completed my master's in employment studies and hrm which involved international
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studies of employment practices and this job came up and i grabbed it
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and in that job i think it was one of the best jobs in my career the best four
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years of my career looking at not you know things that affect employment we talk about cipd as
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a you know champion for better work and working less but that gave me that breadth of what happens before and after
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employment so i'll stop there the rest will pick up later thank you and really great to see some themes i
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think coming out from you and tim about getting that breadth of experience about leaving hr and
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doing something else and about that perseverance um as well um laura can i come to you as a kind of
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midlife careers um specialist what would be your initial kind of opening remarks or tips on
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where to where to go how to kind of make make the move and develop your career further yeah no
13:56
problem thanks katie and so i am a careers and in particular midlife
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career specialist um i do a portfolio of work so including consulting coaching and writing um i've been
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also in the hr profession for most of my career so i've worked in six different industries so rather than
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necessarily really going outside of hr i've worked in a whole variety of different industries
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usually heading up um l d or talent or organization effectiveness so in businesses like gsk
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john lewis partnership bae systems burberry aviva lots of different companies i'm
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going to just comment on midlife careers today and there are a few things that you do really need to know um
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i mean mid-career midlife career it kind of is actually becoming earlier now so come from kind of 35 onwards and the
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clients that i work with range from 34 to 62. so just to give you a clue it's quite a broad range
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but there are a few things that you need to know um firstly research shows that it can be a uniquely
15:01
challenging time um in life but around careers in particular
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uh for several reasons for three main reasons so most people at this stage in your career
15:12
have a lot going on so there's a lot of expectations you have a lot of roles there's lots of people with needs from you more so than you
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might have earlier or later in your career the other thing um is that you're
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essentially at the pivotal point in your own life so you're between your youth and your old age but also you're between
15:33
generations typically in your own family and also in organizations or in society
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so you're kind of the lynch pin that holds a lot of the society and the organization um
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together so it's a lot relying on you but the main thing is that the changes that are happening
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to you and for you are multi-directional in nature so most of the times in your life the
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trajectory is relatively positive whereas in midlife it's a whole mixture so some of it's positive so as you're
16:05
moving forward you're becoming wiser in terms of how you make decisions but other things are typically are
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perceived anyway to be on the decline so things like your your well-being your health
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your physical strength uh your speed of processing those sorts of things so it's this complexity that makes it
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particularly challenging and there are a few things to know and that i found in my own research so i
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did some research as part of my master's two years ago and that forms the basis of my book and there's a few things to know
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about how do you do this at this point the first thing is not to get too hung up on changing what
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you do because actually that's not the most important thing so people who've changed from doing
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things like an it consultant in scotland to being a brewery owner in
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france the biggest thing wasn't that they went from doing that to that it was how they feel about their work so how they relate
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to the work they feel more liberated uh more passionate more engaged more
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committed to what they're doing and probably work a bit harder if anything but actually they feel really differently about how
17:08
they relate to their work because they've got a sense of meaning behind it which escalates radically in
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the midlife the second thing is not to be seduced to jump into deciding too quickly
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so it's not to lurch to the first opportunity that presents itself to take the time that you need to
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get to know yourself again because what you want and need at 30 40
17:32
50 is quite different to what it was when you were 20 so you have to really get to know yourself and what matters most to you
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now and spend a bit of time doing that and the third thing is that the context
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because you're in the midst of all this stuff that's going on contextual readiness is really important
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and a lot of people around you have an agenda about the choices that you make about your career
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so they might want you to keep doing what you're doing for some reason so they might have got used to your salary
18:00
or your status or whatever it happens to be and other people will be really strongly encouraging you to change because they
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get sick of you moaning about you know what's going on in your life so it's quite difficult to get unbiased
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challenging support and so but it is worth persisting with and the final thing i will say um and
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most people i work with completely resonates with is the in midlife or probably slightly broader it is a
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dance with fear and confidence whether you know it or not you are dancing with fear and confidence
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and it's quite a complex dance so sometimes fears in the lead sometimes confidence is in the lead especially if
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you're transitioning and making a career move it's quite fascinating because they can both create drive
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and impetus but they can also keep you stuck so you have to pay attention to what is
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going on it's quite a dynamic um dance and the more you can learn
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from the reactions that you're having and the conversations and what that evokes for you the better prepared you are to
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dance so i'll stop there and obviously we can pick things up in their questions
19:10
and hang back thanks thank you a really fascinating point sir um and louise before i come on to
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people's questions as a recruiter what's the market like at the moment kind of make us feel makes us feel
19:21
better all seems a bit a bit grim out there yeah so yeah i mean no one can deny that the
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last 12 months have been probably i've been at baylor clark for 20 years and i think the last year has
19:34
been the most one of the most challenging that i've seen but um on a positive there are positive
19:40
signs so this year um we've seen actually an unexpected rise so if you compare
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this january to last january we've actually had an increase of 20 percent so if you compare like to like the
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number of permanent and interim roles that we've had come in have actually been more in january this year than last year which
20:00
we weren't expecting which i think is a really positive sign that you know the job flow
20:05
is starting to slowly increase again um i think we've seen sort of a split
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between sort of 70 pound 30 interim and i think personally the interim
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market probably will maintain sort of an upward trajectory this year as
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businesses sort of you know the ones that are maybe still uncertain or don't have the budget to recruit perm will
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um look to recruit an interim also some of our clients are recruiting interims for specific projects or they need
20:37
people in really quickly and then you've got sort of the you know the sickness cover the maternity cover
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we've also seen clients um come to us to recruit interims to cover
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people that are struggling to home to school and maybe they're about to lead on a mass redundancy project and they're
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looking you know they can't do both so they've they've looked to increase um interims in their team for that
20:58
um in terms of sectors so obviously i'm based in southeast
21:04
aviation hospitality has taken quite a big hit but there are still lots
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of sectors that are buoyant um so half of our jobs have been within financial services insurance
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professional services law firms and then it's been sort of evenly split between the pharma
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health care technology sectors and in terms of role types i'd say so 60 65 of all of our roles
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have still heavily been within that sort of generalist er hr operations
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um some hr advisory business partnering kind of roles and then we've also seen
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sort of a some steady demand for reward specialists throughout and then most recently sort of the hr
21:50
operations shared service at the sort of manager and head-off level and also the l d roles and the talent
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acquisition roles that again right at the start of the pandemic sort of took a massive hit
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have now starting to come back as clients obviously feeling that confidence in them in the
22:09
in the market again to press on with their key highs and recruitment is starting to increase again so i mean we feel quite
22:16
positive that looked you know i think people were worried about lockdown three but i feel like it's had less of an impact versus lockdown one
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and two and we feel quite positive that hopefully this trend will continue in 2021
22:30
fingers crossed not all doom and gloom really yeah um but i'm going to come to your
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questions because there's some really really great ones um coming in so i'm not going to ask any of the ones that i wrote down and come
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straight to yours um tim i'm going to come to you on this first emma's asked what advice would you give growing your career or role within your
22:47
existing company so where do you find the opportunities to develop where you are great question um so immediately
22:56
understand your business understand the organization that you work for there's a phrase isn't there um
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are you working on the business or in the business and all that means is are you thinking about
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the strategy of the business where the business needs to be in terms of to be successful uh so in terms of the you know the
23:15
delivery of products and services the vast majority of organizations um who will be represented on this call
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have been disrupted over the last almost 12 months really 12 months yes it is um in you
23:28
know quite enormously um in terms of the way that they do business so how have you got engaged
23:34
with that and how can you get engaged with that because that demonstrates that you're really committed to where the business is the organization
23:42
is continuing to um to change so what's it mean to your digital strategy for example how
23:49
has that changed in terms of the uh delivery of products and services how's it changed in terms of the
23:56
how you focused on the health and well-being of your colleagues to sustain everyone through what i keep
24:02
saying is a marathon of sprints we have to keep picking ourselves up
24:08
we go like billy ho then we sort of go right and there's always the next project so we have to keep to have to keep
24:14
sustaining everyone through this how are you rethinking what this
24:20
for many organizations um the change in terms of not having people in the office means
24:27
for the way that you bring people together to find solutions to the different challenges that you
24:33
have to the way that it's changing access to talent because suddenly you don't need to find
24:38
someone who's prepared to commute to that place wherever your office happens to be that
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might mean that you can access different talents it might be that you can plan things differently
24:50
and what so many um people professionals have demonstrated over these last 12 months is their
24:56
understanding of how working capital flows flows through the business and how they
25:04
can how they can best position uh cash
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so in terms of a you know very cash focused uh place which is where we are now in a
25:15
largely recessionary uh um in environment what that's meant for furlough was i meant for
25:21
other other salary reductions for restructuring for the way we've looked at professional fees
25:26
um for non-permanent colleagues or our approach to recruitment there's been
25:33
lots of lots of examples of where people professionals have demonstrated how
25:38
they can really support the organization through this change now not all are
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finding that they are um shrinking or feeling that recession there are many which are in completely
25:52
different stages of growth at the moment so how are you challenging that well for
25:57
those um louise was talking about a couple of the sectors that have been horribly disrupted over um over the last year and there's
26:04
fantastic talent that have come out of those sectors um and who are you who we see on
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linkedin with the little green semi-circle of open to work uh now how could they transition to help
26:17
you and be upskilled and move across so there's so many ways that you can
26:22
think about what's happening in your business right now and you can i keep going back this word
26:27
curious you know be curious ask the questions understand what's going on
26:33
and if you're asking the right questions in so many cases you'll leave that
26:39
conversation with a new responsibility so lean into that take the opportunity
26:45
to learn to make a difference and enjoy it i think that word curious is so important in so many other
26:50
discussions i have with with cpos that's kind of the number one thing that they're looking for um so thank you tim um louise we've got
26:56
a couple of questions about job titles uh how much does it matter about your job title what if you feel
27:02
your job title is actually holding you back that it's not giving a fair reflection of your responsibilities and it's
27:08
actually getting you knocked back when you're applying for jobs or from recruiters personally
27:13
i and i think this is quite a common theme i get asked this question quite a lot i
27:18
don't really look at job titles when i'm looking at cvs because job titles mean
27:24
so diff in different organizations like you could be a hrbp in one organization on 30k in another organization online tk
27:32
so it's about it's our job as a recruiter whether your agency or internally to
27:37
actually look at the skills underneath the job title and i think i think i i think in general
27:45
people like i certainly do and make sure that you know my team does that and i think the only challenge i think that probably
27:52
you would have in terms of job title is when you're applying directly and it goes through a portal and it's you know a sort of tick box
27:58
exercise but i certainly feel that if you if you came to a recruitment agency or you had the opportunity to speak
28:05
directly to a an internal recruiter or an actual recruiting line manager then
28:11
i think it's quite the way to overcome that is just by making sure that on your
28:16
cv your skills and achievements are really clearly laid out so it's you know in the first
28:23
couple of bullet points under your job title i always say you know write the first
28:28
bullet point just give me a summary of sort of your responsibilities
28:34
so just give me an idea of how many employees for example are in your company how many you're responsible for
28:39
in your client group how many people you look after how many people are in your team across what locations because
28:45
that one bullet point will help people ascertain whether you're a hr business partner of
28:51
looking after 20 people in the uk only firm or 500 people across
28:57
five locations across the world so i think it's just making sure your cv is detailed as possible to
29:05
help people ascertain that but certainly for me i don't tend to pay too much attention
29:10
to the job title so maybe they're going to the wrong recruiters potentially well yeah i think it's i
29:16
just think i think most people i mean most people only talk to most recruiting line managers
29:22
understand that it's very different in terms of the companies that you've come from and
29:28
you know whether you're american or you can you know some people are called hrd cpo vp is
29:33
just it's very varied so you have to really just try and have conversations isn't it
29:40
which i know is hard and you know i know it's hard to get action and get those conversations in the first place but i think you can
29:46
use your cv to really hone in on what you have done and try and get that
29:52
bullet point right under the job title so it's very clear for everyone to see thank you um yatunda you mentioned some
29:58
great experiences of line management getting yourself that experience i'm just going to put a couple of questions to you
30:04
first one is somebody asking how do they get that line manager experience they've been told they need it but they don't have it and following
30:10
up from that um what advice would you give somebody who's just taken on their first line management role in the middle of
30:16
the pandemic okay thanks um katie now land manager
30:22
the role of the land manager here is really key i mean land managers are busy people but they're also interested in developing people so that
30:29
they can deliver results for themselves for the team so they have a vested interest
30:34
in your career so what i will say is have a good relationship with your line manager and i remember um in the example i gave
30:41
earlier on about gaining that experience because i knew what i wanted i had set my ad
30:46
when i went into the job i set out my objectives for the land manager what i was looking to do and how i can help
30:52
so it's always that question how can i help you how can i make life better for you so when i mean it's a two-way street so
30:59
you have to give and take so put yourself forward for things to help the team on one hand but at the same
31:05
time make sure that you know you're doing things that matter for your career as well and having that conversation with your
31:11
line manager what i found useful is having that those career conversations with my line manager
31:18
say oh this is what i want to do now this is what i'm working on this is where i'm struggling and this is how i'm thinking of
31:23
approaching it so you're not only going to the line manager to say you know i want this i want this but
31:30
show that you have actually made that first step and for me that has helped and that helped
31:37
me to negotiate the broad reversal that i mentioned earlier on in my career to gain that
31:43
experience as my career has advanced i've kept those practices on and having those
31:48
conversations with my manager to say i would like to do this and if i'm working on a project
31:55
before that project finishes i'm looking at okay this is these are the things i want to do i've i can take off things and wherever
32:02
there is a cab i'll mention to my manager this is what i would like to do next and we i think all of us we've
32:08
talked about having that breadth so for me using the cipd hr professional map helps
32:14
me to actually identify what i need to do next so it's a tool that i would
32:20
actively promote and encourage people to use because that helps me and
32:27
in terms of these conversations and also moving forward um i was doing a project before that
32:34
project finished and i told my manager these are the things i would like to do next and between us and you know talking to
32:40
other people having a good network i found out opportunities and people invited me to come and work with them
32:46
and then i'll go have that informational interview to find out what the role involves and
32:52
whether it fits in with my own objectives if it did and then i'll go and take up the
32:58
offer and that has helped me throughout my career thank you brilliant tips there laura you wanted to come in yeah i wanted to
33:05
comment on the what the line managers do so obviously my l d world i've done a lot around
33:11
management development um and did a six month assignment recently at bau systems to redo their
33:16
first line manager program and the one thing that you can google search actually is google did
33:22
some really good research last year on what are the top 10 things that great people managers do and don't do
33:31
and interestingly we found very similar results when we did the internal research within the organization
33:37
the top two just to give you a flavor the top the first one is that the great line
33:42
managers take the time to get to know the individual team members as individuals so rather than doing the
33:48
same thing with everybody in their team they treat everybody as individual people and the second thing is not
33:55
micromanaging which is a thing um but just to say
34:01
there's two of the ten things but it's a really nice list and there's a lot of research that's gone into it so if you just search google's top 10 things that
34:07
great managers do thank you that's a really great tip um so i was going to ask you follow up with
34:13
somebody just lost it there are so many questions coming in so i'm going to come back to you um tim a specific question for you you mentioned um how
34:20
how valuable you found your international experience what advice would you give on finding how do you find those international opportunities
34:29
and of course it's a really interesting time to ask that questions
34:35
exactly yes thanks for that one um i okay the great the opportunity that
34:42
today's world gives us is the ability to work internationally without without leaving your house
34:51
and at the expectation um from uh those who are recruiting into those
34:57
roles that that that will be the case that you don't have to have physically been somewhere
35:03
so again within the organization that you're in now if it's an international business how do
35:09
you how do you go and find those so years ago i i
35:15
worked for marx and spencer and marx and spence had a um international franchise uh department so that would then
35:23
set up for the uh the franchise stores um internationally so i asked if i could go and do an
35:28
attachment to the franchise department rocket science hey and they would do
35:33
they were like okay well not next week but you know several months later off i went and sort of you know spent spend some
35:39
time with them really really open about how they did what they what they did and were delighted that
35:46
someone was interested um and that was in the 20s and you know just
35:51
just finding someone who was prepared to give you some time and then you know guess what the next
35:57
time they've got a project that comes up they know you you've you've enlarged your network you've lent in you've
36:03
i'm gonna use that word again you've shown your curiosity and you've built that now if you're in a
36:10
uk only organization for example um then take this so much great content out
36:16
there so much opportunity to learn from international businesses through panels such as these and podcasts and
36:23
all the great stuff that we know and then to build up your your know-how um to use the copd
36:31
resources i'm a fellow of the cipd and and to you know work through work through all
36:36
of my qualifications with the copd for years and encourage my team and others to to do the same
36:43
and again to find those through through your local groups or through different forums you
36:48
know find people who are doing this build your network what do we know
36:54
louise will say exactly the same thing which is where are the majority of jobs found they're
37:00
found through pre-existing networks and if the pre-existing networks don't work then we go to the professions
37:07
that's you know that's that's the truth of it so you know to build that network is
37:12
just so um so so uh essential and then go in there with my final point is go in
37:19
there with more humility than i showed it's a great thing when i got my when i
37:26
moved to um out to uh australia i had no idea what i was walking into
37:33
and thank goodness i had a boss and colleagues around me that had
37:40
patience and that would explain things wait the way things were to me
37:48
because the the delta between what i knew and what i needed to know was so vast so be prepared for an
37:56
almighty learning experience if you do make that move in terms of role or particularly
38:01
if you make that that international move yourself for the way that it stretches you
38:07
personally professionally your family life everything it really can take you to to
38:12
the edge and i moved to a country where i was speaking the same language um but you know it is you really have to
38:20
be open to the learning experience it is um for those of us that have worked in global organizations for many years
38:26
we know that the global moves fall over in the first six or so months and if you
38:32
can get someone through the first year you're good but that is that that's when you normally have
38:38
the wobble um because people don't realize the delta between what they knew and now what they're required to know
38:45
thank you tim um laura you mentioned that you've worked in lots of different sectors um we've got a few questions
38:50
asking when people are applying for jobs and they're told you know to work in financial services you really need to have worked in
38:55
financial services or retail or hospitality or anywhere before um what advice can you give if you're an
39:01
hr professional that wants to switch sectors um firstly i've never found it to be a
39:07
problem um i think that's part of the beauty of having being in the hr profession is
39:13
that we do have transferable skills so and i think larger organizations that have functions so like finance hr it are more used to
39:22
kind of people moving around across different sectors um i've always just made a major of it
39:27
being an advantage so in the interview or on my cv for example i think once you've moved once
39:33
it makes it easier to do it again so they know that you can move across sector so in terms of getting a job in
39:40
the first place if you can emphasize as louise said you'll cross your transferable skills
39:45
so major on skills and types of experiences rather than necessarily majoring on the
39:51
sector or the one organization i think the other thing that helps um i
39:56
should say this for those long longer serving people but um i personally find it's easier if you move
40:03
within five years or so so if you do some of those moves relatively early
40:09
it shows that that you're not i think people find it quite difficult if you've worked in the same company for
40:14
20 years to then believe that you're really committed to moving into a very different sector for
40:20
whatever reason or will find that an easy transition so i think if you are earlier in your career taking the opportunity to do it
40:27
a little bit earlier is is probably easier and you'll generally get a little bit more um support thank you
40:34
um yeah louise oh i was i i actually um that's great that laura has a positive
40:40
experience but i do think that a lot of people maybe at more junior end have have a
40:46
real challenge in terms of moving sectors especially some sectors like financial services
40:51
law firm professional services do are quite strict in terms of oh i don't
40:57
know whether it's because when they come to recruitment agencies obviously they're they're coming to us because they want a
41:03
very specific brief um and very specific skill set but but a few of my top tips i think for
41:11
people looking to move sectors is that you know if you're really passionate about wanting to move from a law firm into a
41:18
charity or vice versa you know is if you're really passionate about that then then be really specific about that
41:24
so don't then apply for five jobs so say say for example you
41:29
want to get into a charity then don't apply for five jobs within another law firm because then that sort of dilutes what
41:35
what you're looking for and i think again if you're really passionate about making a a move into a different sector is is
41:42
there a specific skill set that that particular job needs is it a system skill because again if you're
41:48
going up against five people that maybe have that sector experience but don't have that specific skill or system knowledge that
41:55
you have then that could be your way in to getting in in the door and also like
42:01
what tim was saying it's about using your connections so it could be that someone you worked with two years ago is
42:07
actually a ceo of a charity or or you know you can use them to write your
42:13
recommendation on linkedin can they then even refer you into that company or you know
42:18
they're going to be in a network where they're going to know what roles are coming up so then can they utilize your network and connections i
42:25
think is really key for that as well and use use your recruitment agency because
42:30
you know it's a lot easier for us to bring you to life overcome barriers when we're speaking to
42:36
hiring managers rather than just sort of sending a cv blankly or coldly
42:42
into a into a firm through internal recruitment or assist system because we can then sell you and
42:50
bring you to life and explain why you're looking why you're passionate i think that that often helps to use us as well to be able
42:56
to do that thank you um you tinder you mentioned that you'd had a few times where you've gone out of hr and
43:02
come back in and we've got a few questions of people asking how to bridge that gap so if they were an hr
43:07
specialist that's now gone and done something else for a few years and they're finding it hard to get back into the profession any tips on how you
43:14
can come back if you're taking a bit of time out okay so um i think for me one it was i mentioned
43:21
the reasons i wanted to to do that one initially was to get that promotion but because there wasn't any movement and
43:28
having that plan of what i wanted to do but again relationships it's really important to maintain good
43:34
relationships because that i was having regular conversations with my land manager about what i wanted to
43:39
do what i was interested in so when opportunities came and i explained to them that look the only
43:45
reason i'm going out is to gain this experience it's and then but i would still want to come back so while i was away
43:51
from hr i still maintain those relationships with you know we've talked about con networking so
43:57
that's really important having great relationships to do that so when there were opportunities that
44:02
came through the in in in our chats in our discussions they mentioned oh something is happening here or they're
44:08
going to advertise the job or this is happening and that helps me to prepare for my
44:13
return into hr so it's understanding one of your objectives keeping the
44:19
relationships looking out for opportunities and i think wherever wherever i went i would always
44:26
make sure that um you know i use those transferable skills in in those jobs outside hr and that
44:32
really helps me and coming back into hr again i use those transfer transferable skills but with more
44:38
knowledge better knowledge that gave me an edge over other people that's what louise mentioned earlier on about you
44:44
know you're coming back with something different so that really helps me to make that switch and then return
44:50
thank you and laura just building on that any advice on kind of how you sell it
44:56
some amazing points from nintendo there kind of bringing it to life when you're if there's a few people who say they are
45:01
struggling to get back to the profession yeah i mean i think as louise said you
45:07
know it's it's different experiences for different people so obviously you know some people are saying that they are struggling so i'm
45:12
believing them that they are struggling but i think the clearer that you can be about what you bring you know what you
45:19
uniquely bring and what you've you know how it developing that really clear narrative so whether it's a summary description on
45:26
your cv to say these are my responsibilities and right i have three versions of a cv
45:31
so i don't know if other people do so depending on what i'm doing so if i'm going for an interim which is an hr
45:37
generalist interim i have a very different version it's the same jobs it's the same experience i'm just
45:43
emphasizing slightly different things in the role than if i'm going for say a talent management interim
45:50
assignment you know it's quite they're quite different um or if i'm writing a bio
45:55
a biography if i'm going to something about the book you know i think it's really knowing
46:00
your audience and targeting you know what do they need to know it's the same content but it's just emphasizing it and writing it really
46:07
succinctly and sticking to the message great great point there see people in the chat
46:12
saying definitely definitely something to do um tim do you have any advice on how to
46:17
make the step into hr leadership roles obviously you've been doing hr leadership roles a long time i'm not commenting on your age but um
46:24
especially if you've got that kind of middle management experience but the gap between manager and leader is quite can be quite large
46:30
so any advice on how you can demonstrate leadership ability and build it maybe if you're not in a leadership role
46:36
yeah i suppose there's three immediate thoughts on that one is
46:41
that um what one thing that i've realized looking back at my career is that
46:48
there are certain leaders who you work for and you're like that's amazing
46:54
absolutely you know you just you'd walk over broken glass for them
46:59
and i i i probably didn't didn't i started to realize that that means
47:04
that you will work for them for a limited period of time because they will be going on to bigger and better things
47:10
um and you know who knows they might take you with them but but when you work for someone that you
47:16
just go wow work out what it is that makes you go wow
47:21
and you're gonna have to turn into a vampire you know you need to get that
47:28
understand what it is that they do that really really energizes you what knowledge do
47:35
they have what relationships do they have what is it about the way they show up what is it about their passion and
47:41
energy what is it about their their curiosity what is it about them that that gets you
47:49
going because you won't be the only one and i guarantee that will be you will have a limited window to do that
47:56
and that will then help you to work out the type of leader that you want to be and to
48:02
um and to take that and if you have that type of leader and you have the appetite to progress
48:09
they will give you the opportunity so i'm thinking about particularly my um
48:14
uh hr director um regional hr director when i was out in australia and she was
48:20
so generous with opportunities when there was um a board meeting and she was on
48:26
leave she would say well you know you you go deputize to me i think she was the only one of that
48:33
exec who sent a deputy everybody else when i leave they were just on leave or when there was a regional meeting in
48:40
in hong kong i remember saying i think that'll be good for you you go and that generosity of great leaders
48:47
is just fantastic you find someone like that you grab that opportunity with both hands because you're getting
48:53
that exposure but it's twofold right you've got to be prepared to step into that and to
48:58
demonstrate that you'll work with them to to to grab those opportunities
49:04
and if you're not you can find some of that inspiration elsewhere as well because it might not
49:09
be the person that you're seeking to learn from might not be your direct leader might be someone you can see over here
49:15
so you know again what you know what is that and how could you get to work with them on a project what's their agenda how can it
49:21
how can you support it and just think about the people that you um that you tap into more broadly you know
49:28
who do you fall on linkedin who do you follow on uh how do you follow on twitter i see a group of people here that you might want
49:33
to follow at timpointer um and you know just take that opportunity to connect in with
49:39
people and you know go um go for that the second point would be about learning what do you learn so first of all as
49:46
leaders second point is is learning how are you demonstrating your commitment to learning at the
49:51
moment just going back to the conversation that's just happened i am astonished to this day of the number of people that i
49:57
interview who haven't done their research about the organization that i work for
50:03
absolutely bonkers you know they're interested in the profession but are you interested in the
50:08
organization so where's your you know where's your commitment to um to learning what you you know what
50:16
are you reading at the moment this is this is not a stage there are two books on my desk right now what are the books that you're
50:22
reading right now you know what's when someone asks you that question how are you
50:28
i'm going to get laura's book now um you know how are you leaning into learning and my final point
50:35
uh i went for three l's is lifetime great book by linda gratton co-authored
50:41
by linda gratton called the 100 year old life read that helps you really think about
50:47
everything that you can achieve during your working life and your career and the openness to different opportunities
50:52
you might think you're someone who's always going to work in permanent roles i would like to challenge that perspective open yourself up to interim
51:00
opportunities to consultancy opportunities to really flexing to give yourself the most
51:05
learning that you can in terms of progressing on so those are my three leaders learning lifetime brilliant and that
51:12
linda grashan book is brilliant yeah fantastic team to build on what team
51:19
said you know about what are you learning and also lifetime i i think if we if we were to look at all of these you
51:25
know we're talking of people that mid life now we would have lots of experience without yet we will still have aspirations
51:32
but there may be some times when you know what you are doing at the moment um it's maybe limited for example if
51:39
you're working on a project and you have that passion and that yearning to do more than you know than your current world
51:45
allows you for there is an opportunity for you to learn and do things elsewhere opportunity to volunteer so that you
51:52
that the that's the skills that you have do not become out of date so for me that's one of the things that
51:59
um inspired me to volunteer with the cipd because the things i was doing in my work
52:05
in my day job my paid job where you know it's great but i still had that yearning you know i
52:11
still had that yearly to do more but the opportunities at work went there so
52:16
by volunteering with the cipd i was able to do more i was able to learn more i was able to connect more with people
52:22
expand my network expand my you know it's just amazing so i wouldn't say to
52:28
limit your learning you know whatever you do don't limit it to your work your paid job only there are
52:34
opportunities out there that you can gain to improving your paid job also from your paycheck to to that
52:41
as well so it's it's really important and i like how you use that the three elves you know leader
52:47
learning lifetime really fun important for people in in midlife career i'll write those down and take them and
52:53
where we are running out time i'm going to try and squeeze in as many more questions as i can um louise we've had a few on kind of
52:59
using linkedin um have you got any advice on how to get the most out of it is it appropriate for people to direct message
53:05
cold people like you um how do you feel when people do that yeah i do i i think it's such a powerful
53:12
tool and i think if you use it right then it's amazing and i think some of my i know we're
53:19
running out of time so i'll try and keep it brief but some top tips would be make sure you've got a uh appropriate
53:27
photo make sure that your skills um mirror are up to date and mirror your cv
53:33
i think make sure that you've got ask for as many recommendations and get as many recommendations as you can on there
53:39
because i think that's the first thing that as a recruiter and internal creatures we would you know i'd receive a cv if if i did receive a cold
53:46
cv or a cold message the first thing i would do is look at the profile so you want to make sure that's as
53:52
marketable as possible and also you know make sure that your personal brand across all of the social medias
53:58
is that consistent message so i think you can google yourself and then you can make sure that the
54:05
the message and the brand is consistent you can set up google alerts as well so whenever anyone
54:10
mentions you you can get an alert so i think for example when you you know it depends on how sufficient
54:18
and proficient you are at using linkedin but you know it can be so powerful i think
54:23
if you are looking for roles um i think you know you can you can set the status to open to work
54:29
and open for opportunities you can be as open and transparent as to post on there
54:35
that you are open and ask for help and ask for recommendations and get your profile shared and i think if
54:41
you can spend and commit to maybe five ten minutes each day of linkedin you know looking
54:47
like tim's saying you know if you can connect with the industry professionals and the people that you want to be connecting
54:53
with and comment and share industry knowledge share your
54:58
thoughts on what they've written you know it's just all of that will increase your visibility and
55:04
get you noticed at the end of the day and i think um i think it's a really pat and certainly
55:10
for recruiters you know i always make sure that i respond to people that message me and if
55:16
if i can't help then i'll recommend them or forward them on so it's such a powerful networking and it's
55:22
something that if you are if you have been made redundant or you are i've worked at the moment it's something that
55:28
i would be committing to sort of spending ten minutes a day just making sure that that's up to date in your
55:35
and you're constantly sort of commenting and liking and getting traction on your profile so yeah
55:41
i think it's really really powerful thank you um laura somebody say asked i'm being made
55:47
redundant i'm at a crossroads whether to persevere with a career in hr or do something completely different what advice would you give around
55:53
changing careers which is bearing in mind we've only got about five minutes left yeah problem i mean if you can take some time to
56:00
really rethink um even if you deliberately choose making a deliberate choice is the most
56:07
important thing even if you deliberately choose to continue with hr great if you deliberately choose to do
56:14
something else and to pivot in a different direction great but the main thing i'd say about deciding
56:19
between those different routes making those choices is it's an inside out process and an outside-in process
56:27
so what matters most to me what are my values what are my strengths and outside what's going on what's
56:34
available what's what does what matters in my world my context and those two things and taking a bit of time to
56:39
think a bit differently think of fresh is really useful thank you um and then i'm going to ask one more question and
56:45
i'm going to ask you all for one top tip this is a little bit self-indulgent being as i work at the cipd but a few people are asking
56:51
how valuable are cipd qualifications um and please answer honestly but you
56:57
sunday what what would you say is the value in being in being qualified
57:02
i think as a as a hr practitioner what i found useful about the cipd qualifications is that you're
57:09
bringing with you the knowledge so you understand the context why some things happen in nature rather
57:15
than just having the experience so the qualification will give you that knowledge so you understand what you the reason why you have to do
57:22
some things and why you have to stay away from something so it gives you that knowledge and also the confidence in making any
57:28
decisions because whatever decision you make would be evidence-based
57:33
you know so it's important to have that knowledge so the qualification for me i think is is key and tim is it something
57:40
you encourage in your teams as well as yourself i know you're yeah yeah absolutely absolutely
57:47
and it's but i would say that context is queen and that and i go back to you
57:55
are you a business person do you understand the organization that you work in because that context is so so important
58:02
so as i said fcipd um don't yourself encourage it on my team
58:08
it's not the only source that's out there and your broader learning is so so important
58:14
commit yourself to learning and it's it's um it's incredibly rewarding
58:20
and it really helps you to progress because it will it will broaden your ability
58:25
to understand the context for why you're enacting uh that technical under um understanding
58:31
and to talk to people who don't know what you're talking about if you speak hr
58:37
thank you chicks in the post both of you um before i come to a close um i'd just like to very quickly ask
58:42
everybody for one key takeaway that you'd like people watching this to take away um from this session and louise i
58:47
will start with you and sometimes it's easiest going first it's really i think i think in brief
58:54
i think be patient be persistent and stay positive um i think it's really
59:00
hot i understand it's really hard times really hard market but i think you know you could go for one two three
59:07
interviews but you know people are very unlikely to find that dream role in the first interview they go to so i just think
59:14
keep going keep using your networks using people like myself um and just asking
59:21
for advice and you know one thing i didn't mention earlier is the mentoring as well you know there's no harm in asking for
59:28
someone to mentor you i think it's really flattering so i think yeah just keep keep going you
59:34
will find you will find your dream job there is a job out there for everyone thank you laura i think the
59:41
slightly complementary perspective is around learning how to be yourself with skill so i think you know in terms
59:49
of progressing within an organization or moving into another organization being true to yourself
59:55
is much easier than if you're trying to pretend to be someone else but remember that you need to be
1:00:00
yourself with skill so it's not about being you know what's in all this is me love me or hate me
1:00:05
that's not actually very helpful for you or for other people learn to be yourself with skill i love
1:00:10
that i'm vietnamese
1:00:20
i think for me it's it's about trusting trusting the skills that you have
1:00:25
and finding out you know what makes you unique um and how how do you sell that to
1:00:33
to if you like your next employer and if you don't have hr experience
1:00:39
those skills will come in handy there but again it's about being curious ask questions learn and
1:00:46
network mentoring um for example i i have a i have a sponsor and uh and a reverse
1:00:53
mentor which works well for me to understand not only what i'm doing but you know understand what's happening elsewhere
1:00:59
and how my mentee who's a senior manager is or director is feeling
1:01:04
you know so that helps me so have a mentor have a sponsor network be curious to learn trust your skills
1:01:12
the positive so the outlook is positive and tim last but not least
1:01:18
everything that they said i i i would just go back to be a
1:01:25
business person with strong technical know-how focus on focus on context
1:01:31
commit yourself to being inspired and connecting to great leaders to a lifetime of learning
1:01:38
and thinking about your career through what i hope for all of us is a long and happy life even though
1:01:44
this we've been through a very difficult year and you know i find enjoyment in your
1:01:49
work we are very fortunate we are in a fascinating profession and it's never dull
1:01:58
brilliant thank you so much everyone i'm afraid we are out of time in fact i've run over by one minute so sorry about that
1:02:03
um thanks so much to our wonderful panel your tinder laura louise and tim thank you all for your questions and
1:02:08
it's been really really great to see you um chatting to each other as well and um sharing and helping each other
1:02:14
just a reminder as i said at the beginning that this is part of a series on building your career in 2021 we'll be back on the 8th of february
1:02:20
with a session looking at some of the various career paths available in the career in the people profession so whether
1:02:25
that's going kind of hr corporate route becoming self-employed looking at interim opportunities so i can hope you
1:02:31
can join us there because we have a really really great panel um on that lunch time as well that is it from us for now thank you so much for
1:02:37
watching and we will see you next time
1:02:46
bye foreign
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