Career paths in the people profession
Watch our webinar to hear first-hand from experienced professionals on the various career paths available in the people profession
Watch our webinar to hear first-hand from experienced professionals on the various career paths available in the people profession
This webinar. part of the series Building your career 2021, the panel of senior professionals discuss their career paths and experiences of different roles within the profession. Reflecting on the main lessons they have learnt in navigating their careers, they offer insight into the challenges they have faced and how they overcame them, and insight into the various paths available in the profession.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Katie Jacobs, Senior Stakeholder Lead, CIPD
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hi everybody i'm going to kick us off sorry i'm one minute late i couldn't see that it was recording but now it is
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i hope everybody is well and thank you very much for joining us this afternoon my name is katie jacobs i work at the
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cipd and i am delighted to be hosting this third session in our series that is all about helping
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you to build your career in the people profession throughout this series we've been
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providing you with the advice and practical guidance you need to make 2021 a personal success
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hearing from the people who've been there we've also been trying to make these sessions as interactive as possible so there's going
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to be lots of opportunities to ask questions and to connect with each other as well
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in our previous webinars we've explored how you break into the people profession and how you move on and move up today
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i'm sure we're going to touch on some of that again but our focus is on the diverse and varied career paths
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available in this amazing profession how you can pick the right one for you and how you can make a success of it
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we are very lucky to have a really fantastic panel who have a wealth of different experiences in the people
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profession which they're going to share with you i am joined by nelly bustani senior director of human
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capital management value advisory mina for sap david de souza
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membership director at the cipd michelle raymond is managing director of
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her own consultancy the people's partner and mel steele founder of people change expertise
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who works mainly in the interim market thank you everyone for joining us today
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as ever i'm just going to run through some housekeeping very quickly the webinar is being recorded it will be
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available on demand after this session although you can see some slides now
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there will not be any slides when we actually get into the discussion because we're going to run it as an interactive panel
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and that means we need your questions so please do get them in from the start you can use the q a function which you
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can see at the bottom of your screen can i use um ask you to use that if you want me to put any questions to the
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panel but i can already see that people are making use of the chat function um and please do use that to connect
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with each other to talk among yourselves to swap tips and stories we'd have so much activity on there
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people connecting and networking adding each other on linkedin it's been really really great to see so please do make the most of it over the
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next hour and that's the whole point of attending something like this live we have loads of great resources around
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careers for you to access our cipd careers hub where you can find a host of brilliant
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interactive tools including a cv optimization tool we have our careers clinic
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on the cipd community where you can get advice from your fellow people professionals and not forgetting our amazing branch
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network which is a really really great way to volunteer that helps you to build your skills as well as your network
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these are really tough times so i'm going to flag our well-being helpline again we're working with award-winning
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workplace well-being provider health assured to provide our members in the uk and ireland with free advice from qualified
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therapists you can also access the my healthy advantage app which provides well-being
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tools designed to be used at any time anywhere to improve your mental and physical health and finally just a flag that if
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you missed the previous two webinars in this series they are available on demand i'm sure my colleagues will put a link
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to those in the chat um and that we have one more session after this on the 22nd of february which is specifically around cipd
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qualifications so if you want to ask our experts from the cipd any questions about quals
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then please do sign up for that all right that's enough housekeeping let's get on with it
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one of the many brilliant things about people profession is the range of career paths it offers
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from climbing the ladder in-house into a corporate hrd job to specializing in an area you're really
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really passionate about whether that's od lnd reward dni to pursuing a self-employed career as an
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interim or independent consultant or as david showed even coming to work at the cipd
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if you get really desperate and there is nothing else out there for you but how can you decide what route is
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right for you what skills and attributes do you need to be successful in these various types of role
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our panel are going to share their stories and take your questions but before i come on to that i'm going to ask all of the panel just to share a
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little bit about their own career journeys to date and some brief insight on why they chose the route they did and
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mel can i ask you to kick us off please yeah of course hi everyone thanks for
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joining katie and david thanks for having me along so um i'm a very passionate career interim um
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i set my business about six seven years ago and i specialize in people change and it's called people
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change expertise so what it says on the tin um what does that actually mean in reality well it
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can range anything from modernizing people functions leading business transformation and
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change consulting on people projects where there's some issues or maybe
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just offering advisory services to business folk i'm also a non-accept
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director currently at the british retail consortium so that's been a little bit busy over the
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last few months more so than maybe what i was expecting and what did i do
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before i started up my own business i held a number of hr director program change roles
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in various sectors both in public and private sector so i guess
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i come with multiple badges i quite like to kind of if someone tells
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me you probably can't do that in a sector in a work way i probably have tried
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and hopefully has smashed through some of those uh barriers that people told me about
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thanks well i can confirm multiple hats very stylishly um nelly could i ask you to go next
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sure and thanks again for the invitation to be part of this panel so um i started my career unlike
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the traditional way in hr in computer science so i'm by profession a
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computer programmer um and then i moved i studied of course few years in as a
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system analyst and then discovered the world of hr when i started work
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working on my master's in business administration and my real career in hr started in 2000
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when i moved to dubai with siemens i spent seven years with
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siemens as the regional hr director for the middle east operation then moved to nokia network so a bit of
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a spent there four years again in regional roles
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and i've been with sap for the past 10 years started as the regional hr director and
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led the growth of sap in the middle east and africa region
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but two years ago i took a bold move and stepped out from the main hr
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profession to do hr advisory focusing on digital transformation so
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in my current role i'm more customer facing helping customers you know connect
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business and technology in order to accelerate their hr transformation
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thank you and i can see from the chat there's a few other people who also started off in uh in the tech space but
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then realized that people were more interesting than technology or at least as interesting michelle hello
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i'm michelle raymond i'm a hr consultant and trainer so i'm the independent uh consultant
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here and it's really good to hear everybody's stories because i started off in-house hr
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first i started off as an as an administrator and i worked myself up worked my way up
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but what happened i was at an organization and i was made redundant while i was on
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maternity leave i had no consultation uh they didn't uh you know tell me what the criteria was
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and i made a pact that if i really get to understand what hr is really about
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this will never happen again to anyone i'll make sure it never happens again so i got really
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involved into hr i did my cipd then i did my masters
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and cipd did all the qualifications and while i was working i noticed that a couple of my friends
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were saying oh michelle can you help us uh find a new role can you um help us review
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this job description of this contract so i started helping employees and that's what i wanted to do
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then i realized that employees didn't have enough money for me to pay for my mortgage so i thought let me work for an employer
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but to bring great value to the employer so that they can in turn help the employees
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and that's how i got into the consultancy working with employers and making sure that they have
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the right policies and procedures but i wanted to make sure that employers have been upskilled developed
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were being treated fairly and so that's where i am today and i've been running uh my consultancy the people's
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partner now for more than four years and now we dedicate ourselves to
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policy implementation uh change management and training so that's my story so far
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thanks michelle and congratulations in turning a really awful terrible experience into something positive for not only you but hopefully
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other people as well um and david do you want to share your own experiences
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uh yeah so and i'll speak for less later but i'll try and do this story as quickly as i can so uh when i was 18 i was
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at university uh my dad um had a severe work related breakdown
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and several members of my family were ill i couldn't cope so i dropped out of university of mental health issues i
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went to stack shelves uh very determined that i wouldn't ever have a career in anything because like it seemed like that was the way to
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end up in a bad way um eventually i became a bit bored and i got the opportunity to work in
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recruitment and induction initially for the retailer i was working with then i went and worked in a contact centre because it felt a bit too much
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like a grown-up career was happening and it was probably when i was about 30 and i was working in a contact center
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doing a project on employer retention uh an hrd that i knew took me to one
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side and said you're basically wasting your career and it isn't a choice between uh working hard and losing your grip on
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family um and so it was probably only in 30 that i started actively merging my career and doing anything
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i guess positive and proactive with it and after that and i moved down to london for family
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reasons and i had a year working for startup bank and i was awful at my job just to be really clear
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with everyone that you can stink and then come back from the mix really wasn't very good it didn't work out for me um and then i went
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independent for kind of four or five years so i built up enough experience doing enough things that actually people wanted to hire me to solve problems for
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them and after that um i came to the cipd so i decided that actually it was a big
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train set there in terms of working working lives and i could probably impact some of that so uh so that's my story none of it
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planned so if anyone here is going i don't have a plan absolutely fine it can work out and i've
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made massive mistakes in my career so just to be really clear and everything's recoverable
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thank you dave i can see that people in the chat are responding to that and finding that incredibly reassuring
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so thank you all for sharing um really really interesting diverse career paths there and ways into the
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profession i can see we've got quite a lot of questions um coming in already but i'm just gonna ask a couple of my own
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first i'd like to ask um mel and michelle as self-employed professionals what do you
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think are the attributes you need to make that a success um and what kind
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of drove you to make that decision and mel can i start with you yeah okay um
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well i think for me uh the assumption was when you when you go into him that i
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mess more more holiday i must want to spend more time with my kids um etc i don't have any kids and i've
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had less holiday since i've been doing this than before so i guess to bust some of those myths
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for me it was about um breaking away from being an employee and doing a
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change and transformation i found that really freeing to be able to do it without getting
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contained within the politics of an organization so i felt it completely free to be able
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to give a you know professional views and guidance thank goodness they
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seem to want that too um because i've had quite a few clients who have respected that
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um so for me um not being accountable uh in the system if i can
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call it that and then having accountability for my promotion my future
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um seem to set me free and i guess for me when i look back on my career i've
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always had a high level of independence so i've never wanted really i've never
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joined an organization and think okay i can have a career forever in here i've always thought what can i give what
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can i get back um so i think being self-employed you know you do need that high level of
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independence because there's many things that you don't get obviously um and you've got to find them
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from elsewhere so yeah i'd say one of the key things for me is having a high level of independence michelle what about you
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yeah i've got to agree with mel i think the independence is one of the main
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attributes of being self-employed and i also have to expand on that to say when you are
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employed those who are self-employed tell you that oh you should run your own business
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you shouldn't be working for somebody you're working to build somebody else's dreams and
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uh everybody gets into that mode oh i want to be self-employed i want to have financial freedom i want to have control
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over everything but once you do get into self-employment you see it's not exactly
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the way that everybody sold the dream but what i have tried to do is uh try
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and control um what i've enjoyed is being able to control uh what uh what engagements i take on i
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can say no without repercussions i don't have someone saying to me that i have to do it this
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this way i feel there's also a level of respect so when i was in house hr um
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they i would tell them something but if somebody else said it then it's supported it gave them that
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leverage okay yeah michelle knows what she's talking about i when i became self-employed and i actually contracted my services for the
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same company they took my word just like that so there is a level of respect when you become like a contractor or
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you're contracting your services doing the same thing that as you did when you were in a house
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so i i like i like that level of respect it means my basic one of my basic human needs or
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significance i'm just gonna put it out there and um and i think one of the other attributes
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is having a very strong mindset because being self-employed you have to be all
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things in your business and we'll obviously speak about that later but i think having that mindset and not
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uh you know moving away from that imposter syndrome thinking am i good enough
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to really do this can i make enough money out of this so there's lots of things that you have to look at
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but i think it's definitely an option for people to consider if
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they've got the right mindset and the right network around them thank you michelle um nelly
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um you've obviously worked in a lot of large corporate roles doing various different things and
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got a question here from sally who says she's trying to move from 20 years of operational leadership
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and transformation into hr um she's in a footsie 100 she's finding that quite a difficult
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transition um kind of get into there could you offer any advice and you said you made the move from kind of i.t into hr perhaps
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when you're hiring into your own teams how can people transition out of one area of the business into another
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yeah um if i understood the question correctly the current background is operations okay
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look i think um for me there is there isn't let's say no magic formula right i think what what
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once needs to understand is what are the direction of that organization and what are the
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possibilities that are there in hr and and what's there on their hr transformation journey and how can i fit
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in even if i don't necessarily today have all the skills required or the knowledge i mean
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the knowledge can be built but do i have the right attitude do i see eye to eye with with the with the
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direction um so i have personally hired
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people onto my team that didn't necessarily come from an hr background because i value diversity of perspective
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and of skills so i'm not sure if that answers the question but i think it pretty much depends on the organization but happy to
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um to connect you know after the call to have a more person like one-to-one conversation
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thank you and david can i ask you for any advice on that as well kind of making that move it's kind of later in your career
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probably are quite experienced you probably have worked at a leadership or at least management level yeah so there's two elements one for
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everyone on this kind of webinar as you get more senior in your uh kind of career make sure that you give
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people opportunities to move pan sector because it's one where everyone bemoans the lack of it but then they choose the
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person that seems most convenient because they've got their skill set so you're going to have to kind of role model and lead on that i think um
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there's something about understanding your own transferable skills and being able to kind of sell those effectively in but i also know that's quite a stock
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answer for just about any job and i think it depends on the employer but most of the advice i give to anyone is
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it depends on the network as well if you can get someone who really believes in you then you've got a chance of carving out an opportunity
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be it through project work and other elements but otherwise it can be unnecessarily difficult to get
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recognition for the skills and the career that you've already had thank you
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um and we've got a few questions of people trying to get that kind of first expert that first bit of experience um
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and david i'll come back to you first on that since that's what we were talking about anyway but how how do you
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actually break in so networks are really underrated so the
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branch network you flashed up earlier katie there's an opportunity there to get exposure get mentored by people have
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people looking out for you it's far easier particularly in what is going to be quite a difficult recruitment market
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to do that so i know there are lots of questions around quals today is this enough and do you know what to
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some extent sometimes it's necessary but not sufficient so it's really important you get calls and you get your background your
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structure but you also need the networks you need the positioning of your cv all of those things and you need the
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ability at times to see sideways moves or moves into sectors that you wouldn't have expected working in that will get
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you those skills and experience it could then show to someone else so it would be naive of me and unhelpful to
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say it's not difficult and tricky at the moment but the first moves are possible but normally someone who gets their first
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break has either had to be very persistent and i know that's difficult and all they've had to be very lucky in terms of the
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people around them who give them that break in that space thank you and a specific um question
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nelly that kind of builds on that but um for you somebody's asking about securing that job actually in your
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market in the uae what's it like out there do you have any specific advice for working in that market
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i think it's it's currently a bit challenging uh given you know the the current um
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you know the the how do you say the results of the of the pandemic on a lot of industries and i think it's not
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specific to the uae but generally speaking there has been a bit of a of a hold in in terms of
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movement but there are still some organizations that are still recruiting for specific roles especially
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organizations that have progressed for example their hr transformation and now are looking
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at specific people to lead their employee experience transformation so you might find pockets
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you know in terms of need for for hr professionals in the uae market but it's
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not let's say as open as it used to be but i believe it's not specific to that country in particular
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no i think you're i think you're right there and from the other couple of sessions we've held there was some light at the end of the tunnel according to our recruitment
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experts on here was 2021 should be a better year than 2020 was in terms of job hunting fingers crossed
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um a question specifically about self-employment and put to michelle and mel um harriet
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asks if you endeavor to eventually start up your own hr consultancy business is it recommended that you gain
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experience in a corporate business first um michelle do you want to take that and then i'll come to you mel
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well interesting um i'm gonna come from the perspective of no because i didn't um i think
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there are other skills that you will need to be able to run a consultancy so you obviously need to have
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hr skills and have experience but you do not have to have had them in a corporate environment the other
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skills that's going to work well for you is your your ability to build relationships with people
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your ability to understand their needs and be able to serve their needs
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and when you first start off you almost want to be able to be on tap for your your your clients and then you
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can start spacing out how you serve them but i think there's a number of other attributes and characteristics that will
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make you a great hr consultant running your own your own consultancy you have to have
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some an awareness of finances and invoicing and pitching and proposals
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these are all the other things that come outside of hr as the skill set but these are what make
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you a business owner an entrepreneur in the field of hr so i think uh it's less about working in the
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corporate environment as long as you've got experience and because since i've been doing this and it's coming up to five
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years nobody has ever asked me can they see my qualifications they don't ask me for a cv um they just
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see that i show up on different platforms i get referred a lot and so your character and your
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relationship building is going to be key to you running your hr business fantastic and mel what about you
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yeah i think i think you've got to put yourself in the shoes of the people that would be buying the services so
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what makes you different what are you going to be able to sell to those individuals that they want to
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pay money so to me it's that simple transaction so if you um don't have experience in a
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particular area so say change in transformation but you're trying to sell services
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there is going to be a host of people who have got that experience um likewise if you are an employee
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relations expert and you've done that in different organizations
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it doesn't have to be corporate you might have helped and given your services
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um in third sector public sector wherever it is uh again i think you know it
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think about who's buying those services so i i also think it depends um
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on on the market so um i think this always splits into two that's the sexy stuff if i can call it
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that so there will always be a greater demand for certain so if we think about
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analytics or we think about reward etc you know typically if there's less people who
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have um qualified or have got loads of experience in there there will be a greater need
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uh and similarly if you think about areas like uh training and development there's been
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a a much more uh uh over time uh consultancy has been a
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a much more um specialist area where people have used um external
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consultants and actually many in-house big corporates are looking at how they can leverage
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those amazing people like michelle and and her teams and colleagues uh rather than
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having a big in hand so again i think you need to know your market hr is a broad church um and the people
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function is and think about where it is you want to sell your skills uh what they are thank you mel
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um nelly one for you um jessica asks i'm five years into my role in hr but i'm unsure of my next step um
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what what is your opinion on moving out of hr in order to move back in would it help to get
25:46
some a broader experience i mean it definitely helps and i'm a big advocate of people moving
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out of hr because you know you broaden your perspective you get to understand different parts of the business
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and then go back to hr with an outside in perspective more from you know having experienced
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hr as a consumer of the services and as a customer rather than someone who's
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delivering the services and that always brings in a lot of insights and enhancement one of the key
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skills you know that are needed in hr is really that business acumen and being
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understanding really how who are the customers of your organization how does the organization make money
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and how everything you do in hr influences that positively or negatively
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and being able to articulate that in the business language and that transition i think is very
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valuable and how have you found you're working in a customer-facing role now how's that
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been for you in terms of broadening your hr experience i mean it helped me definitely get out
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of my comfort zone because i have been let's say in the hrd role for eight years already it helped me work on
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different muscles and similar to what michelle mentioned earlier it's that exposure to
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different customers maturity level different industry challenges of course everyone in hr has to align with the business has
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to recruit on board develop retain and engage employees and ensure their
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well-beings and so on but the flavors of those different industries is
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those nuances are was i was an eye-opener and i keep learning every day as much
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from the customers as you know as they learned from me as well thank you um we've had a few questions
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in i'm going to try and group them about um kind of specialisms that's generalisms
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um david can i come to you on this and kind of i guess the general question is if you're in a generalist role but
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you've got a passion for specialism how do you make that jump kind of how do you decide
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what works for you is there a way to get into l d if you've never worked in l d before
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yeah so there's probably two two kind of really obvious ways wanted to take projects in that area where they're
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available and second would be kind of shadowing and kind of building up contact but there are normally different ways this
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is going to sound really old to express yourself in a role so to bring your interest and your lens to the role and then to build out
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specialism in that way so you know very early in my career i would have been looking at employee retention but we
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started looking at um why different ethnic minorities different demographics were leaving well
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that you know led us into some work on dna that wasn't specifically in scope and that was you know 10 15 years ago so
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i slightly despair that we haven't made as much progress as it would have voted in the meantime so i think project work is a key making
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it known and building up time for it read widely around it connect to influencers in that space and but it's definitely
28:56
possible to make the label i've done everything except payroll and they wouldn't let me do payroll because no one would ever get paid
29:02
and just chronically unreliable but most other bits i've been allowed to do at some point in my career
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and do you think you can kind of move between them or do you kind of settle on one and that's it i think it depends on the depth so i
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think when you're starting off it's easier actually to to move into some of the more junior roles in them and then bizarrely you have a middle
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portion mel's nodding there's a middle portion where it's quite hard because everyone wants deep specialism and then by time you get to kind of hrd
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or the top end everyone expects you to be able to do everything underneath anyway so it's i'm not entirely sure that makes
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sense in terms of the way that we think about careers but certainly it's easier to get that experience i think at kind of mid-level
29:38
or if you're if your company is big enough to have a kind of fast track program high potential you can quite often pick up you know
29:45
large-scale projects and things that give you experience there thank you um we've got a few questions of people who are feeling a little bit
29:51
stuck so people perhaps have been in hr admin roles for the last um few years and they're trying to take
29:58
that next step up but uh finding the kind of promotion opportunities quite elusive mel give me
30:03
advice on um how to how to get yourself kind of moving up especially given the current context
30:10
yeah i mean i started off um as an administrator i didn't go to university
30:17
um i i i just took whatever that was there so i did i worked in a commercial
30:23
team i worked in a finance team i did whatever i felt could develop i think what nelly and michelle said
30:28
those more generalist business type skills even as an administrator
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and this one always goes down well i i also at the age of 18 i joined a trade
30:39
union and because they were amazing at training um and through that training i got
30:46
opportunities which were beyond what i was allowed to do uh in my administrator role so i got to
30:53
represent uh folk um i got to go to national training
30:58
events etc so i'm not i'm not saying everyone should join a trade union um but there are other uh areas whether
31:06
that's in volunteering uh where actually what i say when you're when you're stuck you can feel like you
31:12
start you can develop those skills outside of your direct um role i think in
31:20
in hr um there's also the thing like with uh big um shared services
31:27
being created so i've worked in a number of organizations where they've had there i think there's been a bit of stigma
31:33
attached to me you know they're so futuristic in there there's so much that you can
31:38
really drive it's not always the most sexy place that everyone but i've talked to people they say i really want to be a talent acquisition
31:45
specialists have to go away and just check out what that might mean in terminology or i want to be a futurist
31:50
in analytics again i just go and check what that actually means maybe for today but i i would i would not discount you
31:57
know if you can see opportunities in something like a share service because what you get to do is experience a lot of different things
32:04
uh under that heading so look for the things that maybe are not billed as the most sexy that's what i
32:10
did in my career and then sometimes you know you're reducing the ratio and then once you get in there you can
32:17
show them what you've got so don't be disheartened uh just think of lots of other ways that you can
32:24
add more experience um to your cv maybe outside of that direct
32:30
role thank you very much mel um and nelly we've got a few kind of similar-ish questions around
32:38
kind of building on what mel was talking about it's about getting that kind of first start people are asking about
32:43
job titles kind of what roles should you be looking at if you're in those first couple of years
32:48
of your career obviously we use lots of really great terminology within hr so what kind of
32:54
stuff should people be looking for look at it i think it depends on really
33:00
what's available and what what they're passionate about but just to reconfirm what mal mentioned like sometimes at the beginning early on
33:08
in your career you have the option to experience a lot of different things before deciding
33:14
which one is the right role for you so my recommendation or encouragement is let's
33:20
say really to look at the different options available there and and start somewhere the other thing
33:26
that is important is the organization you join because um some of the organ some organizations
33:33
are very good at actually taking that early talent and growing
33:38
that talent and allowing the talent to develop inside the organization now that pretty much depends really on
33:45
the available opportunities as well as the market itself and how big is the organization
33:51
set up in that country and what opportunities that it does it uh open
33:58
so you know it can be in hr administration to understand the basics
34:03
of of hr operation you know hr administration sometimes it's in payroll
34:09
but if your career aspiration is to uh to develop more towards hr business
34:15
partnering it would be good to start really by even taking a role in the
34:20
shared services center where you do case management so you have visibility over the hr uh different roles in hr end
34:27
to end and that gives you a good visibility thank you very much um and david we've got kind of again
34:34
building on that some people in smaller organizations who feel perhaps they don't have exposure to the kind of things that
34:39
nelly and mel are speaking about perhaps isn't a shared services center they don't have the opportunity to experience lots of different things
34:45
um what's your view on kind of small businesses large businesses do you need to try
34:52
working in a corporate in order to get that experience um i think there are pros and cons to each so your benefit of working in a
34:59
smaller business can quite often be you get disproportionate access to the ability to work on different things
35:05
because quite often there isn't a dedicated department quite often really early in your career you can get access to the leadership team
35:11
they're thinking in a far more kind of proximate way than someone's working in a different country and you never see them large organizations quite often
35:18
you've got those talent streams set up and you get you get those kind of paths and support in a different way i guess my general
35:24
advice would be work out what you want from your career and then be really open to different options
35:29
because i think people close them down too naturally and i can see some of the ones in the chat my company doesn't do this okay well
35:36
that's fine you might need to find another company and i know that sounds you know easier said than done but actually they're the
35:41
choices people need to face into i was chatting to one of my team a couple of weeks back and i was saying but your career choices are all around
35:48
the copd if you actually think about the world of work you open up different choices and
35:53
in five or ten years time opening up those different doors could be really valuable so sme is great place to learn genuinely
36:00
great place to learn but there are limitations there absolutely the same with you know large corporates
36:05
you've got to take your choices and maybe move between them but only as your career needs thank you very much david um michelle
36:12
i'll put this to you because i know you're very good on this kind of personal branding and um and that kind of thing another
36:19
michelle has asked what platforms work best for promotion i'm launching my hr and coaching consultancy business
36:27
yes so michelle linkedin is going to be your best friend i tell you why you can build your
36:33
personal brand on linkedin and there's a number of things you do it uh you
36:39
you want to build conversations so whenever you put a post out it shows your expertise but
36:47
make it conversational so ask questions get people to engage then you want to start building communities so you have you'll
36:54
start seeing that the same types of people are responding are engaging with your post then get
36:59
into their dms send them a message and say hi i'm really glad that you like my post what about it did
37:05
uh what what about it resonated with you so that's another thing you want to do and and you want to start making sure
37:12
that you're putting out consistent credible content so whatever your aerial expertise
37:18
is start sharing it and then you repost those things so this is what i do so i
37:23
did a training uh last week on uh inclusive leadership and at the end
37:30
of the training somebody had said to me uh i'm so glad you didn't get to ask me so many questions because i don't like
37:37
arts and questions in an open forum i'm very quiet and he didn't always show up on video
37:42
and that led me to think there's not enough information out there around inclusive leadership and not
37:49
judging people by their engagement because they don't show up on camera or they don't ask questions and what i did i just put a
37:55
post about that on linkedin and i've got a couple of people engaging with it and then i'm going to use that
38:01
same post and i'm going to do a video on the same thing and then because people respond to
38:06
different post different ways so i would definitely encourage you to use linkedin put out content consistently and
38:14
consistent could be whatever that means to you could be once a week twice a week but be consistent with it because then people
38:20
get used to seeing your content they want to know what's new in hr world what things should i be aware
38:25
of what um different hr things are coming up that i need to know about so you can become an
38:31
expert in your field so that they find you rather than you keep going out and looking for work
38:37
so it does work thank you very much and see um we are linked in with each other we do put a lot of really great content
38:42
on there and i'm just a drop i know there's loads of questions there's quite a lot of questions about qualls i'm going to leave those just because we have a
38:48
specific question uh session on bowls in a couple of weeks um but we will copy those across to that session um mel andy's asked
38:56
given the vast amount of contracting roles in hr what are the pros and cons of moving from a permanent role to contractual
39:02
roles yeah um so i think for in my experience
39:09
it was a career decision so i didn't move from perm to um contracting
39:15
by that i mean i had a break in between and i'd fallen out of love with the with the people profession a bit and i
39:21
was thinking what could i do i had an early midlife crisis i guess and was thinking maybe there's something else i was
39:27
better at actually after after a couple of months realized i wasn't probably much good at anything else so i had to find a new way with it
39:34
so um i think what i would say is that this is just my experience and
39:39
people think about it differently for me it was it was a massive change it was a massive switch so
39:45
it the way that um that i needed to um think about my my own
39:53
personal financial situation so you know i still have to pay my mortgage i think about how to pay my bills but
39:59
what comes with obviously doing interim work is you you you
40:05
can track the services in different ways so you end up in a situation where you're only as good as the clients that you can
40:11
land and um therefore you you've got to be thinking about how do you financially um set yourself
40:20
up for success not just when it's in buoyant times but when the market changes that's on you
40:25
that's your responsibility to have to do that and um seven years on i think wow it's
40:31
an amazing paycheck every month some people do and whether they do well or not within the thing that feels
40:37
quite alien though so i i think thinking about being really broken you know think about that financial
40:44
situation because actually without it you know you know you're going to get stressed you're going to get worried about how
40:49
how how you're going to be able um to survive i think you have to do that mindset
40:55
shift so um the biggest thing for me which was quite surprising was
41:00
just how much people behave differently so to me i was like yeah i'm setting up
41:07
my new business this is different for me but actually for my network and my peers that that was
41:14
very different for them so you need to think about how do you respond to that how
41:19
you may in your own head think you're just switching from one to the other but actually it's it's really different and and you
41:27
have to stay centered so the things i thought i'd love like running my own business are the things that i
41:33
uh enjoy the least by that i mean um by day i'm providing services to
41:39
clients and by night at weekends i'm doing business development financial returns and i see michelle
41:46
nodding away that you know it's this stuff where you kind of go oh won't this be exciting to
41:52
do but actually you're your own fd your own hrd your own commercial
41:57
director you know all those things that someone else used to do for you you now have to do yourself and
42:04
i believe if you do it right that actually does keep your business solvent as well but it it you know when you just want to
42:09
chillax at the weekend and not have to worry about that stuff it can be a bit of a bind
42:14
so what am i saying and all that i think you know it is a change it's some people do
42:21
flex between one minute they're like okay now i'm perm now i'm not um i think if you're looking
42:27
at it as a career move though is something very different so it's not just a contractual change
42:33
to be successful and have longevity you need to set yourself up for sex
42:38
success less like anyone who's starting to grow a business thank you and get a good accountant i
42:44
assume as well 100 you know you find um
42:50
it's interesting how you like services provided to you um and you want to support small
42:56
businesses so you you you seek out those that understand
43:01
uh you as a person and what you're trying to drive so you build this community of people
43:07
that support you and therefore you support them that's that's that's a really nice thing but yeah i mean i'm gonna say
43:14
it you know when it comes to the changes all the time isn't it michelle it's relentless
43:19
um well it has been since i've kind of joined it so yeah swatting up on a sunday about what
43:25
what might come in the budget of change again just because you have a good accountant remember no one looks after your
43:32
finances in your business as well as you do so yes they're there to advise but you
43:37
don't hand over accountability to them because you want to make sure that you know you make sure your money looks after
43:43
your business is in good hands thanks well um nelly i'll put this to you i actually don't know if you've
43:50
had this experience yourself um somebody's asked i recently returned from maternity leave i'm returning to my role in hr but in
43:57
respects it feels like i'm starting a new job how do you keep up to date with the latest trends and changes in the profession
44:03
well i have to agree that you know the profession is moving you know at such a high pace you
44:09
know the way we used to do hr one year two years or even three years ago is is
44:14
different than it is today so look i think um and this is let's say one of the
44:20
key takeaway from me having worked for so long in hr is how do you continue to
44:26
renew yourself how do you keep up with all the trends uh in the in the function
44:31
you know itself but also what's going on in the industry and how do you
44:36
keep yourself and your skills up to date so my my recommendation my my question is why
44:42
does it feel different than when you left and how long have you been gone how can you understand you know what's
44:49
the strategy and the direction and how can you uh you know integrate yourself back in
44:55
what i'm seeing is with the hr transformation even the definition of a role for
45:01
example of an hr business partner or of an hr advisor or even an hr operation
45:07
is is changing in nature because a lot of the tasks that used to be done
45:13
previously part of the role is now being taken care of by the technology so how how can you leverage
45:20
the skills you have and build up build on them but also acquire uh
45:25
new skills that can help you accelerate um you know your your development or your
45:31
growth back into the hr function thank you uh somebody's about to go on maternity leave very
45:37
useful we'll take that away put it in my back pocket um david i'm getting the sense from a
45:42
lot of the questions a lot of stuff on the chat and there's quite a lot of frustration around that people are feeling quite fed up they feel that they have been
45:48
working really hard searching for something they're not able to get a break what advice would you give either on
45:54
finding that break or on kind of remaining positive and resilient given the situation we find ourselves in
46:01
so first of all it depends on whether you see it as a good thing or a bad thing but there are lots of people in your position
46:06
so it's not unusual and um you're not doing anything wrong or
46:11
you're not missing out on something and it's just actually a tough market
46:17
and to an extent it's always been that way they'll normally be more qualified people in the profession than people wanting to do a job and something
46:23
like us um particularly in hr i think how you stand out
46:28
and making sure that you've got all of the things that are working in your favor in terms of i guess the percentage
46:33
chance of getting a job because it's a volume game at times and and how you go structuring kind of
46:38
your job hunt is really important i mean i i got a job at one point just off the world's most ridiculous cv i did
46:44
like a kind of fancy presentation thing and it caught someone's eye and i ended up getting a job through that but that wouldn't work for lots of
46:51
organizations the more you can tailor identify the organizational sector you want to work for
46:56
tailor an approach and a job approach for that get to know good recruiters and and it's
47:02
harder at the start of your career because you really are one of lots of cvs rather than a person but find a way to stand out
47:08
they're all viable but equally make use of the community in the networks i think that's
47:14
my best advice if you if you're gonna try and not be just one of a pile of 500 cvs but be the
47:20
cv that someone's looking out for then that takes um some different approaches so take all
47:26
the help you can get use the resources that the crpd provide in terms of that cv guidance and things
47:31
like that but keep hoping as well because almost everyone on this call will have had to have got that first
47:37
role at some point we've all been through that journey it does happen we've all had bits of our career where
47:44
you kind of go actually i feel like i'm two years behind where i want to be um but the people that keep going are
47:50
the ones that do get those results and do get that reward but it doesn't make it feel any better at the
47:55
time so i can empathize but i can't make that go away i wish you could wave a magic wand
48:01
unfortunately yeah this is the situation we find ourselves in um a few questions about getting
48:06
management experience so i think especially it's quite interesting within hr isn't it is you probably have to coach managers every day but you
48:12
might not have managed your own team any advice for first steps into management
48:18
roles um michelle any thoughts on that um i think if you're in the current role
48:23
it may be worth finding out if there's any opportunities that you can shadow somebody um
48:30
and i would say either shadowing someone who's already in management then you can just learn from them and find a mentor
48:39
who is in management and that's another way in because once you start working and getting exposure in this
48:47
field they see what skills you have as well and then it's then there's another conversation about
48:53
how do i get more uh how can i apply it to be a manager or to
48:58
to up skill so i would always say try and see if there's any like job enhancement
49:03
opportunities in your in your organization if you can be mentored by a manager that you trust um
49:10
and see if that works i think those are two options i can definitely suggest david yeah
49:18
there's some really basic stuff as well cover for people's holiday yeah just just be the one that people turn to to cover the team when the
49:24
manager's taking their annual leave and step up do project work and within that quite often you'll find
49:30
that you're managing people in a different way and and the other thing i just urge everyone because this is like my bet noise
49:36
throughout my entire career work out why you want to manage people because if it's for your career
49:41
then what you're doing is you're taking charge of a whole other group of people and how they feel about work
49:46
focused on you if you want to do it because you want to be a really good manager and a good leader of people then
49:51
you end up in a different place automatically but i managed people for about a month i was really proud because it felt like
49:58
a step up my boss took me to one side and went how does it feel to be in charge of seven people's mortgages and i was like wow um it really doesn't
50:06
matter the intent that you go into it so don't just do it as a stepping stone managing people is a really serious thing right it's about how they feel at
50:12
the end of every single day it's about how their career is going to develop it's not about you so take the opportunity to get it forge
50:19
them where you can put your hand up for it very clearly and but do it for the right reason david
50:25
is my line manager so so he uh yeah practices what he preaches kind of yeah
50:30
when it goes wrong it goes horribly wrong um nelly a question here about again i
50:36
think it's about showing how um how committed you are how ambitious some amy's asked if i entered
50:43
into a new role a big company would i be penalized for focusing my professional development plan
50:48
on progressing into an hr role but within that same company i think really it depends on the company
50:55
culture and how open they are really to promote talent across lines of
51:00
business and across the organization uh so it will be very difficult to answer that
51:06
question you know on a general level um but i think it's it's important
51:12
really to if the organization does not provide that opportunity going back to what david said at the
51:18
beginning is this the right organization for me or you know sometimes when you move
51:25
if you're open in your career you know you're you're just not fixated on one approach it's nice to have a goal in
51:31
mind but it's also nice to have the flexibility and be keep your eye open on the opportunities
51:36
that might come up and sometimes deviate from just a straight line um and uh some you know when you
51:45
venture on some of these small roads just to go back on the main road you might discover new avenues or new
51:53
opportunities that you didn't even think about uh before and i can and i'm saying that you know from my own experience when i
52:00
how i got into this advisory role was purely through the fact that a lot of time
52:06
people were coming to me from our colleagues saying you know what can you please connect with our customers
52:11
tell them how we have transformed hr at sap how we're doing you know uh learning management transformation
52:18
how are we doing you know i don't know one two three how are we before transforming our performance management
52:25
and i discovered that you know this is this is i quite enjoy that that
52:31
job and and it wasn't part of my path you know my path in my mind was like to grow and take on another
52:38
uh regional role or to go specifically into certain areas of hr but it uncovers new opportunities and
52:45
it's okay to take a small deviation um to grow or to accelerate uh growth in a
52:52
different direction thank you i think that phrase about it being a less of a career ladder and more of a jungle gym or
52:58
climbing frame kind of going all over the place and careers are very fluid at the moment so it's important to keep that
53:05
flexibility in mind thank you somebody's asked about the
53:10
value of reflection asha said i'm beginning to understand the value reflection has especially during my cipd studies how have you used
53:17
reflection in your life what advice do you have for implementing reflection as a regular practice how has it supported your your growth
53:23
and progression mel how do you use reflection in your work
53:32
she never reflects at all i do i do i try i'm trying on the question i'm
53:38
reflecting on the question i think um so for me i have to take time out between um
53:45
assignments so i i find it difficult to um jump from one to to the other
53:54
um spent a long time having to understand a culture of organization how
54:00
it works the dynamics um you you work in a
54:05
uh i just saw david's note about mel being live at reflecting thanks
54:13
you have to take time out sometimes to to be able to a reflect on what you've achieved um
54:21
what you would do differently and in the self-employed market that is really
54:27
valuable to do because it starts to really hone what you want to do
54:33
um in the future with your business how you link that with your future business plan
54:38
um so from a from a self-employed perspective between for me and i'm sure
54:44
michelle would add to that between clients and she does it a slightly different way but i'm sure she she does that in the same way i think on
54:51
the job uh reflection is is ensuring you cast your net why to let
54:58
others feedback to you so um some of the most uh
55:03
the greatest feedback i've got is not from a line manager it's from those around me so people who have
55:09
worked with me for me who i've connected with and sometimes they just give you those nuggets of gold
55:15
actually which if you can catch them and take time to digest them than that i found those really pivotable
55:24
pivotal um for the future uh of where i've gone on my career and
55:29
as nelly said i've taken some quite curvy tight rows of where i thought i was going to go
55:36
versus listening to some of those that feedback and being able to reflect on it
55:41
thank you michelle yeah and i really wanted to jump in on here because i do
55:46
reflection every sunday and i just look at and there's two things i ask myself
55:51
what went well and how can i improve and i do that because i want to
55:58
i want to make sure that i'm doing something right and then i want to know where i can improve to be better and i
56:04
always and i think part of the reflection is really sitting down and thinking what can i do better for next
56:10
week and i always say be in tune to how you're feeling about things if
56:16
something is sticking with you and it keeps coming back up reflect on that and think why is it happening what can i change about it
56:23
and the things that you're doing right i always say reward yourself because you want to have almost like a
56:30
visual representation of when you're doing things right and then you do more of it and you know they say what you appreciate
56:36
appreciates so i would definitely in anyone who's listening to this whatever you know whatever stage you are
56:42
in your hr career whatever you're doing right really hope you really hone into that and you do more of that
56:49
right and the things that you think yeah i can improve on don't see it as failure you just see it as feedback and that's where
56:56
that reflection and that journaling comes in really handy so i just wanted to give that piece of advice in in relation
57:02
to what mail was saying thanks that's a great advice i'm really sorry we've only got a couple of minutes left and
57:07
maybe it's going to overrun slightly anyway um because i really like to ask everybody at the end of one of these sessions just to offer
57:13
one piece of advice that you really want people to take away from the session so if they ignore everything else that
57:18
you said i'm sure they won't because it was all gold uh what one thing would you like them to kind of write down listen to
57:24
reflect on um from this session nelly can i start with you for your one
57:30
nugget of gold um keep keep learning that's nice nice and brief
57:38
david um yeah don't be afraid to ask for help genuinely do that and then help others
57:44
as you go through i'm sure everyone uh on the panel is going to have multiple linkedin requests after this and i'm sure they will
57:50
accept all of them and also message you privately let people know uh beyond your manager
57:58
if you're looking to do something different looking on their chats lots of people saying i want to get into this i want to do that
58:04
um i was always quite shocked as an hrd sometimes well i didn't even know that within the team so don't be afraid
58:11
to kind of jump over barriers that are there and let people know not just in your company
58:17
but on on social all these different networks because if you're keeping it to yourself or only
58:24
told one person the chances are you know there's a whole army of people out there that might be able to help you
58:30
so share tell people ask for help use the social it's amazing uh what it
58:37
can bring you thank you and last but not least michelle i would say don't be afraid to
58:42
show up to show up as you authentically and whatever platforms uh and don't be afraid to show up in
58:49
your workplace like everybody said if you want a new role you have to start acting like you
58:55
want that role to tell people that you want that role so be unafraid to show up and be
59:01
unafraid to ask thank you so much um really brilliant piece of advice to take away there
59:07
um i tried to ask as many questions as possible i'm really sorry if i didn't get to yours if it was incredibly specific then i might have tried to
59:12
group it into themes of other questions but hopefully everybody watching uh whether live or on demand you feel
59:18
like you've got something out of that i can see in the chat that people have been connecting giving each other advice
59:23
and support which is always really really fabulous to see i always think about these sessions that it really just shows how supportive
59:30
and open and sharing this profession is uh thank you so much to david nelly mel
59:36
and michelle for for taking part and for sharing their experiences really really honestly and uh with no filter i think as well
59:42
which is always really really helpful but that is it from us for this afternoon remember there is a session specifically on cipd qualifications
59:48
that's taking place on the 22nd of feb so do sign up for that if you've got any questions about various kind of levels
59:54
and options available to you but that is it from us for now have a really good afternoon and we will see you next time
1:00:07
goodbye
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