New World? New Jobs and New Leadership with Paolo Gallo
Watch the webinar hosted by The European Association for People Management EAPM as part of the International HR day 2022
Watch the webinar hosted by The European Association for People Management EAPM as part of the International HR day 2022
This event has been organised by The European Association for People Management EAPM as part of a range of activities taking place across the world in relation to International HR Day.
Keynote: Paolo Gallo, Futurist and recognized Global Expert in Human Capital, Future of Work, Leadership 4.0, Energy Management and is ICF, certified Executive Coach.
The day itself provides an opportunity to join in an international celebration of all the hardworking HR and people professionals around the world.
It provides recognition for the profession and the positive impact on individuals, organisations and society. It is also an opportunity to connect with other HR professionals globally, sharing experiences and good practice.
Panellist:
Chaired by Even Bolstad, President, European Association for People Management
0:05
dear hr colleagues in europe and beyond
0:10
today we're going to meet paolo gallo before that it's been very lit for me as president of the european hr association
0:17
eapm to welcome you today we celebrate international hr day
0:22
for fourth time originally by initiative from lithuanian ireland nurtured in europe and today celebrated all over the
0:29
world it's a day to reflect on what lies behind us to be proud and to mobilize
0:35
for what lies ahead it's a day to celebrate on what we are
0:40
how we contribute and what we believe and hr is indeed bigger than itself
0:48
during covet hr has delivered delivered and delivered on what was expected but
0:53
also on needs many did not see when the crisis started on our way out of govit
1:02
we shape the new future i'll return to that in a bit
1:09
then came ukraine it's a tragic disaster for ukrainians and many russians let's not forget that
1:16
with consequences for us all many ukrainians are dying many have
1:22
become refugees and all of them see the beloved country being torn into pieces stock markets all over the world are
1:28
shivering energy prices are on the rise inflation is increasing and recession is
1:34
a realistic threat to many countries all of us are worried the poor ones afraid of not being able to put bread on
1:41
the table but also those who already are low on motivation and those who do not see themselves as a part of the
1:46
organization in the future they really struggle struggle we talk about fatigue big resignation we
1:53
quit lost generation distrust the rise of skepticism and isolationism we see the rise of strong leaders those
2:01
who are good on creating unity by defining external enemies we have seen this before in the past
2:08
with terrible consequences it's toxic and it's contagious
2:14
for us we mainly work at the company level it's important to remember that much starts with daily life
2:20
what we experience at work and stories parents tell around the kitchen table
2:25
work is the source for income dignity and social security and we must deliver on that
2:31
but also an arena for individual development where we foster values and where we live our lives
2:38
where we are leaders and where we see leadership displayed in all its forms
2:43
when we look around we see excellent leaders we know who they are and the opposite management by fair
2:50
distance and humiliation yes druke was right culture still eats
2:56
strategy for breakfast this is our responsibility conducting people management
3:03
should foster a culture of trust psychological safety empowerment and inclusion with clear object objectives everyone
3:10
can support and act upon and with freedom when it comes to execution people-centric policy that
3:18
puts hr at the core something good comes out of everything
3:23
in a bizarre way covet and ukrainian disaster reinforced by global talent
3:29
scarcity might pave the way for a different kind of leadership a different working life
3:34
a crisis is an opportunity too good to go to waste as we know where we invest in people re-skill
3:41
upskill and where we build better structures leadership and processes where we utilize technology increase
3:48
productivity and achieve a better work-life balance and do good for the environment all at
3:53
the same time we should create a magnet effect to all
3:58
those good people we have already hired and those we want to attract in the future caring and demanding culture
4:05
people are valued and given the opportunity to show the best side of themselves i mean this is not rocket science at all
4:12
people is the main source of competitive advantage in most companies and the same way it goes with public sector much is
4:19
up to us we are in the people business the most important business of all
4:25
the hashtag for the international day alongside international hr day hr shaping the near future
4:31
that is exactly what we aim to do shaping the new future let's make sure it's a good one
4:37
hr is indeed bigger than itself it's more than a job more than a profession
4:43
it's about creating value in all its forms for the benefit of companies
4:48
us as individuals and society as a whole
4:53
a wise guy once said talk about the dream try to make it real
4:59
that guy was bruce springsteen today it's my privilege to introduce paulo gallo
5:05
i have only attended five i think bruce springsteen concerts first back one back
5:10
in 1981 uh i believe you have attempted substantially more
5:16
you are a man talking about the dream trying to make it real and you are one of us
5:21
former hr director at the world economic forum world bank european bank amongst much else
5:27
i first met you at the conference in little humber some years ago you impressed us all with your knowledge
5:34
skills and values your ability to describe a bigger picture with a growth
5:41
with a growth perspective and where we enjoy and embrace change we would then welcome you
5:47
on stage with the sound of hungry heart in retrospect i think this as an excellent music
5:54
choice for such an introduction so if not in a springsteen way and
6:00
hungry heart at least with eurovision take it away paolo you are good to go
6:08
no listen evan first of all you have no idea much appreciate uh your word wisdom your introduction and
6:15
i'm sure people are disappointed because i have to say bruce prince probably maybe a speck was pretty they get
6:21
only paolo gallo but uh just to uh maybe put an emphasis on on your words uh and
6:27
your wisdom and your your reflection and um when i when i finished university there was about 345 years ago uh
6:36
um you know i studied at bocconi and studied finance and economics and and then i i went to my professor and i said
6:43
i i i decided to work in human resources and you look at me with the same expression that you would
6:49
have uh if you were to meet a ghost like you couldn't believe you know like like what's wrong with you no
6:55
and i explained why i wanted to to work in human resources which is fundamentally exactly what you just said
7:01
evan which i believe the competitive advantage and the passion is about developing people and uh he looked at me and he said well
7:08
paulo i respect your choices it's a pity because i thought you would have gone into you know finance or whatever but
7:14
you know your choice but uh yeah he said you're very innocent and you're gonna
7:19
lose your innocence by working human resources and and the guy was right because you
7:24
know as soon as you start working in resources you get some some disappointment because you see in the standard deviation the best and the
7:31
worst of people an organization when you work human resources but then the philosopher means bruce came and he gave
7:39
me the key to solve that problem because bruce in an interview said
7:45
the very difficult things in life is uh how do you keep your faith after you lose your innocence
7:51
how do you keep your faith after you lose your innocence and this if you think is is is a lot to do with our
7:58
profession because we have lost our innocence we saw redundancy we saw covet we saw the war we saw
8:05
you know maybe bad practices in management in some organization in some countries bad
8:10
example of leaderships as well but we keep our faith the faith is about
8:15
developing people making sure that people are valued for the sake of growing organization and i think that
8:21
what we have in common here i know there are people from all over the world tonight and today and i'm very
8:27
grateful is actually we we kept our faith so in a way we are all a bruce
8:32
princeton fans so and on that note let me let me uh share the screen with
8:38
you guys because i wanted to uh to um to let me see
8:45
um you are screen sharing let me see okay
8:51
so um i i wanted to uh to produce an image that reflects perhaps the spirit that we
8:58
have after dealing with everything with that with uh in the last few months and i decided to use another philosopher which
9:05
is shrek it of course is a is a is a fun way but is a serious way to say listen guys we
9:12
had quite a lot of stuff to do and if you think about it's not about the quantity
9:17
but also the disruptive element over whatever we've been doing in in numerous
9:23
saw since the last few months so before starting i'm gonna have two questions for you and
9:28
rebecca i know you are a most wonderful dj for me today so i'm gonna help i'm gonna ask you to help me because i want
9:35
to get an answer from from you guys the first one the first question for you is uh
9:42
how good are you in singing from zero to ten okay so this is not about bruce
9:47
princeton it's about your capacity to sing so if you think that you're like a pavarotti obama or bruce prinstein or
9:54
maria callas put a ten uh if you're pretty bad like i am in a
9:59
good day i'm a two but usually one so what is your what is your how good are you in singing and uh
10:06
for me too rebecca can you read us some of the answer from uh from the participants and then we'll go back to
10:12
this question at the end of the presentation hi paulo um good morning good afternoon and good evening all
10:18
those who are joining us from around the world and happy international hr day the numbers are coming in thick and fast two
10:24
four three seven all between a one and a two i'm a solid five um six one to two
10:30
seven i think seven's oh eight hey you're doing well uh oh nil points from eurovision i'm guessing
10:37
they're not particularly good um i think eight oh twelve someone's super
10:42
confident maybe we should ask them to sing today um i appreciate the desire and an
10:47
enthusiastic 10. um i'm not sure if they're really a 10 if they're an enthusiastic
10:54
oh someone's being a bit controversial bruce springsteen is a five
11:03
i'm going to come off camera now that's given us a great start okay no thank you rebecca and again
11:09
thank you for inviting me to international hr day i cannot think of a more important uh
11:14
item to discuss and park your answer here because sometimes
11:20
ago i asked these questions to a group of uh leaders in organization there were
11:25
170 and we did the math and the average was 3.72 so we said okay we you guys are good
11:31
3.72 let's park this information here we're going to get this at the end
11:37
the second question that i for you who who invented superheroes with super power
11:44
who invented them which country invented them rebecca i need your help again which
11:50
country invented superheroes uh usa america usa japan usa usa france
12:00
usa greece japan usa lots of usa india
12:06
japan usa oh there's a lot in the usa a lot of people think superheroes came for usa with a
12:13
close second of japan i reckon okay in grazie graz again uh rebecca by the end of the
12:19
presentation you would have improved your italian as well which is an additional benefit of listening to me but
12:24
you can beside actually there is one person that answers correctly because the superior were not invented in in
12:30
united states were invented in greece more than 3 000 years ago we have 12 olympian gods and i like you to point
12:37
out there is a great uh diversity distribution because uh the chairman of the board was zeus
12:44
but there were six uh female gods a goddess and five six
12:50
male gods so they were a good distribution in terms of diversity so when the romans conquered greece and uh
12:58
they conquered greece with the battle that was fought 238 before christ in ascolum which is
13:04
now an italian city called ascori they they didn't really invent
13:09
new gods you know they were very practical guys going to war building streets and aqueducts
13:15
and and they decided it was easy to cut and paste greek gods rather than create a new one
13:21
okay also because they have more than two thousand of them uh and it was a bit complicated to sort them out you know
13:27
uh so they decided to literally use the greek gods except one god
13:32
janus so this is the only roman god that did
13:38
not exist with the greeks okay with the greek uh and look at the feature of this god
13:44
because uh uh it was considered the god of transition transition in latin means andare go to
13:51
another place trans era go to another place and this god is a unique feature
13:56
to have two faces the one looking at the pasta that implies they invented a word called
14:03
gravitas gravitas means wisdom judgment reflection
14:08
what we saw for example what we saw from from heaven a few minutes ago and then they had a face
14:15
looking at the future and the future was called juventus youth
14:21
not the soccer team but juventus in terms of youth energy and optimism
14:27
and this god was considered the god of transition and was celebrated in every transition that occurred in their life
14:35
yeah so for example when you go from winter to summer when the war was over
14:41
when in family kids were born on funerals or marriages
14:47
and in case you wonder why january is called that way because it was named after the god janus because represent
14:54
the transition into the new year so if you think about what we've learned
15:00
from the romans that in a moment of transitions you need to have both the gravitas meaning the judgment
15:07
and the experience managing the problems and the optimism and the energy to cope
15:12
with them so we learned from them that you're not managing change which is external but you imagine transition which is internal
15:19
of you and i really believe that right now we are managing a
15:24
historic transition so today what i want to to address with you at least and maybe
15:30
discuss briefly with you are the following points uh and i'm an executive coach and uh i love to frame problems
15:37
around questions the first one is what is different this time around you know why we're even talking about this
15:43
transition this uh systemic changes what is coming next and then there is one feature of uh that
15:50
never occurred since the first industrial revolution in the job market which what i believe is really relevant
15:56
to the profession that we have when we work for human resources or as i used to call it people in culture how can we
16:03
restart given the fatigue and the intensity of the last few years
16:10
and then going back to one of the questions that also evan raised to say okay but which kind of leadership do we
16:16
need to shape to drive not only the future of human resources but also the future
16:21
organizations so what is different this time around i think you know it is the speed in which
16:28
things are happening okay and why this speed is occurring i think you've known it already i don't want to
16:33
spend too much time it's because we have accumulative effects of a technological transformation occurring
16:40
as we speak from robotics to blockchain artificial intelligence all of them accumulating as
16:47
you can see they're producing an impact which is uh much higher than any other impact that occurred in the past
16:54
so if you think about dyna stability meaning continuing doing what we've done
17:00
in the past is a liability in a moment of transformation we need to look at like
17:06
juventus with the youth and go one step further the second element in addition to the
17:12
speed is that whatever is happening is changing us it's changing the way we act we engage with other people
17:20
and this is a lot to do with with a concept it's been developed by by
17:26
a chinese scholar they said we're moving to a homeless society almost has no sexual
17:32
connotation it always fundamentally means when online merge with offline when the boundaries between our
17:39
i say real life and digital life are blurring and it's no longer clear who is doing what and where no this is just an
17:46
example of a circus that is using holograms rather than animals you know
17:53
so what can we expect them what can we expect and the short answer is
17:58
nobody knows we don't have a crystal ball we don't have the capacity to anticipate the future
18:05
and to say that's going to happen however we can intelligently frame what
18:11
is coming next now uh we heard from many organizations
18:16
newspaper tvs etc that what is coming next is called the new normal
18:21
and uh many organization i don't want to quote any of them but you know they're using this term as if
18:27
is an appropriate way of framing what is coming next yeah in reality if you think let me go back
18:34
to greece normal is a greek word canonicos
18:40
that means average predictable ordinary what people expect and conforming to a type
18:46
and i think it is helpful to reflect for a second if we really expect that what is coming next is going to be normal
18:53
again i personally don't believe so and i personally believe that what is coming
18:58
next could be better defined if we say it's going to be a new context context is neither positive or negative is
19:05
something that we need to shape which increase our sense of responsibility and accountability in society and in the new
19:13
context we're going to found chaos crisis complexity confusion and surely a constant change
19:18
okay we also learned that in this moment
19:25
have a decision it means a square mess so is important crisis is not the greek
19:31
word that implies a taking decision and being somewhere in between it
19:37
usually doesn't help yeah so what are the new uh
19:43
unprecedented feature of the job and grow market and this is something that i i repeated many times because it's
19:49
something that perhaps is not usually in our reader screen yeah
19:55
think about the way we have conceived and conceptualized careers in our life
20:01
and as we are hr practitioners also in the organization where we operate
20:06
where the whole problem was three phases in our life we study then we work for a certain
20:13
number of years let's say 35 40 depends on the country and then sometimes in the early 60s or
20:20
maybe late 60s you retire and you still hope to spend a nice period of your life enjoying your
20:26
family your nephew and nieces and perhaps in a nice place
20:31
in reality what is emerging is uh life expectancy is increasing life expectancy
20:37
increased one and a half year per decade since 1840 so every every 10 years life expectancy
20:44
has increased by a little bit less than two years and work will remain for many years and
20:51
uh the change rate is increasing dramatically so if you think about
20:57
um the length of the careers probably of our kids i have a 16 years old daughter
21:02
probably not to me but for her it's gonna be 260 to 70 years the average tenure in a job is around
21:10
five years a little bit less in united states and a little bit more in europe and this is
21:17
important whatever we know today so we're now may 2020
21:22
have a residual value of around 20 in five years down the line and the analogy they usually use is like
21:28
we're buying a car today in five years time this car would be worth 20 percent what we paid today the same
21:36
for our skills there is a very interesting study done by main organization it depends a bit of a
21:41
sector technology is uh is faster than maybe other um sectors but
21:47
fundamentally means whatever we know now will be almost irrelevant
21:53
in uh five years down to july okay so careers are not going to be like
21:58
doing the same job in the same industry maybe in the same country all your life
22:03
it's going to be a completely different career journey where we will be end up doing jobs that perhaps now doesn't even
22:10
exist okay so what is the future of the job market then um sometimes ago i put this slide many
22:18
times in my conferences because i think it is important when donald trump was president united states and i prefer not
22:25
to say anything about team otherwise would be a different conversation
22:31
part of this they say propaganda to say look american is great again because we created seven million jobs
22:37
in that moment i'm talking about pre-covered uh the data were correct but there is
22:42
another part of the truth that in my view explain really the challenge
22:48
in the year 2000 in the year 2000 there were 1.2 jobs available per
22:55
um so i want to candidate available per job so fundamentally if you think about there
23:01
are six candidates for five jobs then 2009 when the middle of financial
23:07
crisis and the ratio is close to seven so seven people almost seven people were looking for a job and then in the year
23:14
2018 the ratio was one to one and actually the same number is
23:21
confirmed over the years and i want to bother you with a too many graph on this topic but in the year 2018
23:29
the ratio was one to one and people said well that's brilliant because then we have as many vacancies as many
23:35
candidates okay and so it looked like according to the economist
23:40
let's say um approach that the only thing that needs to be done was the
23:45
improvement of the efficiency of the job markets fundamentally the supply and demand meet efficiently
23:52
however the the raw labor statistics i worked as a director of human resources for for
23:59
the world bank for the european bank for the and for the world economy forum and the
24:04
royal olympus statistic which i visited many times given my role so they said hold on a second here because in the
24:09
year 2000 people find a job equivalent job within six to nine months maximum and
24:16
when i say equivalent means a job with the same task in the same sector with a salary in a compensation which is ten
24:23
percent more or less of what you will be making before now in the year 2018 85 percent of the
24:30
people remained unemployed for more than 18 months so they created a new category
24:36
of workers not the unemployed by the unemployable so fundamentally what is happening right
24:42
now in the job market that it never happened before that we have simultaneously so many jobs available
24:50
created by the fourth industrial revolution created by by the technological changes and
24:55
simultaneously so many unemployed people they became unemployable because the set of skills
25:01
that they have is no longer relevant to the job market so i really believe that this is a
25:07
huge challenge that we have which is fundamentally how do we create employable people how to create people continue to be
25:14
relevant knowing and this is my personal opinion the responsibility shared between the organization
25:20
human resources and the individual this is not only financial responsibility
25:25
there is a role of the organization and the manager and by all means a big role play by the individuals
25:31
so what is official work there and i like to just put maybe a bit of an emphasis because i read many studies
25:37
they say listen hr as a time is lacking a little bit behind when it comes to digital transformation
25:43
um is possible but i want to also quote a couple of examples the first one
25:48
is ibm used to have more than a thousand people do recruitment now the number is
25:54
12 and uh and the answer is how is possible they went from more than a thousand people to 12 within a short number of
26:02
years and the answer is because using facial recognition algorithm and artificial intelligence to recruit
26:09
people so people became rather than just recruiters in the traditional sensor they become more and more let's say data
26:16
analysts they are able to to understand better uh the behavior of individuals
26:22
and then i say that candidate would be better for that function the candidate would be terrific they can be probably
26:27
not the right person for us another example uh the civil servant in uh in
26:32
canada they have to go through a very strong let's say induction program and they
26:38
decided to do it with second life so people are joining before joining so
26:44
they enter into the building they create an avatar they start to get accustomed to the to the organization even before
26:50
the official start so there are some um splendid examples of digital transformation done by hr
26:57
over all over the globe so i i think we should probably acknowledge that as well
27:03
now what is fair to say the machine will increasingly do the routine work and we know it
27:08
we know it we know it this is something that i don't think i'm saying anything new to you right now but i want to share
27:14
a couple of stories that to me are quite relevant this is a is a hotel china in uh in
27:20
japan and uh in some other asian countries and they decided to uh um fundamentally use
27:27
robots to do the concierge of the receptionist work and this is what you see is a real
27:32
client dressing purple and a real robot that is uh let's say managing
27:37
with the request of a person is checking in or checking out a few months after they they opened the
27:43
hotel there was a lady she was pregnant and respond to this way the child had decided to arrive a little bit earlier
27:50
than anticipated the lady went downstairs and she started talking to the robot understanding that the robot
27:55
was not programmed to deal with this specific issue um luckily you know there was a doctor
28:02
in the hotel the issue was solved but this example gave you a sense that for certain routine work is absolutely okay
28:09
to have quote machines do work but when it comes to um empathy and all the rights that then
28:16
then the robot is probably not not the right example so this is to say that anything that cannot be digitalized
28:23
you automated become it will increasingly become even more valuable
28:28
creativity imagination ethics empathy consciousness values angry you know
28:35
collaboration emotion so this is an area where i believe human resources as a
28:43
huge huge part to play how you develop these skills this behavior
28:49
in the organization knowing that the routine work and the digital transformation will impact some certain
28:56
tasks that is better than machine to to to perform you know and uh there's another very interesting
29:02
study done by cambridge institute of technology to say actually 85 percent of your success as a professional
29:10
has nothing to do with with with the core technical skills is your ability to communicate negotiate lead
29:16
and and so there is plenty of evidence that explain that developing these
29:21
skills is not about being a good guy is actually promoting development and
29:28
effective leadership in organization yeah so as the word goes totally digital
29:35
is our humanity and purpose that define who we are technology is an instrument
29:41
is a tool rather than you know the the final outcome so how can you restart
29:48
rebecca i'm gonna ask your help in a second because i'm gonna ask this question this is a
29:54
i have to confess i have a pleasure to collaborate with many organizations i i learn all the time but one of them is
30:01
ferrari so when i go to maranello i live in geneva but i go to maranello a couple times per year and my wife
30:08
looked at me like as if i'm going to the toy shop it's just an amazing organization they produce these uh
30:14
phenomenal cars now this is my favorite one is a t8
30:19
and uh i'm going to ask you a very simple question which is uh what do you think allows this car
30:25
to go up to 350 kilometers per hour which technical features allow these
30:31
cars to go to up to 350 kilometers per hour rebecca can you please read the
30:37
answer i can the first response is the brakes the brakes great oh or the driver
30:44
the engine horsepower aerodynamics
30:50
design yeah rebecca thank you
30:55
and uh you're all right because the design the aerodynamics the tires the pilot the the the technology but the
31:03
first person is is i wouldn't say the only person that is right but he made a point
31:10
are the brakes fundamentally uh water allows any car
31:16
to go to a certain speed are the breaks and uh i think uh
31:22
we tend to forget that and there is a very interesting study that was done by our business school recently they went
31:28
to 28 000 people there was like 18 months 15 months into into the pandemic
31:34
and they asked hey listen tell me how your general well-being is gone
31:40
and 85 percent of the people said actually has deteriorated and only a small percentage i mean 20 percent of
31:47
people said it's improved these people were the one they were commuting the longest
31:53
ride to go to the office so i think this is another
31:58
very important center work going forward which is how can we help organizations
32:06
to use the brakes because you can accelerate only after using your brakes
32:12
which brings us to the last item before we opening for for questions in uh in
32:17
probably 12 to 15 minutes um which leadership is that needed no
32:23
this is one model of leadership there is one person speaking and everybody else is clapping
32:29
and in my book there is a chapter called you know south korea sorry north korea
32:34
is not that far away because i saw that model of leadership even in europe many times it's not only
32:40
uh the regime in north korea this is another leadership model but we're not
32:46
gonna cover this model as well um i'm gonna ask you a question and
32:51
rebecca i'm gonna ask you once more to help me out
32:57
which is which word comes to your mind when you think about the best leader
33:02
that you've ever met and i'd like you to reflect on a person that you've been working with it could
33:08
be a professor university a teacher a family member manager in your current colleague or in a formal organization
33:16
but uh not at this iconic individuals like gandhi or jfk or
33:23
martin luther king you know so really people that you work alongside with
33:28
when you think about that individual which word comes to your mind and
33:33
rebecca i'd like you to read at least 30 words from the 300-plus participants
33:40
that are currently attending oh gosh paulo they're coming in thick and fast but empathy and inspiration
33:47
caring trust humanity um
33:53
compassion humor respect courage
33:59
so many words there's clearly a lot of people who have been really emotionally touched by what you said
34:06
today um trust and empowering vision supportive
34:11
innovation listening skills authenticity wow i like that word thank you thank you
34:19
rebecca and i i need to confess something because uh um a social experiment is something that
34:27
you don't know the outcome of it okay but i knew the outcome i knew already the outcome because uh
34:32
um even you you you already listened to me once in the past and you know that i always have this question i asked these
34:38
questions i don't know 300 times in my life probably more i asked this question to 500 ceos in
34:45
davos when i was working for the world economy forum i asked this question to students
34:51
in china in zimbabwe in in japan in brazil
34:57
to you know big audiences which are people or or leader in whatever organization and
35:04
uh it doesn't really matter who is listening everybody all always always always
35:09
respond the way you did it's about trust it's about integrity is about uh you know compassion is about
35:17
communication it's about innovation nobody ever has answered by say oh somebody is increase our sales by 20
35:25
or decrease costs by 30 percent or somebody that has a phd at harvard was
35:30
written three books to speak five languages what does it mean what does it mean that it doesn't matter
35:36
where we are it doesn't matter who we are it doesn't even matter which profession or meteor
35:42
they say here in geneva you're doing we always relate to leadership as a
35:48
human quality as a human quality so we can go next
35:54
meaning of course after having a solidity of of behavior and values you
35:59
need to deliver you need to learn something you need to deliver something so i don't want to you say oh you just need to be a good
36:06
person no you need to also to produce some results somewhere no but the starting point is not the results the
36:12
starting point is who you are so when we think about which kind of leader do we need to do
36:18
one of the mistakes that i've done in my my capacity when i was for example chief learning officer at world bank
36:24
of course i needed to develop people's skills but did we spend enough time and focus to develop people behavior
36:32
human behavior that same one that you just mentioned in the last few weeks so good leadership is about you know being
36:39
good people and as i said here you know my wife is french and and i live in geneva st warfare means
36:46
being able to do something comes after sabaretra been able to be so
36:53
b comes first do later okay so which kind of leadership his name is
36:59
needed and i created a model that hopefully can be meaningful to you with some stories and that i have to confess
37:05
is the center of my my next book the first one is do you care
37:12
do you care and there is this wonderful phrase from abraham lincoln they say listen people
37:17
will uh they don't care what you know until they know that you care
37:23
and carry it is not about being politically correct it's something more profound and i've learned
37:30
a bit about caring uh some years ago i i shared this story many times because i
37:35
learned a lot from from this individual this guy is the ronaldo or the federer of alaska he's a guy won the slate racer
37:42
in alaska of the yukon race for six consecutive years okay so when i was there
37:48
in 2014 on a holiday with my wife and daughter it was probably one of the best holidays we ever took in our life
37:54
we were in this little village in in in alaska and i met micah and uh because he was presenting
38:01
his book so i i went and listened to him and uh and then i uh he he present his book
38:08
with some of the dogs around him and uh so at the end of the presentation i we had a beer together
38:15
and i asked hey mike help me to understand how how on earth you've been able to win such a brutal
38:21
competition that is more than a thousand in 200 kilometers in january when the
38:27
average temperature can be as low as uh 45 to 50 degrees but it's never less
38:32
than 30 so is it's 30 below zero so it is brutal
38:37
and they say you know we we start with 16 dogs and uh until recently the policy was uh you need to
38:44
return at least with uh eight dogs alive and when a dog get injured i never let
38:50
them behind i take them with me and when we stop for for for for eating and they need to
38:57
eat every three hours given the given the the brutal temperatures i eat after them
39:04
i eat after them so i've learned quite a lot about leadership from this guy because he said
39:11
you never leave anybody behind and you eat after you people not before
39:17
so let me ask you one question how do you spell
39:23
care when i ask this question people say that's pretty easy c-a-r-e
39:29
now reality care is paired with time you care if you spend time
39:35
the one thing that i do as a coach when i people say yeah i care about my people i said great now please open the
39:42
agenda and tell me how much time are you going to spend in the next months how much time you have located allocated
39:49
in your next 30 days for caring what does it mean caring well spending
39:54
time with somebody maybe it's going through a nasty divorce or somebody that is has a difficult time
40:00
is the engagement the build the trust between people so caring is not just a standalone concept it's something that we could be
40:06
doing if only we spend quality time with them and you know it because if you have a
40:12
child as as i'm lucky to have one or maybe you have more than one or two they don't want gifts from you they want
40:19
time from you they want attention yeah second one is cause because it's
40:24
fundamental sense of purpose and i want to share another little story about you know my professional life i told you i
40:30
was head of human resources in some organization and one of them was the world bank and uh one department was i have to say
40:37
a little bit under fire because they were perceived to be not particularly effective was the recruitment function
40:42
okay and when they was called by by the president celeste and paulo we were not
40:48
happy with the function because it takes one year to get a person and that's that's unconceivable i think you have to
40:54
do better than that i was of course quite frankly demoralized because uh it was not fun when the boss of the boss
41:01
calls you to tell you that it's not happy with the delivery of one of the part of your responsibilities
41:07
um but i saw his point i saw his point and then a few weeks later a few weeks later
41:13
there was this horrific horrific earthquake in a hitting
41:18
so there was a meeting in the middle of the night with the president the senior leaders and the president look at me and
41:24
say paulo we need to put 40 people uh immediately in a heating and work to recruit 200 of them by maximum two
41:31
months and by the way don't forget they need to speak french so when i left the meeting some people who come here they say okay paolo they
41:38
look at me like okay paulo is done because no way they're gonna deliver 250 people in the ground on the ground
41:44
within few weeks two hours later i called the meeting uh with everybody in my team and there was
41:50
a huge team not only recruit but you know 300 people i said guys listen
41:55
we need to do that this moment we can prove that we had value this moment but we proved that we care
42:01
and guess what they did it they did it and this is the moment where i realized that
42:07
when i was putting an emphasis on process improvement people got demoralized but when i reconnected with
42:14
with the mission with a purpose the missionaries come back and the mercenaries disappeared
42:20
so to me another big element of being in human resources is to keep the purpose
42:26
alive you know what bruce princeton called the fires in your belly now
42:31
the reason why you're there connection and collaboration well we
42:36
know it we know it that from the cognitive standpoint we used to to solve problems that were
42:41
complicated and complicated problem requires fundamentally um expertise on on this domain so if
42:48
tomorrow your your tv set is rocky is is broken you you get a guy that is fixing
42:54
so you need an expert on that field but if you think about ukraine
43:00
copied climate change demographic the job markets these are not just
43:05
complicated problems these are complex and complexity require learning
43:12
adaptation connecting the dots and most importantly collaboration and this is just
43:18
a visualization of the complexity that you're dealing with this i call a transformation map
43:24
from the world economic forum which is just a brilliant way simply to say listen whatever problem you're dealing
43:30
with there are so many elements into the equation that from the quantity standpoint we need to connect and from
43:36
the human standpoint we need to collaborate so creativity is the next one
43:42
so leadership to me is care cause connection and creativity and how do we create creativity well the first one is
43:48
by having diverse team this is a soccer team just called the goal the three players
43:54
are from different three different religions and they're celebrating the goal and this is
44:00
to me is fundamentally which how you preserve the individual identity and the
44:06
prerogative people to be who they are from the political sexual religious
44:11
standpoint and simultaneously to make sure they're playing for the same game the same from
44:17
the same team and playing the same game here i want to share something quite
44:22
quite interesting because uh uh google has done uh i collaborate with google
44:29
quite quite extensively is as you can imagine it is quite an interesting organization i don't claim that i
44:36
understand fully what they're doing because it's a huge organization but sometimes ago they they really wanted to
44:42
say what makes an effective team and they connect they collected
44:48
billions of data they collected 72 different variables and they have a fundamentally figured
44:55
out what makes an effective team psychological safety
45:00
dependability structure and clarity meaning
45:06
and impact and when it comes to uh certain logical uh safety you know that
45:11
uh amy edmondson has been voted as the most influential thinker in human resources for a reason
45:17
say safety is a share believed and by a member of the team the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking
45:23
so psychological safety is a crucial element to create teams that works in organization
45:31
last is courage last is courage and uh i want to to share this story because uh her name is
45:37
ngozi and uh she used to be my my boss at the world bank many years ago uh in
45:42
my view the best leader i've ever worked in all my life i had a good fortune to work with the amazing
45:48
people this is to me is federer this is miss bruce princess this is uh surely above
45:54
everybody else i've ever worked in my life yeah so uh some times ago we were working
46:00
together and and uh she was the boss and all the managing directors were bank fundamentally number two of
46:07
the world bank among her responsibility human resources and on this capacity i reported to her and then she left she
46:13
became a minister of finance in nigeria and uh i was heartbroken when she left
46:20
because i absolutely loved working with her she's currently the head of a wto in
46:25
here in geneva and uh and you know i told her listen if you
46:31
ever come back to washington dc in your capacity as a as a minister of finance
46:36
please let me know because i like to organize a presentation of your book she wrote a book called reforming the
46:42
unreformable so she came she presented the book and we get a long story short here but
46:48
fundamentally say no when you're trying to reform the unreformable when you try to fight corruption which is not limited
46:54
only to nigeria just to be clear my country regrettably is is also very very
47:00
present um a few few bad things could happen and they attacked me they attacked my my
47:06
team my credibility i don't care i continue but i fear that eventually it's going to attack somebody that i love on
47:12
my family she was right because a few weeks later they kidnapped her mother
47:19
they clean up the mother and they asked her for the criminals to ask her for the condition of her release that she would
47:25
have left nigeria not resigned from the cabinet leave nigeria forever
47:31
she went on tv and she said i'm gonna get you and that was it i'm gonna get you
47:39
now luckily her mother luckily her mother was able to uh escape from from these
47:46
criminals uh so she's sounding safe as we speak today but a
47:52
couple of years ago i took her for for lunch uh we we we had a meeting and saying guys have been meaning to ask you
47:58
this question for many years and to say what's happened from the moment where you learned about the
48:03
kidnapping of your mother and the moment where you went on on tv and you said i'm not gonna negotiate i
48:10
bet i'm gonna get you and say no paulo that was terrible moment of my professional personal life
48:16
and all i wanted to do is to talk to to my dad i didn't want to talk to anybody i didn't even take a call from
48:23
from the president of nigeria i just wanted to be alone thinking and talk to my father
48:29
so when i was talking to him i said that what i'm supposed to do i'm lost and
48:35
and and i say well my dad told me um ghazi just remember what you stand for
48:44
remember what you stand for so to me leadership is a lot to do with remembering what you stand for
48:52
so let me close with maybe five takeaways that to me are meaningful and
48:58
then i'll go back to the question about how good are you in singing so if you the way i see i have the good
49:05
fortune to work with uh many organizations and amazing people in in so many different countries now
49:12
and uh from microsoft to make radio to pick a united nation
49:19
you you you brickstone you name it okay um so i keep on learning on a daily
49:24
basis from my clients from from the ceos from the hr directors of the head of learning development that usually might
49:30
counterpart you know and uh if you think about in my view the the
49:35
agenda which is defined in on these criterias the first one is we are shaping a transformation we're
49:42
not just managing change and when i say just that i'm not saying that it's easy but transformation is more complicated
49:48
implies gravitas and juventus we need to support people well-being
49:54
and our well-being as well self-care we need to drive digital transformation
50:00
we need to invest invest in people professional development and when i say professional development
50:06
i'm not referring only to the technical side but the human side and i think we need to transform
50:12
leadership model in a meaningful way now i want to uh go back to you on the
50:18
question how good are you in singing because one of the companies i collaborate with
50:23
is a manpower and i don't want to say that this is a better company than others just a great company
50:29
many of them that i have the fortune to work with and uh um there is a group that you call
50:35
future leaders about 180 people in europe and you know i've been working a little
50:40
bit with with this group and with manpower to do literacy development for this group so we ask these people to say how good
50:47
are you and sing it and the answer was on average 3.72 few people were very good but most of the people like myself
50:55
not good at all so the challenge we thought to say okay how can we
51:01
how can we uh make sure that these people they have a perception to be
51:07
well below average we can bring to another level we gave them one hour of
51:13
of coaching and so we became a bit of a director of an orchestra and because we've done that
51:19
during covet the orchestra was not in a in a theater hall where people were working from home
51:25
so we gave them one hour of coaching and we wanted to see if we were able to
51:32
convince people that rate themselves as 3.7 to go to a different level let's see
51:38
how it what's happened
51:59
oh
52:06
[Music]
52:12
[Music]
52:26
they say
52:33
[Music]
52:44
i know [Laughter]
52:56
[Music]
53:05
um [Music]
53:14
is
53:27
[Music]
53:35
is
53:45
[Music]
53:55
[Music] um
54:23
so thank you for listening and uh perhaps uh just to conclude i think that our role is actually to help people to
54:30
be better than they think they are so thank you happy to take out whatever
54:36
comment and uh if you think about the present for me my birthday's next month the ferrari t8 will be extremely
54:43
appreciated grazing thank you rebecca thank you evan
54:48
oh paulo that was amazing and the singing at the end there was such a reaction in the chat people were
54:55
absolutely loving it um we did slightly run over time so i'm not sure we're going to get to all of the questions but
55:03
there are some people who'd like to ask you some things about what you said this morning so um
55:09
so in particular someone asked do empathy and care affect emotional intelligence
55:14
so in a corporate world we need to take difficult decisions um one part of the mind says to take the decision without
55:21
getting overly emotionally involved how do we overcome this what are your thoughts
55:26
no listen i think uh the modality in which you deal with difficult situation is crucial okay i mean
55:34
to say i mean i'll be an end of the chat for many years and many times uh i had the
55:39
uh terrible task to tell somebody listen you got to go no
55:44
uh the way you do it is is absolutely crucial and i'm gonna share a secret
55:49
with you and maybe you're gonna hate me after i'm doing this uh uh i'm sharing this with you guys but one thing i've
55:56
done many times with my team uh remembering my team i used to let's say that rebecca you work with me okay
56:02
and i'm your boss just for the sake of example for two seconds okay go ahead when i say i'm your boss i don't mean at
56:09
all that i feel that way okay but let's say that i'm i'm calling you today and you we've done very good job or whatever
56:15
and we we like working with each other and said listen i'm sorry i'm i'm this is the last day
56:21
you've got to go and you look at me flabbergasted standing to say about how comes is it's
56:27
just just awful you know i you've done that you know you got you got promoted and you you get
56:33
confused and i say i'm sorry you're fired and uh i'll see you tomorrow morning for details and just
56:39
please don't do anything stupid in the next few hours but i see you tomorrow clock at nine o'clock in the morning
56:44
i've done this many times fundamentally with almost everybody in my team so the day after people came are usually
56:51
very upset very upset very upset with me almost to the point of being violent and
56:56
i said okay before we start talking i'd like you to hear two things
57:02
uh the first one i was joking the second one how did you make you feel being
57:07
fired because you're gonna do this to other people in the future okay
57:13
so think the way you felt tomorrow you have somebody else and this
57:20
time it's not going to be a joke so people
57:26
wow so empathy is not a bullet point in a job description
57:31
is understanding the suffering that people have to go through and and so i can give a great article on our business
57:38
review to about empathy let me say yeah that's we heard that before we learned from daniel
57:44
blah blah blah no no you have to feel the pain you have to feel you know the difficulty of some people
57:50
struggling no evidence was referring to the world in ukraine which is uh in the six million refugees right now but let's
57:56
not forget the nine million refugees from syria as well no so empathy is a quintessential
58:03
modality to be effective human resources and one of the most uh crucial moment is when you have bloody
58:10
difficult conversations and the ultimate one when we cut the the umbilical cord to say you've got to go
58:16
you need to understand the suffering so what i've done was cruel yes but it
58:22
really worked because people when they approach firing they approach it with a completely different modality and
58:28
mindset than just you know do some paperwork and get a person out of the door
58:34
that's really powerful i'm quite glad you didn't put me in that scenario
58:40
but actually that leads really nicely on to another question and that's what will be the future of hr if ai takes over
58:47
because we're going to lose that empathy we're going to lose that human connection how would you reflect on that
58:52
no i don't think we do actually i was trying maybe maybe i was unable to to convey the opposite which is uh um you
58:58
know the uh to go back to one example for the ibm of course the facial recognition
59:05
slot people into say this is great for us this is this person is it would be better for marketing or for procurement
59:11
or for human resources but then the second round is actually a conversation
59:17
of values like it's a conversation about are your values compatible with around the organizations and that's
59:24
fundamentally the topic of my or my book now so i think if i may say so we need to develop a
59:32
clear understanding of technological transformation the digital the artificial intelligence and
59:37
simultaneously to continue to use what make us human
59:43
i hope that answers then clarifies the point then fill for whoever made that really interesting question um
59:49
and just leading on from that really um how can we put more emphasis on the soft
59:54
skills when we're recruiting senior leaders i mean hr we are doing the recruiting yet we're really focusing on
1:00:00
on the hard skills and the education how do we do that well i've done this mistake many times
1:00:07
because you know you go to the world bank you know everybody has a phd an impressive list of publications so
1:00:12
chapral i mean from the technical standpoint these people are wonderful but as we've learned from the question i ask you leadership is not defined by the
1:00:19
fact that i wrote a book or speak another language is they find that do i trust that individual would i go to work
1:00:25
with them would i does this person has integrity uh or not you know so i think it is important um
1:00:33
for us to to to look at this element and the one element is maybe it's very simple but in an interview if a person
1:00:39
say i i i mean usually you're recruiting a narcissist
1:00:45
okay but if a person is actually acknowledging the struggle uh the vulnerability the authenticity and also
1:00:52
the fact that whatever you're doing as bruce presley would say you need a band you need a band you cannot play alone
1:00:58
okay and so even in the language you you you understand if a person is already
1:01:04
let's say a channeled into working is a team player in which he wants to grow
1:01:09
people or or not i mean the example of this song of men of manpower
1:01:14
is is we went to the board and we showed the board of manpower this video and to say you know that's your job guys you
1:01:21
know people they think that well i'm okay i'm not so great you know they go from three to eight
1:01:26
then we ask them how would you rate this thing the song and the average was eight point two eight point four and people
1:01:32
said can you see you improve fifty percent with one hour coaching and they say leaders that's your job your job is
1:01:38
not to be better than your people but to help your people to be better that's a completely different sport and when you
1:01:44
understand that you become a leader if you're not you're just a technical contributor
1:01:50
i guess that is an interesting concept because that's what i would look for in a leader if i was moving forward but i'm not sure it's
1:01:56
what we would necessarily always automatically go for when we're recruiting um but then is there a
1:02:02
dilemma between sort of really demonstrating that empathy but sort of keeping that professional distance at
1:02:08
work particularly if you're in an hr role do you think that's a problem or is it something we can overcome no this is listen this is a it is a very
1:02:15
good question which is uh you know it doesn't mean that we have to become friends not at all not at all it's not
1:02:22
about uh spending vacation with uh with your team but being approachable humble and again
1:02:29
demonstrating the empathy that you need to have one of the things that i always ask people to say do you know the name
1:02:35
of you ceo and people say yeah his name is roger or jennifer whatever it is okay and do know the name of the person who's
1:02:41
doing the cleaning of the office and nobody knows it okay so empathy to me is uh
1:02:47
start by acknowledging people presence and people are people you can be the ceo it could be the
1:02:53
cleaning person that is coming i ate in the evening to clean your office you need to engage with these guys no
1:02:59
and um and there are a couple stories in my book which is funny about that but to me you start by
1:03:06
acknowledging that you're not uh you know a financial analyst in latin america department you're rebecca you're
1:03:12
paolo you're jennifer and i know something about you and i can relate to you also because as we've learned people
1:03:18
motivated by different different elements i mean a single mother with four kids there's probably more need of
1:03:24
flexibility than a single guy age 29 that is focused on his career how
1:03:29
do you understand them is important it's not about becoming friends it's about understanding what
1:03:36
makes them trick thicker the motivational part and provide them the space
1:03:41
to perform in a psychological safety environment is what we've learned from we study at google
1:03:49
and you just talked about the context being different for different people someone's made a comment here leadership itself does not change but the context
1:03:56
does so why does hr always launch new concepts only to find that we should go back to the essence of the profession
1:04:04
well that's a good question because i think you know we keep on talking about stuff that we need to do but perhaps uh maybe the next presentation i
1:04:11
was to give a presentation about stuff that we should not be doing at all and uh you know
1:04:17
give an example because i i really focus on that one performance management rating people just you know it's like
1:04:23
it's like a disaster every single time because with fundamentally you have to say to 80 percent of the people your average this is terrible this is that
1:04:30
when you go to your child and you say my name the child my my daughter name is sadiq and says said okay you know what i
1:04:36
believe you're average look at her face okay and it doesn't work this is not to say
1:04:41
that everybody is a genius but to say hey listen perhaps coaching can help on this one to say listen you're very good
1:04:47
in a b and c how can i help you in improving some of the prep you're struggling or how can i make sure that
1:04:53
you can become even better in what you're doing no and here's the difference between a
1:05:00
passion talent and strengths passion is something that you're passionate about let's say and you're passionate about i don't know playing guitar okay
1:05:06
talent is something that people recognize that you're you're you're very good but strength is a talent multiplied by
1:05:14
sweat i mean the effort that you've put in develop that talent no and i quoted the story which i always found a very
1:05:20
interesting i love tennis and uh there was an italian player the one the usa opened ten years ago called flag panetta
1:05:27
that she was a seeds number 26 so she was clearly not the favorite on that tournament but she won against another
1:05:33
italian and then the last shot was an amazing shot and she won and an italian journalist
1:05:39
went to her with the microphone and said flower flavia you are the champion they say well what does this rock of luck uh
1:05:45
this shot and she said and i'm gonna say a bad word in a second so please forgive me he took the journalist this way and
1:05:52
she said a tough luck a tough shot a i've been working 23 years for make it sure
1:05:58
yes that that phrase to me was beautiful because basically say no no there are no
1:06:04
tough shots there are 20 years of training in order for me to get that so
1:06:09
one other thing that i'm trying to convey to say once you have you discover you your gift which is your
1:06:14
talent uh make sure that you apply this talent with grit and determination because then
1:06:20
it's not a lucky shot is the way you perform under pressure and the phrase that was very colorful by
1:06:26
this italian player um i showed a few times but is is so so true to say listen
1:06:33
i discovered that i was talented in tennis i played 23 years professionally and i'm today winning the usa open
1:06:40
because of that reason please don't tell me it's luck
1:06:46
great comment um going off on a slightly different tangent i'm aware we've only got a
1:06:51
couple more minutes of questions but there are two that are really similar around um
1:06:57
industries that are struggling for for individuals because there's a lack of talent or there's a lot of qualified
1:07:04
workers um and and how can can we help them both at a sort of a company level but also at
1:07:10
a country level but listen as i mentioned i i work with them
1:07:16
with the main organization one of them which is mentioned once is manpower manpower has done a very interesting
1:07:22
study by asking about 40 000 people worldwide what do you want and what is
1:07:28
called what workers want okay and uh and uh basically they say three
1:07:34
things okay one leadership purpose and flexibility okay that doesn't mean that you can pay
1:07:40
them 200 euros per month but it's interesting they say listen i want to go in a place where leadership
1:07:46
has integrity and values and i trust them two i want to be in a place where whatever i do has a purpose for me other
1:07:54
than just my job description and three please let me have flexibility in whatever i do don't force me to be nine
1:08:01
nine to five nine to five monday to friday because i can maybe work in canada one on saturday but on wise they
1:08:06
have to take my kids to tennis and i don't know gym or whatever it is no and and so
1:08:12
some organization and sector are struggling and they think that a problem can be solved by putting an extra little
1:08:17
bit of money a given example when ryanair last week has decided to give a thousand pounds bonus
1:08:24
to people if they would have stayed there was the day in which they had the highest number of resignation
1:08:30
okay because the media say you know what rebecca i know you're unhappy i know you don't see your kids i know you're tired
1:08:36
like this but i'll give a thousand euros shut up and now people say you know what that's not you're gonna keep me here you
1:08:41
know you know what and this is an insight that's a good buy and office and
1:08:46
goodbye now so what i'm trying to say that people are not for sale we are not for sale
1:08:53
we need purpose we need good leadership we need values we need a safe space where we can operate we need to know
1:08:58
that we're growing you know what daniel pink call it as a master if you provide that
1:09:04
then people will come if you don't and you think you can solve that problem by putting thousand even 10 000 on the
1:09:11
table you're gonna get maybe some mercenaries but you're gonna lose your soul so don't go there
1:09:17
you exactly summed up my working experience i'm delighted to say that i have all of those three things in my
1:09:23
role which is why i so love doing the job that i'm doing here today and on that note unfortunately we're out
1:09:29
of time for questions it's been my absolute pleasure to be chatting with you this morning paulo and thank you for
1:09:35
joining us on international hr day fantasy honor to be invited that's again thanks
1:09:41
so much keep in touch oh very much so um and on that note i would like to introduce my colleague and
1:09:48
friend berna ostinas berna is a board member of both the world federation of people management
1:09:54
associations and the european association for people management she is the chair of the events committee and
1:10:00
the chief human resources officer of an international energy company berna happy
1:10:05
international hr day and the virtual floor is yours
1:10:11
thank you very much rebecca uh wow paolo
1:10:16
thank you thank you i am i am so inspired and thanks for
1:10:22
this mind-blowing presentation and um thank you to apm secretaries to
1:10:29
putting their heart and soul into this celebration and providing this opportunity to us and thank you to evan
1:10:35
for the lovely opening session and thank you to you all uh for being
1:10:41
here with all these curious minds before you go i'm gonna ask a promise
1:10:48
from you but bear with me for two seconds so i'll give you my reasons for asking
1:10:55
while i was listening to paulo one more time it hit me that the world
1:11:01
is evolving so is hi as hr professionals we face this
1:11:08
with this tremendous expectations in the five cities era
1:11:13
espalier said in chaos crisis complexity confusion and constant change
1:11:22
organizations expect hr professionals to perform to transform lead and change too
1:11:31
we are the professionals who deeply care about the business organization and the employees we serve
1:11:38
on the other hand beyond the leaders and many times let's face it the buffers and
1:11:45
cushions for employees and the organizations but we also want to perform transform
1:11:52
and lead the change thinking about it i stopped for a second
1:11:58
and a question popped in my head by another music legend not bruce this
1:12:04
time but another legend michael jackson asked
1:12:10
once what about us so i'd like to join him
1:12:16
asking what about us what about us hr people
1:12:22
so we look after the people we expect to transform the most in hr we tend to focus on more the other
1:12:30
people's needs and less on ourselves so on our day
1:12:36
at the closing i'd like you to invite you hr people to think about hr people
1:12:43
too so today alongside all the smart things that you do for the business itself
1:12:51
let's promise to stay committed to look after to yourself and your teams
1:12:59
have empathy and compassion towards yourself and your people
1:13:05
think about well-being watch and protect hr from being
1:13:10
emotionally worn out and surround yourself and your team with
1:13:16
the right networks of support and learning like eff
1:13:22
well let's remember what evan said at the beginning this is a day to celebrate
1:13:29
on what we are how we contribute and what we believe in
1:13:35
make the most out of it check the presentation from our website
1:13:41
by the end of the day it's going to be available so happy international hr day
1:13:46
to all thank you for being here
English (auto-generated)
Tackling barriers to work today whilst creating inclusive workplaces of tomorrow.
Discover our practice guidance and recommendations to tackle bullying and harassment in the workplace.
Watch our webinar for an outline of the changes, guidance and advice from our panel of experts
Explore how you can normalise conversations about menstruation and menstrual health in the workplace to better support women at work
Explore how enabling employee voice can help create a safer and more inclusive working environment
Explore how to create a menopause friendly work environment and empower employees to continue to work and thrive whilst experiencing menopause transition