Leading through crisis
Watch our webinar on leading through crisis with Rupert McNeil, UK Government Chief People Officer, in conversation with Peter Cheese, CEO, CIPD
Watch our webinar on leading through crisis with Rupert McNeil, UK Government Chief People Officer, in conversation with Peter Cheese, CEO, CIPD
Listen to the panelists discuss how we can use the coronavirus crisis as a catalyst to move forward into a more positive, healthy and inclusive working world.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Katie Jacobs, Senior Stakeholder Lead, CIPD
hi everyone gonna get started I hope everyone is well this afternoon or if
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you're watching this on demand whenever you happened to be watching it I hope you're well my name is Katie Jacobs I work with HR
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leaders at the CI PD and I've been hosting our coronavirus webinar series and we've got a special bonus session
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this afternoon where we're going to be talking to two really influential HR leaders about the bigger picture of the
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coronavirus crisis what does it mean for how we're going to work in future how we're gonna think about work and how the
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people profession itself will operate and be seen within organizations and more widely we're also going to talk
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about the impact of this crisis on one of the UK's biggest employers for civil service we're going to look at how HR
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has stepped up to deliver organizational leadership at this really challenging time the CIPD in civil service HR work
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closely in partnership to up skilled support and professionalize government based HR practitioners so joining me and
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all of you this afternoon I'm delighted that we've got recoupment Neal and Peter cheese thanks guys
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I'll just do a quick introduction as chief people officer for the UK government Rupert has one of the biggest
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HR jobs in the country responsible for the delivery of people strategy across the civil service he provides leadership
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on the full range of people issues so that includes things like talent capability inclusion leadership culture
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and he's also director general the government shared services and I'm sure that you all know our CIPD CEO Peter
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cheese Peter is a highly respected writer and thinker on subjects like the development of HR and the people
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profession the future of work and issues of leadership culture organization people and skills and obviously he's
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been thinking a lot about the impact that coronavirus is having on the profession and the world of work more
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widely so thanks both for coming along this afternoon and before we get into what I'm sure is gonna be a really
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really fascinating conversation I'm just gonna do the very quick housekeeping notes so first things first the session
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is being recorded it will be available on demand and you'll find it on the webinar section of the CIPD website and you can
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also access all our previous webinars there and sign up for future sessions secondly if you want to submit questions
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and we'd really love to make this session interactive um can I ask you to use the Q&A box instead of the chat box
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feel free to chat to each other in the chat box if you want to ask any specific questions it will be much easier for me
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to pick them up by Q&A um we're gonna run in a session informally so that
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means there aren't any slides do submit your questions at any time you want and I'll pick them up and I'll try and feed
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them in at an appropriate point and finally a quick reminder that the CI PD is continually updating our resources to
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support the people profession and that you can find everything on our coronavirus hub and we're updating it every day because things keep changing
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every day so we're trying our best to be agile and fast and support you all because we know you're working
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incredibly hard to support your people in your organization's so let's get started
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Rupert I'm gonna ask you first could you just explain a little bit of the context but your role and kind of the people
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function within civil service sure thanks Katie and thanks for having me so
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just to explain a bit about the silh service first of all and then how HR
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supports the civil service as one of its functions so the civil service is really
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I think best seen as a sector or a sub sector of the UK public service it's
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made up of multiple organizations let's say about 40 large employers of various
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sizes some of them enormous organizations like DWP and HMRC's and the largest in the UK some much smaller
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of a few hundred or fewer people so we've really got in a sense a microcosm
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of all the different work contexts that we have in the UK economy whether it's
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you know somewhat a retail environment if you think about job centers call
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centres offices labs and workshops factories etc across that whole spectrum
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now that represents around three hundred and forty-five thousand full-time staff
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and around 102 thousand part-time staff and spread out over the over cut over
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the country the the way the way the
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civil service works as a sector is that it's pretty federal so I'm one of a
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number of functional leaders responsible for if you imagine there's a one axis is
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the department the people are employed by and then people also have a professional functional identity that
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sits alongside that now when it comes to what we've experienced with Co bid we
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were actually I don't quite use a word fortunate but we had some some level of
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rehearsal for this because we've been preparing for about three years for various configurations of the UK leaving
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the European Union some of those in a no deal scenario and that had really helped
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all the functions but particular HR think about how to move people around government swiftly and so it allowed us
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really very quickly to put resources into the department Health and Social Care DHS C and then to move people for
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example to deal with some of the big efforts that have been underway whether it's supporting Universal Credit
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benefits through DWP or moving or
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setting up the furlough scheme at about um I'll see two big things have happened during this period as well as there in a
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sense there's a there's a health and social care front decoded and there's a economic front - coded and both need to
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be supported and under-resourced and we've learnt a lot about ourselves
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through that process we already had a sense of thinking about different departments and concepts of operations
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to use a term the military use can you work call centers on a distributed basis
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for people remote working do you need to get people in to meet people physically all of those things and I think what we
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found is we've actually been really pleased to see that in a sense in six
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weeks we've compressed what might have taken about six plus years to do in terms of remote working and the cultural
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change so and this might be interesting benchmark for people to think about their own organizations but I'm still
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that's done by this percentage seventy six point four percent of the civil service workforce is working from home
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and sixteen point two percent are still
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working in their frontline roles and there's a small number we divided up the workforce into those who could start
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working from home immediately or very quickly that's that 76.4% now and then
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there are some people who we recognized just had to be in there in their posts
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and we need to make sure that was done the best way and then there are people to other categories people who didn't
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have the equipment so we need to get that to them quickly and that was a quite a logistical exercise which we
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learned a lot about and it's also taught us a lot about what we call interoperability the need there's more
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that we need to be able to do to be able to move people and work around the government of state between different
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call centers etc and then there was a category of people who couldn't work from home because they were in flat shares or they were well-being issues
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other things and we need to make sure that they were accommodated as well so the civil service has been working
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through all this time as many employers have and we've been sort of learning a lot through that there's been a lot of
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join up between the functions between the technology function the security function as well as HR and the estates
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and that's actually a bit of a theme which may we could pick up in our conversation Peter later which is you
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know this is really about the the integration which I know you now have talked about before of the enabling
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activities whether it's where you're located in the workplace the technology the operations how you want to serve the
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customer and that's just been a very giving us very rich insights about this
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now the other characteristic about this for us is that and you know although we
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can talk in in the generality that the lived experience for colleagues can be
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very very different and and one of my favorite conversations about this was
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with a colleague who said you know if you think about it I mean I think myers-briggs is interesting as a bit of
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there's a cartoon level quite helpful metaphor you know if you're an eye you
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know in a world which is dominated by extrovert right-handed males disgust
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then the this static were interesting this is actually perhaps a bit more of
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an environment that introverts feel happier in I just get that as an examples that was a that was a point that was made to me by one of my
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colleagues and I think that's interesting as we look at the technology as we look at the way to some extent
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interacting like this is is actually quite leveling its leveling and quite
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non hierarchical I think compared to some other modes but it raises other issues are people actually being heard
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how we doing how we doing that so people know that with the CIPD we've been very
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committed to acyl inclusion agenda and we've got some material which will be releasing Katie for other people to use
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and we've called a little bit of inclusion first but we've produced on that is on remote working and how to
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lead with a team that's distributed because it does require different skills
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and like everything that we deal with it requires it requires practice we've been
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very pleased to see from the pulse surveys we've done that people feel broadly supported by their line managers
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by their teams and I think that's a really interesting question for me about how this has made things both help
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people to share and be more authentic maybe you know you see the rooms in which we live and also to some extent
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more intimate and I think that's fascinating are we actually going to go back to physical sort of face-to-face
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presence physical presence and find that you know the two meter distancing that
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will be in place and other things is actually going to feel a bit less
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intimate and friendly than the environments that when in this type of in this type of call
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we've we've actually had we're now on after several weeks we're now on version 9 of our guidance
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for remote working been working very closely with our trade union partners
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with departments with all of the other functions to produce that we meet as an HR function twice a week three times a
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week and we have called all the reps entities from all departments that's been very helpful for us and now we're
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moving into the guidance on getting back into back into the workplace and what
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that means and again people are going to be going back into many different contexts and most people actually will
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probably for time being continue to work so really fascinating time for us and
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just to finish Katie on the broader context and maybe segue into our conversation there's a a sense for me
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that for government in the period between 2010 and 2020 we've had sort of
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three phases a phase where we set up a functions between 2010 and 2015 a period
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when they were being embedded between 2015 and 2020 and and that period was
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dramatically accelerated by all the work that be done around here exit and now we
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are in the next phase which is accelerated by what we're learning through the coded experience and how we
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respond to this new way of working now what's interesting is that when we were
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talking about what we would need to focus on in the next phase of civil service workforce thinking it was around
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greater collaboration smarter use of technology looking at a workforce that
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was much more distributed around the UK at all levels senior and junior levels and lower behold that's you know
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technology and location and that's what's being accelerated at this time so
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it's it's very exciting we're really happy to share with people and a great
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segue into this important conversation about what happens next thank you so much I really like the
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point that I'm hearing a lot in my conversation with HR leaders that it's kind of sped up digit
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transformation and put it on steroids and you did 10 years worth and stuff in a few weeks and it was exhausting and it
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involved so much kind of inter silo collaboration between kind of IT and
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facilities and HR but it's um we could really hold on to it and it could make a really really profound difference in the
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way we work in future and Peter could you offer some opening kind of reflections on how this has been for the
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profession mmm I'd like over the last I'm losing track of time and it's all nothing into ten weeks yeah it all sort
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of blares into each other days and we extend a bit and I thank you a lots of fabulous of observations and reflections
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and many many common themes of course that we're hearing across all kinds and shapes of organizations and yeah but
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what would consist me hearing is that HR itself is very much at the center of the
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organizational response and HR leaders saying an HR people at all levels saying they've literally never worked harder
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and there was an interesting article in The Economist a couple of weeks ago that compared the global financial crisis to
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this crisis and so the global financial crisis shown a massive spotlight on the CFO if you will and this one has shown a
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map since Pollock and the CHR and I think it's because this crisis is fundamentally a crisis a human crisis
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and and it's something that therefore has made us all reflect whether business
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leaders and everybody else I think so much more on what I even think of as humanity at work and people at work and
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important to people and all the points you made wee bit about how this has encouraged us to connect in different
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ways not least because we're staring into each other's living rooms and things like that and how much more we've
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had to think about our connection our support our people how much more mental health has become a very very central
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agenda and well being a very central agenda so that's something which i think is really positive and encouraging we
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are hearing very consistently from HR people and business leaders that this is
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putting people front and center the business agenda and all the way up into ideas like purpose and meaning and and
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even if we may get on to it sort of bigger ideas of corporate governance and things of that nature so those are those
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are the encouraging things and as you said the obvious dimensions that are emerging are but I think I was the shift of
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paradigms of work which we have had for a hundred years or more almost since the
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Industrial Revolution the idea of work being something you broadly do 9:00 to 5:00 Monday to Friday you go to work you
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work and you come back and it's been incredibly hard to break those paradigms and as we've recent years taught more
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and more about technology and enabling different ways of working remote working trying to encourage our time working and
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so which is so important for several reasons one you touched on which is inclusion because the more you do those things the more you create inclusion and
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opportunity for people all walks of life to participate and work um but it's also
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vital to us stress in our mental well-being because again if you look at the paradigms of work with all the
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technology we found in recent years it it has not seemed to have either improved the challenges of presenteeism
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or stress at work and indeed both of those have been steadily climbing and we've seen all the evidence for that and
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so what really strikes me about this and does that give your thought about the
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crisis forming a catalyst and accelerating change in organizations as I think we're going to see that much
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more broad across the whole economy because the reality of semi of these things the presenteeism of engagement
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the diversity of inclusion of flexible working things of that nature we have talked about those for a long time and
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yet if you actually look at the day to the the amount that the needle has moved on many of those themes over the last
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five or ten years has been far too little and now here we are in this situation none of we couldn't have
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addicted it I mean we may talk about the extent which was a white versus a Black Swan but but nonetheless it's called so
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much of us by surprise we've had to adapt very quickly and we've learned a great deal from it already and it seems
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inconceivable to me that we would get back to some of the things that have we've worked in the past and there even
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if we take that example of yours and whose incredible statistic seventy four percent of the public's active working
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from home I think across the economy close on 60 percent and it's we need to
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learn from this and say these are our different ways of working which could be very very good for people I don't think
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it's any evidence that productivity is dropped of course it hasn't sunset Constance's but those role paradigms as
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well old beliefs that people from working from home weren't really working from home they were shirking from home
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they weren't really productive and and yet I can I'm sure you find it I certainly find it I think I'm more
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productive arguably nothing I ever was before not least of which because we can jump from meeting like this to the next
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meeting we don't have to travel and all the sudden thing hmm so there are lots of other dynamics at play at this point
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in time but you know I'm a glass-half-full kind of person I think and and to go back to old adages like I
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think Winston Churchill said it didn't you said don't let a good crisis go to waste and I think this is the sort of
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opportunity that we can see for our profession for organizations everywhere most important for people right across
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all spectrums of society and across the economy and I think we've got to help lead for those kind of positive outcomes
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as well thank you Peter and I'm gonna go actually straight on to a question that's coming because it picks up really
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well on so many of you were talking about so somebody's asked about do you believe we've passed into a new world
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where they'll be genuine 5x ability for people about where and how and even when
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they work and I know there's been a lot of conversations going on about will we be going back to normal obviously not in
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the short term but how do we kind of hold on to a lot of the more positive aspects of flexibility and Ruppert have
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you got any reflections and perhaps any practical pointers and what you're doing to hold on to some of those yeah it's it's no but thanks Kate it's a great
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it's a great question so the phrase which so it's entering the way new
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phases and eras produce phrases that captures concepts you weren't thinking
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about for so interoperability is one that we talked about it's not icky snappy but it gets the sense of
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everything need to work in in a sort of integrated way but a catchy phrase is
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one that's been used in the conversations that we've been having at
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the senior level of the soul service and the Director General's thinking of actually about civil service transformation and it's I would say
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there is a strong consensus that we don't want to have a snap back so that's
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what we're guarding against how do we you know we know we know the kurt lewin you know you sort of you unfreeze change
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and refreeze and we just need to make sure it does not snap back and I'm
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actually real like Peter I'm a golf's awful person I don't think it will or can snap back partly because we're going
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to need to be very vigilant about what happens when when we move into the next phase you know which of the four red in
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a state so we're going to be in you know we need to think about that and I think about other other changes that have
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happened you know I don't know whether it's too crude a parallel to make but
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you know the you know the world changed a lot after 9/11 with we thought about security in a different way we thought
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about security a different way during the 70s and 80s with domestic terrorism
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then and it's that type of thing which I think drives Drive drives this response
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so I think it will I think we have we just we can't afford for it not for it
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not to stick actually and and that then raises some interesting questions about how do you how do you make sure that
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happens well clearly what leaders do is hugely important I think it's also
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important to to recognize that people will have just very different
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experiences and we should try and so so maybe it also moves towards the individualization of the employee
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experience which impede or not talked about before but you know the mass customization if you like of the
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employee offer how do you how do you make how do you allow people to have to work and and live the way they want to
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in in this little service we yeah that's one of our USPS that we can do and we're
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very very keen on doing that personal observation about it is ironically I
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think I'm like Peter I'm probably more productive because of the lack of downtime I'm actually much more
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disciplined about my hours and when I work and when I work at the weekend and
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other things I'm finding that it's helpful to be more compartmentalize than
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perhaps I was previously and the sort of self-generated presenteeism
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I'm just Lisa pressing it personally I
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really do i redo to the the fact that you you've been given permission by the
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prime minister to go out and have one hours exercise and now more is you know you you make use of it normally went
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really long walks and now I'm getting a day and Peter in terms of kind of
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capturing that not more flexible way of approaching work how can we ensure that we don't have snap back will be rather
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kind of bounce forward I guess yeah I love these expressions snap back is one pivots another and are you still on mute
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is probably not yeah it's a really important point I think first and
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foremost it's about what we said before if we really understand what we've learned from this and we made that into
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our thinking about our operating models like cultures and everything else we would absolutely understand that they're
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keeping these more flexible ways of working it's absolutely inherent to that I'm sure you've done this ripping across
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civil servants as well we've been asking many questions about organisation about how do they feel about this but what
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would they want to do and something like 60% class say actually they very happy
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when of course you've got those segments as you describe who find this very hard for all sorts of reasons we have to
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acknowledge those people as well but the majority most cases say you know
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what yes this is working pretty well which is not to say you know we saw an announced and early from Twitter so and there so I'm gonna make it a permanent
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thing of working from and I think the answer is that it's a blender you give people Choice and that's the absolute
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essence that you give people Choice so that idea as you said with mass customization and which is after all
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what you know the younger generations are coming up in the world and expecting anyway in all sorts of things to have
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they interact so so thinking it's keeping true to those sorts of ideas and recognizing the value of choice and how
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it helps people to be productive because it supporting well-being it's supporting inclusion and well there's other ideas
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but I think the danger signs also there I mean we know that you have this is a
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steady encouragement of returning to workplaces it's going to test because there many businesses are finding extremely
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hard they need people at work or in the workplaces to operate at all so they're going to be putting pressure on their
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people to come back and whilst we can talk in the context of organizations like public sector which is
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predominantly and very people driven it it's a knowledge-based economy and so
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forth obviously in instead of things like manufacturing or hospitality services we need people aware that's
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where the challenge is going to be greater and it's not you know I think the real innovation will come when we
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even think of environments like that where we can shift and flex working patterns so it may be still going to be
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there but you can flex your working pans much more and we don't have to be so much in these rigid paradigms of work
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but that's what I think the test will come and of course we as we've been talking us a lot over the last several
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days with with communities about you know the programs of returning to work workplaces and the guidances we have to
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put in place and then the great worry so but what's all the legal support for this well of course one of the first
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questions that people ask all the time is can I force in quotes or can I be
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forced to go back to work and the answer's no you can't but it doesn't mean to say there won't be a lot of
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tensions between organizations and leaders who are driven by the need for their business to keep going and
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kneading play people aware but as I think as we're both agreeing and as we've always taught I mean that yeah I
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did keeping true to these principles and what we've learned from that and the humanity at work and why these things
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are beneficial I think has to be our guiding light and I think that brings us really nicely onto a question that's
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come in saying that as well as seizing the opportunities and the positives of how we've adapted to ways of working and
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there are some I think inequality risks have been identified and I think what
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you were just touching on preaching about difference between who can work from home and who can't and do I review
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of any thoughts on how we can mitigate those ribbit well we've been having very
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very good conversations useful conversations with our staff networks about this and
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I think this is one of the really big issues for us nationally as we come out
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of this you know what does it mean for ya particular demographics what does it
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mean for people who are over 70 what does it mean for people from some groups who might have been affected more more
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dramatically and including people doing certain types of job so it's a we're very alert when I come back to it saying
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it's the my sort of health warning on everything I put out on this in in my
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internal conversations with still the civil service leadership is but individual experiences vary widely and
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and that's I think that that's that's the key back back to what Peters been saying about about individualized
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individualization and you know we're gonna have to look at that stuff really really carefully and will it actually be
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you know will it actually act as a catalyst is another glass half-full point to ask about those issues in in
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other in other contexts not just in the context of kovat and recognize the needs
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of those those groups one thing I did want to say Peter is that a few things
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that have happened that I think of really interesting in the public sector which are interesting from a sort of
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policy perspective one is what's what's happened on homelessness and how that's
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been looked at differently and the fact
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that GP appointments are being done virtually that large chunks of education are being delivered virtually these are
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really again you know these are things that would take decades to look at in a different context and are throwing open
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an up all sorts of interesting questions about what we do when we're out of this
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particular stage of the response but you know great great question it is a really
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really important question and as I thought your communities of D&I leads I
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thought one of the big civil service communities you know recently about this and there is this genuine concern
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because if we took an example like returning to a place of work and
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recognising that yeah but that could be if we're not we don't look at it to an inclusion lens we might I mean obviously
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example might be well we'll take people it's easiest to return so for example people with mobility issues or whatever
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order to bring back so I would it be quite easy to sort of forget them but but there's also some other very maybe
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I'll give you slightly more subtle ones and less sort of visible perhaps of the normal lenses that II and I like this
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debate that's emerging about well of course many people who have who need to work in a workplace could not so easily
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work from home so your middle managers your white-collar staff to use your vernacular much more likely to work from
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home then your so-called blue collar style so so how do you make that affair how do you balance it and as I said
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before I think in any workplace in any circumstance you can still find ways to provide flexibility and we just need to
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be a bit more creative and inventive so I think the the truth on the DNI one is yes I think there is a danger it begins
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to get a bit lost and all the debate about you know just logistics and practicalities of returns to work basis
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or whatever and so the most important thing I think of all of the in that regard is that we keep that lens on and
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we as HR professionals to keep that lens I think we've done a lot in recent years to understand the diversity of our
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communities and we must keep doing that now so that whenever we look at any shifts in working patterns and the like
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we are applying that DNI lens to it to be sure that were being fair and and as
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usually drooper to obviously the other way is we just keep this open communication open channels we're
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sharing it when learning from our people all those other things which we know anyway good practice and in this context
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become ever more important thank you and we put a couple of specific ones about
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civil service HR so I'm gonna put them back together last about do you think
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this will generate a rethink on what needs to be face to face based HR service within the civil service and
30:51
somebody else has asked what would HR in the civil service need to do differently to ensure we move forward from this
30:56
rather than snapping back yes so two very good questions so I think the first
31:02
the first thing is that the approach that I'm taking and putting
31:08
out as the assumption is that there is actually no HR process that which HR
31:15
professionals you know three and a thousand other civil service do that cannot be done virtually all remotely
31:23
and that should be the default and that
31:28
we've had a bit here we put that in place now I take the photogate example we have
31:33
accelerated development programs and we have some particular so they develop programs for some particular
31:39
demographics protected groups and most
31:44
people were sort of fine to go with that some people were a bit reluctant but I think when people had experienced it
31:50
they actually were very confident in us doing it that way so that's the that's the default that doesn't mean that there
31:56
won't ever be residential training for example or you won't have to have face-to-face interactions but you know I
32:04
did my first big you know two days of interviews for a post an HR director
32:11
summer in government and that was done you know completely online through zoom
32:16
and was was fine so that's why I think that said generally this is the future
32:23
for that and I suspect other functions will find the same will find the same thing the
32:31
what do we need to do to make sure we avoid the snapback what we need to keep
32:36
doing that ourselves and I think we need to be in a sense surfacing all the
32:41
issues that we've been talking about on this call so that leaders and others understand why we mustn't snap back and
32:49
just keep communicating I like Peter
32:54
your analogy with the you know 2008 at the CFO's time and this being the the a
33:02
general functions time you know I think what's come out to me not just in the civil service but looking across all of
33:08
the UK's HR community and actually talking to counterparts in the Republic
33:14
of Ireland and other places as well you know there is a professional body of knowledge in capability
33:20
associated with HR which is being leveraged now the return on that
33:26
investment is happening now and we just need to keep need to keep doing it Peter
33:35
somebody's asked as a how would you advise an HR professional to encourage
33:40
leaders to allow working from home to continue so to kind of have a move forward how can we influence hmm yeah I
33:49
love that word influence because a lot of what we have to do is influence and indeed it's one of those skill sets that
33:55
we put at the heart of the professional sort of skills things our ability to influence I think you know the reality
34:01
is as we recognize there is a spectrum of people there there are business leaders who totally get this understand
34:07
why it's important all the rest but there are the other end of the spectrum the doubters and the cynics and we know
34:12
they exist as well I think you know the first thing is as much evidence as possible so you do these surveys if you
34:18
wear false and you ask them how do you like working from home do you feel more productive is it you better connected or
34:24
whatever all those sorts of questions then you use that as part of your evidential base to support the argument with the you know perhaps the most
34:31
skeptical the business leaders that thinks that we need to move back or you said Rupert a snapback um but I do think
34:39
as I said at the very heart of this debate now is about this whole notion of
34:44
people and well-being and I have long been an advocate of the view but one of the most important outcomes for any
34:50
business and indeed society more broadly should be well-being and if we go back
34:55
to and I meant and some of you will have heard me talk about before I mean that the history of the CRPD itself which has
35:01
its antecedents in what was known as the welfare workers Association 100 years ago and they did what he said on the tin
35:08
they worried about people's welfare and I think we forgot a lot of that and the intervening years it's definitely come
35:13
back strongly in recent years it's now being accelerated by by this so the
35:19
other point over there for megwin influence and business leaders is the need for transparency and I'm a very
35:25
strong applicant having for a while that we have to shift corporate governance we have got to get you know the ABS
35:32
the essence of what a responsible businesses organization is built much more strongly into our corporate
35:37
governance now for public sale to a private sector companies yeah and the the new regulations or the updated
35:43
regulations around the company Act which is requiring directors to show that they
35:49
are understanding the short and long term impacts of their business and what they're doing to all of their stakeholders being more transparent on
35:56
what and how we treat our people so there are those sorts of pressures as well that are coming in on businesses
36:02
everywhere to say you've got to step up to this you've got to show that what you're doing is right and you have to do
36:08
that anyway because of some of the increased attention coming from regulators on it on corporate governance
36:13
but finally linked to that thought instead that we are all under scrutiny
36:18
now in ways we've never been before as business leaders as HR leaders because there is a very high expectation that we
36:25
are going to do the right thing so it's a very low tolerance now for anything that's excluding or not treating people
36:32
fairly because we all see this is a very human crisis so I think it's those external things we need to draw on as
36:38
well to influence a business leave in its thinking or organizationally just thinking to say this is a moment we're
36:45
going to be under screaming we've gotta share that doing the right thing delivers the right result and we're going to be held to account for that
36:51
across all of our stakeholders not least our own people and their own employees thank you not saying to advocate because
36:59
yeah I just wanted to raise one one thing and agreeing actually what Peter said and how we how we think about just
37:08
taking a step back and how we think about what is happening now so this is a pandemic and Peter and I were sort of
37:14
joke about it before I was out for my constitutional and heard someone saying oh this is a Black Swan event it is not
37:21
a Black Swan event right it's a White Swan this has been we knew this was going to happen at some point I mean
37:27
there are many people on this call that would have been having conversation about pandemic readiness SARS swine flu
37:33
all those things my grandmother and her nurse both caught flu in 1918
37:40
she was 12 her nurse died what happened with that flu in 1918 it were
37:46
first of all the second wave was worse than the first and it hit young people this isn't this is a this is a disease
37:51
which is disproportionately affecting old people that affected disproportionately younger people and you know one of our jobs you know we
37:59
talk about HR being strategic and strategic influence and business partners we need to be ready for these
38:05
types of big externalities that have an impact on the organization's we're supporting and also the the the risk of
38:15
congruent events now we had a we had a very interesting exercise within cell
38:21
service when it's a jar which I would encourage every HR team to do whatever
38:26
their organization which is we said we need to look at all the things that could happen at the same time and
38:33
actually one of the things we had was we might be leaving the European Union and there might be a pandemic and there
38:39
might be X number other things and it's a really good exercise and I would say
38:45
when you then go to your and there won't be a better time as we're coming out of this to go to leadership teams and say
38:51
oK we've looked at this and this is what we need to do to prepare our business
38:57
continuity plans to be thinking about that so I'd encourage everybody to look at what's expected of us as HR
39:05
professionals and our business continuity plans make constructive suggestions about how we can make our
39:10
organizations more resilient and tougher
39:15
to final things on that a very interesting description I was reading in one article about what what have we
39:22
learned about the NHS through this period the NHS and there'll be many people on this call but a call by
39:27
talking about the maze so but the NHS is proved that it is tough it's a tough
39:32
organisation that's been very resilient it's been hard it's been you know people
39:37
have an incredibly professional but boy is it tough and as a good thing as a virtue and you've got the so we've
39:45
learnt that Nicholas Taleb who wrote the Black Swan and fooled by randomness in great books
39:52
every HR professional should read talks about this concept of organisations being anti fragile tough organizations
40:00
and part of our job is to keep up keep the engine running keep people in our
40:07
organization safe exercise the duty of care and make sure they are as as tough as possible and it's a really good
40:15
opportunity for us today job fresh doesn't stick step back and think about how we'll do that going forward for when the next thing happens because there
40:21
will be a next thing is a really great
40:30
question so when I ask it so somebody's asked about how do we ensure as a
40:35
profession that we're not defined as rescue and response as they put it and rather that we strategically Drive the
40:42
future people agenda in a leader full way which I think you answered really great well just now a group at UM future
40:48
could you pick up on that as well as your next point yeah isn't it because I
40:53
think your point a bit about resilience is so important and we do have a very
40:58
fundamental role I think we've all seen that because when you when you were describing it before that and quite
41:04
thought about in this context but all the work they've been done on the project yellow hammer in the Braxley stuff had actually prepared the silver
41:11
service for this kind of eventualities ways that we probably wouldn't have imagined before and what we have seen
41:17
across many many sectors an economy it's because of the drives to efficiency and all these other things that the
41:22
resilience in our supply chain systems an example is minimal because of no buffer stops anywhere it's all just in
41:29
time too much short-term thinking in businesses where they're not investing in the longer term and resilience of
41:35
infrastructure and things that allow and then when it comes to people in resilience and this is where hraah
41:40
become so important there are lots of different things think about and I would start with one which is not always
41:45
talked about but is the notion of trust because again something we've learnt a lot through this crisis is that we have
41:52
had to trust our people to get on and do stuff and a lot of the innovation that
41:58
we've all seen in our organisations is because we have yes in some cases for the first time
42:03
properly empowered we have properly trusted people to get on and do what they needed to do they have to adapt
42:09
rapidly with their teams very different circumstances so I think Trust is an absolutely critical element of any
42:17
businesses or any organizations ability to respond then you trust you people you people trust the leadership and and that
42:25
is a fragile commodity and then of course you've got all of those other things that you would naturally think about the more strategic response of
42:31
resilience which is understanding your operating models contingency planning your ability as you said reboot your
42:38
ability to be able to reconfigure the organization quickly move resources around bounce you workloads things of
42:45
that nature which to be honest again because we've had such a drive in the private sector those efficiencies and
42:50
always I think just not very good at and then finally it is that ability to understand yeah sort of slightly broader
42:58
level in order to be able to redeploy people quickly through crisis what are the skills and capabilities people have
43:04
and that I think is another really interesting things going to come out all of this we we've had too much arguably
43:10
lots of specialization lots of specialist skills in the growing future of work jobs pointing more and more - laughs what we are seeing now and some
43:17
of the really exciting innovations as happen across businesses where we know that across different sectors you got
43:23
what would be classically described as a v-shape recovering you ship recovery or an l-shape recovery so if you take
43:28
Airlines and what they've been doing for example with retailers saying well we can't employ all of our people but you
43:35
know what they've got great customer service' skills which we brilliant to support where there is increased amount so in retail isn't that points to
43:42
something different about our understanding of skills underpinning of what you might regard as the core or
43:47
transferable skills that we need to be calling out much more so I think those are part of a strategic response as well
43:53
but so I would say that I'm in between those two ideas that we need to be able to understand the short-term impacts of
43:59
resilience but also the strategic way of thinking about organizations to make sure that we are resilient for these
44:04
future events thank you I'm picking up the point about their function I'm gonna
44:10
run a few questions together we've had quite a few have you got any reply Shinzon how the HR function itself will
44:17
need to transform in terms of the skills and perhaps functionally how we're set
44:22
up and somebody else has also asked about do you think there'll be any emergent roles to come out of this so
44:28
new HR job titles type thing so I'd say I think almost certainly yes I'm not
44:36
sure what they are and I think that I think what can I say
44:41
I think that it's this is just reinforced the fact that there is a lot
44:46
of stuff happening at the interface between service design workplace design
44:55
technology and the human people element and that and I think this just shows
45:00
that as HR professionals and I've talked about other places you know the the HR
45:05
profession of 2030 could be much more
45:11
multidisciplinary professional we might be sharing it with some other professions as well so I think that's that that's definitely a theme you know
45:17
what do we expect from the HR business partner as if you like curator of the
45:23
employee experience on behalf of the organization that that's I think something we're definitely seeing and I
45:28
think there's a lot around around data and analysis and around what it means I
45:35
mean the appetite yeah we've spent a lot
45:41
of time if I'm gonna make it slightly slightly facetious remarks but we've had a lot of years and years of people
45:48
complaining about HR policies and an area even their existence and now are we
45:54
discovering a massive appetite to be told what to do and so part of our trick
46:01
is not to respond to that but actually to help people you know trust your good
46:08
judgment will help you will give you advice will influence you but really this is for you to decide and will and
46:14
will help you rather than go to sort of rigid rigid guidance they're very but I
46:21
know lots of there'll be lots of interesting roles and I hope that people will move well they'll be much more
46:27
fluid movement into other play is like facilities technology etc do you
46:35
think on how it's gonna change our profession yeah I'm interested as to reflection first one that rules and
46:40
policies one lipid yeah you're right and I've long advocated the view which over a bit of a bump out of our policies
46:45
because that has driven too much of our thinking in the past and actually doesn't influence all right David we have a classic case now going on there
46:52
me with all these returns to workplaces guidelines and people expecting a manual to tell them exactly what to do in every
46:58
circumstance and you can't and so much of this is about human behavior and unfortunate what makes it difficult is a
47:04
lot of these distancing things are very unnatural to us so you have to trust you
47:11
got to get people understanding principles their individual responsibility which is another thing rules tend to work again we've just got
47:18
ton of rules and just a bang rules especially yeah but what's my personal accountability for this so I think you've got those things but as you said
47:24
more broadly I mean yeah interesting thought about what you job titles my I'm hurt yeah well we have achieved crisis
47:30
officer or something I don't know but but I agree with the general point super there that I think at the heart of it
47:36
will be a strengthening of these more strategic areas if you well an organization science job design things
47:43
of that nature the whole employee journey X employee experience thing and those will become strength and
47:48
management to change which is of course linked to crisis response also will be really strengthened but at this point in
47:56
time in it and who knows in things will emerge of course but I think as we've reflected we can't we've look back in
48:01
our profession and look to the areas of development and I think it still holds us in good stead we've talked so much in
48:07
recent years about grounding us out on the right behaviors the right core knowledge which range from things like
48:14
influencing skills and ethical judgment all the data and analytics that you talked about links to business and
48:19
business understanding cross-functional working all those sorts of ideas so I think that a lot of the foundations are
48:26
there but it's it's going to be a harder push and indeed a pull from the
48:31
organizations that we support to build our capabilities and a lot of these areas and I think particularly what you
48:37
might bound in some of this more strategic äôt organization design operating miles job design star
48:43
Plus underpinned by good analytics and understanding and then as I say this broader idea of our role in nature which
48:50
i think is a really important one has been the real advocates champion supporters of how you manage change and
48:57
all the cultural dynamics and sit behind that and those are things which I think will get strengthened as well and I want
49:04
to ask a nice question about change management um obviously you reflected really early on in this conversation
49:10
report that we were able to make really big change really quickly so do you think that there any practical lessons
49:15
we can take from this and how we manage large-scale change of pace given it proved that it can be done yeah so well
49:23
I'm still really thinking about this and I'd be grateful for any suggestions I think I my immediate reaction is to say
49:33
don't take for granted that opportunities like this will occur very often and and I think we've been very I
49:40
can fortunate seems the wrong word to use but circumstances have conspired in
49:46
the context of the public service to go through you exit readiness and then this
49:51
and we've been able to ride that so so the main thing is know when and they'll be micro examples of this but know when
49:58
there is a chip when there is an appetite and and drive through the
50:03
through the gap to make a change now I would say there is something which is
50:10
quite notable for me which is sometimes the door to the door to push through
50:17
change in a culture is wide open and people still feel that the doors shut
50:23
and so I would it's made me think that there are probably many more occasions when we could be pushing things through
50:30
and pushing it open doors that perhaps we then perhaps we think and I'll
50:38
definitely be definitely be reflecting on that how we can encourage leaders new
50:49
ways of working and change and uncertainty yeah a great point I mean just on the change when I mean change
50:55
happens top-down and bottom-up and I think an awful lot of chase any big change we've thought about in the past rather too
51:01
much as top-down here we got a structured old programs I gotta tell everyone to do we're gonna communicate in the hell out of in all the rest of it
51:07
and the sort of ten steps of what we're all supposed to do you know a lot of what we've seen again what we've learned
51:13
in this crisis is a lot of fantastic change can happen bottom-up as well which doesn't mean say you've got to keep those two things somewhat aligned
51:19
of course but there is no doubt that I releasing the innovation of our
51:25
organizations and trusting and empowering people more it is the the real essence of so much effective change
51:32
and I've often reflected on models and there probably are people on the call from say the MRD but the way the
51:39
military its thought about this many years it's mission command mission objective ideas I got clarity and what
51:44
I'm doing I've trained my people in cleaning my managers down to the lowest level of management as to how they are
51:50
supposed to act and what they would call situational leadership so I've trained them and I trained them properly on
51:56
these sorts of things and then I empowered them within that framework to do the right thing in the right context
52:02
and take action into the helped change to happen and I think those are sort of dynamics have changed we haven't always
52:08
well understood and if I'm really honest it comes back to this trust idea that we taught about trust but trust like it any
52:14
goes that way that I you're supposed to trust me as your your my team member or whatever versus the other way which is
52:22
also what do but do I trust you and the more rules we write all the other things we've done tells people they're not
52:27
being trusted so I think that's a very important dynamic um and then I put on the second question leaders yes about
52:35
leaders well absolutely absolutely and again we've all learned I've learned I'm
52:41
sure Rubin has we've all learnt as leaders to do this about communication about sharing about and if I take a
52:47
simple adage again from the past that often leaders thought that their job and said well I've seen this before
52:52
and this is what we've gotta go and do but I've never believed in that view because the world is changing so for us
52:57
and certainly in this context if it told us anything it's taught us more humility as leaders and I think that is one of
53:04
the real learnings for leaders going forwards is we don't know everything and from the idea of humility
53:09
so you got to reach out you got to connect you've got to engage you've got to listen you've got to learn those attributes of great leadership that
53:16
we've talked about for a long time and again I think that this crisis can help to reinforce those ideas and then link
53:23
it as I said to that idea of trust so if the humility comes that idea that I have got to trust and I've got to empower and
53:30
I think those are very broad messages for leadership that I think of again got very reinforced to those biases there's
53:37
lovely I'm I've lost it in the comments now that's somebody put a nice some comment or a question about do you think
53:42
this is making us bring our whole selves to see - chairs from I'm gonna again
53:56
blend a few questions together so we've had a few about um the embracing change is really positive but not all changes
54:02
are positive how do you think we can look after people who are finding some
54:08
of this remote working quite detrimental to their mental health so feelings of isolation and I'm going to tag onto that
54:13
how do we help people deal with them with grief because this is an incredibly kind of human health crisis and I'm Reed
54:20
but what you doing in the civil service to help with these so a couple a couple
54:26
a couple of thoughts on that so I again the individual experience is going to be
54:32
very it's gonna be it's going to be so different and it's very easy I'm
54:39
speaking personally to forget so we noticed something early on in this process which was that there was a the
54:48
people who'd be dealing with this from day one so for me my introduction to this was the Cabinet Office 70 Whitehall
54:55
ground floor cafeteria coffee place sitting with the opponent sector from
55:01
DHS C and the chief medical officer in there saying this was like in January
55:06
this this thing is coming look what we do we need these people like now that's
55:14
quite small us that's not my first encounter with it and of course we went and provided the people I needed and
55:19
that's that start us on on the route and but we noticed that those of us they were sort of in the
55:26
inner ring and then we were in the next ring of people who were aware of what was coming and there was a period of
55:31
people not really getting what was coming just as we hadn't initially and and then that the dangerous thing was
55:38
when you have people who are in those two groups in the same room and they had sort of internalized this and other
55:44
people who hadn't yet internalized it and that that's that may be very
55:49
thoughtful about how we deal with some other things like that so how we have we absorbed the change I mean I'm not a
55:54
huge fan of kubler-ross grief curve but it has a place and that was you know an example of it people were further along
56:00
the curve with this and so we always need to think that there are people who
56:06
are at different points on the curve and and there are people for whom the experience of working from home or not
56:15
being in the office is going to be isolating the impact on people with
56:20
different neuro types is relevant as well you know all of those things need to be considered and really that comes
56:26
back to good line managers and good colleagues being supportive and you know
56:34
you should know which of your people in your teams might be in that category and what they might need and the check-in so
56:41
I'd be really pleased to see you know the virtual check-ins perhaps people are check-in more with their teams and they
56:47
would have done if they were physically present and that's been really that's been a really important thing and so and
56:54
that comes back maybe to a general thing you know ultimately human resources you
57:02
know I'm actually quite a fan of human resources as a title because the human bit is so important the humanity is so
57:09
important and our job is to be you know structured organized application of
57:16
humanity and humane principles in the workplace and all those things need to
57:21
need to be taken into account I I feel very strongly about this which is
57:27
probably why I'm not being very articulate about it but it's gonna have
57:33
to bring this to a close I'm just going to ask one more question and put it to both of you and so somebody's asked do you have any
57:40
advice for HR professionals themselves who are feeling overwhelmed at the huge asks ahead and I know that's something
57:46
we're hearing from so many of the membership that people are just exhausted and you know there's still so
57:51
much more to come and while you answer that they also ask if you could offer maybe a personal reflection on what's
57:56
kind of helped you in terms of self-care because you're in both in really big roles managing teams big organizations
58:02
so how are you looking after yourself and I'm Pete Rock with that to you first yeah I mean first of all recognize and
58:08
acknowledging as we both said that age has been so much at the center so yeah we shouldn't forget ourselves and
58:14
actually it has some other parallels because I've often said and some we may heard me say it that that age has been
58:21
too much of the Cobblers children and we haven't invested enough in ourselves and that's one of the reasons why I'm hugely
58:26
proud that relationship that we have with you Roopa and silver service HR because that is putting back into the
58:31
profession to grow our capabilities collectively and that absolutely applies to birthing as well so we need to look
58:38
after ourselves and from the cipa perspective we've been doing a lot to support that I filled everything
58:43
everyone said it's much more on the agenda but specifically to provide help lines and support help lines wellbeing
58:49
outlines to our own professional membership so we must look after ourselves in that regard and take on board what we're also trying to
58:55
encourage others to do and then finally very quickly for myself yeah I I'm slightly worried two perspectives one is
59:03
I'm definitely physics I'm exercising quite a lot more but I'm probably also drinking a bit more so I'm sorry we're
59:09
going to come out as a rather fit alcoholic but and but the other thing that to be serious is really really
59:15
important that it sustain me so much is my family connection and I've recognized how lucky I am the fact I've got my
59:22
three adult daughters are all in their twenties they're all back at home which is had set their stresses and strains
59:27
but it has been absolutely amazing to provide that support for me so I can
59:32
switch off I can go spend time with them me my family can actually do all sorts of crazy stuff together and that has
59:38
been really really good for my mental well-being and and and finally to your point but about switching off and
59:44
switching yeah that ability to make sure just all become a seamless blur of work and that opportunity
59:51
disconnect spent time and family has been an absolute blessing and I think
59:56
we're closer as a family for it as well thank you and advice that kind of HR
1:00:01
professionals also reflections from you personally yeah pull them together and raise the record what Peter said I think
1:00:09
you're nurture and value human connections and one of the connections
1:00:16
that everyone on this call has is we are all members of a professional community I think we're very fortunate thanks to
1:00:24
Peter and Katie and all your colleagues that we are there's there's a good
1:00:29
support and infrastructure there with CIPD so there'll be people in your organization that you should be
1:00:34
connecting with and sharing with and and
1:00:40
connecting and connecting with friends friends and family as well accepting that it's been this is a particularly
1:00:47
challenging time because of separation and distancing but one which probably
1:00:53
sort of throws that into its value into sharper relief I'd also say a question
1:01:00
that Peter and I have talked about and and I think we we do want to sort of try and build up as a profession we're
1:01:07
looking at it in the civil service we don't know quite what it looks like but the idea of finding more opportunities that people have channels for reflective
1:01:13
discussion with their peers and to sort of we carry a lot of load in these jobs
1:01:20
compared to some other professions people earlier in their careers are exposed to bigger issues maybe and
1:01:29
that's something I think we really want to try and we should find ways to recognize and support but human
1:01:35
connection that's the thing that's a really really fabulous place to end I think probably gone on longer and I'm
1:01:42
really sorry I didn't get to everybody's questions but I tried to combine and be clever about I think many of them as
1:01:48
possible this webinar will be available to watch on demand and hopefully from
1:01:54
this afternoon or not tune in tomorrow morning so please do feel free watch it again share it far and wide thank you so much
1:02:01
Rupert thank you Peter for giving up your time I see the chaplet people thought that was very great session so thank you very much
1:02:08
taking part and thanks everybody for watching and we will see you next time thank you thanks everyone thanks Peter
1:02:13
thank you thank you bye all right
English (auto-generated)
For a summary of the key points from this conversation, read our blog Crisis as catalyst: a Covid-19 leadership conversation with Rupert McNeil and Peter Cheese.
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