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Engage Decision Makers or Someone Else Will: The Need for More Compelling I-O Psychology Communication

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 June 2018

Marc Sokol*
Affiliation:
Sage Consulting Resources, LLC
*
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Marc Sokol, Sage Consulting Resources, LLC, 6417 Timber Ridge, Edina, MN 55439. E-mail: [email protected]
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Extract

Better focus on the frontier of talent management (TM), the thesis of the focal article by Rotolo et al. (2018), is necessary but not by itself a sufficient condition for I-O psychologists (IOP) to influence organizational decision makers. Although I agree with the substance of their perspective, as professional psychologists we also need to communicate in a manner that decision makers recognize as worthy of their time and attention. We should pay greater attention to how, why, and when organizational stakeholders embrace, reject, or overlook our insights and recommendations.

Type
Commentaries
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology 2018 

Better focus on the frontier of talent management (TM), the thesis of the focal article by Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018), is necessary but not by itself a sufficient condition for I-O psychologists (IOP) to influence organizational decision makers. Although I agree with the substance of their perspective, as professional psychologists we also need to communicate in a manner that decision makers recognize as worthy of their time and attention. We should pay greater attention to how, why, and when organizational stakeholders embrace, reject, or overlook our insights and recommendations.

Rotolo and colleagues open up much needed discourse on the evolution of our professional work. The argument of industrial-organizational psychology vs. anti-industrial-organizational psychology (AIO) strikes an emotional chord, much as we experience in the broader assault on science in some aspects of popular media. Compelling as this is, the authors seem to be also caught in a polarized view of good versus bad science, almost as if there are good versus evil actors within the field (Hambrick & Marquardt, Reference Hambrick and Marquardt2018; Johnson, Reference Johnson2014). Even with great research, however, we do not consistently see traction in terms of receptivity and application, and wonder how others without our foundation make headway. One opportunity is to pay more attention to how we communicate our message.

There is much we can do to better engage decision makers and influencers so that our messages are noticed and to create a desire for real dialogue about what we have learned. Given the flood of information that appears in every format, from social media to print options, IOP must be willing and ready to proactively compete for attention so that the quality of our professional work gains the traction we seek.

Empathy for Consumers of TM-Related Communication

The perspective begins with a narrative to illustrate the issue of AIO messaging getting to decision makers, well before the in-house I-O psychology professional is called in. Although we can sympathize with the professional's predicament, we might also wonder how and why such events come about.

My experience is that we have done a much better job communicating to and for each other than to and for the other audiences we hope to inspire. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP) has made strides to increase the volume and range of IOP practitioner-focused outlets, but what of our communication aimed toward organizational leaders and decision makers?

The growth of popular business books, blogs, and white papers continue, accompanied by an expanding array of TED talks. Ironically the more books, the more blogs, the more dramatic the headlines, the more we seem to inoculate leaders from attending to the onslaught of so much messaging. Many organizational leaders, including CHROs, claim they have little time to read unless they can see direct application and the material comes from a trusted source.

At other times a well-marketed book will capture attention of a key stakeholder, and this entry point drives broader reception throughout the organization. I have seen the president of one firm ask his high potentials to read Daniel Kahneman's (Reference Kahneman2011) book Thinking, Fast and Slow, and to apply that to how they think about that business. Similarly, leaders in financial services have begun to incorporate aspects of behavioral economics into their own presentations to large teams. So these leaders will read; our challenge is how to increase their likelihood of reading our work.

Toward More Leader-Friendly Communication

High potential programs, coaches, and speakers at business offsite often present a compelling TM story. A book on the topic may be a take-away; an attendee may purchase a set for his or her team to read. Theories of talent management embedded in powerful narrative may be all a key influencer needs to become open to a “new and better way.” To fully leverage best practices of our research, we also need to present messages that gain the attention of gatekeepers and influencers.

Between some thinly disguised sales efforts labeled as white papers and research publications too densely written for business leaders, there is a gap and we are not gaining attention to our work. However, there is the opportunity to provide brief, informative, readable material that is relevant to the line executive and CHRO, and with a clear eye toward stimulating dialogue and application. Harvard Business Review has long been the gold standard but does not rest alone.

People + Strategy is the professional publication of the HR People + Strategy Association (www.HRPS.org) and part of the Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM). During the past 2 years, while serving as executive editor, along with a diverse editorial board, we have focused on the following:

  • Design the publication with a look and length suitable for executive audience. Articles three to five pages in length, each typically no more than a 10–15 minute read.

  • Digestible research findings and summaries, often using call out boxes to highlight key messages and infographics style tables or figures.

  • Topical issues intended to reflect the role of HR and TM in some broader theme that executives likely resonate with: enterprise security, candor and transparency, maximizing potential, and so on.

  • Embrace a variety of voices and styles of presentation: executive roundtables, first person accounts of from thought leaders and senior executives, case studies, and a regular column summarizing published research for its practice implications.

In the past several years, association membership has more than doubled, and representation of CHROs has increased from 12% to 35% (personal communication, L. Connell, March 7, 2018). During this time, we have reached out to IOPs and many have contributed to the journal. As an illustration, I provide links to two issues of People + Strategy, published in 2016. The first took on a broader topic of enterprise security as an organizing theme (http://www.nxtbook.com/ygsreprints/HRPS/hrps_39_1_2016/). IOPs contributed articles on cybersecurity (Klimoski, Reference Klimoski2016), safety culture (Nieminen, Bianco, & Denison, Reference Nieminen, Bianco and Denison2016), active shooter response on a college campus (Baran, Reference Baran2016), and prediction of accident-prone tendencies (Hogan, Reference Hogan2016). Although it is 2 years since the publication date, every one of these topics is still highly relevant.

A second issue, devoted to the theme of candor and transparency in the workplace, also contained contributions from members of our profession (http://www.nxtbook.com/ygsreprints/HRPS/hrps_39_4_2016/). One contribution by two authors of the focal article (Church and Rotolo, Reference Church and Rotolo2016), in particular, reports research on the question of whether one should inform employees of their assessed potential. This article can stimulate dialogue among almost all TM Centers of Excellence and set the stage for similar discussion between HR and the C-suite. This article, in fact, worked its way up to the executive committee of the author's company, a Fortune 50 firm (personal communication with Allan Church, March 31, 2017). Imagine if this experience was typical rather than the exception! Executives may always approach their TM leaders to act on “hot” ideas they have heard about, but I suspect that where IOP professionals have been actively communicating best practices, there is less likelihood of outside influence gaining traction without the support of in-house professionals.

I can imagine an alternative narrative to follow the opening one of the focal article—one in which the CHRO had become used to the IOP professional providing brief, relevant, compelling articles on TM practices, and that routinely created a pull for discussion with members of the C-suite. When approached by the external firm in the opening narrative, the CHRO countered its advances due to its lack of published results the CHRO could share with line leaders.

Recommended Actions

  1. 1. Editorial board members of People + Strategy who are affiliated with business schools have for several years joined with representatives of Harvard Business Review to host a panel at Academy of Management (AOM) on the topic of publishing for business leaders (Winn et al., Reference Winn, Luthans, Hayton, Tavis, Abel and Merino2015; Winn et al., Reference Winn, Ulrich, Rucci, Bernstein, Merio and Tavis2016; Winn et al., Reference Winn, Bernstein, Harrell, Mathieu, Luciano, Rogers and Tavis2017). This may seem atypical for AOM, but some professionals are making a concerted effort to convey a message about more impactful communication to executives. SIOP, through its annual conference, might host more sessions on communication of our research and best practices for non-IOP audiences. We might even devote an hour on the topic at doctoral consortia meetings. Notable on the 2018 conference schedule is a preconference workshop on storytelling to increase influence (Sinar & Grubb, Reference Sinar and Grubb2018) and a community of interest session on research about communicating with organizational leaders (Lin, Nolan, & Dalal, Reference Lin, Nolan and Dalal2018).

  2. 2. Although we often talk about bridging the scientist–practitioner divide, one way might be collaboration in publishing summaries of research that highlights application in formats that senior leaders are more likely to consume. With so many IOP practitioners based internally or working extensively inside organizations, we should leverage these materials to initiate and shape dialogue with organizational decision makers.

  3. 3. Graduate programs at the master's and doctoral level might add consideration of as well as training and practice in how we present our insights and findings to a wide range of stakeholders.

Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018), like most readers of Perspectives, want IOP to be a driving force in talent management theory and practice. Expanded strategies and tactics of communicating what we know will help further these aspirations.

References

Baran, B. (2016). High-reliability HR: Preparing the enterprise for catastrophes. People + Strategy, 39 (1), 3438.Google Scholar
Church, A., & Rotolo, C. (2016). Lifting the veil: What happens when you are transparent with people about their future potential? People + Strategy, 39 (4), 3640.Google Scholar
Hambrick, D., & Marquardt, M. (2018, February 6). Cognitive ability and vulnerability to fake news. Scientific American. Retrieved from https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/cognitive-ability-and-vulnerability-to-fake-news/.Google Scholar
Hogan, R. (2016). The accident-prone personality. People + Strategy, 39 (1), 2023.Google Scholar
Johnson, B. (2014). Polarity management: Identifying and managing unsolvable problems. Amherst, MA: HRD Press, Inc.Google Scholar
Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. New York, NY: Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux.Google Scholar
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