The meaning of talent management
Talented people possess special gifts, abilities and
aptitudes which enable them to perform effectively. As defined by the CIPD (2007),
Talent consists of those individuals who can make a difference to
organizational performance, either through their immediate contribution or in
the longer term by demonstrating the highest levels of potential. Talent
management is the process of identifying, developing, recruiting, retaining and
deploying those talented people.
The term ‘talent management’ may refer simply to management
succession planning and management development activities, although this notion
does not really add anything to these familiar processes except a new, although
admittedly quite evocative, name. It is better to regard talent management as a
more comprehensive and integrated bundle of activities, the aim of which is to
secure the flow of talent in an organization, bearing in mind that talent is a
major corporate resource.
However, there are different views about what talent
management means (Michaels et al., 2001). Michaels (2001) identified five imperatives that companies need to act on if they are
going to win the war for managerial talent; these are as follows.
Five imperatives for talent management (Michaels, 2001)
1. Creating a winning employee value proposition that will
make your company uniquely attractive to talent.
2. Moving beyond recruiting hype to build a long-term
recruiting strategy.
3. Using job experience, coaching and mentoring to cultivate
the potential in managers.
4. Strengthening your talent pool by investing in A players,
developing B players and acting decisively on C players.
5. Central to this approach is a pervasive mindset a deep
conviction shared by leaders throughout
the company that competitive advantage comes from having better talent at all levels.
the company that competitive advantage comes from having better talent at all levels.
The McKinsey prescription has often been misinterpreted to
mean that talent management is only about obtaining, identifying and nurturing
high flyers, ignoring the point they made that competitive advantage comes from
having better talent at all levels.
The process of talent management
Talent management takes the form of a ‘bundle’ of
interrelated processes, as shown in Figure 01
Figure 01 The elements of talent management
Talent management starts with the business strategy and what
it signifies in terms of the talented people required by the organization.
Ultimately, the aim is to develop and maintain a pool of talented people. This
is sometimes described as the ‘talent management pipe line’. Its elements are
described below.
The resourcing strategy
The business plan provides the basis for human resource
planning, which defines human capital requirements and leads to attraction and
retention policies and programs for internal resourcing (identifying talented
people within the organization and developing and promoting them).
Attraction and retention policies and programs
These policies and programs describe the approach to
ensuring that the organization both gets and keeps the talent it needs.
Attraction policies lead to programs for external resourcing (recruitment and
selection of people from outside the organization). Retention policies are
designed to ensure that people remain as committed members of the organization.
The outcome of these policies is a talent flow that creates and maintains the
talent pool.
Talent audit
A talent audit identifies those with potential and provides
the basis for career planning and development ensuring that talented people
have the sequence of experience supplemented by coaching and learning programs
that will fi t them to carry out more demanding roles in the future. Talent
audits can also be used to indicate the possible danger of talented people
leaving (risk analysis) and what action may need to be taken to retain them.
Role design
Talent management is concerned with the roles people carry out.
This involves role design ensuring that roles provide the responsibility,
challenge and autonomy required to create role engagement and motivation. It
also means taking steps to ensure that people have the opportunity and are
given the encouragement to learn and develop in their roles. Talent management
policies focus on role flexibility giving people the chance to develop their
roles by making better and extended use of their talents.
Talent relationship management
Talent relationship management is the process of building
effective relationships with people in their roles. It is concerned generally
with creating a great place to work, but in particular it is about treating
individual employees fairly, recognizing their value, giving them a voice and
providing opportunities for growth. The aim is to achieve ‘talent engagement’,
ensuring that people are committed to their work and the organization. Sears (2003) points out, it is “better to
build an existing relationship rather than try to create a new one when someone
leaves.”
Performance management
Performance management processes provide a means of building
relationships with people, identifying talent and potential, planning learning
and development activities, and making the most of the talent possessed by the
organization. Line managers can be asked to carry out separate ‘risk analyses’
for any key staff to assess the likelihood of their leaving. Properly carried
out, performance management is a means of increasing the engagement and
motivation of people by providing positive feedback and recognition. This is
part of a total reward system.
Learning and development
Learning and development policies and programs are essential
components in the process of talent management ensuring that people acquire and
enhance the skills and competencies they need. Policies should be formulated by
reference to ‘employee success profiles’, which are described in terms of
competencies and define the qualities that need to be developed. Employee
success profiles can be incorporated in role profiles.
Management succession planning
Management succession planning takes place to ensure that,
as far as possible, the organization has the managers it requires to meet
future business needs.
Career management
Career management is concerned with the provision of opportunities
for people to develop their abilities and their careers in order to ensure that
the organization has the flow of talent it needs and to satisfy their own
aspirations.
Developing a talent management strategy
A talent management strategy consists of a view on how the
processes described above should mesh together with an overall objective to
acquire and nurture talent wherever it is and wherever it is needed by using a
number of interdependent policies and practices. Talent management is the
notion of ‘bundling’ in action. The strategy covers the following aims.
The aims of talent management
·
Define who the talent management program should
cover.
·
Define what is meant by talent in terms of
competencies and potential.
·
Define the future talent requirements of the
organization.
·
Develop the organization as an ‘employer of
choice’ a ‘great place to work’.
·
Use selection and recruitment procedures that
ensure that good quality people are recruited who are likely to thrive in the
organization and stay with it for a reasonable length of time (but not
necessarily for life).
·
Design jobs and develop roles that give people
opportunities to apply and grow their
skills and provide them with autonomy, interest and challenge.
·
Provide talented staff with opportunities for career
development and growth.
·
Create a working environment in which work processes
and facilities enable rewarding (in the broadest sense) jobs and roles to be
designed and developed.
·
Provide scope for achieving a reasonable balance
between working in the organization and life outside work.
·
Develop a positive psychological contract.
·
Develop the leadership qualities of line managers.
·
Recognize those with talent by rewarding
excellence, enterprise and achievement.
·
Conduct talent audits that identify those with potential
and those who might leave the organization.
·
Introduce management succession planning
procedures that identify the talent available to meet future requirements and
indicate what management development activities are required.
Management succession planning
Management succession planning is the process of assessing
and auditing the talent in the organization in order to answer three
fundamental questions. First, are there enough potential successors available –
a supply of people coming through who can take key roles in the longer term?
Second, are they good enough? Third, have they the right skills and
competencies for the future? At different stages in their careers, potential
successors may be ranked in order, such as,
- Being ready to do the next job now,
- Being ready for a certain higher-grade position in, say, two years’ time,
- Being ready for job rotation at the same level, and
- Being ready for lateral assignments on temporary relief or project work.
Succession planning is based on the information about
managers gleaned from supply and demand forecasts, talent audits and
performance and potential reviews. In some large organizations in which demand
and supply forecasts can be made accurately, highly formalized succession planning
processes exist based on the sort of management succession schedule illustrated
in Figure 02.
MANAGEMENT SUCCESSION SCHEDULE

Figure 02 Management succession schedule
References
(CIPD, 2007) Talent Management Fact Sheet,
CIPD, London
(Michaels: Handfield: Jones; Axelrod, 2001)
The War for Talent, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA
(Sears, 2003) Successful Talent Strategies,
American Management Association, New York

Talent Management is a wide spread topic and I believe you have done a good job in this article providing lot of additional information covering Talent Management. But the article is much longer to read though I find it is worth reading. Nice one.
ReplyDeleteok thanks upendra
ReplyDeleteInteresting article and nicely explained ,it's very clear and easy to get the idea. nice work
ReplyDeletethanks malintha.
ReplyDeleteGood work, well explained article on talent management and its covered many points but the management succession planning topic mentioned in two areas and if you can short the article it will be further attractive. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeletePlease make sure to flow the Harvard reference style. No need to post lengthy articles. Your post expected to be max. 350 words.
ReplyDeleteok. thanks sir your idea.
DeleteVery detailed Article covering all the areas in talent management ..good luck.
ReplyDeletethanks anupama
DeleteGood effort. You have explained whole process how to achieve the organisation's goal through talented people's efficiency. Good work at all. Better to short the article. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeletethanks prasanna
Deletethanks prasanna
ReplyDeleteGood article Wasantha, Investing on Talent management will definitely improve the organization and its employees. There are lots of talent pools available in any organization, but to use these talent pool towards its success is the most important thing. Thanks.
ReplyDeletethanks achala
DeleteGood article on talent management.effective talent management definitely enhance organizational performance.Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
ReplyDeletethanks nethra
ReplyDeleteGood explanation Wasantha. I suggest if you can focus on some important relevant point this will be more interesting to read.Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDelete