Synopses & Reviews
Many organizations are scrambling to prepare for an expected wave of retirements. Almost twice as many job openings are occurring from people retiring as from economic expansion—a direct function of a steadily aging workforce. The implications for businesses, government agencies, nonprofits, and educational institutions are enormous, as organizational leaders maneuver to fill the talent pipeline. In this context, organizations are stepping up their investments in career planning (training and development programs to help employees hone their skills and qualify for advancement) and succession management (programs designed to ensure the continuity of leadership). To date, however, these programs have generally been treated in isolation.
Drawing from a survey of 1,000 human resource practitioners and a wide variety of case examples, the authors demonstrate how to create that crucial link between succession and career development programs—developing one's organization's talent from the bottom up and the top down simultaneously. Featuring numerous diagnostics, checklists, and other interactive elements, Career Planning and Succession Management will become an indispensable guide for leaders and human resource professionals looking to align individual and organizational goals and ensure their economic future.
Many organizations today are scrambling to prepare for an expected wave of retirements. Almost twice as many job openings are occurring from people retiring than from economic expansion—a direct function of a steadily aging workforce. The implications for businesses, government agencies, nonprofits, and educational institutions are enormous, as organizational leaders maneuver to fill the talent pipeline. In this context, organizations are stepping up their investments in career planning (training and development programs to help employees hone their skills and qualify for advancement) and succession management (programs designed to ensure the continuity of leadership).
To date, these programs have generally been treated in isolation, and the combined effects of attracting, developing, and grooming talent from the bottom up and the top down are being lost. Drawing from the authors' decades of research and practical experience, a survey of 1,000 human resource practitioners, and examples from a wide variety of organizations, Career Planning and Succession Management shows readers how to create that crucial link between succession and career development programs. Showcasing the most current theory and practice, the book address such hot-button issues as: how to prevent top performers from leaving, how to balance the competing needs of promoting from within versus bringing in new blood, and dealing with unexpected retirements in an age of corporate scandal. Featuring numerous diagnostics, checklists, and other interactive elements, Career Planning and Succession Management will become an indispensable guide for leaders and human resource professionals looking to align individual and organizational goals and ensure their economic future.
Review
"[S]hows human resource professionals and other corporate leaders how to create a link between succession and career development programs to prevent top performers from leaving, balance the needs of promoting from within versus bringing in new talent, and deal with the unexpected retirements in an age of corporate scandal." - Reference & Research Book News
Synopsis
How to develop your people and groom future leaders--at the same time.
About the Author
WILLIAM J. ROTHWELL is Professor-in-Charge of the Workforce Education and Development program in the Department of Learning and Performance Systems at Pennsylvania State University and President of Rothwell and Associates, a full-service consulting firm specializing in succession planning and management. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of over 50 books and dozens of articles on human resource management, training, and development. As a consultant, he has worked with a broad array of organizations in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors in the United States and internationally.ROBERT D. JACKSON is Senior Consultant for Career Development, Center for Performance Excellence, for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation and Adjunct Instructor in the Training and Development Masters Program at Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg.SHAUN C. KNIGHT is the Career and Business Solutions Associate for the School of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. He has had extensive experience in career development counseling, planning, and placement, working with many Fortune 500 firms.JOHN E. LINDHOLM is Compensation Manager in the Department of Human Resources at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Previously, he served in compensation, performance consulting, and instructional design positions at Pennsylvania State University, Compaq Computer, and Polaris Consulting.
Table of Contents
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
Acknowledgments
Making the Business Case for Moving Beyond Career and Succession Planning: Why They Must Be Integrated
Reflections on the Contemporary Business Scene: Why Career and Succession Planning Must Be Integrated
An Approach to Integrating Career and Succession Planning
Foundations for Integrating Career and Succession Planning
Establishing the Infrastructure to Support the Integration of Career and Succession Planning
Competency Models and Value Systems
Assessment and Evaluation for Careers and Succession
Development Planning and Career Advising
Strategies for Integrating Career and Succession Planning
Training and Development
Mentoring Programs
Coaching Programs
Self-Learning Programs
Self-Assessment Programs
Other Approaches
Concluding Thoughts
Questions and Answers
The Future of Career and Succession Planning
Appendix 1: What Is an Employee? The Answer Depends on the Federal Law
Appendix 2: Introduction to Career Counseling Competency Statements
Appendix 3: Leaders for Tomorrow
Appendix 4: Differentiating between Coaching and Mentoring
Appendix 5: Coaching and Executive Coaching Web sites
Appendix 6: Career Instruments, Tests, and Surveys
Glossary
About the Authors
Index