In my last note, I mentioned how Platinum is building the Next Generation Leadership Factory. What does that really mean?
For some (including me), the idea of what makes a leader is a vacillating concept that is hard to define until you actually see its implementation in action accompanied with a corresponding result. That ‘aha’ moment sets the baseline, and as we observe more behaviors (how people treat others, what’s their style for processing information, etc.) and demonstrated outcomes, the concept gets refined, and the process repeats enough until one day your brain tells you ‘OK, I got it’… and then you know.
My personal views on this topic were shaped during the early part of my career at Lockheed Martin. In 2006, the company introduced Full Spectrum Leadership (FSL) as the way forward that would reshape the culture of the organization. Based on five Imperatives, FSL was incorporated into just about everything that required a corporate decision including: hiring processes, annual performance reviews, talent management and leader selection.
At Platinum, our enlightened view borrows from these and other principles to seek out the multipliers who are going to make people better and move the business forward. We don’t own the talent, however—we just aim to be responsible stewards for the season(s) they are in our care. Our goal is to create the behaviors necessary to entrust individuals with responsibility to make reasoned decisions, quickly and with impact.
For us it starts with Talent Acquisition. Our team spends approximately 10% of their time identifying potential candidates for which we have no job requisition. My leadership team will then meet with those individuals to learn more about their technical background and to see if they are cultural fit. Our strike rate is about 1 in 5 (it used to be 1 in 10, so we’re improving). We maintain the relationships so that we can move quickly on opportunities where there is a match.
For those who join us, our core focus is to build an individual’s technical capacity through classroom/online training and to introduce complex situations early and often. Within the first month, we establish their authorities and hold sessions to discuss the impact of their business decisions. It’s a safe space—one in which they can learn and grow. Outcomes we’ve observed are that people assimilate more easily to making consequential decisions since we’ve prepared them to do so. We focus on making new mistakes and learning from the old ones, while developing a cadence of discussion focused on growth and opportunity, not just status.
Some of my industry colleagues give me flak about the deliberation and investment required for us to just have a chance at success – “Sounds good in theory Jermon, but our clients need people now and your approach isn’t cheap. How can you afford to operate in that model?” My response is, “How can you afford not to?” Among many benefits, the more obvious ones are:
That brings me to the OG, James Crandall, Platinum’s Employee #1. James joined us as a part-time Web developer right in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. I promised him the world – investment in his future, meaningful opportunities to grow and the chance to focus his energies on the technology weapons of choice. Not sure how much he believed me, but he took the job anyway, and I was excited to have my first employee.
James exhibited all the qualities we look for in a #TeamPlatinum member, with contributions that far exceeded my expectations. Fast forward 3+ years, and James, now a Senior Solutions Architect, has been responsible for building our low-code practice and has led major software development projects for our clients. More importantly, he’s now a husband and father to two beautiful girls. At Platinum, James has been a shining light for what we hope to accomplish – create dot-connecting multipliers that are inspired to act, help each other, and deliver results. In the next week, James will start a new role (ironically with LinkedIn) and guess what… I couldn’t be happier for and prouder of him. He is going to impress his leadership and do exceedingly well for the organization. It is a bittersweet moment for me personally, but he will take the #PlatinumValues with him to his next gig and be a strong representation for what others can achieve.
As I noted earlier, we're stewards for a season. I would love to be able to keep everyone that we hire, but obviously that will never be the case. This fact doesn’t lessen the responsibility we have as leaders to provide the best opportunity for our teammates to thrive as employees and citizens. It’s the risk I’m willing to take to create a better community of leaders. Build the Factory.
See you in a couple weeks.
.::jb