Are You An HR Ninja?

by May 9, 2018

Over the last decade, I’ve had lots of people ring me up to partner with them on culture change – whether they sought training, coaching or consulting. Through these conversations, it’s become very clear to me that I’m interacting with two types of HR: Compliance-focused HR, and Strategic HR.

Compliance-focused HR professionals view their role as technical. They submit payroll on time, schedule sexual harassment trainings, keep on managers to hold their annual performance reviews, etc.

They keep the company running – they get employees paid, handle legally required paperwork, and focus on minimizing risk.

Strategic HR professionals are focused on the organization’s vision and mission and how to forecast organizational needs. They conduct job analysis, develop recruiting strategies, create onboarding programs, ensure managers are delivering collaborative performance management, etc.

These folks want to set their employees up for success. They are passionate about building and sustaining a positive work environment where their employees can thrive.

Neither is wrong or right – just different.

I do notice a pattern, however. Smaller companies tend to have more compliance-focused HR people, and that can hinder company growth because there’s no strategy behind HR activities. HR becomes a cost center that’s just part of doing business, like paying the electric bill or having insurance.

I also notice that even in larger organizations where the HR professionals tend to think more strategically, leaders still only view them as administrators of personnel. Those strategic HR folks are fighting for budget, opportunity, and even permission to do their jobs effectively and strategically.

They want to be change-makers and bottom-line contributors, but leadership is holding them back.

Seeing these patterns over and over again has driven me to become what I like to think of as an HR Ninja.

I’m always finding ways to help HR professionals be more strategic without getting budget or even permission from their leaders. I do it because I hate to see leaders keep their own employees from thriving, simply because they don’t understand what HR can really do.

If you want to be an HR Ninja too, check out my upcoming webinar on Employee Engagement That Transcends Generations. I will give you the low-down on what drives engagement in each of the generations currently in our workforce, and how to tap into it…

But my tips will all be turn-key tips, things you can do without budget or permission.

And if you’re in HR, you know the newest generation is changing the way every generation works, so you’re gonna need a ninja star and nunchucks to be successful, especially if your leader won’t let you be as strategic as you want to be.

So join me on May 15 at 10 am PST – all attendees get a free pair of nunchucks (kidding, sort of).

Register here.

Catherine

About Catherine Mattice

Catherine Mattice, MA, SPHR, SHRM-SCP is President of consulting and training firm, Civility Partners, and has been successfully providing programs in workplace bullying and building positive workplaces since 2007. Her clients include Fortune 500’s, the military, several universities and hospitals, government agencies, small businesses and nonprofits. She has published in a variety of trade magazines and has appeared several times on NPR, FOX, NBC, and ABC as an expert, as well as in USA Today, Inc Magazine, Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, and more. Catherine is Past-President of the Association for Talent Development (ATD), San Diego Chapter and teaches at National University. In his book foreword, Ken Blanchard called her book, BACK OFF! Your Kick-Ass Guide to Ending Bullying at Work, “the most comprehensive and valuable handbook on the topic.” She recently released a second book entitled, SEEKING CIVILITY: How Leaders, Managers and HR Can Create a Workplace Free of Bullying.

4 Smart Ways to Use AI to Build Civility at Work

Use AI to build civility. SHRM reports that 66% of U.S. employees have experienced or witnessed incivility at work. And those moments of disrespect don’t stay isolated. They ripple. Research from Christine Porath at Georgetown University shows that incivility is...

Offensive Terms to Avoid: What You Say Matters More Than You Think

According to SHRM, 66% of U.S. employees have experienced or witnessed incivility in their workplace. The most common forms include addressing others disrespectfully and interrupting others while they are speaking. Meanwhile, a Deloitte survey reveals that 84% of...

Celebrate Diversity With Music: A Playlist for Inclusivity

A few years back, we put together a playlist for inclusivity in the office and it quickly became one of our most popular blogs, proving that something as simple as music can strike a big chord (pun intended) as people find solidarity in it. So we thought, why not do...

Join our FREE WEBINAR – Fostering a Workplace Where Feedback Fuels Change

Imagine this: A senior leader makes an offhanded, inappropriate remark in a team meeting. The room tenses, eyes drop, and a few uncomfortable chuckles fill the silence. No one speaks up. You’re caught off guard, unsure what to do. Later, someone from that meeting...

Silence Is Not Golden: 5 Ways Lack of Feedback Kills Productivity

Whenever you search on Google or ask ChatGPT for something, you get an answer in a snap. An unintended result of this technology is that we expect immediate feedback from people, too. A lack of feedback kills productivity.  In 2008, tech scholar Nicholas Carr raised a...

5 Ways to Give Feedback to a Toxic Worker About Their Toxic Behavior

If you’ve landed on this page, chances are you’re looking for answers. Maybe you’ve tried everything, or maybe you’re bracing yourself for a conversation you’d rather not have. Or you don't know how to give feedback to a toxic worker about their behavior. Either way,...

It’s Not All in Your Head: 5 Signs You’re In a Toxic Workplace

If you’ve ever questioned whether your workplace is truly toxic or if you’re just “overreacting,” you’re not alone. The truth is, if work feels unbearable day after day, it’s not a bad week—it’s a bigger problem. It could be signs you're in a toxic workplace. Research...

Struggling with a Toxic Boss? Read This

Did you know that seven in ten U.S. workers say they would leave a job if they had a bad manager? That’s according to the latest findings of LinkedIn’s Workforce Confidence survey. Leaders who exhibit challenging behaviors don’t just cost their organizations talented...

NEW BOOK: Navigating a Toxic Work Environment for Dummies

Does your workplace feel like a daily battle for survival? Endless conflict, backstabbing, bullying, and leadership that turns a blind eye… Sound familiar? For too many professionals, the workplace isn’t a place of productivity and growth; it’s a source of anxiety and...

DEI needed if hiring on merit is your goal

Trump has initiated a series of actions aimed at dismantling diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives within the federal government. On January 20, he signed Executive Order 14151, titled "Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and...