HR Voices

HR Voices

Purpose, People, and Process: The Three Things That Hold in HR

25 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Purpose, People, and Process: The Three Things That Hold in HR

Descripción

Summary In this episode of HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor is joined by Paul D. Brubaker, VP of HR for North America at KARL STORZ, to work through one of the most complex scenarios an HR leader can face: a confidential misconduct investigation has leaked from inside the function, and now HR must run two simultaneous inquiries without contaminating either one. Paul walks through his sequencing framework, explains why maintaining an open mind during a contested investigation is a form of rigor, and reflects on the two inputs that carry teams through organizational change. This episode is for HR leaders who want to think more clearly about what it means to hold the function's standards when holding them is hardest. Chapters 00:00 Welcome to HR Voices and show format 02:00 The scenario: The Internal Investigation Leak 03:30 First move: the legal hold 06:00 Who investigates when your investigator is compromised? 08:00 Fighting the assumption of guilt 12:00 Zero gray: what happens when the leaker is found 15:30 Building trust as an HR function 17:00 Data, courage, and speaking truth to power 22:00 Purpose and people: what holds teams through change 24:00 Final advice: step back, stay open, follow the process Takeaways 1. When an investigation leaks from inside your own function, issue a legal hold before you make any personnel decisions. 2. Fighting the assumption of guilt is not kindness. It is what keeps the investigation clean and defensible. 3. If the leaker inside HR or legal is identified, the consequence is termination. There is no gray area. 4. The two inputs that stay stable through organizational change are purpose and peer relationships. Point people back to what hasn't changed. 5. HR's credibility is built in the hard cases, not the easy ones. Guest links * Paul D. Brubaker on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pdbrubaker/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pdbrubaker/] * KARL Storz: https://www.karlstorz.com/us/en/index.htm?target= [https://www.karlstorz.com/us/en/index.htm?target=] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/] * (00:00) - Welcome to HR Voices and show format * (02:00) - The scenario: The Internal Investigation Leak * (03:30) - First move: the legal hold * (06:00) - Who investigates when your investigator is compromised? * (08:00) - Fighting the assumption of guilt * (12:00) - Zero gray: what happens when the leaker is found * (15:30) - Building trust as an HR function * (17:00) - Data, courage, and speaking truth to power * (22:00) - Purpose and people: what holds teams through change * (24:00) - Final advice: step back, stay open, follow the process

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81 episodios

episode The Manager Accountability Trap Most Organizations Walk Into artwork

The Manager Accountability Trap Most Organizations Walk Into

Summary In this episode of HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor is joined by Margie Zyble, CHRO at UC Health Cincinnati, to work through a high-stakes scenario: a company's forced ranking system produces racially disparate outcomes, a manager refuses to rank her team in the bottom tier, and HR must advise on both. Margie draws on her experience to separate the two problems, explain why most manager defiance traces back to a skill gap rather than principled dissent, and make the case for running an enablement phase before any accountability conversation begins. This episode is for HR leaders, ER specialists, and people ops practitioners navigating the gap between process compliance and genuine manager development. Chapters 00:00 Welcome and the scenario: forced ranking fallout 02:30 What stands out as most risky right out of the gate 05:30 Margie's honest take on forced ranking as a philosophy 07:30 Why team size and context change the calibration conversation 10:00 How to start the investigation: who to talk to first and why  12:30 Manager defiance as a skill gap, not a principled stand 14:15 Conflict avoidance and the easiest out in performance management 17:30 Separating insubordination from disparate impact as two distinct problems 20:00 Best practices when you have to operate inside a forced ranking system 23:00 Enablement before expectations: Margie's two-phase framework for people leaders Takeaways 1. Most manager refusals to differentiate trace back to conflict avoidance and a skill gap, not a principled objection to the system. 2. Separating the manager defiance issue from the disparate impact risk is critical — they require different investigations and different remedies. 3. Run an enablement phase before you move to accountability; organizations that skip this step manufacture the manager problems they later have to investigate. 4. Qualitative context built from years of watching managers operate is valid HR evidence — use it to sharpen questions, not to replace investigation. 5. Empathy and fast action are not opposites: once someone isn't absorbing coaching and it's affecting the team, urgency is the appropriate response. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marjorie-zyble/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/marjorie-zyble/] Website: https://www.uchealth.com/ [https://www.uchealth.com/] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/] * (00:00) - Welcome and the scenario: forced ranking fallout * (02:30) - What stands out as most risky right out of the gate * (05:30) - Margie's honest take on forced ranking as a philosophy * (07:30) - Why team size and context change the calibration conversation * (10:00) - How to start the investigation: who to talk to first and why * (12:30) - Manager defiance as a skill gap, not a principled stand * (14:15) - Conflict avoidance and the easiest out in performance management * (17:30) - Separating insubordination from disparate impact as two distinct problems * (20:00) - Best practices when you have to operate inside a forced ranking system * (23:00) - Enablement before expectations: Margie's two-phase framework for people leaders

28 de may de 202626 min
episode The Paradox of Well-Meaning Messages artwork

The Paradox of Well-Meaning Messages

Summary HR Voices explores real and fabricated anonymized employee relations scenarios through the lens of experienced HR and People leaders. In this episode, Rebecca Taylor is joined by D'Mar Phillips, VP of People and Culture at RS Americas, to work through "The Social Media Outing": a manager discovers via personal social media that a direct report is gay, tries to signal inclusion without disclosure, and faces a confrontation. D'Mar unpacks the difference between intent and impact, explains why HR should always talk to the employee first in a trust rupture, and lays out his core operating philosophy: being people-first is not a soft alternative to business thinking. It is business thinking. Chapters 00:00 Welcome to HR Voices 01:30 The Social Media Outing scenario 05:00 What's most risky and unclear 08:30 Psychological safety and the cost of being outed 12:00 Personal social media is not workplace information 17:00 D'Mar's personal rule on colleagues and social media 22:00 Who do you talk to first? 26:00 Supporting the employee: EAP, Trevor Project, outside resources 31:00 The manager conversation: understanding motive without assigning blame 35:00 People-first doesn't mean people-only Takeaways 1. Personal social media information is categorically off-limits for workplace decisions, in either direction. 2. When trust breaks, start with the employee first because that is where psychological and legal risk concentrates. 3. Intent is a mitigating factor, not a defense. Good intentions do not cancel the impact on the person affected. 4. HR's value is in holding the gray: advocating for both parties while building a workable path forward. 5. Being people-first and being business-minded are not in tension. Trusted people deliver better business outcomes. Meet the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmarphillips/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmarphillips/] Website: https://us.rs-online.com/ [https://us.rs-online.com/] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/] * (00:00) - Welcome to HR Voices * (01:30) - The Social Media Outing scenario * (05:00) - What's most risky and unclear * (08:30) - Psychological safety and the cost of being outed * (12:00) - Personal social media is not workplace information * (17:00) - D'Mar's personal rule on colleagues and social media * (22:00) - Who do you talk to first? * (26:00) - Supporting the employee: EAP, Trevor Project, outside resources * (31:00) - The manager conversation: understanding motive without assigning blame * (35:00) - People-first doesn't mean people-only

26 de may de 202638 min
episode The Expectations Nobody Wrote Down artwork

The Expectations Nobody Wrote Down

Summary On HR Voices, host Rebecca Taylor and Jeannie Virden, Chief People Officer at Central Health, work through a layered employee relations scenario: an employee with an approved work from home accommodation whose manager wants to move to a PIP three months later. They unpack why the accommodation is often a distraction from the real issue, how unstated remote expectations set people up to fail, and what documentation a PIP actually requires. Jeannie makes the case that strong HR slows managers down, asks for the paper trail, and reframes "you could" into "should you." For any people leader who manages remote teams or owns the accommodation and performance process. Chapters 00:00 The accommodating conflict 03:40 Where a strong HR leader starts 07:15 Is 90 days really enough time? 08:45 A PIP has a brand 09:55 "I need more than the output isn't there" 11:20 Presenteeism doesn't survive remote 13:10 Talking managers down from a bad call 17:40 Training is the first thing budgets cut 22:50 You could, but should you? Takeaways 1. The accommodation is often a spotlight on management gaps, not the actual problem. 2. You can't fairly PIP someone for missing expectations you never set or wrote down. 3. "The output isn't there" is not a PIP; it has to name where the person is and where they need to get to. 4. Documented coaching across those 90 days is what separates a performance plan from an ambush. 5. Being technically allowed to act is not the same as it being the right, people centered move. Guest links Jeannie Virden on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeannievirden/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeannievirden/] Company Website: https://www.centralhealth.net/ [https://www.centralhealth.net/] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems — just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/]

21 de may de 202625 min
episode Purpose, People, and Process: The Three Things That Hold in HR artwork

Purpose, People, and Process: The Three Things That Hold in HR

Summary In this episode of HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor is joined by Paul D. Brubaker, VP of HR for North America at KARL STORZ, to work through one of the most complex scenarios an HR leader can face: a confidential misconduct investigation has leaked from inside the function, and now HR must run two simultaneous inquiries without contaminating either one. Paul walks through his sequencing framework, explains why maintaining an open mind during a contested investigation is a form of rigor, and reflects on the two inputs that carry teams through organizational change. This episode is for HR leaders who want to think more clearly about what it means to hold the function's standards when holding them is hardest. Chapters 00:00 Welcome to HR Voices and show format 02:00 The scenario: The Internal Investigation Leak 03:30 First move: the legal hold 06:00 Who investigates when your investigator is compromised? 08:00 Fighting the assumption of guilt 12:00 Zero gray: what happens when the leaker is found 15:30 Building trust as an HR function 17:00 Data, courage, and speaking truth to power 22:00 Purpose and people: what holds teams through change 24:00 Final advice: step back, stay open, follow the process Takeaways 1. When an investigation leaks from inside your own function, issue a legal hold before you make any personnel decisions. 2. Fighting the assumption of guilt is not kindness. It is what keeps the investigation clean and defensible. 3. If the leaker inside HR or legal is identified, the consequence is termination. There is no gray area. 4. The two inputs that stay stable through organizational change are purpose and peer relationships. Point people back to what hasn't changed. 5. HR's credibility is built in the hard cases, not the easy ones. Guest links * Paul D. Brubaker on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pdbrubaker/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pdbrubaker/] * KARL Storz: https://www.karlstorz.com/us/en/index.htm?target= [https://www.karlstorz.com/us/en/index.htm?target=] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/] * (00:00) - Welcome to HR Voices and show format * (02:00) - The scenario: The Internal Investigation Leak * (03:30) - First move: the legal hold * (06:00) - Who investigates when your investigator is compromised? * (08:00) - Fighting the assumption of guilt * (12:00) - Zero gray: what happens when the leaker is found * (15:30) - Building trust as an HR function * (17:00) - Data, courage, and speaking truth to power * (22:00) - Purpose and people: what holds teams through change * (24:00) - Final advice: step back, stay open, follow the process

19 de may de 202625 min
episode The $400K Retention Mistake: When One Counteroffer Becomes Four artwork

The $400K Retention Mistake: When One Counteroffer Becomes Four

Summary A single counteroffer—a 22% raise to retain a valued analyst—triggered a pay equity crisis within weeks. Three teammates discovered the increase, demanded comparable raises citing discrimination, and two threatened to leave. The retained employee, furious her confidential salary became public knowledge, now distrusts leadership. HR must decide: conduct a broader compensation audit, address the perceived precedent, or risk losing the entire team. This scenario exposes the hidden cost of reactive compensation decisions. Danessa Quadros, VP of People at WHSmith North America, walks through how to stabilize the situation, investigate root causes without making three more emotional decisions, and prevent wandering eyes before employees start interviewing. Her framework: write everything down, ask broad questions first, and never solve for pay without solving for trust. Timestamps 03:09 Why compensation disputes are always emotional—and solving for five people, not one  06:15 Stabilize first: who to talk to, what questions to ask, and why you start with the manager  09:41 The coaching moment: when leaders accidentally leak confidential salary information  12:28 Why "she got 22%" doesn't mean what employees think it means  15:23 Feelings aren't facts—but in HR, feelings are facts  19:42 How to prepare managers for pay conversations before the crisis hits  23:54 The most powerful phrase in HR: "I don't know—let me get back to you"  26:59 The assumption Danessa wants challenged: HR can be both heart-led and business-focused  Takeaways * Counteroffer decisions made under emotional pressure create cascading equity problems—avoid making three more reactive raises in response to one. * Stay interviews conducted quarterly give managers a pulse on retention risk before employees start interviewing elsewhere. * Document every conversation and decision; without evidence of how comp decisions were made, you can't prove or disprove discrimination claims. * Practice difficult conversations through role-play workshops—managers who rehearse pay and performance discussions build trust faster and make fewer mistakes. * Ask broad, open-ended questions first to uncover root causes; employees upset about a raise might actually be upset about recognition, growth, or family pressure. Connect with the guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danessa-quadros/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/danessa-quadros/] Company: https://www.whsmithna.com/ [https://www.whsmithna.com/] Sponsor AllVoices brings all your employee relations work together in one place. No more jumping between spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems—just one place to document and manage reports, cases, investigations, and performance conversations. It helps you run a more consistent process, takes busywork off your plate with AI, and makes it easier to spot trends early, so you can work proactively, not just put out fires. See a demo at https://www.allvoices.co/ [https://www.allvoices.co/] * (03:09) - Why compensation disputes are always emotional—and solving for five people, not one * (06:15) - Stabilize first: who to talk to, what questions to ask, and why you start with the manager * (09:41) - The coaching moment: when leaders accidentally leak confidential salary information * (12:28) - Why "she got 22%" doesn't mean what employees think it means * (15:23) - Feelings aren't facts—but in HR, feelings are facts * (19:42) - How to prepare managers for pay conversations before the crisis hits * (23:54) - The most powerful phrase in HR: "I don't know—let me get back to you" * (26:59) - The assumption Danessa wants challenged: HR can be both heart-led and business-focused

14 de may de 202628 min