HR Voices

The Assumption That HR Needs to Solve

32 min · I går
episode The Assumption That HR Needs to Solve cover

Beskrivelse

Summary On HR Voices, host Rebecca Taylor sits down with Chad Thompson, Chief People Officer at LanzaTech, to work through a scenario every people leader will recognize: a manager discloses an employee's performance improvement plan in a team meeting, and a confidentiality complaint follows. The conversation opens into the bigger questions underneath it. Is HR confidentiality even real? How do you balance being an employee advocate and a business partner at the same time? And why does HR keep getting cast as the policeman instead of the strategist? Chad makes the case that HR's credibility problems are largely self-inflicted, and fixable. This one is for HR and people ops leaders who are tired of being blamed first and valued last. Chapters 00:00 Intro 00:45 The broken confidentiality scenario 03:15 Why most PIPs are given reluctantly 07:05 The confidentiality promise HR can't keep 10:50 Scapegoats, linemen, and the HR tightrope 14:30 Who you talk to first in a complaint 18:30 When to involve legal, and the harassment flag 20:00 A PIP is redeeming the investment you made 24:00 The benched quarterback: failing in public 29:30 The assumption about HR that needs to die Takeaways 1. Once a rating is in the performance system, confidentiality is largely fiction, so set honest expectations instead of promising secrecy you can't keep. 2. A PIP, done right, is the most genuine attempt to redeem a hire you spent real money to make, not a shortcut to firing. 3. The core skill of HR is holding two opposing loyalties at once: employee advocate and business partner. 4. Public failure, like a visible PIP, can make a fair evaluation more possible, not less, because it ends the pretending. 5. HR earns its strategic seat by bringing a business point of view, not by running process and waiting to be valued. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chad-thompson-b200028/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chad-thompson-b200028/] Website: https://lanzatech.com [https://lanzatech.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/]

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89 Episoder

episode The Assumption That HR Needs to Solve cover

The Assumption That HR Needs to Solve

Summary On HR Voices, host Rebecca Taylor sits down with Chad Thompson, Chief People Officer at LanzaTech, to work through a scenario every people leader will recognize: a manager discloses an employee's performance improvement plan in a team meeting, and a confidentiality complaint follows. The conversation opens into the bigger questions underneath it. Is HR confidentiality even real? How do you balance being an employee advocate and a business partner at the same time? And why does HR keep getting cast as the policeman instead of the strategist? Chad makes the case that HR's credibility problems are largely self-inflicted, and fixable. This one is for HR and people ops leaders who are tired of being blamed first and valued last. Chapters 00:00 Intro 00:45 The broken confidentiality scenario 03:15 Why most PIPs are given reluctantly 07:05 The confidentiality promise HR can't keep 10:50 Scapegoats, linemen, and the HR tightrope 14:30 Who you talk to first in a complaint 18:30 When to involve legal, and the harassment flag 20:00 A PIP is redeeming the investment you made 24:00 The benched quarterback: failing in public 29:30 The assumption about HR that needs to die Takeaways 1. Once a rating is in the performance system, confidentiality is largely fiction, so set honest expectations instead of promising secrecy you can't keep. 2. A PIP, done right, is the most genuine attempt to redeem a hire you spent real money to make, not a shortcut to firing. 3. The core skill of HR is holding two opposing loyalties at once: employee advocate and business partner. 4. Public failure, like a visible PIP, can make a fair evaluation more possible, not less, because it ends the pretending. 5. HR earns its strategic seat by bringing a business point of view, not by running process and waiting to be valued. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chad-thompson-b200028/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chad-thompson-b200028/] Website: https://lanzatech.com [https://lanzatech.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/]

I går32 min
episode The Manager Who Broke the Rule and Was Right cover

The Manager Who Broke the Rule and Was Right

Summary On HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor and Kandi Gongora, Chief Transformation and People Officer at The Car Group, work through a forced ranking system that's falling apart: managers are required to put 10% of every team in the bottom tier each year, one manager refuses and certifies in writing that her whole team exceeds expectations, and discrimination complaints reveal the bottom tiers skew by race. Kandi makes the case that the bottom 10% is a leadership failure, not an employee verdict, and that the "insubordinate" manager is the company's best early warning. It's a clear-eyed look at performance management, disparate-impact risk, and what to build instead of a curve. For HR leaders, people ops teams, and any manager who owns performance reviews. Chapters 00:00 Intro 01:20 The scenario: forced ranking meets a manager who says no 02:35 The first question: what are you trying to achieve? 03:55 Why companies still force-rank 06:15 Whose fault is the bottom 10%? 12:45 The insubordinate manager as a data point 15:45 Vague ratings and the disparate-impact risk 19:00 The difficult high performer who gets buried 23:15 Making the case to change the system 28:45 HR protects the company by protecting employees Takeaways 1. A true bottom-tier performer points upstream to hiring, onboarding, development, and unclear expectations, not down to the employee. 2. The manager who refused to force-rank her team is a data point and a risk signal, not just an insubordination case. 3. Forced ranking usually substitutes for the courage and skill to have honest performance conversations, and sometimes for funding raises. 4. Vague rating labels like "exceeds" and "meets" invite bias; define behaviors, metrics, and growth instead. 5. HR protects the company by protecting employees, and changing a biased system does both at once. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kandigongora/ Company: The Car Group (Norm Reeves), https://www.normreeves.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/

23. juni 202630 min
episode When the Data Tells a Different Story Than the Manager cover

When the Data Tells a Different Story Than the Manager

Summary On HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor and guest Stacy Winsett, Chief People Officer at RATP Dev USA, work through a termination scenario that collapses into a six-figure settlement. A manager fires an employee after a heated call, then backdates the performance notes, and metadata in discovery exposes it. Stacy argues the real failure runs deeper than the firing: a manager carrying two open headcount gaps and fourteen direct reports was never flagged as a risk. The conversation moves from documentation discipline to psychological safety to workforce planning. Essential listening for HR and people-ops leaders who want to prevent these failures, not just clean them up. Chapters 00:00 Welcome and the shortcut termination scenario 02:15 Why missing documentation is the biggest risk 04:20 Where the investigation begins: prove up everything 07:45 De-escalation in the heat: let's talk tomorrow 10:05 The code word that buys psychological safety 12:05 Cultural blind spots and folk legalisms 14:45 Metadata and the moment the case collapses 16:45 Workforce planning and span of control 24:00 Over-functioning, boundaries, and the cost 27:45 One HR assumption that needs challenging Takeaways 1. An undocumented termination is legally a non-event, and backdated notes caught by metadata destroy credibility entirely. 2. Documentation the employee never received barely counts; fair process means they had a real chance to improve. 3. Psychological safety is risk management, because fear pushes stretched managers to fire first and document later. 4. Span of control is a leading risk indicator that belongs in regular workforce planning, not at the bottom of the list. 5. Over-functioning managers get rewarded until the workload comes due; someone has to ask if they're okay. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stacywinsett/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stacywinsett/] Website: https://www.ratpdev.com/en/usa/ [https://www.ratpdev.com/en/usa/] 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/]

18. juni 202628 min
episode The Four Words That Keep HR in the Room cover

The Four Words That Keep HR in the Room

Summary On this episode of HR Voices, Rebecca Taylor and Julianne Galli, VP of People at Kindbody, work through a fabricated but painfully familiar scenario: a 61-year-old senior director is retitled "Director of Special Projects," stripped of his reports, and files an age discrimination complaint eight months before his pension vests. They argue the real risk isn't the age claim, it's that the decision was made with no HR in the room. Julianne shares the four-word tactic she uses to insert friction without becoming the obstacle, and the two draw a hard line on what AI can and can't do in an investigation. Essential listening for HR and people leaders who are tired of being brought in as cleanup. Chapters 00:00 Why HR can feel like Groundhog Day 02:30 The scenario: The Demotion That Wasn't 04:15 The real red flag isn't his age 06:00 Left out by accident, or on purpose? 08:30 "Have you considered?" and useful friction 10:30 Order of operations: legal, leader, employee 14:00 You can't move people like chess pieces 17:15 Why AI can't run the investigation 21:00 Evidence over intentions, and slow to go fast Takeaways 1. The riskiest fact in a role change is often "no HR involvement," not the protected-class detail everyone fixates on. 2. Reframing friction as "have you considered?" lets HR challenge a decision without becoming the obstacle. 3. AI can organize documentation and surface prior cases, but the witness conversations and the judgment stay human. 4. The same facts can read as discrimination or as clumsy succession planning; partnership and clear communication are what separate them. 5. In a dispute, only documented evidence counts, so build the paper trail and partner early. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julianne-galli-m-s-ed/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/julianne-galli-m-s-ed/] Website: https://kindbody.com/employer-benefits/ [https://kindbody.com/employer-benefits/] 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/]

16. juni 202626 min
episode The Talent Engine No Software Can Replicate cover

The Talent Engine No Software Can Replicate

Summary On HR Voices, host Rebecca Taylor talks with Paul Yater, who holds the unusual dual role of Chief Information Officer and Head of Human Resources at 84 Lumber, a building materials supplier with 7,600 associates across 320 locations in 34 states. Paul explains how the company promotes 96% of its store leadership from within, hiring up to 4,000 people a year into entry-level manager-trainee roles. He breaks down the machinery behind that pipeline, the training facility, the learning system, the structured onboarding, and argues that the real driver is a pay-it-forward culture no software can replicate. The conversation closes on where AI belongs in recruiting: surfacing and ranking candidates, never making the culture-fit call. It's a useful listen for HR and talent leaders deciding how much of people development to automate. Chapters 00:00 A different kind of HR Voices episode  01:00 84 Lumber by the numbers  02:10 How the IT guy ended up running HR  05:30 Eight years of transition: COVID, AI, recruiting  06:40 Why 96% of leaders started entry-level  07:40 The tools behind internal mobility  08:50 Pay it forward: the culture you can't install  12:40 Putting AI to work in recruiting  16:00 Recruiting is marketing, and trucks are billboards  19:10 One step toward internal mobility today Takeaways 1. A 96% internal promotion rate is the proof point that 84 Lumber's promote-from-within model works at scale. 2. Training tools and structured onboarding get you halfway; a pay-it-forward culture is what actually moves people up. 3. AI's job in recruiting is to surface and rank candidates and draft outreach, while recruiters keep ownership of personalization and culture fit. 4. Hiring for people "willing to bet on themselves" beats hiring for prior industry experience when the development engine is strong. 5. Treat recruiting like marketing: partner weekly, A/B test messaging by geography, and use grassroots channels like job-site truck signage. Connect with the Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-yater-b229633/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-yater-b229633/] Website: https://www.84lumber.com/ [https://www.84lumber.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/]

11. juni 202620 min