By Linda Henman
June 10, 2010
If you played sports in school, did the coach play everyone equally? Create an egalitarian form of governance in which each person had a say? Or, did the stars, the ones who had the innate athletic ability and drive to put it into action receive a disproportionate amount of playing time and the coach’s attention? If you won many games, I suspect the second scenario.
Fairness demands each person receive an equal opportunity to succeed, not equal treatment along the way. If your high potentials show a willingness to work the extra hours, take the additional training, and attend night school for advanced education, why shouldn’t you reward them differently than those who don’t? As your athletic coaches understood, so you need to understand. Only by grooming the top 20 percent of your talent will you ultimately win the war for talent. Certainly, compensate them monetarily, but also reward them with the best and cheapest prize of all—your mentoring.
In organizations, we tend to resist this reality, however. We address non-productive behavior and underachievers. When we do this, our stars vote with their feet by walking out our doors. “A” players want to play on winning teams, and they don’t suffer "C" and "D" players too long or too much. “A” players demand your attention, but giving it to them won’t always prove easy.
One of the most challenging issues you’ll face, in fact, will be coaching high potentials. As people near peak performance, tasks become mundane, problems less interesting, and opportunities less fascinating. The adrenaline wanes. They start to experience discontent and to wonder what happened to the excitement. You may see less enthusiasm and subtle loss of edge.
I have spent my career selecting "A" players during the pre-employment process and coaching them for promotion. They embody the aptitude, behaviors, and attitude of stars. Sometimes they lack experience, but since they are so clever and learn so quickly, gaining requisite experience seldom stands in their way. I have found, however, that most leaders don’t know how to coach them, even if they themselves would be counted as stars. Through the years, I have learned the following things about attracting and nurturing "A" players, stars, high potentials—whatever term you choose to use:
• Clever people learn quickly, so they bore easily. About the time they master a skill set, they itch to move on and start to take the recruiters’ calls.
• You can’t fool them with titles, even though they appreciate ones that mean something. They want ever-changing, challenging work and real authority to make a difference.
• They require other "A" players on their team. Make your organization a place where the clever choose to work, and your stars will become your best magnets for other top performers.
• Celebrate innovation and experimentation, even when that means the occasional failure. Clever people like to create. You have to give them that chance.
• They know their worth and expect to be compensated fairly. Even though star performers don’t usually count compensation among their reasons for taking or leaving a job, they do have a sense of fair play and want to be rewarded for who and what they are.
• Top performers don’t respond well to autocratic leadership. Nor do they appreciate laissez-fair leadership. They want direction but in the form of democratic guidance, not an absence of direction.
• Try to micromanage a star just a little, and you will lose that person.
• A players want access—to you, your top clients, investors, and anyone else who is important to the organization.
• Star performers require praise, but unless you offer it sincerely and specifically, they will dismiss it.
• The best and brightest lead with strategy, not tactics. Often, in fact, they lack strong detail orientation and need others to keep them on track.
Dr. Linda Henman is the president of Henman Performance Group, a St. Louis based consulting firm. For more than 30 years, Dr. Henman, the author of The Magnetic Boss, has worked with executives to help them set strategy, plan succession, and develop talent.She can be reached at www.henmanperformancegroup.com.