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Work Rules!

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Work Rules!

A New Philosophy of Work

  • Trust employees fundamentally: Build systems based on trust rather than control
  • Focus on creating a great culture: Recognize that culture drives performance and innovation
  • Give employees freedom: Provide autonomy to make decisions and solve problems
  • Base decisions on data: Use evidence and experimentation to guide people practices
  • Measure impact rigorously: Track outcomes of HR initiatives like any other business function
  • Look beyond conventional wisdom: Question traditional HR approaches and management practices
  • Apply behavioral economics: Use nudges and choice architecture to help employees make better decisions
  • Build transparency into systems: Share information openly, including compensation and performance data
  • Recognize psychological safety’s importance: Create environments where people feel safe to take risks
  • Balance employee needs with business goals: Find approaches that benefit both individuals and the organization

Finding Exceptional Talent

  • Define “exceptional” concretely: Create clear criteria for what constitutes exceptional talent
  • Emphasize cognitive ability: Prioritize learning ability and problem-solving skills in hiring
  • Look for leadership potential: Identify candidates who lead without authority
  • Seek culture contributors, not culture fit: Find people who add to your culture rather than simply fitting in
  • Involve employees in hiring: Use hiring committees rather than individual decision-makers
  • Establish structured interviews: Ask consistent, job-related questions of all candidates
  • Create work sample tests: Use job-related tasks to evaluate actual performance
  • Avoid typical interview questions: Steer clear of brainteasers and hypothetical scenarios
  • Focus on achievement over experience: Look for accomplishments rather than roles
  • Implement predictive analytics: Use data to improve hiring success rates

Making the Hiring Process Work

  • Set a high bar consistently: Maintain rigorous standards for all hires
  • Design deliberate assessment: Create a hiring process that tests for your most important attributes
  • Train interviewers thoroughly: Ensure evaluators know how to conduct effective interviews
  • Separate assessment from decision-making: Have different people collect data and make hiring decisions
  • Mitigate unconscious bias: Implement specific practices to reduce bias in the hiring process
  • Optimize candidate experience: Create a respectful, engaging experience regardless of outcome
  • Track quality of hire: Measure how well hiring decisions predict later performance
  • Review hiring outcomes regularly: Analyze hiring data to improve decision quality
  • Engage hiring managers meaningfully: Ensure they understand their role in the process
  • Invest time in hiring: Recognize that thorough hiring processes save time and money long-term

Building Best-in-Class Benefits

  • Focus on meaningful benefits: Prioritize offerings that truly impact employee wellbeing
  • Adapt benefits to life stages: Create programs that support employees through different life events
  • Apply behavioral economics to benefits: Make the best options the default choices
  • Balance standardization with personalization: Create consistent frameworks with individual flexibility
  • Consider families, not just employees: Design benefits that support employees’ loved ones
  • Make wellness convenient: Remove barriers to healthy behaviors and preventive care
  • Address financial wellbeing: Provide education and tools for financial health
  • Design for inclusion: Ensure benefits work for employees of all backgrounds and circumstances
  • Create supportive leave policies: Build generous, flexible approaches to time away from work
  • Test benefit effectiveness: Measure impact of offerings on employee health, happiness, and retention

Managing Performance and Development

  • Separate performance assessment from development conversations: Hold distinct discussions for evaluation and growth
  • Gather multi-source feedback: Collect input from peers, managers, and reports
  • Focus on objective evidence: Base evaluations on specific behaviors and outcomes
  • Combat assessment biases: Implement processes to reduce common rating errors
  • Create calibration processes: Compare evaluations across teams to ensure consistency
  • Focus on development planning: Help employees create concrete growth plans
  • Enable peer recognition: Create systems for colleagues to acknowledge contributions
  • Balance individual and team performance: Recognize both personal achievement and collaborative success
  • Provide regular feedback: Create mechanisms for ongoing, timely input beyond formal reviews
  • Hold managers accountable: Evaluate leaders on how well they develop their teams

Building a Learning Organization

  • Make learning part of everyday work: Integrate development into regular activities
  • Promote teaching and sharing: Create expectations that knowledge is shared, not hoarded
  • Build feedback-rich environments: Establish practices for regular, constructive feedback
  • Create psychological safety: Make it safe to admit mistakes and ask questions
  • Design onboarding for learning: Start new employees with development-focused experiences
  • Balance challenge and support: Provide stretching assignments with appropriate guidance
  • Model continuous learning: Demonstrate learning behaviors at all leadership levels
  • Measure learning outcomes: Track development progress, not just training hours
  • Create peer learning opportunities: Enable employees to learn from each other
  • Balance formal and informal learning: Combine structured programs with organic development

Pay and Recognition

  • Pay unfairly: Differentiate compensation based on performance and impact
  • Explain the compensation philosophy: Help employees understand how pay decisions are made
  • Create transparency around pay: Share information about compensation processes and ranges
  • Combine intrinsic and extrinsic motivation: Balance financial rewards with meaningful work
  • Use spot bonuses effectively: Provide timely recognition for exceptional contributions
  • Design recognition for visibility: Make appreciation public when appropriate
  • Create peer recognition systems: Enable employees to acknowledge each other’s contributions
  • Align rewards with desired behaviors: Ensure incentives reinforce your cultural values
  • Consider team-based rewards: Recognize collaborative achievements, not just individual performance
  • Test reward effectiveness: Measure the impact of recognition programs on motivation and results

Managing Organizational Culture

  • Define values concretely: Translate abstract principles into specific behaviors
  • Measure culture regularly: Assess how well your stated values match everyday practices
  • Hold leaders accountable for culture: Evaluate managers on how they embody values
  • Create culture champions: Identify and empower employees who exemplify your values
  • Address cultural violations promptly: Take action when behaviors contradict stated values
  • Tell culture stories: Share examples that illustrate your values in action
  • Design processes to reinforce culture: Align systems and procedures with cultural priorities
  • Connect culture to performance: Show how cultural elements drive business results
  • Evolve culture deliberately: Update cultural elements thoughtfully as the organization changes
  • Tolerate quirks, not jerks: Allow for individuality while addressing destructive behaviors

Making Decisions Based on Data

  • Establish people analytics capabilities: Build teams that apply data science to people decisions
  • Ask meaningful questions: Focus analysis on important business and employee outcomes
  • Combine quantitative and qualitative data: Use multiple methods to understand complex issues
  • Run controlled experiments: Test people practices with rigorous experimental design
  • Share results transparently: Communicate findings even when they contradict expectations
  • Make analytics accessible: Build user-friendly tools that help managers apply insights
  • Focus on practical applications: Prioritize analytics that lead to concrete actions
  • Balance privacy with transparency: Protect sensitive information while sharing useful insights
  • Build analytics partnerships: Connect people analytics with other data teams
  • Create an experimentation culture: Encourage testing and learning in people practices

The Role of Managers

  • Focus managers on coaching: Position leaders as developers of talent, not just task managers
  • Select managers for people skills: Choose leaders for their ability to motivate and develop others
  • Measure management effectiveness: Track key indicators of management quality
  • Train coaching behaviors: Develop specific management skills like feedback and development planning
  • Reduce administrative burdens: Free managers from unnecessary tasks to focus on people
  • Set clear management expectations: Define the specific behaviors effective managers exhibit
  • Create peer support for managers: Build communities for sharing management practices
  • Hold managers accountable: Evaluate leaders on team development and satisfaction
  • Provide management tools and resources: Equip leaders with frameworks and guidance
  • Consider management alternatives: Create non-management career paths for technical excellence

Change Management and Innovation

  • Focus on the user: Design change initiatives with employee experience at the center
  • Start small and iterate: Test changes on limited scale before broad implementation
  • Create change champions: Identify influential employees to advocate for new approaches
  • Communicate change effectively: Explain both what is changing and why
  • Anticipate resistance: Plan for common sources of change resistance
  • Create feedback loops: Build mechanisms to gather input during change processes
  • Balance top-down and bottom-up: Combine leadership direction with grassroots involvement
  • Measure adoption and impact: Track both implementation progress and outcomes
  • Tell success stories: Share examples of positive change impact
  • Create innovation spaces: Build formal and informal venues for new ideas

Key Takeaways

  1. Data-driven decisions: Base people practices on evidence and experimentation rather than intuition
  2. Trust fundamentally: Build systems that assume employees want to do great work
  3. Hiring rigor: Invest extraordinarily in finding exceptional talent through structured processes
  4. Performance clarity: Create transparent, objective systems for evaluating contribution
  5. Development priority: Focus intensely on learning, growth, and development at all levels
  6. Compensation differentiation: Pay disproportionately for exceptional performance and impact
  7. Management as coaching: Position managers primarily as developers of people and teams
  8. Culture by design: Create and maintain culture through deliberate practices and systems
  9. Meaningful benefits: Design programs that truly matter to employee wellbeing and productivity
  10. Continuous experimentation: Constantly test and refine people practices through rigorous methods