In Houston, Listening to What Workers Want

BY Emilia Benton | April 18, 2022

From Day One’s conference at the Asia Society in Houston brought together more than 200 leading thinkers and top executives in HR, CSR, talent, diversity, employee engagement, and benefits for an engaging, up-to-the-minute conversation about how employers can build stronger bonds of trust and connection with their workers and their communities. The urgent topics at the February conference included the importance of offering career paths, developing diversity in leadership, balancing productivity with well-being, supporting working parents, and encouraging employees in community work. Highlights from the event:

The Major-League Clout of High-Profile Brands to Have Social Impact 

Paula Harris has often been the only African American person or the only woman in her workplace. As SVP of community affairs for the Houston Astros major-league baseball (MLB) team and executive director of the Astros Foundation, she is determined to work toward a time in which such scenarios are rare or nonexistent. “I think this next generation of employees are looking for employers where they don’t want to be the first. It should be part of the culture where you see diversity, diverse ideas, diverse people, diversity in their clients and everywhere else,” Harris said in a fireside chat to kick off the conference. Harris talked about her experience of moving past the empty corporate rhetoric of the past to today’s newly prominent needs. 

Paula Harris, SVP of community affairs for the Houston Astros of MLB

“People can tell when it’s just for show, or when you just spam out numbers,” she said. “The demands are greater and greater now, [and it’s] not to say that change isn’t happening fast enough, but to say that there’s a new awareness about what’s really going on. And we’ve seen what’s happening with corporate boards, and corporate boards haven’t been made to diversify.”

Harris described what the Astros Foundation is doing specifically to improve on this front, including partnering with the HBCU institution Texas Southern University, to which the Astros Foundation is giving a $500,000 grant. The Astros Foundation is also collaborating with students in sports management and STEM subjects (including some who have been affected by domestic violence) through scholarships and fellowships that allow them to work with the baseball team, as well as engage in volunteer projects involving the team and foundation.

These initiatives have admittedly been challenging amid the Covid-19 pandemic. “After Covid, it’s been tough to get people back reinvesting or bringing baseball back into the inner city, and [reviving] baseball in the inner city is a big focus of MLB,” Harris said. “But we really wanted to have kids come back to baseball because we have seen [the decline in numbers] of inner-city kids playing baseball and not as many African American Major League Baseball players, and it’s an investment in time and money.” 

How High-Performing Workplaces Can Show Compassion, Too 

Those investments were at the forefront during the ensuing panel discussion, titled “How High-Performing Workplaces Can Show Compassion, Too,” which highlighted how a competitive, innovative business can remain productive even while its employee engagement and retention depend on empathy and compassion–particularly when workers are expected to take certain risks and deliver maximum effort. Leaders and managers can model the importance of flexibility in remote-work situations in order to set the tone for a reasonable work-life harmony throughout their organizations, such as being open about when they’re going to be out of the office, be it for vacation or to spend valuable time with children.

The speakers considered how high-performing workplaces can show compassion, too

“Dialogue is so essential, and these are the things that we need to talk about. We need to talk about what the expectations are about communication,” said Lisa Warner, president of AMP Creative, a producer of corporate learning experiences. “Give permission from the outset to be transparent, to be candid, and show that we’re doing that.” Matthew Dodson, an organizational development leader at Chevron, highlighted the additional considerations that need to be taken when it comes to international teams, such as scheduling meetings and thinking about the time zones for everyone participating. “It’s just another way to think about the big world and people, [where] someone’s going to have to pay some type of sacrifice when you’re a global team,” Dodson said.

Finally, Warner highlighted webinars AMP had created to help people navigate stressors that the pandemic has brought on for both employees and employers. AMP’s new employee resources also include mental-health counseling services and an on-site primary care clinic. “Having that understanding, I think, helps people process their way of understanding their own emotional landscape, and then understanding the landscape of others,” she said. “So, perspective-taking is kind of where we start. We start by imagining what it might be like to be in someone else's shoes.”

Additional speakers included Julie Fawdington, head of operations for the data office of Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Kristi Pittman, VP of HR at Goodman Manufacturing, and Clelia Cayama Soto, VP of HR at Aegion, a construction and engineering company.

How to Simulate Career Progressions as a Retention Tool

Empathizing with the goals and experiences of employees can serve managers well too, a reality on full display during a thought-leadership spotlight titled “How to Simulate Career Progressions as a Retention Tool,” presented by Vijay Swaminathan, CEO of Draup, an AI-driven, decision-making platform. Swaminathan asserted that by understanding the trends affecting a company’s market ecosystem, businesses can develop prospective career progressions for employees to gain valuable insights into workforce-planning needs. 

Vijay Swaminathan, CEO of Draup

Given the digital transformation that virtually every industry is currently going through, Swaminathan highlighted how companies can effectively use career progression as an attractive retention tool to ease the burden of recruitment. “If you understand this layer, it actually takes you to a more skill-level view of the world,” he said. “Our prediction is that in the next two to three years, we [will] largely migrate toward a skill-based economy rather than a job role, or job-family-based type of a hierarchy.”

Certifications for largely digitally based programs typically take months, whereas companies are still asking for years of experience when looking for new hires. Swaminathan noted that companies should not overlook candidates holding two-year degrees in higher education, vs. four-year degrees. 

“Today, the entry point could be through an associate degree, or it could be through a bachelor’s degree from a university, and we cannot ignore the community college [degree] that is turning out fantastic,” he said. “With digital and technology talent, the challenge is that we don’t create enough jobs at an entry-level for those professionals, and then over time, we have a pipeline problem.” The pandemic has shown employers the importance of mapping out skills and prioritizing soft or behavioral skills as much as technical skills, with a focus on having empathy for coworkers and maintaining a good communication framework.

Managing a Healthy Workplace in a Hybrid Environment

Empathy and healthy communication are integral to a positive workplace culture. In a panel titled “Managing a Healthy Workplace in a Hybrid Environment,” the expert speakers discussed how a hybrid or remote workplace marked by uncertainty and lack of boundaries requires extra vigilance concerning the health and well-being of workers. Core ideas like flexibility, the idea that employees’ concerns are heard, and the opportunity for self-growth and development are critical. Leaders can also boost morale and productivity when they show they care–and respond with empathetic and effective solutions to the issues their employees face. 

“What we see as a healthy work environment today may be different two years from now, and so we need to make sure that we are continually assessing what that looks like and listening to our employees,” said Andrea Alexander, chief people officer at Rent the Runway. Lucho Vizcardo, head of international HR for the western hemisphere at Nabors Industries, and oil-and-gas drilling company, added: “What we knew two years ago where we were all learning from this, in addition to flexibility, will kind of combine into adaptability.”

The speakers shared ideas about how to maintain a healthy workplace in a hybrid environment

Alexander spoke to challenges specific to Rent the Runway when it came to promoting flexibility and how the seemingly ideal or preferred solution may not actually be ideal for everyone, as some people may prefer being in an office or other workplace to being at home. Emphasizing the ongoing value of adaptation, she remarked, “One of the challenges that we really faced was, how do you make sure that you are providing flexibility, but you’re also thinking about all of your employees and understanding the inequities that may be created, as it’s easier for some corporate workers to be virtual.” Alexander concluded, “We are leaving a lot up to the employee.” 

The pandemic has taught us that in-person meetings tend to go longer when people socialize about their personal lives and interests, whereas with video calls, people are more likely to stick to a planned agenda so they can go about their day, noted Shashank Bhushan, chief talent-development architect at BMC Software. Socialization is a big part of the sense of belonging many employees seek from their jobs, and plays a role in mental health, as well. We’ve also learned over the past two years that employers need to go above and beyond in providing mental-health resources that employees will not hesitate to utilize. For example, many employees might be more inclined to seek out teletherapy than an in-office psychotherapist because they may feel it’s more convenient and private.   

Ultimately, panelists agreed that employers must continue to be flexible and listen to their employees as workplace environments continue to evolve. “We need to be flexible in our own thinking about how to deal with situations. Nobody predicted this pandemic and how this is going to play out; we can’t even predict when it’s going to end, which means that we have to be constantly thinking on our feet,” Bhushan said. “Be vigilant about what’s happening around us and then take every day the way it is and resist the temptation to crystal-gaze too much into the future, because that only brings in more disappointments at some point.”

Additional panelists included Roma Desai, VP of HR International at MAN Energy Solutions, and Christine Morehead, chief people officer at One Medical

Three Key Leadership Trends for 2022

There are instances, however, in which foresight is advantageous, as evidenced in the thought leadership spotlight, “Three Key Leadership Trends for 2022.” The workforce is going through unprecedented changes, and new challenges are emerging for companies and leaders to ensure a successful talent pipeline into the future. April King, senior consultant at the leadership-development consultancy DDI, analyzed what the firm’s research says are the top leadership trends for 2022 that have emerged in these changing times, and what employers can do to respond and make the most of them.

These are developments that leaders can’t ignore, since they need to prepare to take on challenges and find top talent in a faster, more tumultuous, and increasingly digital future. King kicked off the session highlighting three trends from the Global Leadership Forecastthe race for top talent, finding potential in the virtual shadows in hybrid-workplace scenarios, and how to engage the next generation of leadership. 

April King, senior consultant at leadership-development consultancy DDI

For the first point, she emphasized how burnout is fueling attrition, and that instilling a sense of purpose and supporting leadership capabilities are ways to retain employees. “There is significant research that’s going on right now in terms of how burnout is posing that major retention risk, and how it’s important for us as leaders to pay attention to that,” King said.

Regarding finding potential lurking in the virtual shadows, she noted that part of the challenge is that physical visibility does not exist as much as it used to in the past. King noted how objective observation of what’s happening is a real challenge when employees are working remotely, which can also impact the ability to engage new and emerging leadership candidates. 

“In that hybrid work environment, we know outcomes are important [as well as] having objectives, having key metrics in terms of measuring performance, but we know there’s so much more that people bring to the table,” she said. “The idea here is for leaders to think about how they get observational data and a real understanding of what their teams are doing on a day-to-day basis.”

And as for engaging next-gen leaders,” she said, “your future leaders are demanding more coaching and feedback, and seek an authentic workplace that truly embraces empathy and inclusion.

Is Your Company Developing an Inclusive Culture?

Collaboration was a key theme of the following panel, titled “Is Your Company Developing an Inclusive Culture?” The conversation highlighted that, instead of looking for a “culture fit” in new employees, companies can make their workplace better-suited to include diversity. Among the highlights: the key elements that make an employer welcoming to a diverse labor pool, from personalized benefits to a sense of belonging, and how career growth and employee retention significantly add to a company’s reputation for inclusion. 

Pedro Neiva Botelho, head of HR for the Americas for Schlumberger, highlighted how one of the available avenues for growth surrounding inclusion is looking at key local factors, including ethnicity. Moderator Lan Ni, a professor of communication at the University of Houston, pointed out that inclusion also involves psychological safety, which includes having a sense of belonging and being able to bring your authentic self to work. 

Tiana Carter, senior director of culture and social impact for Waste Management (WM)

Agnes Denise Malloy, global VP of diversity and inclusion at Johnson Controls, used the following metaphor to demonstrate the differences between diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the workplace: “If we brought in a ton of shoes, and we passed them out to everybody, diversity is that you got a variety of shoes, inclusion means everybody got a pair of shoes, and equity means everybody got the right-size shoes,” she explained. “So, it’s meeting people where they’re at for their own individual needs, but having policies, practices and procedures to make sure that it is thoughtful and inclusive of everybody’s personal needs.” 

“People need to feel valued in the workplace, they need to be seen and they need to be heard,” added Victor Wright, director of Global Labor and Employment Law at KBR, the global contracting and technology company. “A lot of things where companies can go wrong is the lack of dignity and respect and how people feel valued in the workplace, if they have a voice, or if they feel marginalized.”

Tiana Carter, senior director of culture and social impact for Waste Management (WM), explained why companies need to look ahead toward the next 10 years when it comes to prioritizing their company’s culture and employee retention. “When you think about the next generation of talent and their expectations, 25% of our workforce by 2025 is going to be Gen Z, and they are not going to accept similar things that prior generations accepted in the workplace. They are willing to forego a company for purpose over profits at any given point,” Carter said. “You need to go out and find talent that are culture adds, because you need to be adding to your organization to help you build and grow to the organization you want to become. You have to start planting those seeds today, [because otherwise], quite frankly, it’s going to be very challenging for corporations to have the workforce they need to succeed in business.”

Botelho added that it’s important to recognize that the responsibility of creating an inclusive environment shouldn’t fall on the employees, but rather the company’s ecosystem, with HR and talent management as key players. “The ecosystem needs to be inclusive, and we need to drive the diversity aspects of it,” he said. “But we need to embed it into our practices.”

Additional panelists included Rachelle Davis, SVP of talent at the management-consulting firm RGP

Don't Forget About Recruiters! How Automation Can Help  

The thought leadership spotlight titled, “Don't Forget About Recruiters! How Automation Can Help Retain Your Recruiters During the Great Resignation,” described another source of talent not to be overlooked. Statistics show that one in three recruiters is currently looking for a new job, and experts believe internal recruiting teams need to be at the forefront of retention strategies. Jason Scheckner, chief revenue officer at HiredScore, which uses artificial intelligence for hiring, demonstrated how technology can unlock recruiter retention and satisfaction while making progress towards corporate goals. 

Recruiting has been a beleaguered field amid the pandemic and the onslaught of people seeking new jobs. Scheckner covered some of the key challenges recruiters and recruiting companies have faced, including the backlog of pandemic and market shifts, increased burnout, and an ever-changing regulatory environment with fluctuating laws regarding treatment and the disclosure of information. Additionally, some companies are still struggling to strike the right balance between having the autonomy to meet DEI goals and meeting hiring managers’ demands about candidate experience to fill a role.

Despite these challenges, Scheckner made clear that demand is at an all-time high for recruiters by showcasing 16,000 new recruiting jobs posted on LinkedIn within 24 hours of his session. Furthermore, since one in three recruiters are looking for new jobs, those searching have an abundance of opportunities to choose from.

Jason Scheckner, chief revenue officer at HiredScore 

“[This shows] the burden we have to think about when it comes to our recruiters, and it really becomes front-and-center because without those folks, we’re not hiring the people we need to fuel all the growth and achieve all the initiatives,” he said. “The people you need to fuel the very hard labor market are also themselves in the labor market, and that creates a very interesting dynamic.”

Scheckner pointed out that one in two recruiters would join another organization if the company had better recruitment technology. However, companies are struggling to address these technological issues while simultaneously dealing with the “people problem” of retaining employees.

“The challenge is: If you wait, the problem gets worse, because recruiters are going to get less burned out or more burned out,” he said. “[If they get] more burned out, they’re going to leave your company in droves, and that’s going to leave you with gaps and challenges.” However, companies can achieve productivity in reaching hiring goals and prioritizing diversity by using automation. 

“Recruiters are huge, so please do not undervalue them,” he said. “They drive a lot of the hiring in your organization, [so think about] how automation could maybe play a role in that and don’t wait too long to leverage it.” 

Redefining the Workplace to Give Workers a Sense of Belonging

This notion of proactive engagement arose as well in the final session of the day, a fireside chat titled “Redefining the Workplace to Give Workers a Sense of Belonging.” Michael Bramnick, SVP of corporate affairs, chief of staff and chief compliance officer for NRG Energy, a major supplier of energy and natural gas to millions of U.S. customers, explained how the company is adapting to remote work by revamping its culture to embrace diversity and boost engagement. 

Many companies are beginning to foster an inclusive workplace environment even while their employee base is working remotely. For NRG Energy, this effort entailed adopting an array of different work arrangements, including fully onsite work, fully remote work, and two kinds of hybrid work, with one being in the office one-to-two days a week and the other three-to-four days a week.

Michael Bramnick of NRG Energy, right, spoke in a fireside chat with Jennifer Vardeman, associate professor and director of the Valenti School of Communication at the University of Houston

“Based upon anecdotal data, card swipes, and surveys, we were averaging about 80% occupancy in an office environment on any given workday, in any given month of the year,” Bramnick said. “The idea was to cut it in half, so we would be at roughly 40% occupancy.” But there were considerations the company had to monitor within this arrangement, such as offering enough guaranteed seats for those needed at the office.

Additionally, this required the company to take a hard look at workplace boundaries and maintain the same norms it had in place pre-pandemic, such as extending people the courtesy of not calling in the early or late evening hours unless absolutely necessary, not requiring everyone to have their cameras on at all times during video calls, and giving people working remotely the freedom to take an afternoon walk or a coffee break if that was part of their routine in the office. 

“Managers had to be told, [if] somebody doesn’t answer the phone, they’re simply not at their desk and it’s no different than when they’re not at their desk at the office,” he said. “Similarly, [if] there are less than 12 people on a call, it’s suggested that you have your camera on, but if there are more than 12 people on the call, it’s polite to turn your camera on when you’re speaking but you don’t need it on all the time.”

When it comes to DEI initiatives, Bramnick said NRG Energy is still in the early stages of a process that it began in earnest over the last three years. To date, the company has encouraged people to share their preferred pronouns and conducted pay-equity surveys based on race and gender. It has also updated its company match policy on charitable donations, reducing its threshold from $25 to $10 to make it more accessible.

Bob Hamer, director of corporate for ClassPass, left, with the companys team in Houston. ClassPass presented a workshop at the conference.

“We are working our way through this as we pivot to a hybrid work environment from a manage


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As technology continues to evolve and impact our daily work lives, is it an employee’s technical skills that will be the most valued? Not necessarily. “These more enduring human qualities that all of us possess, these are the things that are going to differentiate workers in the future. It’s really that resiliency, the decision making, and the ability to exhibit emotional intelligence,” said Peter Boyle, VP, HR, Dell Technologies, said during an executive panel at From Day One’s Denver conference. “As we blend digital and human labor together,” he said, it’s these skills that will drive future organizational success.With the universe of workplace skills expanding constantly, employers have to think ahead about what they’ll need as their businesses change and grow. What are the best ways to assess the skills of current workers, predict the skills that will be needed soon, and build the methods to bring employees up to speed? At the same time, how can employers adapt their talent pipelines so they're drawing on a wider and more relevant pool of candidates?Putting People Analytics to WorkData collection has been around for a while, but it’s the predictive power of software that’s truly transforming the landscape. “We’ve been studying and counting people and tracking what they do for centuries. What is changing is the technology that we can lay over people analytics that allows us to not just describe where they're at today, but what's possible tomorrow,” said Matthew Gosney, VP, organizational development at UCHealth.People analytics can, and should, be incorporated holistically into an organization’s overall metrics, noting how one worker’s tenure, background, and employment history might correlate to the quality and quantity of their output. “That is really the future of people analytics: looking not just at the person, but the work they do, and how you can help them to be the best they can be,” said Neil Taylor, VP of product marketing at Visier.The panelists spoke about "How People Analytics Can Help Employers Match Worker Skills to Future Needs"Organizations are also using analytics to measure soft skills and decide how to leverage them. “We love how the technology can tell us a story, but we really want to see how we can bring those human-centered skills (better thinkers, problem solvers) to address certain issues and build up more organizational confidence in productivity and teamwork,” said Erin Gabrysh, head of learning and development, Bundle. “It’s more than just [attaining] the numbers, but using that to take action.”Another area where people analytics is playing a major role is employee listening and engagement. For Jennifer Herrod, senior director of talent, global learning & development at Johnson Controls, her team works with managers to help them understand and utilize the insight gained through employee listening software. “What are their teams telling them through the survey that they’re not telling them face to face? And how can they then leverage that data to get them the right skills that they need? It’s [about] finding the detail in the data and the story behind it, which is how it can help connect to skill-building,” she said.It also can help improve employee retention, as well as prepare for future hiring needs. “People analytics can actually help you predict who might resign, and along with that, which skills are walking out the door,” Taylor said. “You need to understand the learning development plans that you have in place to develop those skills internally, how you’re hiring, and how you’re retaining skills that might be in demand. And the only way you can do that is through connected data that is pushed out to the edges of the organization.”Adapting to a Changing Work EnvironmentThe skills needed to succeed in the modern workplace are evolving as rapidly as the workplace itself. Fortunately, the tracking technology is keeping pace. Traditionally, says Boyle, employees would simply check off boxes for skills on an internal database. “But that doesn't necessarily tell you the depth of their knowledge.” Nor does it stay up-to-date for long. Nuanced people analytics software can help leaders infer a greater depth of knowledge among a talent pool, cross-referencing other factors like certifications, tenure, and employment history, and match them accordingly to future roles.And the ability to adapt to rapid change itself is a quality that is vitally important but hard to measure traditionally. “Human-centered leadership, which I think is the emerging model for leadership in the future, is focused on change management, psychological safety, and key components of leadership that are going to be critical in a very dynamic work environment,” Gosney said. During Covid, his organization’s workforce quickly had to make a transition to virtual care. “We knew who could do it, and we could move them there. The challenge was in understanding, capturing, and quantitatively measuring soft skill. I don’t know if we have a great answer for that yet, but I know that’s the next mountain to climb.”One way human qualities like psychological safety can be measured, Gabrysh says, is through their impact on other areas. “When organizations embed psychological safety training, when organizations create this safe space, people are more comfortable saying or doing [certain] things. That’s where we start to see change occur, and the rest of the metrics start to improve as a result,” she said.And the utilization of people analytics itself, Taylor says, should engender psychological safety within an organization, “because [workers know] the entire person is understood, the entire workforce is understood, their impact on the business is understood, as well as the business impact on the person. If it’s just a manager making a decision based on emotion [then] there’s no psychological safety in that.”People analytics is also making strides in the area of diversity, equity, and inclusion, shedding light on areas where it may be lacking and where, Gosney says, leaders can enact change. “People analytics is changing our HR structures to support solving problems instead of supporting traditional processes,” he said. And for UCHealth, it’s paid off. “We’ve improved our BIPOC internal promotion rate by 40% in two years.”Making People Analytics Work For YouSo how can an organization that has yet to dive into people analytics get started?“When you’re talking about people analytics, you need to start with desired business outcomes,” Gosney said, noting the need to first define the goals, objectives, and challenges the organization is facing. “Then you translate that into key employee experience components. Is it psychological safety? Is it flexibility? Is it skills development? Is it retention, or is it engagement? That then informs the questions that you ask in an engagement survey, or the data points that you’re looking for.”The measurement of skills should then impact the action taken by the organization, particularly when it comes to developing talent and filling the gaps. “Developing that continuous learning culture is paramount,” Gabrysh said.Adding AI to the Equation“Data is organized and structured and predicts outcomes, whereas psychological safety is constantly moving,” said moderator Noelle Phillips, senior reporter for The Denver Post. So how can it be quantified? That’s where AI comes in. Herrod’s organization introduced an AI conversation coach–after a deep data privacy review–to boost employee engagement. The AI reviews comments gained from employee listening to identify meaningful themes and recommend leadership actions.The ability to work with AI is also a skill that will need to be accounted for. “We’re all feeling this need, individually and as businesses, to adapt to a dynamically changing market, and AI is compounding that,” Taylor said. Workforce planning will need to happen more often, he says, than once a year. “This is an ongoing thing that needs to happen every day. And it isn’t just an HR job. It’s the manager’s job to make sure that you have the right workforce. And so, having the right data around the skills that you need, the skills that you have, [and] the skills you need to develop internally becomes really important, and you have to continuously shapeshift your workforce in today’s day and age.”Katie Chambers is a freelance writer and award-winning communications executive with a lifelong commitment to supporting artists and advocating for inclusion. Her work has been seen in HuffPost and several printed essay collections, among others, and she has appeared on Cheddar News, iWomanTV, On New Jersey, and CBS New York.

Katie Chambers | November 05, 2024