The commentaries to the video:
Not the most sensitive time to post this topic. I guess it's tabasco in open wounds for those being laid off instead of salt.
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Will this strategy return us to 107 bn annual revenue? When?
Yes? Cool! No? Words :(
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Thanks Rob Thomas. Best of luck to you
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Can we get a list of books on your bookshelf? Some of them are cutoff by the camera on the left-hand side of the video
Train people well enough so they can leave, treat them well enough so they don't want to.”
― Richard Branson
If you look after your staff, they'll look after your customers. It's that simple.
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Can we call you Tabasco Thomas going forward?
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Love the analogies Rob as usual - learning something new everyweek! I always say you should hire those who are smarter than you and you will always look good! And if can keep 10 of those people in your hopper - only good things can happen.
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What is more important ? Retaining or recruiting the best talent ? How ? Do we know people who are able learn and practice all theirs "IT life" - we need focus on those ... no matter how old they are.
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I like the analogy. We're all part of a talent field people. Our ability to have an impact in specific areas grows, changes, and evolves over time. We all have the opportunity to ripen into the perfect 'red' across many areas, and hopefully help others to do the same in the process. Being 'red and ready' as individuals should be our goal. For those of us that lead people, spotting red talent and nurturing the red in others is equally important. Thanks for recognizing and sharing Rob.
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So much here.
I do not want to cause trouble.
This gives me much pause with other news we have been putting out.
I believe this was at best, a very badly timed moment to put this topic out.
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Attracting, retaining, and developing great talent is key to our success. This is a virtuous cycle - meaning, as we drive success, build relationships, act with integrity and values - the best people want to join and be part of that. And as the best people come, we reinforce those extraordinary outcomes again and again.
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Difficult to listen to you speak of retaining the best talent when so much of our best talent is being laid off as you speak. Terrible timing. Terribly insensitive. Not credible. Two faced.
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The Blue stick is what I use to attract the right talent to IBM. Meaning, I look for people who have great talent, passion, and who will be a good cultural fit to IBM. In some cases, these are people who were previously with IBM but left us and were regretted losses. People choose IBM because of the company and because of the person they would work for. So our own "brand" as a people manager is a large part of the recruitment process. We need to be leaders people actually want to work for.
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Interesting topic, given the current environment of lay-offs. Focus was on how to hire, didn't seem to talk to retaining talent. I guess the implication was that if you have a list of "red stick" candidates ready when hiring tickets come available, then you should also have a list of "get rid of first" when cuts are needed? I believe this is a little insulting and insensitive, if you are in the group of those laid off.
I wonder, when the market has a steady stream of (potentially unhappy) ex-IBM employees - many of them eventually working for our customers - what does that do to our long term growth and ability to hire new talent?
FWIW, if you are being laid off (or 'pushed' out in some way), I can say that (after many years at IBM), who goes seems to have little to do with ability to learn and change, or your contribution or the need for what you do. i.e. its probably not your fault, the responsibility falls somewhere above you...
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Rob, As a senior strategic leader, please look at the larger picture- Recruiting is a mentality that should include placing the right people, with the right skills, in the right place, at the right time. You should not limit to looking outside of IBM for the best talent, unless you only want the cheapest talent. As an example, consider the deep data analysis around the talent that is already available for you in GTS. One tool to do such pepper picking is made visible by these IBM dashboards, of which a significant portion of those who created, maintained, and continually improved them are gone as of June 22nd, 2020
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As others have mentioned, it's remarkably tone-deaf to send this message today, the same day which a vast number of our colleagues have been told is their last at IBM.
Having said that, I'd also challenge the appropriateness of drawing comparison between a manufacturing/QA procedure and corporate recruitment practices. "Repeatability and consistency" in recruiting does not lead to a quality workforce, as you suggest. What you are describing through the "red stick" analogy is a binary process — either a pepper is fit for the sauce or not. The same principles cannot be applied to people, who not only have the capacity to quickly learn and grow into the workforce as established, but, over time, can and should change our way of doing work for the better.
If our approach to hiring people is exclusionary by nature — i.e., "How might we avoid hiring the WRONG fit?" — we will never emerge from doing business as usual. Bringing one "red stick" (or 10) into being at IBM almost certainly ensures that we will continue to approach talent acquisition with undue bias. Believing that there's nothing wrong with this means that you are not paying attention, neither to the immediate needs of our teams nor to the broader socioeconomic context(s) in which we are situated. If, when reviewing candidates, we instead ask "How will this individual change — challenge, even — our team, our BU, or IBM for the better?" we can start growing into a more successful, more diverse workforce.
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I think there is a lot we can learn about finding and retaining the best talent from TESLA and SpaceX. We should learn from them.
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Hybrid cloud ..needs hybrid peppers ..
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Insensitive message on "recruitment" today of all days when we have some great talent that was laid off and are turning in their computers, badges, etc today.
Many of us have colleagues that have been affected by the layoff.
May have been a better message for a later time.
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I'm struggling to see how the never ending cycle of lay-offs is beneficial to retaining talent.
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Rob, this is a great analogy. The only thing I might add is ensure you are looking at ALL of the peppers available to you as you build your Tobasco pipeline. If you only look at the ones that are growing next to the ones you are already harvesting, you could miss out on the other perfectly good peppers growing a little farther afield or not looking exactly the same in terms of size or shape.
(That was supposed to be an interesting way to link hiring people with Diverse Abilities into your hiring plans. ;-) )
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Rob, I quote you from your week 6 video:
"Is this the best you can do?"
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Loved the analogy. Although it is certainly consistent, as a lover of hot sauce, Tabasco if far from my favorite. We need to focus on a great standard before we focus on consistency. Also, we need more focus on retention. We can't lose top talent to layoffs just for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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Why in $DEITY's name did you post this today? Thousands of people getting axed from the company and you're posting about recruitment?!?
This is tone-deaf, insulting, and frankly ignorant. It reinforces my feeling that IBM disowned me after the notice in May.
I'm (not) sorry for the venom here. Maybe if enough people speak their true feelings, you and the other execs will get it through your thick skulls that "resources" are HUMAN.
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Hmmm. Along the way, I probably will be holding that red stick up to my self as well. I definitely want to be part of the sauce.
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Just perhaps a polite suggestion, that perhaps you could have kept some of that great talent that were just laid-off and recruit people from there.