Dec 30, 2013

My "Social HR" predictions for 2014

Twitter Meta Moo! too far?
Twitter Meta Moo! too far? (Photo credit: Josh Russell)
Well I don't normally do such posts :) And as my professor from college advised "Predicting, specially about the future is hazardous" :)

But I thought, at the most, what can happen by Dec 2014? At worst I will have egg on my face, at best you'll not remember I posted this :D

So here goes:


  • Employee Referrals will go social - more and more employers who hire in large numbers will tap their employees' social networks and leverage social tech like leaderboards and public recognition to drive referrals. On a related note I would love to see one or more of the larger Applicant Tracking Systems bake in social referrals within the tool.
  • Gamification will impact Assessments, Onboarding and Learning - Gamification is the process of making tasks social, that require people to move from level to level with social recognition elements also built in will be deployed in organizations from Assessments, to Onboarding to Learning
  • Large organizations will deploy their own version of MOOCs - Massive Open Online Courses are impacting how people learn (at school with firms like Khan Academy) to higher education (Coursera). In 2014 I think large organizations would leverage "internal MOOCs" to train new staff or some large organizational initiatives.
  • Recognition will try to go social - Have mentioned this earlier in the context of referrals - but here I am talking about the individual and team recognition by peers on a social platform - spreading to the enterprise - however standalone recognition platforms will need to get integrated into intranets or Enterprise Social Networks for this to be happening better
  • Employer Branding will move from social engagement to social advertising - As Facebook and Twitter both get pressured by the markets to monetize, more and more companies will be used Facebook ads and Twitter promoted tweets to reach different talent segments
  • Content specialists will be used by HR - whether internal hires or by agencies, these would be the people who will showcase the culture and SMEs externally and role modelling behaviours internally triggering conversations and measuring impact.
What do you think?

Updated: Here's what I think will *NOT* happen in HR techonology (social or otherwise):


  • Big Data - Let's admit it, in 99.99% of companies HR doesn't have the "small data" - so getting to big data and predictive analytics in 2014 is unlikely for HR folks.
  • Wearable computing - Yes I've seen the video of how Google Glass can help in onboarding new employees, but that won't happen in 2014.
  • Crowdsourcing - Some companies (which you can count on your fingertips) are turning to employees to crowdsource things from product to ideas on working policies, but 99% of companies will not do it (or fail if they do it - because the overall ecosystem is not in place)

Enhanced by Zemanta

Dec 7, 2013

30 Twitter users I learn the most from

When people ask me "But what do I do on Twitter, my friends and family are on all Facebook" I try telling them - that as an open platform Twitter allows you to follow and learn from the very best in the business - so I thought I would put together a list of Twitter users I learn from a lot.

  1. Tom Peters - yes the uber-guru of Management - shares his views in his distinctive passionate voice and opinions on what is triggering his mind on a day to day basis. Follow him at https://twitter.com/tom_peters
  2. David Gurteen - I have followed David's KM blog for more than a decade and his Twitter stream is focused on Knowledge Management, KM events and KM jobs. Follow him at https://twitter.com/DavidGurteen
  3. Luis Suarez - Another person I have followed for the last decade Luis is a Social Business Enabler at IBM. You can follow him at https://twitter.com/elsua
  4. Shel Israel - Shel and Scoble wrote the first book on business blogging many years ago, and have written the changing nature of computing in their new book "Age of Context" - Shel's a part of Silicon Valley ecosystem and coaches entrepreneurs to tell their story. Follow him at https://twitter.com/shelisrael
  5. John Sumser - John is one of the most respected analysts of online recruitment - and his tweets link to articles on HR Examiner that he runs. Follow him at https://twitter.com/JohnSumser
  6. Jon Ingham - Jon is from UK -  another HR blogger I have followed down the years and specially look forward to his live-tweets from the many global HR conferences he addresses and attends. Follow him at https://twitter.com/joningham
  7. Ross Dawson - Ross is based in Australia and is a futurist - tracking how various industries and how people themselves will change in the future. You can follow him at https://twitter.com/rossdawson
  8. Daniel Pink - Dan is author of multiple books and curates some very interesting content from across the world https://twitter.com/DanielPink
  9. Sameer Patel - Sameer is SVP at SAP and a votary of how social has to be embedded in business processes to make it better for people to do work. https://twitter.com/SameerPatel
  10. S Sivakumar - top executive at ITC, his tweets are a very amazing curation of extraordinary facts, news from around the world and beyond https://twitter.com/S_Sivakumar
  11. Alan Lepofsky - analyst at Constellation RG, tracks the social collaboration marketplace and great to follow if you want to keep a track of what developments various vendors are doing https://twitter.com/alanlepo
  12. Mark Fidelman - author and Forbes columnist - Mark tracks the social business space and how influencers are shaping product consideration. He's also co-founded a company in that space called Raynforest. Follow him at https://twitter.com/markfidelman
  13. Robert Scoble - follow him at https://twitter.com/Scobleizer to know the latest development in the startup space in Silicon Valley 
  14. Marcia Conner - author of The New Social Learning - Marcia looks at various trends shaping learning and training - follow her at https://twitter.com/marciamarcia
  15. Ray Wang - Founder of Constellation RG, tweets about tech and also food :) Follow him at https://twitter.com/rwang0
  16. Dan Tapscott - author and keynote speaker Dan tweets his points of view and also news and links to great content https://twitter.com/dtapscott
  17. Karthik Srinivasan - Head of Social at Ogilvy India tweets about media, social media, his family and opinions about almost everything. Follow him at https://twitter.com/beastoftraal
  18. Haroon Bijli - A twitter friend who is now a colleague, Haroon tracks the marketing, communication industry as well as tweets his views on Indian politics - follow him at https://twitter.com/bijli
  19. Abhijit Bhaduri - CLO of Wipro, author and cartoonist - Abhijit tweets links to interesting articles about learning, storytelling and human performance. Follow him at https://twitter.com/AbhijitBhaduri
  20. Dan Pontefract - Dan is author of The Flat Army and now helps firms become more collaborative - tweets about his views on the same :) Follow him on https://twitter.com/dpontefract
  21. Susan Scrupski - Susan is a community builder and currently she is building a community of Change Agents, looking to reinvent the world of work. Follow her at https://twitter.com/ITSinsider
  22. R Sukumar - CIO and Head of Innovation at Cognizant tweets links to an eclectic but always very very interesting items. Follow him at https://twitter.com/rsukumar
  23. Harold Jarche - posts some blog posts and links to some thought provoking stuff about the new world of work and learning. Follow him here https://twitter.com/hjarche
  24. NS Rajan - The CHRO of the Tata Group posts pithy observations about work and performance sometimes in a form of a pun and sometimes in rhyme. Follow him at https://twitter.com/RajanNS
  25. Yashwant Mahadik - The HR Head of Business Transformation and Global Learning at Philips, Yash posts links to interesting news items and also the goings on in Philips too https://twitter.com/IndianYash
  26. Kavi Arasu - The head of learning at Asian Paints, Kavi posts content from his daily reading that spans technology, social media and learning. Follow him at https://twitter.com/_Kavi
  27. Vivek Paranjpe - the Group CHRO at Reliance Industries, tweets about India, skills and what people need to do to work better. Follow him at https://twitter.com/vivekparanjpe
  28. Anand Pillai - The CLO at Reliance posts links to interesting news, inspirational quotes and you can follow him at https://twitter.com/Anand__Pillai
  29. Rachel Happe - the cofounder of The Community Roundtable Rachel tweets about how companies are leveraging communities to achieve business success Follow her at https://twitter.com/rhappe
  30. Jeremiah Owyang - tracking how the collaborative economy is disrupting business models and how companies are dealing with it - Follow him at https://twitter.com/jowyang

Nov 12, 2013

Constellation research on #socbiz by @rwang0

Constellation Research founder Ray Wang recently released a research on Demystifying Social Business and was kind enough to share a copy with me. While the report is titled "Optimising the Marketing process" Ray takes a broader view of social business

Ray urges companies to take a view of their persona - when it comes to digital disruption - there are four of them. Do take a look at their DEEPR framework too - 43 use cases for social business.

My suggestion, buy Ray's insightful research if your business is evaluating a social business suite and go through his blog posts on social business.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Oct 23, 2013

The key to career growth is not what you think it is

Man on a ladder at the peak of a mast, 1890-1953
Man on a ladder at the peak of a mast, 1890-1953 (Photo credit: Australian National Maritime Museum on The Commons)
Many people think that if they put in a good performance at work, they would be promoted up the career ladder. However this book says that performance counts for just 10% of the decision. 30% is your reputation. About 60% is dependent on who all know about you and what you do.

This model is called the PIE model - Performance, Image and Exposure, and Image and Exposure often are the difference between the two solid performers and their differing career trajectories.

Many people think it is not fair- that work should speak for itself. However, remember that almost organizations are pyramids, and when many people are good performers - the discussion that senior managers turn to when discussing good candidates for promotions are around image and exposure.

So what can you do?

First you have to get your manager and his/her manager to be your "sponsors" - and then find out who the key decision makers are for promotion discussions to the next level. Volunteer for cross functional projects so that you get as much visibility to them - without impacting your core job. Write for the company newsletter. Volunteer to train others. To present to senior management.

Then you will agree that performance is just table stakes for promotion.
Enhanced by Zemanta

The relationship between Social and Digital

Every social media conference I have attended, often hear at the sidelines, "But social is such a small part of digital, and digital is a small slice of overall marketing"

That's true.

Social is a subset of digital when you see it from the "media" lens. Digital is much bigger, it encompasses, Search Engine Optimisation, Search Engine Marketing, Online Advertising and many other things I don't know much about.

However, that view changes when you view how organizations have to transition to the new normal. IMHO, then the view flips. Digital is easier to do (internal or external) than social. When I mean easier I am not discounting the behavior change and other change management issues that are critical or something like a CRM or HRMS rollout.

But social, that's a whole new kind of beast.

You know why? Because more than change in behavior, social needs a change in mindset - whether implementing internal social networks or external social communities. It requires moving to sharing, listening rather than broadcasting. It requires organizations and leaders coming down from their pedestal and interacting with customers and employees on one-on-one human terms. It requires trusting that your customers can give you better ideas than your R&D department. It requires empowering and educating and trusting your employees to resolve customers' queries and sharing stories of the organization. It requires marketers to think from the customer-in perspective than the product or service out perspective. It requires new metrics to think about, new goals to measure.

It requires a cultural, structural and process change - in addition to technology.

That is why social is much much bigger than digital.

On that note see this report by the Altimeter Group on the Maturing of Social Media into Social Business in 2013


Oct 21, 2013

A tweetchat on Social Media and HR

So my friend Sunder Ramachandran (@sundertrg) who teaches a course at ITM Business School on Social Media and HR asked Yash (@indianYash) and me to take some questions from his students - and it was a fun session.

Do check out the Tweetchat below


Oct 16, 2013

Employee Advocacy for Social Business #socbiz - Talk at #SBS2013 by @dachisgroup - Part II

Remember I had addressed the Social Business Summit at Mumbai? I today discovered the video had been uploaded some time ago :)

So if you couldn't attend the talk, here it is for you :) You can find the slides on this earlier post



SBSgautam-ghosh from Dachis Group on Vimeo.

Oct 10, 2013

30 HR and Social Media folks from India to follow on Twitter

Kunjal, the Rambling Recruiter has compiled a list of the Indian HR, Social Media folks to follow on Twitter.

You can find the list here.

The exciting thing for me is that 10% of the list - 3 people are from @HRPhilips team :)

And, this is the shortest blog post I have done in a long time :)

Sep 23, 2013

Social Media training for employees

When it comes to empowering employees I think Dell has the most comprehensive programs ever. So was great to discover these presentations by Liz Bullock of Dell.



Training Your Company For Social Media from Liz Bullock


And this is by Dion Hinchcliffe of Dachis Group:



Here's a presentation by IBM on enabling the social workplace





Another presentation from IBM on internal social networking and employee collaboration




This presentation by Liz, has this blog's post on its final slide :) Yeah I felt chuffed :D





And this presentation by Charlene Li on why social media training is necessary for your employees that also looks at the Dell model as well as what Cisco does.



Training for Social Media Success from Charlene Li

And here's an interesting infographic on Dell's Social Media and Community University



Infographic: Social Media and Community University at Dell from Dell Social Media

I am looking at developing a similar program for our firm. Do let me know if you come across any other useful content, or would like to help in any way :)
Enhanced by Zemanta

Sep 11, 2013

#PhilipsHRTalks videos are up - @VivekParanjpe and @_Kavi on 3rd Sept

In case you couldn't make it to the last edition of the #PhilipsHRTalks - don't worry :) The videos are uploaded and free to view on YouTube!

Have embedded them here too - Enjoy and Learn and share it with friends/classmates/colleagues too :)




Sep 3, 2013

The changing nature of HR and L&D #PhilipsHRTalks

Today we had the 4th edition of #PhilipsHRTalks at Gurgaon at the Philips office today. Both our speakers were from Mumbai. We had Vivek Paranjpe, Advisor to Reliance Industries and Kavi Arasu, head of Learning at Asian Paints talk about the evolving nature of HR and the learning function.

Here are the tweets from the session. The videos would soon be uploaded here.


Aug 30, 2013

The NHRDN August newsletter focused on "Social Media for HR"

The CHRO of Mphasis, R Elango reached out to me and said that he had been asked by the National HRD Network to be the guest author of their August journal which was to be focused on Social Media for Human Resources. Elango said he wanted me to co-edit the issue - and I was pleased to do so :)

So here's the journal issue (you can download it for free too :) with three contributions by me. A "Social Media for HR 101", an article on Social Learning with my Philips colleague Andrew Lax and a review of Social Tech vendors in the HR space in India. The article also has articles by Yashwant Mahadik of Philips, Kavi Arasu of Asian Paints, Sunder Ramachandran of Jardine Lloyd Thomson, Tanvi Gautam , Syeda Mehar Taj of Infosys, Irfan Abdulla of LinkedIn amongst others 


Aug 23, 2013

#Blueprint2013 is coming to a close soon!

B-School students have you submitted your idea yet? To know more about Blueprint check out the following Facebook posts from our page :)










Aug 20, 2013

#areyouinthelist for young HR leaders is back!

What is Are You In The List?
A People Matters initiative in association with DDI, which presents a platform for emerging HR managers to showcase their potential and get recognized as the ‘Future 25’ HR Leaders. If you are a young HR leader or aspire to be one, and fall in the age group of 26-35 years, here’s your chance once again! India’s first initiative to identify India’s HR leaders in the making is back with yet another intense qualifying application process, with a series of assessments and a competitive race to find today’s emerging leaders in HR. Are you in the List? is a platform for young HR managers to get recognized for their talent and potential. If you have it in you and want to better yourself, compete to be amongst the chosen ‘Future 25’ HR Leaders in India!

And I am proud to be a member of the jury for the second time :)

Aug 19, 2013

Indians to follow on Twitter - a list by @DNA

English: Logo of DNA Newspaper
English: Logo of DNA Newspaper (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Image representing Twitter as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase
So a couple of weeks ago, I was pleasantly surprised to find that newspaper Daily News and Analysis tweeted out that people should follow me - and was more flattered to see myself on their list later on the website: Indians You Should Follow On Twitter

The list is quite eclectic and covers some of my favorites - Sree, SahilRiz. Check out the others too :)


Oh, and a huge shout out to Karthik Srinivasan aka @beastoftraal for winning the Indian Blogger Awards in the Business category. Oh and today he's got a post on Social Recruiting - check it out here  
Enhanced by Zemanta

Aug 13, 2013

Talk on #SocialHR and #SocBiz at RIL

So last week I addressed the leadership team at Reliance Industries Ltd at Navi Mumbai on implications of Social for HR and Business. Here are some of the tweets that people sent out in the session :)

Aug 6, 2013

Listed in SHRM India's 'Top 20 Indian #HR Influencers Active on #SocialMedia'

Society for Human Resource Management
Society for Human Resource Management (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
So yesterday this news item and this was published :)

This year, SHRM has taken it a step further by also paying attention to the content of the conversations on HR in social media.

Some of the experts identified and mentioned in SHRM India’s report are Gautam Ghosh GM - HR Strategy & Projects, Philips India; Abhijit Bhaduri, Chief Learning Officer of the Wipro Group; Anand Pillai, Senior Executive Vice President & Chief Learning Officer at Reliance Industries Limited; Aadil Bandukwala, Recruitment Product Consultant at LinkedIn; Vineet Nayar, Vice Chairman and Joint Managing Director of HCL Technologies Ltd.; NS Rajan, Group Executive Council and Group Chief Human Resources Officer, TATA Sons. These thought leaders share their views on latest trends and developments across human resource domain regularly on the social media.
Ms. Achal Khanna, CEO, SHRM India Operations, said, “To understand, influence and harness the potential of the younger generation, HR needs to leverage the power of social media to recruit, collaborate and engage with this future talent pool. Hence, SHRM looked at the influencers from learning and development, social media, talent management and leadership domains and captured their influence on Twitter. The outcome is a fresh list of Indian mavens who are leading and influencing the conversations about HR on social media in 2013.”
You can download the full report from the SHRM India site here (PDF)
It's also embedded below



Enhanced by Zemanta

Aug 1, 2013

Quoted in : Social Media and the Job Hunt #SocialRecruiting

So I am quoted in this Mint article :)

Social media helps companies reach out to a large talent pool that has skills and is interested, but may not be aware about openings, said Gautam Ghosh, HR expert and blogger. “Both the employer and the employee get to showcase themselves better through this medium. LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter—all three can be used effectively to showcase work,” he said. Reducing headhunter costs is an added advantage.

Here's the video segment :)

HR Practices in a Social World. Video panel discussion on @HRPhilips journey in #SocialHR

Yesterday was the kickoff of #IndiaHRLive a new series by Nisha Raghavan to showcase Indian HR practices globally. And it was an honor for Yash and me to be the first guests as she invited us to participate in the hangout :)

Here's the YouTube recording. Check out the other videos on IndiaHRLive.com

Enhanced by Zemanta

Jul 19, 2013

#CampusJournos review by @Social_Samosa

So the folks at Social Samosa reviewed the employer branding campaign we started a couple of weeks ago, and had good things to say about it :)

Amid the slew of campaigns on Facebook and Twitter, this campaign is like a breath of fresh air.  While its target audience is B-schools students its move to host the campaign on WordPress is revolutionary and outstanding. Crafting a story instead of voting or sharing pictures with friends calls for greater effort and true creativity, thus posing a challenge much needed by B-schools students. As managers tomorrow they will have to think of ways to be different and lead from the front, this contest gives them the opportunity to think and write, something which is becoming a lost art in the days of “cut, copy, paste”.As an employer branding initiative seeking to change the way budding employees across B-schools in India view Philips, this campaign is definitely a pioneering one. Breaking away from Facebook and Twitter, moving to WordPress.com might be the beginning of a new trend in digital marketing by brands.  A bold move one would say as most youth across India spend a lot of time on Facebook and Twitter but certainly one that is likely to pay off by targeting the right audience!

Some facts so far:

No external agency involved.
Run totally in-house
No “ad spends”. Only cost so far - a $299 Wordpress upgrade and prizes for the winners.

Number of entries by 15  days – 400
Number of unique visitors – 37000 unique visitors
Total page views – 112k+

And the FB likes have gone up by 100% from 2000 two weeks ago J Totally organic!

Jul 18, 2013

Philips India's #SocialHR jouney @HRPhilips

Yesterday I co-authored a blog post along with my colleagues Zenobia Madon and Mansoor Hussain for Yash Mahadik's blog. Yash, by the way is HR Head for Philips India and the Global CLO too. It was how over the past year the HR team has "gone social" :)

Some excerpts:

During our 2012 annual HR strategy workshop – Yashwant Mahadik (@indianyash) shared his learning’s, forecast and vision about Social Media & HR and encouraged the team to come out with ideas and strategy to leverage Social Media in HR. 
The more we indulged in leveraging social media the more we learnt that, “it’s not an easy task” – you need certain capabilities to do it effectively (and not many of us had those capabilities – what we had in plenty was enthusiasm and drive). Then we explored partnerships and support from Digital and Social Media agencies, most of them were rather inexperienced in context of leveraging Social Media for HR and especially in the area of Employer Brand building. 
At this point in time @indianyash hired and attracted our co-author of this blog post –@gautamghosh to Philips India and he started off by building awareness and capability of Social Media in the HR team and the senior business leaders. @indianyash was very clear in his steer that, we will build the capability by learning and doing it ourselves. Oh boy!! we did it or are doing it and its so much fun!!
We then moved on to Twitter and the excitement and the learning journey was accelerated. We created a Philips India HR Twitter account and got the entire HR team (70+) on to Twitter. The team getting on to Twitter was awesome fun and the turning point. We had all of kinds – we had some early adopters who took to twitter like ducklings take to water and there were some cautious ones who observed and watched and gradually got on to it. The twitter world welcomed us with open arms. Very quickly, we all got hyper connected with the rest of the HR and Social Media stalwarts on Twitter

Go ahead. Read the full post :)
Enhanced by Zemanta

Jul 16, 2013

Learning Records Store: Capturing how people learn #socbiz

A classroom in Hraðbraut
A classroom in Hraðbraut (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
I've blogged earlier about the challenges L&D in organizations face.

I first heard about the 70-20-10 model in 2004, which says that 10% learning happens in classroom, 20% by coaching and mentoring and 70% is on the job.

If that is the case, why do organizations spend money and time on the 10% and ignore the 70%?

IMHO, that's because organizations don't believe that they can control or even the visibility to the 70% learning.

But what if they can? With social business activity streams that collate what an employee does at work, there is a new concept emerging. The Experience API (xAPI) or Tin Can API as it is known is hoping to track what an employee does that contributes to learning and store in a Learning Records Store, as distinct from the Learning Management Systems that we have today. In fact, many feel that this is the next version of learning standard (which is SCORM, currently), and will capture "social learning" a lot better.

More about the Experience API here.

It's a fascinating growth for the learning community and I hope to be following this closely as well as hoping to implement this sometime in the future. Do let me know if you're experimenting with the xAPI too.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Jul 12, 2013

Reflections on 100 days of #socialMedia in HR at @HRPhilips

So today I complete 100 days at Philips India - in a role that supports the HR team in leveraging social media and technologies to impact their effectiveness and to create new value for the organization.

So what did I learn in my first 100 days at Philips India HR?


  1. Management support is critical: India HR Head and global CLO Yashwant Mahadik (Blog, Twitter) is one of the few HR leaders in India who "gets" the fundamental shift and power of social to business. His support in creating my role and then empowering with responsibility is what makes me successful.
  2. Cross functional education: As a "social media" enabler in the HR function my role is to ensure that the existing groups within HR (like Recruiting, Learning and Recognition) - so educating and working with them to understand social and how it can help them achieve their own business results. One of the first things was a Social for HR education for all the HR employees.
  3. Business education: Being one of the first "social media" hires in Philips India - I am working on "reverse mentoring" some business leaders on how digital and social is impacting businesses and am also working with groups like Strategy & Business Development and the Corporate Communication groups on helping them use social for their work.
  4. Content is key: This cannot be over emphasized. As someone who is looking to engage with external audience - understanding who they are and what content they value is one of the main parts of making a role like this successful.
  5. Agencies can help - but the strategy has to be yours. In the employer branding space in India I haven't really met agencies who can give you "big ideas" - most of them are great in execution, but you have to rely on your own ideas.
  6. Challenge conventional wisdom: When we were thinking of CampusJournos.com - conventional wisdom says that if you want to engage with B School students you have to leverage Facebook and spend on ads to reach out to them. However we went for Wordpress as a blogging platform, spent zero money on ads and achieved more success in engagement than we had ever hoped for :)

Jul 5, 2013

#CampusJournos a contest for B School students by @HRPhilips

If you are a fresh MBA student in India. Here is an opportunity for you to tell a story, get noticed, win a prize and make a mark very early on!! 

A unique and fabulous initiative of Philips India HR, where the company is keen to connect with the early in career talent in India. 

We would love to hear your story!! :) Do check out Campus Journos.

Jul 2, 2013

Am in the list of the 100 most social HR experts on Twitter by @ValaAfshar

Image representing Twitter as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase
So Huffington Post columnist and CMO and Chief Customer Officer of Enterasys Vala Afshar, after compiling lists of most social CEOs, CMOs and CIOs compiled a list of most social Human Resources experts on Twitter and I was fortunate to make the list, and the lone Indian representative :)

Here's the full list !

Hope to see more Indian HR professionals on the list next time :)
Enhanced by Zemanta

Jul 1, 2013

Social Business thought leaders movements #socbiz

So Rawn Shah, IBM's social business thought leader has left IBM, and in his blog post on Forbes lists a group of social media thought leaders in the recent past who have changed roles, including the likes of Sameer Patel, Susan Scrupski, Chris Carfi, Peter Kim, Maria Ogneva, Eugene Lee and he adds me to the (gasp!) list!

Read the blog post here

Am on number 22 :)

3rd #PhilipsHRtalks Video - @IndianYash in conversation with young HR leaders

Recently we hosted the 3rd edition of the #PhilipsHRtalks ( Storify here)

Here's the video!




Here's a blog post by one of the winners, Rahul Kandhal on the "right" brained HR professional. Do read :)

Jun 27, 2013

Young HR leaders in conversation with @IndianYash #PhilipsHRtalks

Yesterday at Philips India we hosted three emerging HR leaders who were winners of People Matters and DDI's "Are You In The List" contest last year 2012. Many thanks to Ester Martinez and her team at People Matters to bring these people in the limelight.

Here are the storified tweets from the panel discussion that was moderated by +Yashwant Mahadik (Blog, Twitter)

Jun 26, 2013

My blogging and social media journey over the last decade

The Smart Manager magazine last October asked me to write an article on how I started blogging and my eventual career change into the "Social HR" area.

Thought you might like to read it too :)


Jun 25, 2013

#SocialHR 101 - How HR professionals can use 3 less known social media sites

Here’s the thing HR and other people need to remember, “social media” might be a new term, but what it signifies is not really new. Ever since the advent of the internet people have connected with each other in a public system (via Usernet, Bulletin Boards) to discuss and share their views and opinions. It’s just that social networks like Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter have emerged at a time when internet penetration is growing exponentially in our part of the world.

So what does social media comprise of?

When most people think of social media, they think about “networks” – and the biggest three names are of networks. Social networks like Facebook (Friendster and Orkut earlier), professional networks like LinkedIn (and Ryze earlier) and information networks like Twitter are all networks.
The networks are people-centric. My social network comprises of people who I have known, but might not know each other.

The other aspect of social media is “communities” which are virtual places where people who have a common interest gather to share and engage about that subject. These can range from communities of practice (where professionals interact) to hobby communities (photography or quilt weaving, for example)

The principles that drive social media adoption is when people start sharing information and creating content on networks and communities. According to an oft quoted thumb rule, a minority of the people “create” content. Some more people “curate or comment” on the created content and the majority of people
“consume” content. As a person gets more and more comfortable – they start to curate and create too.

These sites have also added design principles that encourage people to move from the “consumption” default. There are two main ways they do that. One is to reduce the effort to curate. This is what the “like” and the “share” buttons on Facebook and the “favorite” or “Retweet” buttons on Twitter do.
The other thing many communities do is give recognition in the form of levels and designation to people who contribute. So as they contribute more and more and other members find their content useful they move from a beginner to an expert level. They also publish leaderboards two drive peer based competition so that others are motivated to rise up the ladder.

Since many people are aware of Facebook and LinkedIn here are some other communities and sites that I thought would be useful to know about.

Google Plus

Google Plus is Google’s answer to Facebook with the promise that you can share your information with specific people and communicate with them. One of its biggest features is that you can have video conference with 9 other people, without installing any additional software.  The chats also get integrated with Gmail chats.

Slideshare

Slideshare can be described as the YouTube of slide decks. It also has the ability to upload documents too. By nature of its content, Slideshare seems a very “professional” site, and businesses have found it useful to showcase their reports and viewpoints easier through this than video (which is expensive and harder to get right) Professionals also use Slideshare to showcase their expertise and build their own personal brand. After the acquisition by LinkedIn, Slideshare integration is seamless with LinkedIn profiles

Quora

Quora is a “question and answer” site where people ask questions in various topic areas and others answer them. People who read answers can them vote on them, causing the most useful answers to rise to the top. So people can discover experts who share their knowledge in areas as diverse as Engineering to Management to Photography to Mythology to Economics. Since Quora originated in Silicon Valley the topics of startups, entrepreneurship are specially rich and detailed. A lot of entrepreneurs, VCs (like Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia and Craig Newmark of Craigslist) are active on the site almost on a daily basis.
So what does this all mean for HR

Content is shaping how people find and connect with each other. Organizations now have to become content creators themselves to remain relevant. They cannot rely on external media (paid, like advertising or earned, like being mentioned in mass media) alone. They have to invest in creating “owned media”. For an employer brand that means media that showcases the organization’s culture in the form of articles, presentations, videos. This is necessary as otherwise employees and alumni are rating and reviewing all aspects of an employer (from culture, to salaries, to interviews) on sites like Glassdoor and JobsBuzz
It also means that HR needs to “listen” to conversations on the social web about what people are talking about it, its leadership and even its competitors. This can be as simple as doing a search engine search regularly, or using sophisticated tools that track large number of conversations and can even judge the sentiments of the conversations.

Within the organization, it means HR (along with IT and other functions) needs to get the organization ready to deploy tools that enable employees to use the principles of “participation for a purpose” to engage the next generation workforce with the larger organization. These tools can be deployed from the cloud (via the internet) or installed on company servers too. Most larger ERP service providers also offer social networking softwares these days. These tools help in employees to connect across geographies and silos to discover and collaborate with other colleagues. These are also a great tool to engage the larger workforce in larger change initiatives or communication when they are rolled across the organization.

To do all this HR people have to embrace and experiment with this new medium and grow comfortable with it. It is time to stop talking about it, and to start doing it.

Jun 6, 2013

Social Media Masterclass - Tweets from the #PhilipsHRMeet - Storified

Philips logo following the March 2008 Identity...
Philips logo following the March 2008 Identity Update (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Two days ago I delivered an internal training to the Philips India HR Team (follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HRPhilips ) and encouraged them to Tweet at the end of the session.

So thought that the Tweets would give you a flavour of the training. You can find the ppt here.


Enhanced by Zemanta

May 24, 2013

Employee Advocacy for #socbiz at @DachisGroup's #SBS2013

Yesterday at the Social Business Summit hosted by Dachis Group and Oracle in Mumbai, I presented (in a room full of Social Media Marketers!) the HR viewpoint of how employees are the key to success in social media and how organizations can leverage them. Also shared some things on what we are doing at Philips in India and our plan for the future.

You can view (and download) the presentation here:
Would also love your thoughts and comments


Employee Advocacy for Social Business Success - Presentation at Dachis Group's Social Business Summit from Gautam Ghosh

Interestingly Dachis Group's Michael Jones presented a very interesting employee portal that leverages gamification to get employees to spread the word on social networks about the organization.

Here are some of the conversations that I had during the course of the day :)


May 10, 2013

Social Media Marketing – India Trends Study 2013 by E&Y

So the folks at E&Y reached out to me for this report and it's come out with some interesting findings for social media and India.

You can read the report below. My quote is on page 38 :)



There are key findings across nine categories and seven popular practices that the study highlights: 

1.        Objective: Most social media-savvy organizations in India use the medium to build communities while others use it to highlight news 
2.        Platform: Facebook is the most important platform for marketers in India for engaging customers, followed by Twitter, YouTube and blogging 
3.        Integration: Social media-savvy organizations in India have conducted campaigns where social media is the leading component, they tend to speed up processes or show special favor for online fans 
4.        Ads: Majority of social media-savvy organizations use social media ads to promote online campaigns and brand awarenesss, and find them beneficial 
5.        Measurement: Majority of social media-savvy organizations in India measure social media efforts through platform-specific parameters but some are increasingly measuring through leads, sentiment, brand visibility and have seen increase in revenue from social media efforts 
6.        Budget: Almost half of social media-savvy organizations surveyed spend 1%–5% of their marketing budget on social media, most social media budgets are below INR10 million 
7.        Ownership: Majority of social media efforts in India are managed by marketing teams 
8.        Agency: Majority of social media-savvy organizations in India use standalone digital agencies as compared to PR or ad agencies 
9.        Future: Social media-savvy organizations in India are very optimistic about the future 

Some of the popular practices are: 

  1. Generic updates instead of brand updates
  2. Multiple updates day, reply to fan queries within 30 mins to a few hours
  3. Pictures contests are the most popular contests, most contests organised monthly
  4. Social media guidelines and monitoring programmes are common, though more need to create crisis manuals
  5. Tools for online monitoring, response management, or managing social media platforms are popular
  6. Social media research are done to get customer feedback and understand behaviour
  7. Many have created mobile phone apps and more plan to create

May 2, 2013

Social is a skill not a "job"

Great to read this articulated by Amber Naslund :

The problem is that social within organizations is doing exactly what we’ve always wanted it to do: it’s maturing.

Which means we don’t need rockstars, we need performers. People that can further business goals within a system and build and implement strategies that fit as part of an entire organization, not just their personal agendas.

We talked in The Now Revolution about social becoming a skill rather than a job. A set of capabilities that every person will have, to some extent, and apply differently within an organization depending on their needs and responsibilities.

It’s already happening.

We need people who can understand social’s impact on an organization, but not just so they can be the ones to use the platforms and engage with customers online.

We need them so that they can socialize that knowledge, form key leadership teams within of centers of excellence and distribute what they know deeper and contextually inside a company so that everyone gets smarter and more immersed in social as a catalyst for better work (not necessarily the solution for it).

The social ‘superstars’ need to be the best enablers we’ve ever seen. Which means they might need to be behind the scenes, not right out in front.

These are people who are polymaths and understand the intersections of social with different corners of the company. People who are skilled in diplomacy and teaching and creating consensus, bringing lots of different people to a table to develop a unified vision and a plan to get from here to there. People who can and will do the hard work, slog through the inevitable trenches, work through the arduous process of resetting organizational memory, and sticking with the sometimes slow process of change.

Am glad because that's exactly what we are doing at Philips India. We want to build "social" as a skill to all the HR professionals and also to get the senior leadership to engage with social and do stuff, to understand the power of the medium and therefore implications for the organization.

In fact I had said this some time ago on Social Samosa too :) There are a bunch of us at Change Agents Worldwide who are trying to learn from each other as we do this.