“Don’t interview software engineers. Software engineers come in bodies that don’t talk. Ask them to show you their work.”
That advice came from a recruiting executive in the technology industry. Her point was that software engineers can be difficult to draw out, but when you ask them about the problems they have solved, they can light up the room.
When we analyze human capital management in the technology industry, we find many similarities with other sectors. The management, administrative, finance, human resources, and customer service roles are much the same across many industries. But when we narrow our scope down to the people who create, implement, and maintain technology solutions, we get a much different perspective and a distinct set of characteristics.
Here’s our unscientific opinion of the common traits of the geeks in our industry, they are:
Looking for a more scientific approach, we reviewed a meta-analysis by researchers at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. At first, they led us in a different direction.
The researchers found information technology professionals to be both more agreeable and tough-minded than the general population. Those two characteristics may seem to be opposites, but the researchers found they fit the occupation well. IT professionals are engaged in problem-solving work that requires them to be detached and analytical -- willing to make hard decisions, but they need to be agreeable enough to work with people just like them.[1]
Those positives are only two of the nine characteristics the UTK evaluated. In the other seven, IT professionals scored lower. Take a look at these findings.
Things get more interesting when professionals move into supervision. For example, introverted, unassertive people tend to use position power when things get difficult. That can be a problem in any situation, but it is toxic in an environment that respects expertise above all else.
The question for HCM leaders is how to engage information technology professionals as end users, especially when they see themselves as the primary value creators in their organization and experts in what HR wants to do for them.
How do HCM professionals support management of a population that knows, or assumes they know, more than they do about the technology?
A large segment of the tech industry is independent contractors, many of whom will have a long-term relationship with your company. While you need to maintain a strict separation between contractor and employee relationships, your contractors need to be invested in your success. Bring them into the culture, build trust, and give them the opportunity to reach their goals.
In your HCM implementation, you will need to include them in knowledge management. You may also want to provide a time tracking application integrated with Finance, and use your onboarding application to bring them up to speed on policies and procedures.
To get some unique insight into the contractor relationship, we talked with Jim Newman, President and CEO of HRIZONS, LLC, an SAP Gold Partner and winner of the CITI Smarter Worklife Challenge. Jim operates a virtual company, implementing SAP core HR and talent management solutions and niche cloud HCM applications. HRIZONS relies on contractors to augment and enhance his core team of consultants to meet the ebb and flow of project needs and skills gaps for technical and consulting work.
Newman says that although the skill sets his company requires can be scarce at times, HRIZONS meets its needs by making the company’s reputation a magnet for talent, employees and contractors. Jim says trust is the key ingredient in the relationship, and he brings his contractors into the culture inviting them to company meetings and providing access to documentation and training. Although responsibility for skills remains with the contractors, HRIZONS will co-invest in training when it further mutual objectives.
When you are implementing human capital management in your industry, your engineers, programmers, technicians, and consultants can become a part of the solution. They will be if you include them in the business conversation.
References:
1. Lounsbury, John W., Eric Sundstrom, Jacob J. Levy, and Lucy W. Gibson. "Distinctive Personality Traits of Information Technology Professionals." CIS Computer and Information Science 7, no. 3 (2014).
2. Rapoza, Jim. "The Challenge of Managing Tech Workers." EWeek. January 2, 2006.
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