From Mainsail’s Talent Leadership Webinar
Recently, the Mainsail Talent Team hosted a webinar led by Ray Martinelli, the Executive Vice President of People at Coupa Software. Ray began his career in Human Resources with Apple in the 1980s and has since built a track record for managing HR departments for companies growing from 100 to 1,000+ employees. In fact, he’s done it three times, all at rapidly growing tech companies: Juniper Networks, Service Source and Coupa Software.
Ray’s experience offers insight into the modern role and functionality of strategic Human Resources in high-growth businesses. “Too often, HR gets set aside as a back office function,” said Ray. “But, if you align HR to your company’s objectives from the start, it can be your strongest asset.”
In the webinar, Ray focused on three ways that growth-stage companies can utilize HR/Heads of People as leaders and growth facilitators.
From Ray, in his own words:
Define your values, then put them to work.
Human Resources should take the lead when setting and implementing company values. At the onset of your growth, HR needs to be sure the entire company is aligned on its values and what those values mean, in a practical sense.
To set that foundation, Ray suggests hosting a 1–2 day workshop with all of your company leaders. In addition to basic leadership training, interweave value training, and demonstrate how your values can play out in real scenarios. Limit yourself to a max of five. Employers should be able to remember and repeat them.
It’s critical to have these meetings early on and establish clarity while you’re still small. It’s not going to solve all of your problems, but it will present a guiding principle for your employees, giving them a reference that can help them make calls.
Once that foundation is set, build programs around it—everything from the performance review cycle to development initiatives to rewards systems should reinforce your values.
Be a culture facilitator.
Within a growing organization, it’s essential to acknowledge and talk about culture. Many small and scaling companies fall apart because their culture is mismanaged, and it doesn’t have to be that way. HR can, and should, be the leader that ensures a company’s culture works and thrives.
Think of HR as a culture facilitator. It’s up to HR to gain clarity and agreement regarding culture from the executive level, and particularly the CEO, because their actions will be magnified within a small company.
HR doesn’t “own” the culture; everyone owns the culture.
HR’s role is simply to facilitate conversations around the topic of culture to ensure there’s clarity, buy-in and cross-departmental tools and programs that support it. It is a constant effort to develop and maintain company culture, help the organization understand its importance, and demonstrate how culture supports business objectives.
In times of change, lead by communicating.
Change management happens every day, particularly at a growing technology organization. When your company has grown 40 percent, it’s inevitable that everyone is experiencing a notable shift on some level.
In times of change, HR should offer clarity and provide a platform for discussion. HR should train company leaders on how to facilitate discussion about change. Smart people thrive on information and the lack of it can lead to confusion and anxiety. The more you overcommunicate and set expectations, the more quickly your employees will regain a sense of purpose and will be able to work through the change.
Not all change is gradual, of course, and M&A presents specific growth challenges. Often, the failures and successes of an M&A event depend on the way people feel during the integration.
Make sure people understand what’s happening before it happens. Start talking about culture and values right away and continue to emphasize them. These are reference points that will orient your employees.
And finally, remember you only have one opportunity to create a good foundation, and it’s early on. Invest in HR early. Define your values, exemplify your culture and allow HR to grow strategically alongside your business. And, if you do it right, HR can serve as a leader, supporting your company through rapid growth with strong values and culture that stand the test.