Category Archives: Kris Dunn

The Weekly HRExaminer v1.27

hrexaminer-cover-and-home-page-v127-450pxmedium for August 6, 2010


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Feature Parts I & II | What’s the first thing you’d change – Editorial Advisory Board Poll #1

This issue is a real treat, like a present about to be unwrapped where you can’t wait to see what’s inside. We’ve got ten multi-dimensional voices from business and HR answering a singular question:

What’s the first thing you’d change about HR?

HRExaminer-eab-logo-white-bg-200x78pxHere at HRExaminer we’ve been assembling a very interesting crew of contributors (our Editorial Advisory Board) who are writing original work on HRExaminer every week. Now we’re beginning a regular series where we poll our EAB on central topics so we hear what leaders and expert practitioners are thinking about HR, Recruiting and Talent Management. That’s what our EAB Poll’s are all about and this is the first one.

Before you dive into this week’s issue stop and consider your own answer to our question. We’d love to hear your opinion. Drop us a comment here on our website or @ us with a tweet or a comment on Facebook. Then please read the responses from people like Jay Cross, Kris Dunn, Todd Dewett, Paul Hebert, Rusty Rueff, Claudia Faust and many more. It’s a treat. Read More

The Great Recession’s Recovery as a Human Capital Problem | Colin Kingsbury, Editorial Advisory Board Contributor

colin-kingsbury-portrait-hrexaminer-100pxWe continue our theme of outside contributors with Colin Kingsbury who joins the HRExaminer Editorial Advisory Board this week. If you’ve read Colin’s work as we have you know he has a great vision of our industry that illuminates the road less taken. This is how Colin’s piece this week starts: “If, as Ambrose Bierce wrote, “War is God’s way of teaching Americans geography,” then recessions may do much the same for the study of economics.” Come on, you’ve got to read this! Do it now

In The Know v 1.25

Five links to five great reads. Consume this stuff and you’ll be In the Know. Read More

Jason Averbook | Top 100 Influencer v1.67

Jason Averbhrexaminer-top-100-influencer-jason-averbook-100pxook is the founder and CEO of Knowledge Infusion, the most rapidly growing firm on the HR Consulting front lines. Averbook is a plain spoken man with a gift for profound simplification. He has a level of passion for the Human Capital function that defies easy articulation. Somehow, a conversation with Knowledge Infusion’s leader seems to open up possibilities. It’s a kind of contagious charisma that you’re going to want to get acquainted with. Read More


That’s it for this week’s HRExaminer. That was awesome.

Have a fantastic weekend!

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The Weekly HRExaminer v1.26

hrexaminer v1.26 for July 30, 2010 good enough


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Feature | Good Enough

Kris Dunn says, “Complexity is the enemy of actually getting people to use things.” HRExaminer agrees. The problem with trying to create a Talent Management masterpiece is that you spill a lot of paint. There’s another way that gets you there faster. Kris Dunn explains how you can use ‘Good Enough Ideology’ to make giant leaps forward in your Talent Management practices… Read More

On Auto Mechanics

HRExaminer’s good friend Jeff Hunter occasionally writes parables at Talentism. Jeff, if you don’t know him, is one of the great practitioners in our little corner of the world. Recently, Jeff read our piece on Putting HR Out of Business and responded with WORKING MYSELF OUT OF A JOB. Read our response to Jeff’s great post in On Auto Mechanics in this week’s HRExaminer.

Recruiting Is Hard Work

Typically, the recruiting professional is given requirements without adequate time or preparation. She is then expected to deliver a seamless and enthusiastic presentation to a series of prospects with the goal that each of them hopes they get the job. Firefighting is the norm and the consistent lack of planning creates massive amounts of rework. Despite the bleak realities of recruiting we believe that there is hope on the horizonRead More


That’s it for this week’s HRExaminer.

Have a fantastic weekend!

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Also posted in Editorial Advisory Board, HR, HRExaminer, Jeff Hunter, Recruiting, Talent Management, Talentism, Weekly | Leave a comment

Talent Management: Is One Page “Good Enough”?

Kris Dunn | Founding Member, HRExaminer Editorial Advisory Board Member

Kris Dunn | Founding Member, HRExaminer Editorial Advisory Board Member

Please welcome Kris Dunn as the newest member of the HRExaminer Editorial Advisory Board. By day, Kris is an HR practitioner, currently VP of People at DAXKO, a progressive software firm dedicated to providing solutions to the best membership-driven organizations in America. At night, he morphs into a blogger at The HR Capitalist and the Founder and Executive Editor of Fistful of Talent. That makes him a career VP of HR, a blogger… but also a dad and hoops junkie, the order of which changes based on his mood. Full Bio…


I’ve said it a million times, so I’ll say it again. Complexity is the enemy of actually getting people to use things.

Look around and you’ll see that it’s true.  To chase the claim of having the best widget, companies over-engineer products as a standard business practice.  Whether you’re talking about your life as a consumer or a HR pro, you’ve been impacted by an over-engineered solution.

First, let’s talk consumer products, and we’ll get to talent management later.  You don’t need a HD video camera with 30 features  and a 400-page user manual, you need a point and click camera that delivers good enough quality to share with others via the web. You’re not going to edit the 15 hours of high-end HD footage you have now, so why would you want more?

The Good Enough Ideology

Enter the Flip video camera.  A snippet from a 2009 Wired article will get you warmed up to the concept of a “good enough” solutions:

“”The Flip’s [Flip Mino, small pocket video camera, which is how we tape FOTv over at Fistful of Talent] success stunned the industry, but it shouldn’t have. It’s just the latest triumph of what might be called Good Enough tech. Cheap, fast, simple tools are suddenly everywhere. We get our breaking news from blogs, we make spotty long-distance calls on Skype, we watch video on small computer screens rather than TVs, and more and more of us are carrying around dinky, low-power netbook computers that are just good enough to meet our surfing and emailing needs. The low end has never been riding higher.

So what happened? Well, in short, technology happened. The world has sped up, become more connected and a whole lot busier. As a result, what consumers want from the products and services they buy is fundamentally changing. We now favor flexibility over high fidelity, convenience over features, quick and dirty over slow and polished. Having it here and now is more important than having it perfect. These changes run so deep and wide, they’re actually altering what we mean when we describe a product as “high-quality.”

So what about your life as an HR pro?  Are you using products that are hopelessly complex?  Are the talent processes that you’ve developed to define your HR practice so complex that they actually discourage line managers and your employee population both from using them?

My guess is yes. Enter Mark Effron and Miriam Ort.

Simplifying Talent Management

Effron and Ort recently published a book, “One Page Talent Management” (OPTM).  I recently picked up a copy, and I couldn’t help but think of The Flip and the concept of “good enough” as I read OPTM.

In the book, Effron and Ort (accomplished Talent Management Pros with strong careers) argue that many companies add complexity to their talent practices without evaluating whether those components add any value to the overall process. More importantly, they rightfully point out that the added complexity adds headache-inducing time-wasters to core talent items like Performance Management, which turn managers off to the whole process and fail to improve results.

When Effron and Ort say “one page talent management”, they’re dead serious – and committed.  They’re proposing you strip down your current practices to contain only the elements that truly add value.  The good news is that they’ve taken a very scientific approach, basing every process recommendation on loads of proven scientific research that’s openly cited in the back of the book.

As a result, it’s clear they’re not guessing or just throwing opinions around. They know more than most people about areas like Performance Management, 360-Degree Feedback, Talent Reviews and Succession Planning, Engagement and Competencies.  That’s what they do. What makes OPTM so different is that even though they have all that knowledge, they’ve opted to dramatically simplify the approach to each of the cited areas of Talent Management.  Most experts with the same knowledge would chose to add features.

Instead, they’re seeking to build the Flip video of Talent Management. It’s just crazy enough to work.

If we stick with Performance Management as our target for simplification, Effron and Ort run through the research and recommend the following:

  • No more than three goals total per employee.
  • One page total for the whole system.
  • No stretch goals.
  • No goal weighting.
  • No self assessments.
  • No labels or numerical weightings.

Many of you look at that list and ask, “What’s left?”  Great question. What’s left is a one page format with three goals, a couple of behaviors you want the employee to focus on, the metric each is to be measured by and space to list the results. That’s it. No more.

One Page Talent Management is a great read, and Effron and Ort’s work should be on everyone’s reading list. It’s rare that experts in the field attempt to downsell you on what you really need.  And when you hear an expert attempting to downsell you – whether it’s your local auto mechanic, the kid at Best Buy or a Talent Management expert – you probably need to listen closely.

Once you move through OPTM, the only remaining question is the toughest issue you’ll face – are you brave enough to strip down your current practices (which you probably built) and tell your company they need less, not more?

Good luck with that.

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