No Image Available

TrainingZone

Read more from TrainingZone

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1705321608055-0’); });

Are people skills valued highly enough?

default-16x9

A new report, "People are our greatest asset: business responses to managing people", from Ashridge Centre for Business and Society looks at the role of people management in organisational effectiveness. The research was based on a postal survey sent to 4000 managers and HR professionals in the UK and across continental Europe. Additional data were obtained from in-depth interviews with a group of senior managers, selected for their direct professional concern with the issues raised.

Main findings
- 99% of respondents agree that people management skills are important qualities of a successful leader

- 91% of respondents feel that the increased complexity of organisations has made people management skills more critical, but one third disagree that their organisation is committed to help managers acquire these skills

- 75% of respondents identified the intensity of competition and managing change as being more challenging, and 72% identified dealing with uncertainty as being more challenging today than three years ago

- Only 16% of respondents felt that it was easy for technical managers to be good people managers

- 69% of respondents work with five or more teams with 88% being directly responsible for at least one team's performance, yet only 11% of managers rate their employer as being good at evaluating team performance

- Over one third of respondents received no people management training in 2001 and half say their organisation provides insufficient training to help them develop their people management skills

- Over one third of respondents feel that improving people management is not a priority in their organisation

- Most managers are expected to operate in an environment that relies on an infrequent feedback process; the majority of managers say feedback is given only on an annual basis

- Barriers to people management becoming or remaining a priority include: operational focus, cost reduction, time constraints, lack of recognition by senior management, emphasis on technical skills and training

- There is a divided view on whether managers should be measured or rewarded on people skills, and just over half are not measured or rewarded for people skills.

Newsletter

Get the latest from TrainingZone.

Elevate your L&D expertise by subscribing to TrainingZone’s newsletter! Get curated insights, premium reports, and event updates from industry leaders.

Thank you!