Browsing Posts in Change Management

Worth Their Weight In...

by Beth Rounds and Lock Collins, Cambiar Partners

Over the past year, the Cambiar partners have been writing, presenting and blogging about The Winds of Change within the MR industry.  Leading companies across the value chain are listening, evaluating business models and setting strategy for the future.  In addition, new entrants, many from outside our industry, are adding to the mix as well as challenging the status quo.  With all the change happening, executives are also realizing that their talent needs are changing.  Joan Lewis, Global Consumer and Market Knowledge Officer, P&G, said in the recent ESOMAR Global Market Research Report, “the element of research that will have to change faster is the profile of people – people who can show integrated thinking, courage and leadership, with less emphasis on back-room analysis or sales. …what we need are more talented people who can build the industry.”  We agree! Where in the past the individual project was king, now the relationship dominates. Corporations expect their business partners to know the business, bringing a holistic array of information to bear on the issue at hand.

All this is good, but are MR executives really embracing this “New Talent for A New Age”concept?  I asked Lock Collins, Cambiar’s Human Resources Practice Leader to weigh in on the topic.

Beth: In the area of human resources and talent, what do MR executives want these days?

Lock:  Clearly clients are looking for  those unique individuals with grounding in market research combined with the ability to understand and discuss marketing with senior management the key business issues that they face.  In our industry, that’s a rare combination. Of course, they need to have a track record of success and must be passionate about the industry.

Also, it seems that we’re moving away from the traditional “hunter-farmer” models with companies structuring around account managers that “have it all”.  Desirable candidates can listen to a client’s problem, develop solutions, oversee the project team and provide insights.  These people are truly the “renaissance men/women” of the market research industry.  Add on top of this, individuals will need to have a POV on the New MR world and be story tellers.  This is a tall order for most!

Beth: Are clients starting to hire specialists or mostly generalists?

Lock: Right now, I think MR firms are still looking for generalists, especially at the account management level.  We’ve had discussions with firms regarding their interest in hiring researchers outside traditional marketing and business channels.  For example, some companies have hired graphic designers to support their reporting and presentations, and others are experimenting with hiring individuals that understand story telling — journalists for example.  I can see this trend picking up steam in the next couple of years as the new modalities gain acceptance.

Beth: No company can afford a wrong hire.  What recommendations do you have for improving a company’s success rates?

Lock: Managers have to be serious about interviewing and selection.  All too often hiring is treated way too casually.  There are a number of best practices in this area that I’d be happy to share at a later point, but in my experience great managers are looking for candidates who possess those intangible behaviors that will lead to success in the position.   We’re doing more to help our clients focus on the desired behaviors and characteristics, as well as a strong organizational fit vs. the traditional list of research methodologies and knowledge of the end-client’s industry.

Beth: On the flip side – it still seems like a competitive employment market.  Do you see any trends in what employees or prospects want from an employer?

Lock: Our sense is that individuals with 0- 5 years of experience may be operating in a traditional employment environment, not much different than twenty years ago.  At the more senior levels, where our practice is focused, candidates are consistently looking for a few things:

  • Autonomy and the ability to develop solutions in an unconventional way – not the way “we’ve always done it”.  With this autonomy comes a blurring of work and personal life, with individuals wanting to working on their own schedule in their own location.  Some of our clients prefer to have employees engaged in the day-to-day activities of an office.  We’re finding that more and more of our clients, however, are expressing the flexibility for senior level employees to be located anywhere.
  • Among our candidates, we are also noticing the desire to walk away from the large established research suppliers. Many more are now attracted to entrepreneurial opportunities in which they can “build something”.
  • Finally, senior candidates are not looking for a job.  They are interested in moving a vision forward and financially sharing in the results.

Beth: There are a lot of recruiters out there.  What makes Cambiar’s Talent Practice different?

Lock: As part of any corporate strategy, executives look to the major trends that are affecting clients and research companies alike. The MR industry is poised for great change and we are starting to see how those macro trends play in to the types of talent that we will require in the future.  As we all know, a successful business strategy can’t stop at a new and improved sales and marketing plan. To borrow a concept from Jim Collins of Good to Great fame, having the right talent  in the right seats on the right bus is critical to the success of any organization.

Hitting it out of the park

by Beth Rounds, Cambiar

Recently I went to see the movie “Moneyball,” based on the true story of Oakland A’s General Manager Billy Beane.  And while I am not a hard core baseball fan, I went because I was intrigued by the story – how a leader (Billy Beane) used statistics and analytics (he was considered the precursor of the trend that has swept the baseball world—sabermetrics) to do the impossible – build a team of no names, win 20 games in a row and change the business of baseball forever.

Much has been written about the story and the broader messages about running a business. I’d like to “hit” a few ideas your way as you plan for 2012 and beyond.

What is so unique about the story?

He faced challenges head-on. The A’s were losing their best players to other teams with large payrolls. Instead of playing victim or ignoring the problem, Beane “claimed it”, found a solution and took a big risk by bringing in an Ivy League economics grad to analyze players stats, replacing the traditional way of assessing and recruiting talent. By caring more about a player’s ability to get on base, Beane challenged conventional wisdom and proved his detractors wrong.

He managed objectively. Prior to this time, scouts assessed players in a substantially more subjective manner. And, while experience and “gut feel” matter in decision making, Beane brought a new dimension to the sport. By analyzing players by the numbers and statistical probabilities, he brought objectivity to the table.

He was transformed as a leader. Billy had the strength of character and courage to stay the course even when his plan didn’t seem to be working.  He evolved as a leader, going from being a distant manager to one that was fully engaged with the sport, his team, and the players.

With much change happening in our industry, we should think more like Beane.  Ask yourself and your leadership team the following questions:

  • Do we understand the changes that are impacting marketing research?
  • Are we able to assess our current state and create a plan going forward?
  • Are we willing to put everything on the table and challenge the status quo?
  • Are we managing by the numbers? Do we know what drives profitable revenue?
  • Do we have the right talent for the future? And if not, how do we create a plan for hiring new talent for this new age?
  • Does our current staff have the right skills to surprise and delight our customers?

Business is about making intelligent choices. And now more than ever we need to challenge conventional wisdom in order to chart a new way forward. Beane chose an unknown and risky path, and in the end he changed his organization, himself, and the industry.  My kind of leader!  Your’s too?

Would love to hear your thoughts on this topic.  Contact me at: beth@consultcambiar.com

Additional resources related to this topic:

http://www.affinnova.com/blog/bid/106401/Transformation-is-Not-an-Option

http://www.fastcompany.com/1794118/8-strategies-to-fight-ordinary

http://www.fastcompany.com/1794942/how-to-be-distinctive-christian-louboutin-shoes

by Simon Chadwick, Managing Partner

In a sure sign of its continuing resurgence as an association of relevance in the United States, the Marketing Research Association has mounted an excellent new conference aimed at the corporate researcher. Intelligent partnering with the Market Research Executive Board (MREB) and Quirk’s meant that not only did 400 delegates turn up but that there was a slate of generally good speakers to entertain and inform them.

Among the most widely acclaimed of these were Ian Lewis of Cambiar (full disclosure – I am Cambiar’s managing partner), Chris Frank of American Express and Andrew Abela of Extreme Presentations. Lewis set the stage by reviewing the future of research in the coming decade, replete with fresh data from the Cambiar Research in the Future Study. Chief among his points that resonated with the crowd: the gap between the desired state of corporate researchers to be true thought partners in their organizations and their relative lack of doing so. Lewis charted out a number of key trends that will materially affect research in the coming years, including the corporate researcher’s’ need to deliver more with less; the rise of DIY; the organic river of knowledge that will increasingly be available to organizations outside of the norm of what we currently think of as market research; a taxonomy of the new modalities that are available to us; the rise of the global middle class; and the need to find, recruit and train new types of talent for a new age.

Frank picked up on this theme by giving very practical advice to organizations on how to make sense of the tsunami of information with which they are faced – and the key questions that need to be asked in order to do so. Abela then carried this forward by giving his audience a radical view of the research presentation  -  no more than 5 slides, no bullets, no color, no clip art. Just a laser focus on content. The perfect presentation, he said, could have nothing added nor anything deducted from it.

Of great interest in interacting with participants here was the degree to which these clients are more willing to experiment with new modalities and new ways of approaching research than are their primary suppliers, the research agencies. It seems that, in this instance, clients are once again pointing the way to change to those that service them. There is a palpable hunger among client researchers to find ways in which to be more effective, more impactful and more provocative – and much discussion on the necessary mindsets, structures and tools that would enable this to take place.

Kudos to MRA, MREB and Quirks for a valuable new addition to the conference circuit.