I was reading an article the other evening over at Huffington Post titled Welcome to the Club: Lessons From One Mom to Another.
(Why was I reading this, I hear some of my dude HR guy pros asking themselves? Let’s face it; I’m 40ish and woman are still mostly a mystery to me, so I try and find out their secrets! Plus I hate being left in the dark on this parenting thing, so “I need the info,” as Dr. Evil would say.)
I don’t want to spoil the article, but suffice it to say, either I’m very in touch with the feminine side of parenting, or, what they were sharing really wasn’t the “real” secrets Moms know!
The article did get me to thinking about secrets and how in HR we seem to always have a few that we are either asked to keep by others, or just the ones we share in this great fraternity of HR. Here are some of the HR secrets that I thought of:
I’m sure there are a number of others, but many aren’t unique to just HR.
I was thinking of putting down: We cook the books on our metrics, but guess what? So does every other department! Let’s face it, in a political corporate structure that relies on metrics to obtain budgeted resources, the numbers aren’t always going to be clean!
I like HR because we tend to have “big” secrets and are called upon to keep those secrets. It’s probably the biggest failure I see with new HR pros – they tend to try and create organizational friendships by sharing “the secrets,” and it always ends up blowing up on them.
HR has secrets – you knew it, I confirmed it for you. Now let’s move on, because I not telling you the specifics! (besides the Ted thing.)
This was originally published on Tim Sackett’s blog, The Tim Sackett Project.