When You Hire From the Outside, Does It Mean Your Organization Failed?


Henry Ward, the CEO of eShares, wrote a post on Medium recently titled How to Hire. It’s a great piece from an executive point of view regarding the concept of talent acquisition.
Basically, Henry feels that if your organization needs to go out and hire external talent, you’ve failed as an organization:
Hiring means we failed to execute and need help. First, let me quell a misconception. Hiring is not a consequence of success. Revenue and customers are. Hiring is a consequence of our failure to create enough leverage (see eShares 101) to grow on our own. It means we need outside help. The perfect business is a computer plugged into the internet. Starting with me, every human thereafter is overhead. And we are increasing overhead by 50 percent.
I want to repeat this point: We are increasing overhead by 50 percent because we failed to execute. It is not something to be proud of. It is humbling to go back to the labor market, hat-in-hand, asking for help…”
Want to know why your executives don’t respect HR? Read the above.
Executives think about the business differently than we do in HR and Talent Acquisition. I’m 100 percent sure any head of TA would believe hiring, because of business growth, equals success, not failure.
Even if you take Henry’s example of the perfect business model being a computer plugged into the Internet, one could still argue that any organization that can’t self-sustain its own growth of labor is a failure.
Think about it from a training and development point of view.
OK, at this point we still need to use outside bodies. I would guess at some point Google will create real, live human clones, then the process could be completely self-contained.
So, how does Henry Ward hire at eShares? Here is his hiring philosophy:
Pretty solid. Some of it might depend on your industry, company, etc. I’m not a huge believer in always hiring for difference. Difference causes conflict. In some organizations that is great, but in some organizations, that is catastrophic — just as similar, group think, etc. is bad in many cases, it’s perfect in other ones.
Give Henry’s article on How to Hire a read. He goes into detail on each step in his philosophy with an explanation.
It’s one of the best executive written pieces I’ve ever read on hiring.
This was originally published on Tim Sackett’s blog, The Tim Sackett Project.