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ProfileXT®
Helps Healthcare Firm Enroll Top Performers
In a slow economy, consider this:
- Keeping jobs open to save money may drive down
productivity and customer satisfaction.
- Finding ways to satisfy employees will help you
retain them.
- ProfileXT® helps organizations find top talent
and matches people to jobs.
Low employee productivity can trouble a company
anytime, not just during bad times. A healthcare
organization troubled with exactly this problem found
help through ProfileXT® when it sought a way to increase
its frequency of hiring employees that excelled in their
positions. This case study examines the relationship
between employee productivity and Job Match to ProfileXT®.
Participants
The study focused on 60 healthcare enrollment
specialists. Their employer administered the ProfileXT®
to each. Company leaders also evaluated each employee's
performance on a five-point rating scale.
Company performance evaluations gave 13 employees a
score of four or five, an "exceeded expectations"
ranking. Six of the 60 ranked a one or two, which means
they did not meet expectations. The rest of the
enrollment specialists, 41 people, got a three-point
rating, which means they met performance expectations.
Job Match Pattern
The organization used a concurrent study format and
ProfileXT® to develop a Job Match Pattern for the
position of enrollment specialist. The 13 employees who
exceeded expectations formed the underpinnings for this
pattern, which today serves as a benchmark for matching
other employees.
After a review of the percent matches, the
organization's leaders determined that a Job Match of 78
percent or higher best identified top performers for the
enrollment specialist position. Leaders selected this
number as a good match to the job, and the goal to shoot
for.
This study further demonstrated:
- The pattern correctly identified 9 of 13 workers
as top performers
- The pattern correctly identified 4 of 6 workers
as bottom performers
Performance Grouping
Of the 60 employees included in the study, 34 met or
exceeded the benchmark. Only two of these (5.8 percent)
were bottom performers. Nine of the thirteen top
performers, about 70 percent, were included in this
group, while only two of the six bottom performers were
able to display the same match. The pattern thus
differentiated top and bottom performers as delineated
by the company’s own performance evaluations.
Summary
Leaders at this organization say ProfileXT® has
increased consistency in their hiring practices, and
they have gained confidence in their hiring decisions
knowing that the ProfileXT® is based on the firm ground
of employee competencies. Using ProfileXT® to benchmark
employees, the organization has shown the ability to
screen enrollment specialist candidates with success.

Two Products to Grow Your
Workers – AND Your Business
Let's say an organization sees the soft economy as a
time to maintain the business it has. It views open
positions or an overall reduction in the workforce as
good ways to save money during a downtown.
We will call this company the Walking in Place
Outfit, Inc.
Meanwhile, a smart competitor, The Ball-of-Fire
Company, looks at the downturn as innovation time. It
will find new places to do business, and new ways to
sell its faithful customers even more of its quality
products and services.
Oh, and by the way, The Ball-of-Fire Company will be
siphoning off the Walking in Place Outfit's best
employees – the ones that don't like walking in place –
and using them to discover and create its new business.
Is your company walking in place or a ball of fire?
Decide quickly, because talent can disappear in a
heartbeat, and with it, your business. If your decision
is to keep the top-shelf talent that will steer you
through bad times and even turn them into good times,
Profiles has two assessments to aid you. Profiles
WorkForce Compatibility™ and CheckPoint360°™ are
especially designed to help leaders strategically
recruit, hire and develop top talent.
One fact remains constant throughout business upturns
and downturns: The primary reason employees leave a
position is due to conflict with a manager, be it a CEO,
director, supervisor or team leader. This can occur
without company leaders ever fully understanding the
problem or knowing how to correct it. Profiles WorkForce
Compatibility™ prevents "boss blindness" by highlighting
the competencies that affect the employee/manager
relationship, along with information on how the employee
and manager can best work together. As this kind of
understanding grows, so do compatibility and
productivity.
Profiles WorkForce Compatibility™ helps both manager
and employee to:
- Communicate better
- Spot conflicts before they
occur
- Successfully resolve problems
that do pop up
Profiles WorkForce Compatibility™ accomplishes this
not by magic but through careful strategy and two
reports, one for the supervisor and one for the
employee. These detailed summaries reveal major working
styles, similarities and differences, recommendations
for the supervisor on how best to manage the employee,
and suggestions for the employee on how best to work
with his/her supervisor. Profiles WorkForce
Compatibility™ effectively does away with
"one-size-fits-all" management strategy.
Building on the Profiles WorkForce Compatibility™
model of compatibility between supervisor and employee
is CheckPoint360°™, which measures management
competencies by gathering feedback from a 360-degree
circle. It provides a leader with constructive
performance feedback from supervisors, direct reports
and peers.
CheckPoint360°™ helps organizations answer these
questions:
• What strengths of this manager can I capitalize on?
• Which areas should my manager focus on developing? How
can I provide guidance in this area?
• How do I effectively manage conflict?
• Do I have enough leaders in the pipeline to meet
tomorrow’s needs?
The assessment uses 70 interview questions about
specific management behaviors to give a complete picture
of a manager’s capabilities in such areas as
communication, leadership, adaptability, ability to
build relationships, managing tasks, productivity,
development of others, and personal development.
Profiles' clients have used CheckPoint360°™ to develop
effective leaders, build a talent bench, help leaders
through career transitions, use leadership development
to enact key changes in the business, and develop top
talent.
When the going gets tough, an organization wants to
keep its toughest men and women going strong. These are
the A-list performers we never want to do
without. We need them most of all when the economy goes
soft.
Ball of Fire Company – and all others ready to grow
your business – please call Profiles International at
(254) 751-1644. This is not the time to walk in place –
your best talent won't.

The sky is not
falling *
Good Tactics for Bad Times
September 11, 2001, will live in the minds of people
forever. Three thousand lives were lost and our psyche
was struck that day. For a period, Americans were
crippled with fear. The attacks caused people to be
cautious and hesitant. The atmosphere debilitated our
economy into stagnation. The momentum we had worked so
hard to create in our business had come to a standstill.
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We met with our staff to explore our options. The
attacks of 9/11 had a lesser impact outside of the
United States so we focused on further expanding our
business internationally. We composed a list of 23
countries where economic and political conditions
appeared to be conducive to the products and services
our company markets. We were able to identify and
contact many excellent prospects. We assessed each of
our candidates to help measure their suitability for
success in our business. Finally, we invited our top
candidates to Waco to meet us personally and tour our
facilities. Twenty of the original 23 countries targeted
for expansion entered into business with Profiles
International, Inc.
The message of this strategy is clear. Maintain your
optimism regardless of the situation. It may seem like
the sky is falling, but look for the opportunities you
may be overlooking.
Here are 10 tactics for coping in tough times, all of
which your sales organization can quickly put into
action. Some of these actions are specifically aimed at
the sales management level, others at every salesperson
in the organization. To maximize your chances of
success, you need to implement every one of them to
balance the negative effects that weakened consumer
confidence can have on your sales volume in tighter
times.
1. Cross- and Up-Sell in Existing Active
Accounts
Active purchasers/users of your products and services
who are buying from you currently may have a need for
something else that you do. Look at ways of up selling
and cross selling into all of these accounts. How could
they blend one service/product they currently use with
another they have never used? What would be the benefit
to them of doing so? What financial/other incentive can
you give them to do so?
Formulate as many cross- and up-sell strategies as
you can for everything that you currently provide. Look
at packaging sets of goods and services so that you add
value and revenue to every sale you make. With a little
imagination, you'll find you can increase the value of
each sale, and create brand-new sales, with little
additional effort. It doesn't have to result in a
doubling of the value of every sale you make, or in
doubling the value of every existing account. Even
modest margin increases will add up substantially over
time. Look at how McDonald's and Burger King approach
every one of their admittedly individually modest sales
– "Would you like fries with that?" or "Would you like a
pie with that?" Go large!
2. Awaken Hibernating Accounts
Review the records of everyone you've ever done business
with. You'll find there are some on that list who, for
whatever reason, have had no contact from you or your
sales force for some time. Good times are like that – we
all tend to chase the "low-hanging fruit" – the
opportunities that walk up to us and say, "Take me!"
There will be some customers who have had excellent
experience with you, but who haven't done anything with
you recently because you simply have not asked. Get out
and see everyone. Things have changed since you saw them
last – for one thing, you're much hungrier and, if
you've actioned the first point above, you now have so
many "packaged" offerings that you must have something
to interest them.
A key point when you undertake these first two steps
is to avoid the temptation to confess that things are
tight. Do that and you put your most valuable assets in
a situation where they may feel pressured to do
something for you – particularly if traditionally you
have had good personal relationships with the account
contacts. Also, the thought that you might be under any
real pressure can grow into the concern that you may not
be around to service or implement any project or product
that they might buy from you. Be upbeat and treat this
as an account-development meeting – seeking more ways in
which you can help these valuable customers to meet
their objectives, thereby helping you to meet yours.
3. Revisit All Recent Leads
In good times, there is always easy money to be made
and, therefore, prospects who express an interest in
what we do. But they either don't place an order or
don't return our calls, and they fall by the wayside.
Review all of your recent leads. Filter out those that
came to nothing – but where, for whatever reason, you
never got to a no or to a formal decision on your part
to qualify out. If these folks contacted you looking for
information, attended a seminar, or requested a
brochure, then at some point they had a qualified
interest. Chase down these leads. You'll find that some
never got around to making their purchase because they
were too busy and there was no salesperson driving their
decision-making process. Be that salesperson.
4. Seek Referrals
This is classic, basic sales advice, but it is never
more important than when times are tough. In every
encounter with active customers or hibernating accounts,
get into the habit of asking for referrals. Look to
existing accounts for referrals to other contacts within
the account, or for referrals to their suppliers and
peer organizations. Speak with everyone you know in
business and ask them to think of anyone to whom you
should be speaking. It will get results. Simple, but
effective.
5. Cast Your Net Wider
When business is good, the advice is simple: refine your
target audience. Know your customer base and market to
it to the exclusion of all others. It also means being
fussy – going only for the high-ticket, high-margin
deals you deserve. When the going gets tough, go for
some of those smaller projects you would have sniffed at
in better times. Be prepared to come down from the
mountain.
Take that horrified look off your face – we're not
suggesting you compromise your values or your standard
of service, simply that you recognize that tighter times
demand a more flexible approach to deciding who merits
your attention. You will find that lowering your sights
even a little will substantially broaden the target base
with which you have to work.
Be careful, however. What you sell to one class of
prospects may not appeal to another, perhaps smaller,
purchaser. Look carefully at your offerings, and at the
new additions to your target base, and repackage what
you do to appeal specifically to them. Is there a way to
"modularize" what you do, breaking it down into
individually priced elements that smaller customers can
use on an as-needed basis? Can you provide financial
payment terms that make it easier for the customer with
shallower pockets to work with you? What can you do to
broaden your appeal? You may have to create a brand-new
range of product/service offerings and marketing
approaches to hit this wider target base.
6. DON'T Reduce (or increase) Costs
…but DO increase value. The moment you start the
"bargain basement" approach, your existing customers
will imagine that they smell "blood in the water" and
this may shake their confidence, driving them away. No
prospect or customer ever ran away from more bang for
his or her buck, however. Look at how you can deliver
more – better service, higher quality, better payment
terms, whatever – for the same money. Do this by looking
at what your targets value and what your competitors
deliver. You'll find that you can very often up your
value proposition by 100 percent and still elevate your
true cost of sale by only a fraction of that percentage.
And – need we say it? – don't even consider pumping up
your prices in tough times.
7. Invest More Time and Money
…in marketing and promotion. You've heard it all before:
sales is a numbers game. These numbers – particularly
the key ratio – are completely different when things
tighten. If you were working a 100-10-1 model previously
(100 suspects producing 10 prospects, which in turn
produced 1 sale), then you know you're going to have to
ramp the input to this funnel to a much higher level to
compensate for the slowdown. Do you have to double it?
Triple it? Whatever the multiplier, you'll find you need
to have your prospecting machine running continually, in
parallel with other activities, seven days a week. Look
at what you can realistically aim to sell to your target
base and set about designing as many ongoing prospecting
activities as possible. Ramp up your public relations,
run value-added seminars and road shows, engage in
coordinated mail and fax broadcasts – do whatever you
have to do to get your message, and ultimately your
sales team, in front of as many prospective customers as
possible.
If you have not already done so, consider dedicating
some of your team to prospecting alone. Now is not the
time to skimp on the promotional budget. You have to
invest in chasing prospects out into the open.
8. Build Lifetime Customers
In general, the easiest and most profitable business to
win has always been that won from existing satisfied
customers. Delivering excellent customer service is
essential when there is less business to go around. If
you are a direct part of the sales organization or
effort in your company, you are one of those with
ultimate responsibility for development of profitable
customer relationships, and with customer retention. No
longer can you shift the blame for implementation or
delivery to someone else in the organization. To ensure
your future sales, you must take complete ownership and
responsibility for the success (as perceived by your
customer) of all of your sales. This means taking a
perhaps unprecedented interest in the successful and
quality implementation or delivery of every project,
product or service you deliver to your customers. It
means ensuring that everyone involved in delivering what
you sell understands that you expect them to go the
extra mile to satisfy your customers spectacularly.
Ensure that all of your sales result in delivering the
success and benefit the customer set out to achieve.
That way, you start making headway on tomorrow's sales
today.
9. Ask the Troops What They Think
Before you charge into implementing these suggestions,
see if your team has any more to add. Call for input
from every department on what people think you could do
to up revenues and drive sales. Don't confine this to
your sales and marketing people – frequently your
technical and administration people have a keener
awareness of what your customers would really like, or
would be willing to pay extra for. Besides drumming up
new ideas, this process will make everyone feel an
important part of the organization's positive drive for
increased success – people will much more effectively
implement actions they feel they helped to formulate
than ones they feel have been imposed on them.
10. Keep Your Chin Up
Hey! We're not Pollyannas! But we can assure you that
unless you stay optimistic, you are dead. Don't feel
that you or your business is unique in its suffering,
and that all is lost. It's that kind of thinking that
fuels dipping consumer confidence. Whatever you're
facing, you'll find that others have come through worse
and that things always get better – and this happens
faster for those who keep their heads and remain focused
and optimistic. Too many people fold up their tents and
head for home at the first sign of bad weather. Don't be
one of them. Businesses can survive, and even thrive, if
their owners and managers remain calm and do what needs
to be done to cope with more challenging times. Decide
what you need to do to ride the storm out, and then
focus all of your energies upon doing it.
The sky is never really falling unless we
collectively wish it down upon ourselves.
*From the book 40 STRATEGIES FOR WINNING IN
BUSINESS by Bud Haney and Jim Sirbasku. © S&H Publishing
Co., 5205 Lake Shore Drive, Waco, Texas 76710-1732. All
rights reserved. Contact S&H Publishing Co., (254)
751-1644, for reprint permission.
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Building Leadership
at DMJM Harris
Editor's note: DMJM Harris, the
transportation flagship company of AECOM
Technology Corporation, specializes in services
that include transit-rail, highways and bridges,
aviation, marine, planning, energy and power,
and design and construct. With headquarters in
New York and Los Angeles, it has more than 2,200
employees in the United States. The company is
the employer of choice within the industry and
boasts a reputation for attracting and retaining
highly talented employees while advancing their
professional development. The Greater New York
Chapter of the Women’s Transportation Seminar (WTS)
named DMJM Harris as its 2007 Employer of the
Year in recognition of its of its support of
diversity and of women in the transportation
industry. DMJM Harris is also a Profiles Client
of the Year.
Q. Why did DMJM Harris partner with
Profiles?
A. DMJM Harris understands the need for
increased employee engagement and retention. It
chose to meet that need by increasing the
leadership skills for every person in company
leadership positions nationwide. The
organization selected Profiles International as
its strategic partner after evaluating the tools
of 60 firms that provide leadership assessments
and services.
Q. How did the relationship progress?
A. Our engagement began in September 2006 with a
small project involving 21 top executives. We
expanded the project to 75 additional leaders
located throughout the United States. We used
group training and one-on-one coaching sessions
in New York City, Philadelphia, Los Angeles,
Phoenix, and Oakland. The success of those first
two phases of the project led us to move forward
with an additional 500 plus leaders. Phase three
of the project began in July 2007.
Q. What does this latest phase
involve?
A. Formal training for leadership. DMJM
identified this need as the majority of our
leaders ascended from technical ranks without
formal training for leadership responsibilities.
We began with a training program titled “Manager
as Leader” for more than 500 leaders.
Q. What assessments did you include
in this training process?
A. We incorporated Profiles Performance
Indicator™ and Profiles Team Analysis™ into this
program, continues throughout 2008. We also
chose Profiles as a partner in the development
and administration of a mentoring program.
Profiles Performance Indicator™ and ProfileXT®
both play a crucial role in the success of this
plan.
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