How To Choose Participants For Your Emerging Leader Program
Let’s start with a real story of how not to choose participants for your emerging leader program. This pharmaceutical company had such a bad selection process that you can use it as a map of the mistakes you should avoid.
For context, this company has 1,000 sales reps and 100 sales managers. Here’s what the sales leader development team did:
Here’s the biggest problem with this approach: It’s too selective. This poor leadership development team spent a huge chunk of their budget to weed out and disengage 88 of their top performers. Then, they demanded a significant amount of time and energy from four of their absolute best sales reps (we’re talking top 1%), only to tell them that they weren’t quite good enough. Yikes. 😬
Quantity: How Do You Decide How Many Emerging Leaders to Select?
I recommend that you think about this number in terms of two main categories of emerging leaders:
Generally speaking, both of the goals above point to the same solution: Broaden your pool. Even if many of your emerging leaders don’t siphon up into manager positions, development will help engage and retain them. In fact, emerging leadership development programs often help managers realize that they do not want to take a leadership role. And that is incredibly valuable.
Three Ways to Choose Your Participants
Here are three effective ways to consider handling your selection process:
All of these methods have something in common: They all seek to let more people in. Instead of spending your budget on selection, spend it on development. Imagine what the first pharma company could have done with all the money they spent weeding people out. They probably could have at least added the leaders they paid to eliminate (ironic!).
Regardless of your method, stay aware of how selection may interfere with diversity and equitable opportunity. Managers often carry biases. And, when team members know they weren’t selected by their manager, they can disengage. For these reasons, I tend to highly recommend self-selection.
Struggling to Choose One of the Above? Split Your Emerging Leader Program into Two Audiences
If you’re struggling to choose one of the above selection methods, it’s likely for the following reason (which I hear all the time):
“I want to have a big, equitable program that will develop anyone interested, but I also want a narrow ‘feeder’ program that pushes a select group of emerging leaders into management.”
There’s actually a simple, highly effective solution here: Split your audience. Do both.
At Ferring Pharmaceuticals, the Director of Commercial Leadership Development, Rob Daniel, did exactly this. He split emerging leaders into two main groups:
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By building the program in this way, Daniel had his cake and ate it too. He engaged all talented sales reps while still getting selective as people progressed through the pipeline.
The number one objection to this style of program is price. But, Daniel actually ran both of these programs for less than the price of the failed emerging leader program at the beginning of this article. To do so, he leveraged self-driven learning, a behavior change platform, and group coaching. This made for a high-touch, expert-driven program that was still very cheap relative to the industry standard.
You can read more about Ferring’s approach here.
How to Evaluate and Select Your Candidates (If Not Self-Selected)
If you aren’t doing self-selection, then you need to determine your selection and evaluation criteria. Important things to consider include:
Here’s a sample checklist:
At Olympus, for example, their emerging leader program used a selection committee to choose 20 participants from 40 applicants. With 80 first-line leaders across the organization, the target audience size would easily fill in for attrition. Olympus’s application process included a variety of criteria, such as:
For an in-depth look at a more intensive selection process, check out how Olympus does it here.
Promote Your Program Internally: A Story-Based Approach
Regardless of how big or small your audience is, you need to promote your program. If it’s open enrollment, you want to draw as many people as possible. And if it’s application-based, you want it to be as competitive as possible. Here are five guideposts to market your program.
Be sure to include testimonials if your program is already up and running. A great testimonial from an alumni may even touch on all of the above points.
Putting It All Together: When In Doubt, Expand Your Pool
Selection is daunting. But it’s worth being intentional about your process. Your audience is your program. My sweeping advice: If you’re unsure, expand your pool. You’ll regret passing up a potentially great leader more than you’ll regret developing a high-performer who never progresses into a leadership position.
My company works with orgs like Ferring (mentioned above) to design and deliver world-class emerging leader programs. Set up a quick call to learn more.
Instructional Design Director at Red Nucleus
7moIt might be good enough but does it have the same impact to your audience if they know you AI-ed it in? I’m old enough to remember making and receiving mix tapes. Those were just songs strung together, right? WRONG! They were labors of love – planning the right mix, timing the songs so they fit without too much dead air at the end, dexterously hitting play/record at the exact right moment. When I received a mix tape, I always listened to it because I knew it was something special that took some effort to create.
Performance & Digital Marketer - User Acquisition | Retention | Revenue | eCommerce & App Marketing
7moThank you for sharing your insights on selecting participants for an emerging leader program. It's crucial to consider various factors like type, quantity, selection process, and more.
👇 Free "Sell on LinkedIn" Training • LinkedIn Agency Owner • LinkedIn SaaS Founder • Over 10 years doing Social Selling
7moThis is so true, if you choose the right people you're already succeeding Kevin Kruse
CHRO | Chief People Officer | Global Head of Human Resources
7moGreat one! Emerging leader programs accelerate the development of high-potentials, have a powerful legacy and deliver dramatic impact to the business.
Branding You as an Authority in Your Niche | Helping You Build a Lead Flow System with LinkedIn | Business Coaching for High-Ticket Coaches & Consultants | Creator of the Authority Brand Formula™ | California Gal 💛
7moGreat insights on choosing participants for an emerging leader program. 👍