Competencies can be expressed in any of the following:
As a starting point for you to see how your competencies are ‘lived’ in your organisation, review the list above, add any other ways in which you see competencies evidenced in your organisation, and generate some actions which would help to bring your competency framework to life.
Train leaders how to make decisions effectively
Decision-making is a critical part of organisational life, and we do it all the time, but people are rarely taught how to make a ‘good’ decision. Values and competencies can help leaders to be more rigorous, mindful and fair in their decision-making, so you could consider introducing a values-based decision making module into management and leadership programmes.
Daily reminders
In their book ‘The 31 Practices’, Alan Williams and Dr Alison Whybrow describe an interesting methodology for making a set of values ‘live’ within an organisation. Essentially, they help organisations to turn their values into a set of 31 practical, tangible behaviours (one for each day of the month) which employees are then reminded of – either via a daily desk calendar, email, app reminder or intranet pop-up – to help them understand how they can express these behaviours in their role, on a daily basis. This reinforcement leads to a much greater understanding of the values and more consistency between what the organisation says its employees do, and what they actually do. Whilst 31 Practices is more about making values come alive, competency frameworks should also be in service of this and should be the behavioural representation of your organisational values.
Draw on the values whenever you can
Business communications expert Carrie Bedingfield also recommends creating one simple version of the competency framework which can be referred to and drawn on at any time. Many organisations use posters, coasters, mugs or other corporate paraphernalia to act as constant reminders, but these are often a cause for derision and seen as propaganda. It’s probably better to have them accessible somewhere (e.g., via a link on the intranet home page) rather than decorating offices with them. Providing reminders at opportune times is also a more subtle way of communicating competencies: reminding learners which competencies or values a training programme will be focusing on; restating relevant values or competencies about collaboration, respect and decision-making at the top of meeting agendas; self-assessment against behaviours before a performance review and setting expectations around how the team is going to work together at the start of a project are all examples of this.
Embed values during applicant attraction
Remember that your opportunities to put your competency framework to good use start before someone even walks in through the door. You can use the values and competency framework to provide new and potential recruits with realistic job-fit and culture-fit information before they join. Create examples and stories of what people actually do, get high performers to ‘show and tell’, put together ‘a day in the life’ for key roles; share on the web, in videos, in blogs, at events; show those coming in to your organisation what the values look and sound like in action.
The impact of values on customers
Ask customers to talk about their experiences of your organisation – how they felt, what your employees have done to make a difference to them, what it’s like to be a customer, what they value about your company. There should be observable evidence of your competencies and values in these stories and they’re great for connecting people to the impact of what they do, and how the right behaviours lead to the right results.
Work values into training and development
When designing training and development courses or programmes for those in critical roles such as customer service, first line management or business partners, consider engaging industrial actors to help bring important behaviours and values to life. Learning through watching scripted sketches, one-to-one situational role plays and forum theatre workshops can be a really good way of exploring what’s important, what works and what doesn’t work, in a way that is less threatening than some training methodologies.
With your competency framework refreshed, take action now to bring it to life.