- Pending retirements in key roles create workforce risks and potentially impact business continuity.
- Fifty-six percent of organizations have not engaged in succession planning, so they haven’t identified at-risk key roles or successors for those roles.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- Just under 60% of organizations haven't tackled succession planning.
- This means that three out of five organizations don’t know what skills they need for the future or what their key roles truly are. They also haven’t identified at-risk key roles or successors for those roles.
- In addition, 74% of organizations have no formal process for facilitating knowledge transfer between individuals, so knowledge will be lost.
Impact and Result
- Info-Tech's Key Roles Succession Planning Tool will help you assess key role incumbent risk factors as well as identify potential successors and their readiness. Pay particular attention to those employees in key roles that are nearing retirement, and flag them as high risk.
- Plan for the transfer of critical knowledge held by key role incumbents. Managers and HR leaders see significant tacit knowledge gaps in younger workers; prioritize tacit knowledge in your transfer plan and leverage multiple transfer methods.
- Explore alternative work arrangements to ensure sufficient time to prepare successors. A key role incumbent must be available to complete knowledge transfer.
- Define formal transition plans for all employees in at-risk key roles and their successors by leveraging your workforce and succession planning outputs, knowledge transfer strategy, and selected alternative work arrangements.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
9.1/10
Overall Impact
$199,356
Average $ Saved
13
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
$ Saved
Days Saved
Fernco Inc
Guided Implementation
9/10
$32,499
20
Worst: Learning how low on the maturity scale are our internal formal succession and development planning processes are as comparted to Info Tech ... Read More
Walla Walla University
Guided Implementation
9/10
$2,599
2
Minnkota Power
Guided Implementation
10/10
$6,499
3
State of New Mexico - New Mexico Department of Public Safety
Guided Implementation
10/10
$1.3M
2
My departure out of my agency is going to be a difficult transition for the acting bureau chief and the person selected for my position. The time w... Read More
Chief Industries, Inc.
Guided Implementation
8/10
N/A
N/A
Derivco
Guided Implementation
10/10
$31,499
50
Vancouver Police Department
Guided Implementation
9/10
$10,000
10
Seaboard Overseas and Trading Group
Guided Implementation
8/10
$12,399
4
Good overall guidance on approaching the topic. Presenter was very knowledgeable.
City Of Bakersfield
Guided Implementation
10/10
$30,549
10
INFO~TECH RESEARCH GROUP
Build an IT Succession Plan
Future-proof your IT team.
Build an IT Succession Plan
Future-proof your IT team.
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
Executive Summary
Your Challenge
Most organizations are unprepared for the loss of employees who hold key roles.
Planning and executing on key role transition can take years. CIOs should prepare now to mitigate the risk of loss later. |
Common Obstacles
|
Info-Tech’s Approach
|
Info-Tech Insight
Losing employees in key roles without adequate preparation hinders productivity, knowledge retention, relationships, and opportunities. Implement scalable succession planning to mitigate the risks.
Most organizations are unprepared for the loss of employees who hold key roles
Due to the atmosphere of uncertainty.
Not only do they not have the right processes in place, but they are also ill-equipped to deal with the sheer volume of retirees in the future.
Over 58% of organizations are unprepared for Baby Boomer retirement. Only 8% said they were very prepared.
A survey done by SHRM and AARP found similar results: 41% of HR professionals said their organizations have done nothing and don’t plan to do anything to prepare for a possible worker shortage as Boomers retire. (Source: Poll: Organizations Can Do More to Prepare for Talent Shortage as Boomers Retire) |
This means that three out of five organizations don’t know what skills they need for the future, or what their key roles truly are. They also have not identified at-risk key roles or successors for those roles.
(Source: McLean & Company, 2013, N=120) To make matters worse, 74% of organizations have no formal process for facilitating knowledge transfer between individuals, so knowledge will be lost.
|
Most organizations underestimate the costs associated with ignoring succession planning
“In many cases, executives have no idea what knowledge they are losing.” (TLNT: Lost Knowledge – What Are You and Your Organization Doing About It?”) |
|
Use Info-Tech’s tools and templates
Talent Review |
Succession Planning |
Knowledge Transfer |
Key tools and templates to help you complete your project deliverables | ||
Key Roles Succession Planning Tool
Critical Role Identifier Role Profile Template Individual Talent Profile Template |
Key Roles Succession Planning Tool
Role Profile Template Individual Talent Profile Template |
Role Transition Plan Template
Key Roles Succession Planning Tool Role Profile Template Individual Talent Profile Template |
Your completed project deliverables | ||
Critical Role Identifier Key Roles Succession Plan Key Role Profiles Individual Talent Profiles Key Role Transition Plans |
Ignoring succession planning could cause significant costs
Losing knowledge will undermine your strategy in four ways:
Inefficiency
Inefficiency due to “reinvention of the wheel.” When workers leave and don’t effectively transfer their knowledge, duplication of effort to solve problems and find solutions occurs. |
Innovation
Reduced capacity to innovate. Older workers know what works and what doesn’t, what’s new and what’s not. They can identify the status quo faster to make way for novel thinking. |
Competitive Advantage
Loss of competitive advantage. Losing knowledge and/or established client relationships hurts your asset base and stifles growth. |
Vulnerability
Increased vulnerability. Losing knowledge can impede your organizational ability to identify, understand, and mitigate risks. You’ll have to learn through experience all over again. |
Succession planning improves performance by reducing the impact of sudden departures
Business Continuity
Succession planning limits disruption to daily operations and minimizes recruitment costs:
|
Engagement & Retention
Effective succession planning is a tool for engaging, developing, and retaining employees:
|
Innovation & Growth
Knowledge is a strategic asset, and succession planning can help retain, grow, and capitalize on it:
|
Info-Tech’s approach
Talent Review
Conduct a talent review to identify key roles |
Succession Planning
Succession planning helps you assess which key roles are most at risk |
Knowledge Transfer
Utilize methods that make it easy to apply the knowledge in day-to-day practice. |
|||||
Identify Critical Roles | Assess Talent | Identify Successors | Develop Successors | Select Successors | Identify Critical Knowledge | Select Transfer Methods | Document Role Transition Plans |
Future-Proofed IT Team | |
|
|
Info-Tech’s methodology for building an IT succession plan
1. Talent Review | 2. Succession Planning | 3. Knowledge Transfer | |
Phase Steps |
|
|
|
Phase Outcomes |
|
|
|
Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs
DIY Toolkit |
Guided Implementation |
Workshop |
Consulting |
"Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful." | "Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track." | "We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place." | "Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project." |
Diagnostics and consistent frameworks used throughout all four options |
Guided Implementation
A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.
A typical GI is six to ten calls over the course of four to eight months.
What does a typical GI on this topic look like?
Phase 1 |
Phase 2 |
Phase 3 |
||
Call #1: Scope requirements, objectives, and your specific challenges. | Call #2:Review business priorities and clarify criteria weighting.
Call #3: Review key role criteria. Explain information collection process. |
Call #4: Review risk and readiness assessments.
Call #5: Analyze gaps between key roles and successors for key considerations. |
Call #6: Feedback and recommendations on critical knowledge risks.
Call #7: Review selected transfer methods. |
Call #8: Analyze role transition plans for flags. |
Build an IT Succession Plan
Phase 1
Talent Review
Phase 1
1.1 Identify Critical Roles 1.2 Assess Talent |
Phase 2
2.1 Identify Successors 2.2 Develop Successors 2.3 Select Successors |
Phase 3
3.1 Identify Critical Knowledge 3.2 Select Transfer Methods 3.3 Document Role Transition Plan |
This phase will walk you through:
- Identifying your business priorities
- Identifying your critical roles including required skills and knowledge that support achievement of business strategy
Tools and resources used:
- Key Roles Succession Planning Tool
- Key Role Profile
- Individual Talent Profile
- Critical Role Identifier
This phase involves the following participants:
- IT leadership/management team
- HR
Conduct a talent review to identify key roles
Sixty percent of organizations have not engaged in formal workforce planning, so they don’t know what skills they need or what their key roles truly are. (Source: McLean & Company, 2013; N=139)- A talent review ensures that each work unit has the right people, in the right place, at the right time to successfully execute the business strategy.
- Only 40% of organizations have engaged in some form of workforce planning.
- The first step is to identify your business focus; with this information you can start to note the key roles that drive your business strategy.
Key roles
Where an organization’s most valued skills and knowledge reside
Organizations should prepare now to mitigate the risk of loss later. Key roles are:
Info-Tech InsightLosing employees in key roles without adequate preparation for their departure has a direct impact on the bottom line in terms of disrupted productivity, lost knowledge, severed relationships, and missed opportunities. | Identifying key roles is the first step in a range of workforce management activities because it helps establish organizational needs and priorities, as well as focusing planning effort. |
A talent review allows you to identify the knowledge and skills you need today and for the long term.Knowing what you need is the first step in determining what you have and what you need to keep.
CautionA talent review is a high-level planning process which does not take individual employees into consideration. Succession planning looks at individuals and will be discussed in Phase 2. |
A talent review gets you to think in terms of:
Note: Planning against a time frame longer than five years is difficult because uncertainty in the external business environment will have unforeseen effects. Revisit your plan annually and update it, considering changes. |
Step 1.1
Identify critical roles
Activities
- 1.1.1 Document Business Priorities, Goals, and Challenges
- 1.1.2 Clarify Key Role Criteria and Weighting
- 1.1.3 Evaluate Role Importance
- 1.1.4 Key Role Selection and Comparison
- 1.1.5 Capture Key Elements of Critical Roles
The primary goal of this step is to ensure we have effectively identified key roles based on business priorities, goals, and challenges, and to capture the key elements of critical roles.
Outcomes of this step
- Documented business priorities, goals, and challenges.
- Key elements of critical roles captured.
- Key role criteria and weighting.
Step 1.1 | Step 1.2 |
Business priorities will determine the knowledge and skills you value most
Note: Most organizations will be a blend of all three, with one predominating |
“I’ve been in the position where the business assumes everyone knows what is required. It’s not until you get people into a room that it becomes clear there is misalignment. It all seems very intuitive but in a lot of cases they haven’t made the critical distinctions regarding what exactly the competencies are. They haven’t spent the time figuring out what they know.” (Anne Roberts, Principal, Leadership Within Inc.) |
1.1.1 Document business priorities
Input: Business strategic plan
Output: Completed workforce planning worksheet (Tab 2) of the Key Roles Succession Planning Tool
Materials: Key Roles Succession Planning Tool
Participants: IT leadership
Start by identifying your business priorities based on your strategic plan. The goal of this exercise is to blast away assumptions and make sure leadership has a common understanding of your target.
With the questions on the previous slide in mind document your business priorities, business goals, and business challenges in Tab 2 of the Key Roles Succession Planning Tool worksheet.
Get clear answers to these questions:
- Are we customer focused, product focused, or operationally focused? In other words, is your organization known for:
- Great customer service or a great customer experience?
- The lowest price?
- Having the latest technology, or the best quality product?
- What are our organizational/departmental business goals? To improve operational effectiveness, are we really talking about reducing operational costs?
- What are the key business challenges to address within the context of our focus?
Clarify what defines a key role
A key role is crucial to achieving organizational objectives, drives business performance, and includes specialized and rare competencies. Key roles are high in strategic value and rarity – for example, the developer role for a tech company.
|
Info-tech insightTraditionally, succession planning has only addressed top management roles. However, until you look at the evidence, you won’t know if these are indeed high-value roles, and you may be missing other critical roles further down the hierarchy. Use the Critical Role Identifier to facilitate the identification of critical roles with your leaders. |