HR in the Social Era faces significant implications and changes as the world transitions from the Industrial Age to the Social Era. Three key shifts are occurring: 1) Organizations are becoming more fluid and flexible with value created through networks rather than rigid structures. 2) Individuals have more power through their ideas and connections rather than needing approval from organizations. 3) Businesses that have a clear social purpose and aligned community will outperform those without. For HR to be successful, it must unite behind a social purpose of building a better world through relationships and engagement across communities. It must take on responsibilities of a community curator, network architect, and social capital generator.
3. Consult, Create, Transform
By any measure, on a global, regional and local basis, the world of business is in a
state of flux. We are rapidly moving away from the Industrial Age with its rigid
structures, stable business models, formal processes and functionally siloed
organisations into a fluid and flexible environment that fundamentally changes the
way value is created, the meaning of work, and the structures for our institutions.1
This has huge implications not only for how HR fulfils its purpose but indeed whether
HR will survive as a function without undergoing an appropriate transformation to
meet these new realities.
The Social Era
Nilofer Merchant first coined the term âSocial Eraâ in her book â11 Rules to Create Value in the
Social Eraâ as a way to capture the key shifts in how the world is changing. In her own words, the
term "Social Media" was limited by its connection with marketing and communications. "Enterprise
2.0" was too technological. And "Social Business" simply added an overlay to the existing framework
rather than challenging the premise of an organization. Instead "Social Era" captures two distinct
power shifts:
1. Organizational. Connected individuals can now do what once
only large centralized organizations could. This fundamentally
alters the structural core and role of "the firm", and of working
people. As more and more freelancers and solopreneurs enter
the market, work is increasingly freed from jobs. The shift is
from "value chain" to "value flows."
2. Individual. Anyone can be a game changer by using the power
of their ideas. They need not first be vetted or chosen to be
powerful. These previously unheard voices are essential for
solving new problems, as well as for finding new solutions to
old problems. Without celebrating what anyone â quite
possibly everyone â can offer, people are simply cogs in a
machine: dispensable and undervalued. By celebrating each
person and the value only they can create, economic power is
unlocked. And it's not that everyone will, but that anyone can. 2
Welcome to the Social Revolution, where everything is changing, where there are seismic shifts in
how and more importantly why people work, and where businesses with a clear social purpose and a
community aligned to that purpose will be, and are, outperforming those without one.
4. Consult, Create, Transform
Why You Do That Voodoo That You Do So Well
It all begins with Purpose. That simple reason for being that can inspire employees, excite
customers and create vibrant communities. With it, everyone understands what they need to do
and why they need to do it. Without it, we are unlikely to experience consistently innovative
thinking, high employee engagement, true market differentiation or great customer loyalty.
Deloitteâs Chairman of the Board, Punit Renjen, recently wrote that
âcorporate culture is increasingly becoming a critical anchor that
underscores the importance of maintaining core beliefs and
valuesâŠ(yet)âŠthe majority of employees and executives believe businesses
are not doing enough to create a sense of purpose and deliver meaningful
impact.â3
Think about it; which is the more inspiring? A multi-national company that
says we are âa diversified technology company serving customers and
communities with innovative products and services. Each of our six
businesses has earned leading global market positions.4
â Or one, equally
large, that says our âpeople worldwide are dedicated to turning
imaginative ideas into leading products and services that help solve some
of the world's toughest problems5
â. Or how about the one you will
probably be most familiar with, to âorganize the world's information and
make it universally accessible and useful6
â?
The most successful businesses will have a Corporate Social Purpose that ties into something bigger
than them, that is focused on creating something for the good of the entire community that
surrounds it, not just increasing the EPS for shareholders. How much better is that than having a
mission statement that gets stuck above the photocopier and forgotten until the Annual Report is
published or when it gets dragged out again for the Performance Management cycle?
Itâs Not What You Know, or Even Who You Know; Itâs Who They Know.
If industrialisation, as Karl Marx put it, ârescued a considerable part of the population from the
idiocy of rural life.â, then the Social Era has connected the intelligence of the individual with the
power of community. Connected individuals can now do what once only large centralized
organisations could do, which changes organisational structures and individual power. 7
The key to
business success in the Social Era will therefore be the ability to proactively create deep social capital
through the development of, and interaction with, a strong and diverse Community of Interest that
leverages both the strong and weak ties of its membersâ networks for the success of the Community
as a whole.
5. Consult, Create, Transform
Whilst we could equally call them Communities of Purpose, I define a Community of Interest
network as the product of shared interests that may converge within a shared geographical region or
be independent of spatial boundaries and is where individuals are linked through a social network by
one or more activities or factors covering a range of business, environmental and cultural elements;
and where all members and actions are aligned with a common purpose and shared identity.
When we talk about community, we shouldnât misinterpret it as a nostalgic metaphor for some rural
idyll where everybody knows your name. It should instead be welcomed as a concept that embraces
diversity, creativity, engagement, conflict and dynamism. And for that to be realised, information
must flow through the networks that connect individuals both within those communities as well as
to other communities.
A network is âa set of interconnected people or things that can
communicate with each other, share information and achieve results
that would not be possible if the network did not exist. Every part
(or member) of the network is connected to all the other partsâ8
. As
Koch and Lockwood suggested, it helps to visualise the network by
thinking of something like the map of the London Underground; with
each station or ânodeâ being the individual member and the lines in
between each being the âlinksâ. Some stations or members may
have very few links whilst others have many. These links may be
created by communications technology, such as Facebook, LinkedIn
or Weibo, or by true social connections such as face to face meetings.
The links within a network were first categorised as either âStrong Tiesâ (close friends and family) or
âWeak Tiesâ (acquaintances) by Mark Granovetter, in his seminal 1973 work; The Strength of Weak
Ties. Whilst strong ties are useful at a local network level, the strength of weak ties is that they
provide people with access to information and resources beyond those available in their own social
circle.9
However weak ties for all their value are most important to the success of a community
when they connect at least two networks; each with strong ties along which ideas, innovations,
information and artefacts can flow10
.
The links between people in a network vary in strength and what matters is not the number but the
nature of the connections. For example, a community network with many strong ties and few or no
weak ties will have limited access to new ideas, reducing the chance for innovation in the business,
creating a stronger tendency for potentially damaging âgroupthinkâ to become prevalent and
limiting mobility for workers to change roles. For the damage that âgroupthinkâ can cause, we need
look no further than the Global Financial Crisis.
According to David Putnam, a strong community contains high levels of coordination and
cooperation for reciprocal and mutual benefit11
. So by adopting a formal focus on Community and
the networks and ties between them, businesses and HR in the Social Era can take advantage of both
the âhidden wealthâ, namely the non-financial resources comprised of local skills, trust and know-
how, useful contacts and care-based exchanges12
as well as leveraging the positive effects of âsocial
contagionâ13
, the spreading of behaviours and values, to create success.
6. Consult, Create, Transform
Of Coins and Cops and Cones
A Community of Interest network (COIN) is the broadest form of community and, at a macro level,
encompasses the whole eco-system that facilitates the act of business in the Social Era. Because of
this; the really interesting, as well as highly complex, aspect of looking at businesses as COINs is that
they are really only âbubblesâ within which there are a number of different types of communities
that interact and engage with each other, shrinking, growing and changing all the time, to ultimately
create the overall Community of Interest. These communities comprise a wide ranging, far reaching
and, in many cases, global population covering current employees, employee alumni, customers,
customer alumni, suppliers and their value chains, vendors and their sales chains as well as at all
levels of interaction, each individualâs personal network of family and friends.
There are three key networks that we need to consider from the viewpoint of a business COIN in the
Social Era. These are the Community of Practice, Community of Action and Individual Personal
Network.
Etienne Wenger defined Communities of Practice (COP) as groups of people who share a concern or
a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly.14
They each
share three core characteristics; Domain, Community and Practice. A COP has an identity defined by
a shared domain of interest where members engage in joint activities, help each other and share
information and, most important of all, where members of the community are practitioners,
developing a shared repertoire of resources; experiences, stories, tools and ways to address
recurring problems. Project Management and Change Management are quite clearly COPs whilst
Human Resources is itself a COIN with multiple COPs inside it such as Generalist Business Partner,
Compensation & Benefits, Learning & Development, IR, M&A, Recruitment, etc.
A Community of Action network (COAN. Pronounced âConeâ)
can be defined as a group of individuals from multiple COPs
who are brought together, or voluntarily come together, to
effect change under a common purpose, independent of
geographical or organisational boundaries; with that change
being defined by outcomes, time, budget as well as other
constraints. A project team is, quite clearly, a COAN but so
too are Design, Product and HR teams. For example, in HR
terms, an organisational change will be managed by a COAN
consisting of individuals from different COPs; e.g. HR Business
Partners, OD, IR, Compensation & Benefits, Recruitment,
Payroll and Business Leaders as well as other key
stakeholders.
In any Social Era business, there will be multiple COANs, forming and reforming, linking different
COPs, undertaking change activities all the time and whose actions will be self-defined as a result of
their alignment to, and understanding of, the Social Purpose of the business.
7. Consult, Create, Transform
As more and more individuals see the benefits of leveraging the power of their communities and the
portability of their skills, knowledge and experience, we will see a rise in the number of portfolio
workers. These are those people who will work across a variety of communities (Action, Practice and
Interest) at the same time, using their skills, knowledge and experience in the way that interests
them most. One of Granovetterâs key findings was that
weak ties were more likely than strong ties to result in a
new role being obtained; therefore the ability of portfolio
workers to leverage the strong links within, and particularly
the weak links outside, their networks will be critical to
their personal and continuing success in a portfolio career.
Bridging, Bonding and Linking
The World Bank defines Social capital as not just the sum
of the institutions which underpin a society â it is the glue
that holds them together15
.
There are three main types of social capital that need to be
considered in the Social Era; Bonding capital which is
created through the quality of the links between people
based on a sense of common identity (âpeople like usâ) â
such as family, close friends and people who share our
culture or ethnicity.16
Bridging capital defined by the
quality of the connections between people or groups who
are unlike one another and previously did not interact with
one another.17
And, finally, Linking capital shown through
the quality of the vertical links or trusted relationships
from within the community to people in positions of
authority or power, both inside and outside the
community.
Just as a screwdriver (physical capital) or a university
education (human capital) can increase productivity (both
individual and collective), so does the quality of social
contacts (social capital) affect the productivity of
individuals and groups18
. So it is not the fact of the
creation of COINs, COPs, COANs or even individual
networks that matters but it is in how they are all enabled to interact and generate social capital for
the business. The solution, as Aristotle said, is indeed that the whole is greater than the sum of its
parts.19
8. Consult, Create, Transform
Turn the Valve
One of the best examples of a true Social Era business,
which I know of, is Valve. A software company
formed in 1996 and based in Bellevue, Washington,
they produce award-winning games such as Half-LifeÂź,
leading-edge technologies and, SteamÂź, a ground-
breaking social entertainment platform.
Nowadays, it is almost axiomatic that most software
companies like to be viewed as âGreat Place(s) to
Workâ and âBest Employerâ or, perhaps even having
the âfunkiest workplaceâ, but very few have taken the
step that Valve has to creating a self-determining,
completely non-hierarchical workforce. In March 2012, Valve published its employee handbook20
and, on page 4, tells the employee exactly how the company runs.
Welcome to Flatland
Hierarchy is great for maintaining predictability and repeatability. It simplifies planning and
makes it easier to control a large group of people from the top down, which is why military
organizations rely on it so heavily.
But when youâre an entertainment company thatâs spent the last decade going out of its way
to recruit the most intelligent, innovative, talented people on Earth, telling them to sit at a
desk and do what theyâre told obliterates 99 per cent of their value. We want innovators, and
that means maintaining an environment where theyâll flourish.
Thatâs why Valve is flat. Itâs our shorthand way of saying that we donât have any
management, and nobody âreports toâ anybody else. We do have a founder/president, but
even he isnât your manager. This company is yours to steerâtoward opportunities and away
from risks. You have the power to green-light projects. You have the power to ship products.
Michael Abrash, a Valve employee, elaborates further on the model in a blog post21
. âHow could a
300-person company not have any formal management? My observation is that it takes new hires
about six months before they fully accept that no one is going to tell them what to do, that no
manager is going to give them a review, that there is no such thing as a promotion or a job title or
even a fixed role (although there are generous raises and bonuses based on value to the company,
as assessed by peers). That it is their responsibility, and theirs alone, to allocate the most valuable
resource in the company â their time â by figuring out what it is that they can do that is most
valuable for the company, and then to go do it.
9. Consult, Create, Transform
That if they decide that they should be doing something different, thereâs no manager to convince to
let them go; they just move their desk to the new group (the desks are on wheels, with computers
attached) and start in on the new thing. (Obviously they should choose a good point at which to do
this, and coordinate with both groups, but thatâs common sense, not a rule, and isnât enforced in any
way.) That everyone on a project team is an individual contributor, doing coding, artwork, level
design, music, and so on, including the leads; there is no such thing as a pure management or
architect or designer role. That any part of the company can change direction instantly at any time,
because there are no managers to cling to their people and their territory, no reorgs to plan, no
budgets to work around.â
While Valve is an almost utopian example of a self-determining set of COANs in a business, it is likely
that such examples will be on one end of a spectrum of Social Era businesses with the majority
looking to adopt a model that leverages and links the power of community with the intelligence of
individuals whilst maintaining more structured governance mechanisms.
HR: Dodo or Phoenix?
So where does all this leave HR?
If HR is to be successful and meet these challenges, it firstly needs to unite behind a Social Purpose;
that core reason for being with which it can align everything that it does. Whilst there are numerous
examples along the lines of âto maximise the contribution of people (in) delivery of the
organisationâs goalsâ22
, they donât really inspire or excite the reader. So, given a lack of current
examples, I propose that HRâs Purpose in the Social Era is to build a better world through creating,
linking and managing relationships and engagement across all communities in a business.
10. Consult, Create, Transform
If we accept that purpose, then the responsibilities of the HR community must align with it, and
evolve to include the following:
The Community Curator acting as a âsuperconnectorâ to bring together disparate networks to
enhance the flow of information, both internal and external, to benefit the core business while
leveraging the bonding, bridging and linking capital existing within those networks to manage the
flow of people in the communities; from resources in through attraction and recruitment, to COANs
and COPs delivering solutions to develop and enhance efficiency and effectiveness and, finally,
resources out through separation and alumni management.
The Co-Creator influencing the development of the corporate strategy through their knowledge of,
exposure to, and experience with the commercial operations
of the business, then developing HR solutions aligned with
the agreed strategy and purpose to develop and transform
the people, process, tools and technology to achieve success.
The Expert Guide providing a flexible framework of policies
and procedures related to employment and engagement of
all types of staff and implementing the tools to do this
effectively providing guidance, support and advice as
required. The framework must be crafted in such a way that
it allows for global consistency and alignment with the social
purpose, but local autonomy in application by multiple and
diverse community groups.
The Communicator connecting people by creating and
maintaining relationships of trust and value through open,
honest, transparent and timely communication focused at
targeting the creation of bonding, bridging and linking social capital.
The Guardian of the Social Purpose; using community visioning to articulate âwhy we do what we
doâ and embodying the concept through the development and implementation of the employee
value proposition.
The skills currently valued and promoted by HR practitioners will also undergo a change in emphasis
with additional skills coming to the fore to support these new responsibilities in the Social Era. They
will include:
1. Community Curation - The ability to design and implement a community management
strategy that enhances connectivity, reflexivity and redundancy across the networks.
2. Network Weaving - The intentional practice of helping people to build and connect to more
relationships of trust and value, by virtue of being genuinely interested in building and
connecting oneself to more relationships of trust and value.23
3. Solution Design and Integration - The ability to design and integrate holistic HR solutions
based on input from all communities as well as through insight fed by âbig dataâ analysis.
11. Consult, Create, Transform
4. Transformation Management - The ability to effect transformation through a synthesis of
Project Management, Change Management, Business Consulting and Data Analysis skills.
5. Strategic Thinking - The ability to perceive issues at micro and meso levels and create
solutions at the macro level to address.
6. Business Acumen â the ability to define and deal with a business situation by employing a
thorough understanding of what drives profitability and cash flow, a market focused
approach to the business, and an overall big picture understanding of the business and its
interrelationships.
7. Data Analysis/Interpretation â The ability to use disparate data sets to generate insights
about the business and provide data based inputs for refining HR and corporate strategies.
Treating itself as a Community of Interest, with an agreed social purpose, evolved responsibilities
and skills, HR will eventually find that it no longer needs to sustain a large and permanent
organisational structure. Using a fluid community model, it will maintain a small core team with two
main groups; generalist business partners for strategic co-creation with business leaders and
management of HR Communities of Action, and individual subject matter experts to act as
relationship managers with the various Communities of Practice such as Recruitment.
Surrounding the core, interacting and engaging with each other will be outsourced HR Communities
of Practice and Action, populated by Portfolio Workers providing subject matter expertise, forming
and dissolving as required. HR can finally become the business enabler that it has aspired to be for
so long.
However, if we donât adapt to the new realities of the Social Era, we may well see the extinction of
HR as we know it, perhaps through the merging of Corporate Strategy, Marketing Communications
and core HR generalists into one function that will have the necessary capabilities to deliver the
required services by leveraging current skillsets and supported by outsourced HR Communities of
Practice.
In the Social Era, the power of community coupled with the intelligence of the individual
fundamentally changes the way value is created, the meaning of work, and the structures for our
institutions.24
It is an exciting time to be in business and HR has a great opportunity to be the agent
of change to a new way of working across all industries but, to do that, we need to seize the
moment and choose to transform.
We can be the Phoenix or we can be the Dodo. We canât be both. Which will you be?
13. Consult, Create, Transform
References
1
Nilofer Merchant. What we talk about when we talk about âSocialâ.
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/02/what_we_talk_about_when_we_tal.html
2
Nilofer Merchant. What we talk about when we talk about âSocialâ.
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/02/what_we_talk_about_when_we_tal.html
3
âCulture of purpose: A business imperativeâ. (2013) Deloitte.
4
http://solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_EU/About3/3M/
5
http://www.ge.com/au/company/factsheet_au.html
6
http://www.google.com.au/about/company/
7
Nilofer Merchant. What we talk about when we talk about âSocialâ.
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/02/what_we_talk_about_when_we_tal.html
8
Koch, R. and Lockwood, G. âSuperconnect. The power of Networks and the Strength of Weak Linksâ Little,
Brown, 2010
9
Granovetter, M. âThe Strength of Weak Ties: A Network Theory Revisitedâ, Sociological Theory, Vol.1 (1983),
pp 201 - 233
10
Clark, A. âReal Life Working Papers: Understanding Communityâ May 2007
11
Putnam, R. (2000), âBowling Alone: the Collapse and Revival of American Communityâ, New York: Simon and
Schuster.
12
Halpern, D. âThe Hidden Wealth of Nationsâ, 2010, Polity Press
13
N.A. Christakis and J.H. Fowler, "Social Contagion Theory: Examining Dynamic Social Networks and Human
Behavior," Statistics in Medicine 32(4): 556-577 (February 2013); doi:10.1002/sim.5408
14
Wenger, E. âCommunities of Practice; A brief introductionâ June 2006
15
http://web.worldbank.org/ âWhat is Social Capitalâ
16
Keeley, B. (2007) âHuman Capital: How what you know shapes your lifeâ, OECD
17
Cuers, S. Hewston, J. (2006) âStrong Communities Handbookâ, Queensland University of Technology
18
Putnam, R. (2000), âBowling Alone: the Collapse and Revival of American Communityâ, New York: Simon and
Schuster.
19
Aristotle, âMetaphysicsâ, Book H 1045a 8-10: "... the totality is not, as it were, a mere heap, but the whole is
something besides the parts ..."
20
Handbook for New Employees, (2012), Valve
http://media1.gameinformer.com/images/news/valve_handbook_lowres.pdf
21
Abrash, M. Valve: How I Got Here, What Itâs Like, and What Iâm Doing, 13
th
April 2012.
http://blogs.valvesoftware.com/abrash/valve-how-i-got-here-what-its-like-and-what-im-doing-2/
22
http://purplelineconsulting.co.uk/site/what-is-the-role-of-hr.html
23
Traynor, B. âThe Essence of Weavingâ (2010) http://valueofplace.wordpress.com/2010/05/24/the-essence-
of-weaving/
24
Nilofer Merchant. What we talk about when we talk about âSocialâ.
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/02/what_we_talk_about_when_we_tal.html