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Flying Into A Perfect Storm - Asian Aerospace 2007
1. Flying Into A Perfect Storm
The War for Talent - An Aerospace Perspective Based on a global Heidrick & Struggles Survey
presentation by: Torbjorn Karlsson
to: Asian Aerospace Symposium, Hong Kong
on: September 4, 2007
3. Introduction
Founded in 1953, Heidrick & Struggles is one of the worldâs
leading executive search firms. With offices in the principal cities
in the world, we help our clients to address strategic issues with
human capital solutions.
We have existing relationships with, and immediate access to,
some of the worldâs most talented people. Our executive search,
leadership services and interim management capabilities
seamlessly integrate a bespoke programme to meet the diverse
leadership challenges facing our clients.
We help our clients build the most powerful leadership teams in
the world.
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4. Introduction
⢠Heidrick & Struggles is today the leading global executive
search firm with revenues of over US $450 million
⢠Global network of over 1400 search professionals and
employees in 64 offices across 5 continents
⢠4,077 confirmed executive searches worldwide in 2005
⢠Pioneered the concept of industry practices
⢠Unparalleled commitment to technology as a productivity
enhancing tool
⢠A âone firmâ â single Profit & Loss with a collaborative culture
⢠Retained executive search is our core business
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5. Our Approach
Heidrick & Struggles is organized along practice lines (Communications,
Software, Industrial, Healthcare, etc.) and functional responsibilities (Board of
Director, Chief Financial Officer, Legal, Chief Information Officer/Chief
Technical Officer, Human Resources). This allows us to focus on and be
knowledgeable about competition, key trends, and players/candidates of a
particular industry and in various functions.
We are a truly global company and work collaboratively across our partnership
to serve our clients effectively.
We hire people with at least 15 years of business experience in an industry
that they will then serve on behalf of H&S.
We have an operatorâs mentality, always approaching searches from the
clientâs perspective.
We are proactive and solutions-oriented. H&S partners with our clients on
business issues.
We take a talent management approach, allowing us to know and advise
candidates over the course of their careers, not âgetting to knowâ them on a
searchâpreventing putting square pegs in round holes.
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6. Services Portfolio:
Brief Description
Executive Search Interim Management Leadership Review Coaching
⢠Focus on top-level ⢠Supply with ⢠Audit/assessment of ⢠Expansion of the
positions experienced senior leadership skills executive's applied
executives for leadership potential
⢠Reliable quot;Direct ⢠Empirically-founded
limited time periods
Searchquot; method methodology ⢠Flexible, tailored
⢠Firm, well-structured ⢠Large pool of service to match the
⢠Semi-structured 3-
available executive's specific
process hour-long in-depth
experienced senior needs
interviews
⢠Method of resolution managers ⢠Worldwide network
applied in ⢠Individual & organi-
⢠Fast allocation in of certified coaches
partnership zational bench-
pressing times
marking / feedback
Integrated Corporate Governance Services
⢠Participation in the public debate on corporate governance through several commissions/round-
tables
⢠Systematic evaluation of board work and board member skills
⢠Training of board members and/or search for board members
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9. The War for Talent â A Global Issue
⢠All over the world we are facing a shortage of talented people
who have the transferable technical skills to compete in global
business
⢠Today, only 20% of Americans have passports, yet American
companies are looking to aggressively expand into Europe and Asia
⢠Meanwhile European businesses are searching for footholds in Asia
and also further expansion in North America
⢠The Japanese, for the first time in 15 years, given their economic
upturn, are looking to expand outside of their borders yet are
finding they donât have the senior management to get them there
⢠Chinese companies are following this trend and are increasingly
committed to gaining a place on the international stage. In
particular, Chinese organizations which were once state owned want
to know if they have the same talent to compete against a General
Electric, a Pepsi Cola, a Dell
⢠Indian companies are rapidly going global and as seen in their
airlines, among other industries, are rapidly tapping into the global
talent pool 8
10. The War for Talent â Going Forward
⢠In industrial nations the shortage of talent will worsen
⢠Japan alone will lose up to 60 million people over the next 30 years
⢠In 30 years there will be 70-80 million fewer Europeans than there are today
⢠50% of the top people in US companies will leave in the next 3 years
⢠We know the situation in China and India is different. Yet, in spite of
the population wealth, the talent problem in China is just as pressing
⢠The talent pool in China is shallow
⢠Exacerbated by the Cultural Revolution which affected a large group of
individuals who would be in management position now
⢠In China, just as in the rest of the world, there is a severe shortage in globally
experienced senior management
⢠A recent report by Business Week showed there is shortage of 70,000 globally
experienced Chinese managers and by 2010, McKinsey predicts India will face
a shortfall of 500,000 staff capable of doing work for multinationals
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11. An Engineering Perspective
⢠The shortage of top executive and engineering talent is just starting to
be noticed.
⢠In the United States a presidential commission was established in 2003
and predicted a âdevastating loss of skill, experience and intellectual
capitalâ.
⢠According to a study by Bain & Co. and Deloitte Consulting only half of
the 68,000 military engineers due to retire by 2010 can be replaced.
⢠According to a study by McKinsey Global Institute, young engineers
coming forward in China may not be enough to meet even local
demand. The number who are considered suitable for work in multi-
nationals is just 160,000 â about the same number as are available in
Britain.
⢠The supply of graduates isnât the only problem. It is the depth of
experience that is lacking, as well as exposure to new and developing
technologies.
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12. Whatâs the implications for you?
⢠To understand the impact on the Aerospace:OEM
3%
Aerospace industry Hedrick &
Aerospace: MRO
Defense: OEM
Struggles conducted a global
11%
Defense: MRO
survey in July 2007 Aviation: OEM
41%
11%
Aviation: MRO
⢠Majority of the respondents of Airlines: Full Service
the survey are senior managers
Carrier
Airlines: Low Cost Carrier
10%
Airlines: Regional Carrier
⢠37% are COO/Executive
3%
9%
9%
Director/ General Manager
⢠34% are Functional/
Divisional/ Regional Heads 12%
⢠And they are active across the 8%
industry: 42%
⢠41% of the survey
respondents are from OEMâs,
35%
⢠17% from airlines 1%
⢠23% from MROâs
NA Middle East Africa Western Europe 2%
Central & Eastern Europe Asia Pacific
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13. The impact is realâŚ
1. In future, engineering leaders in my industry will have to possess and
ďź display high levels of commercial acumen.
⢠92% or respondents agree with only 2% disagreeing
⢠72% of the respondents believes their current General Management population
understands engineering/technical issues well.
2. There is a potential shortage of engineering talent in my company and it
ďź may affect our ability to develop Engineering (Design,
Manufacturing/Production, Support, Services etc.) leaders in future.
⢠65% or respondents agree with 23% disagreeing
⢠86% believes the complexity of the products and/or services designed/manufactured by
my company has increased in the past five years. Only 18% disagree.
⢠The majority (44% vs. 33%) agrees that reduction in the number of management layers
has affected their ability to grow potential leaders to take larger responsibilities.
3. It is becoming increasingly difficult to recruit high quality engineers into
ďź my industry.
⢠64% or respondents agree with only 22% disagreeing
ďź
4. A shortage of quality entry level engineering talent today will adversely
affect the competitiveness of my organization in the next five to ten
years.
⢠64% or respondents agree with only 22% disagreeing
⢠61% or respondents agree that managing complex projects is becoming increasingly
difficult in their company since engineering skills at senior levels are not widely prevalent.
with only 24% disagreeing
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14. What about MROâs?
Global Issue Study findings Talent Implication
⢠Growing trends for MRO ⢠All regions and functions ⢠Need for formal
to go global and airline STRONGLY AGREE to program to develop
independent the risk of reduced own talent pipe-line.
competitiveness of their
⢠Need for multiple ⢠Use Airline and OEMs
organization in the next
âanchorâ Airline clients for different skills
5-10 years but, airlines
have regional
⢠Need to develop OEM much less concerned
perspective
relationships but not on
⢠Asia less concerned -
the back of an airline ⢠Look outside industry
50% very confident vs.
equipment selection for commercial
~60% fairly confident in
engineers - train and
⢠Diverging and blending the US & Europe.
job-rotate to build
airline models â no
⢠HR is more confident the understanding of
âstandard solutionsâ
talent gap can be filled industry
⢠Growing focus on nose- than functional leaders
⢠LCCâs tap the same
to-tail platform products
⢠82% of Airlines rely on talent pool â
â different narrow- and
job-rotation but 75% of consider comp. and
wide-body solutions
MRO say its in-house attractiveness of
⢠Growing focus on RDE / training that is used MRO industry
PMA to reduce costs most commonly
MROâs need to develop their own world global class talent
MROâs need to develop their own world global class talent
pipe-line focusing on technical and commercial skills 13
pipe-line focusing on technical and commercial skills
15. What equips a leader to fight for
global talent?
⢠People have a natural aspiration to be part of a winning team and once the
feeling of being essential is fulfilled you harness a great wealth of support and
enthusiasm
⢠This idea was powerfully explored by American psychologist Abraham Maslow.
His Hierarchy of Needs extended the theory that humans have basic needs -
breathing, food, water, sleep but once these have been satisfied, they seek
security in their body, their family, their property and their employment
⢠A sense of security and belonging in the workplace is critical
⢠In terms of the key skills needed to keep you competitive in the global war for
talent and so expand your market share, the following are important:
⢠The need to develop a âdistinctâ advantage
⢠The ability to inspire a creative and innovative spirit in your business
model
⢠Engagement with the workforce; this includes the importance of
communication - listening to their thoughts and ideas to inspire morale
⢠The importance of training and development
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16. The challenge is in finding talentâŚ
⢠So how does all this help attract and retain talent in this region and globally?
⢠If you want to look like heroes, if not to your board, but potentially to your
successor, you have to invest in human capital
⢠That means making a decision to send high potential individuals abroad where
they can gain the technical skill sets, organisational know-how and experience
that will help your company grow, long term
⢠The mistake most organisations make is that they send their Chinese nationals
abroad for a short period of time, not allowing them to reap the benefits of this
experience
⢠âŚthe other mistake is that they only send a couple
⢠Itâs a long term investment â you need to operate a talent pipeline with
employees continually being sent abroad, to return a few years later
⢠Human Capital is the oil of tomorrow â itâs in high demand and is often hard to
find
⢠In addition, most organisations think that once the talent has been acquired
the hard work is over
⢠The acquisition itself may not be easy but the retention and on-boarding is
just as critical
⢠Currently 40% of senior hires globally leave their firm or are fired within 18
months of joining
⢠It is in all of our best interests to decrease this percentage
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17. Torbjorn Karlsson
Practice Leader, Industrial and Aerospace, Aviation and Defence Practices, Singapore
Professional Profile
TorbjĂśrn Karlsson leads the Aviation, Aerospace and Defense practice in Europe, Middle East
Africa and Asia. He is also involved in the transportation and supply chain sectors. Prior to
joining Heidrick & Struggles, TorbjĂśrn was Vice President, Commercial, Asia Pacific for
Honeywell Aerospace. He is a seasoned marketing and sales professional with over 18 years
experience in Asia Pacific based in Jakarta, Bangkok, Hong Kong and Singapore, promoting
aviation-related products (including aircraft) and services for large aerospace companies
such as Saab Aircraft, Rockwell Collins and Cathay Pacific.
TorbjĂśrn has a wealth of experience across the aviation sector. He has managed and
designed logistics and sales management processes, identified and closed gaps in opportunities, developed sales
campaigns that have returned significant value, and devised asset management strategies.
TorbjĂśrn has spent many years in the consulting, airport, aviation electronics and regional aircraft markets. His
accomplishments include the management of European and American supplier relationships to develop new markets
and identify new business opportunities and markets. He has managed Asian client relationships to grow business for
multidisciplinary product ranges including hardware, software and integrated solutions, refocusing emphasis to match
changed market environments-increased competition and revised purchasing criteria. In addition to handling all
marketing and sales activities for commuter aircraft in China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia and Indochina leading to an
increase in fleet of 100% over three years, TorbjĂśrn also laid the foundation for consulting and hardware contracts
increasing sales at major regional airports.
Education
TorbjĂśrn studied Mechanical Engineering at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden and earned an
MBA from European University in Jakarta and Brussels, Belgium. He also is a certified Six Sigma Black Belt.
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