Fifteen years ago, at the start of my career in pre-Dot Com London, I found myself in a headhunting start up…complete with beer fridge, ping pong table, cocktails on expenses and motivational recruitment training DVDs delivered by a very eager man in red braces. I had surely landed on my feet. I had arrived. I loved the energy, the optimism in the City at that time and buzz of working alongside like-minded, non-conformist souls.
But after a while something about my shiny new role started to niggle. We were lucky enough to work with some of the leading investment banks, strategy consultancies and corporate brands, and specialised in placing bright, strategic thinkers in the first half of their careers.
I was less interested in making the placements and more interested in what these organisations were actually doing with their talent.
Fulfilment for me was not going to come from putting bums on seats, without being able to get closer to the businesses and figuring why the seats needed filling in the first place. Now of course, many roles came up due to business growth, however, in some businesses the talent just was not sticking around. The psychological contract was wrong for them and it was like a swinging door. Great for headhunting fees, not so great for the clients and worse for the people on the sharp end.
All of this intrigue prompted me to make what my friends considered the odd idea of ditching the City in my mid-twenties to pursue a career in business psychology. I’ve since spent the last twelve years trying to answer questions about what is it that organisations can do to harness the potential of people, with a particular focus on leadership. From a base in Bristol, I’ve been lucky enough to work with business leaders around the world and continued to do this around the birth of my two sons and the acquisition of the consultancy I had grown up in by Deloitte.
On returning to work early last year, I found myself with ‘itchy’ questions again. Why, in so many clients I was working with, were we still having similar debates about talent, well-being, diversity and women in leadership?
For example: do performance management systems and reward align appropriately with the culture being built? Have roles been restructured with creativity to allow for different workstyles? Can flexible/agile working really co-exist in organisations where the majority are still stuck in the standard 9-5 model? I am not convinced that many traditional corporates have been able to take the radical steps required to reinvent their businesses to deal with the talent challenges above. The rate of digitisation, arise of the Millennial generation and need to hold on to, rather than haemorrhage the best talent, all point to the need for accelerated change in HR strategy if traditional businesses are to remain competitive.
I found myself craving to work with those clients who would be willing discard the 1950s style of organisation, and who would be unafraid to rip up the rule book and create new adult:adult instead of parent:child psychological contracts with their employees. At the same point, I found myself a busy working mum, looking for the way to reconcile my ambition with my wish to spend more time with my boys, particularly before my oldest starts school.
Enter Hoxby. By a chance meeting with one of the Founders, Lizzie, my eyes were opened to a world where a whole organisation could be set up and optimised with a new psychological contract in mind for its people. An organisation on a mission to reinvent the world of work, one in which people work when they like, where they like and where contribution is judged not by presenteeism but by output. Also, a place where those ‘tricky’ people to place from my headhunting days would find a home, a place without bias. The ex-military people making their first steps into civvy street, the second-careerers, the second chancers, the different, the diverse, the dispersed, the nomads, the stay-at-home dads, the part-timers, the all-nighters, the all-dayers, the no school-holidayers. Not just a place for round pegs in round holes, but all the different shapes finding just the right fit for them. On their terms.
So now I find myself on this new mission. With new questions again. How can we help other organisations #belikeHoxby and how can we change the world of work for the better in the process? How will the leaders of these brave new organisations need to be different, to fulfil the psychological contracts they have created with their people? I’m not sure we have all the answers just yet. But I’m excited to be working on it.
Jo is Chartered Occupational Psychologist, wife and mother of two little boys, she likes flowers, singing, old cars, pottery, real ale and pork scratchings. She lives in Bristol and is embracing Hoxby life, combining working across her own business, with a well-being consultancy, lecturing, and working in and on Hoxby. She an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society and specialises in using psychology to unlock the untapped people potential in organisations.