How To Be A Talent Magnet

Sep 04, 2015 1 Min Read
Alt

LDR-PDF-download-110x110

Magnets have a powerful, yet invisible force of attraction. Talent magnets have a similar impact as they attract and retain “A” players, who then attract more talent.

Notice I didn’t entitle this article, How to Build a Talent Empire, which is much less subtle and far less effective.

I’ve built a career based on attracting people way smarter than me to do the things I couldn’t possibly do.

Liz Wiseman calls this approach, being a talent magnet in her book Multipliers. I call it common sense, or perhaps heredity. My dad carries the same jump-into-things-you-know-nothing-about gene.

The 4 practices of the talent magnet

“Empire builders seek to surround themselves with ‘A’ players. But unlike talent magnets, they accumulate talent to appear smarter and more powerful. The leader glosses over the real genius of the people while placing them into boxes on the org chart. The players have limited impact and start to look more like A- or B+” – Lis Wiseman

Wiseman’s research found four common practices among talent magnets.

1. Look for talent everywhere

My favourite part of this context is ignore the boundaries. They’re less inclined to look for traditional qualifications than looking for the right cocktail of talents just right for that role.

2. Find people’s native genius

Liz explains, “A native genius is something that people do, not only exceptionally well, but absolutely naturally. They do it easily, without extra effort and freely, without condition”. Tap into that.

3. Utilise people to their fullest

This is all about connecting people to the right opportunities and shining the spotlight on them when it’s time.

4. Remove the blockers

‘A’ players have a low tolerance for nonsense. Talent magnets get that, and do their best to move the unnecessary stuff out-of-the-way, so the native genius can get to work.

Karin Hurt is a keynote speaker, leadership consultant, and MBA professor. She has decades of experience in sales, customer service, and HR which she uses to help clients turn around results through deeper engagement. She knows the stillness of a yogi, the reflection of a marathoner, and the joy of being a mom raising emerging leaders. To know more about talent assessment, email us at people@leaderonomics.com. For more Thought Of The Week articles, click here.

 
Reposted with permission on Leaderonomics.com

Share This

Functional

Alt

This article is published by the editors of Leaderonomics.com with the consent of the guest author. 

You May Also Like

constructive dismissal

Requiring Frequent Covid 19 Tests - Does This Amount to Constructive Dismissal

By Shawn Sher. Does a company's persistent actions of requiring an employee to take a Covid-19 test prior to reporting to work amount to constructive dismissal, and is a salary reduction coupled with placing an employee under a Performance Improvement Plan due to a decline in a company's business volume arising out of the pandemic justify a claim for constructive dismissal? Read the Court's findings here.

Sep 15, 2022 7 Min Read

Man meditating at work, balancing work and life, integrating work and life

Work-Life Integration - Are We Ready For It?

Connie Lim, People & Culture Lead of Leaderonomics discusses why employers should consider work-life integration within their organisations, even if they are traditionalists, and how it generates value for the organisation.

Jun 25, 2023 31 Min Podcast

Man

What is Coaching?

At the recent DoGood Leadership Conference, we had the chance to catch a few moments with leadership coach Paul N.

Aug 19, 2018 2 Min Video

Be a Leader's Digest Reader