One of the questions our consultants are frequently asked is, “Is there a difference between organizational values and core competencies, or do they perform the same function?”
It’s a good question, because these two elements are closely related. But to clearly define and support your organizational culture, it’s important to have both in place.
In this post, we'll look at the following points:
Defining Competencies and Values
Let’s start by defining some key terms:
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Competencies vs. Values
While competencies and values have significant areas of overlap, there’s a key difference between them:
This tangible element is very important. Too often, organizational values remain at the conceptual level and fail to be embodied, because we don’t have a way to objectively define what those values mean at an operational level.
How to make your company's values into something tangible:
Although we may all agree that “customer service” is a core value and a competitive advantage, if we can’t define what effective customer service looks like at every level of the organization, it becomes a meaningless buzzword instead of a blueprint to guide our performance.
HRSG competency consultant Christine Lamothe explains it this way:
“Values are what are important to the organization, and competencies are the tools that support that. Maybe a continuous learning environment is critical for the organization. Maybe it’s client satisfaction or quality of service. Whatever it is, you would look at core competencies to support that. It’s a marriage of the ‘what’ and the ‘how.’ How do your employees demonstrate those values day to day?”
By providing that tangible element, core competencies enable organizations to translate their values into day-to-day workplace behaviors that can be identified, measured, supported, and developed using specific HR tools.
Turn your company's values into measurable competencies.
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Case Study: Connecting Values and Core Competencies for OPSEU
Problem: The Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU), an HRSG client, had a strong set of political and ethical values that weren’t connecting with their hiring and performance-management processes.
Solution: With HRSG's help, they went through the process of selecting core competencies that aligned with those values so that they could bring clarity and consistency to their HR practices.
“When we look at potential candidates, we are looking at the six core competencies and determining whether these people fit the organization and fit our values,” explains Nazlin Mohamed, OPSEU’s Supervisor of Employee Relations. “It’s helped us to determine the right kind of people and communicate with our staff in terms of what’s expected.”
OPSEU is leveraging their core competencies throughout the talent management lifecycle, starting with the development of a set of interview questions that enables them to identify candidates whose values are the right fit.
Next, OPSEU plans to use core competencies to guide performance management activities and create specialized learning development plans that will ensure employees are supported to grow in ways that reinforce the organization’s values.
For OPSEU, a strongly values-conscious organization, competencies were a way to reinforce and support their existing culture. But an organization doesn’t need to have formalized values in place to benefit from the core competency selection process.
In fact, the process can help to crystallize those unspoken values that differentiate, motivate, and inspire the organization.
To learn more, check out the full case study below on how OPSEU used competencies to achieve consistency and accountability.
Get started with HRSG's Core Competency Accelerator Package
Your mission, vision, and values should be more than just words in a business plan, or a blurb on your company's website. They should help you hire and develop talent, better. We'll give you the tools to define and measure those key, core behaviors that drive your organization forward. Let's use core competencies to turn your company's vision and values into tangible, measurable behaviors.
Post last updated: January 8, 2021