Discussion Question: Enhancing Talent Management in Public Health and HealthcareIn the dynamic and competitive fields of public health and healthcare, effective leadership and talent management are crucial for organizational success. The chapter provides a comprehensive guide on managing individual employees to achieve optimal results, emphasizing the importance of understanding both organizational and individual components of talent management. The GEM Model of Talent Management is highlighted as a versatile tool that can be tailored to fit organizational needs and personal leadership philosophies, focusing on three critical aspects: setting employee goals and expectations, enhancing engagement and execution, and managing and motivating employees effectively.Discussion Prompt:Reflect on the application of the GEM Model within a public health or healthcare organization. Write a minimum of 200 words discussing how a leader could implement the GEM Model to address the specific challenges and opportunities within these sectors. Consider the following in your analysis:Goals and Expectations: How can leaders in public health and healthcare set and communicate clear goals and expectations in a way that resonates with individual employees and aligns with the organization’s mission?Engagement and Execution: What strategies could be employed to enhance employee engagement and ensure the effective execution of these goals within the fast-paced and often high-pressure environment of public health and healthcare?Management and Motivation: Discuss the methods a leader might use to manage and motivate employees, considering the diverse and multidisciplinary nature of teams within these sectors.Provide research support for your arguments, citing at least one external source to enhance the depth of your analysis and engagement with the topic.
Leadership in Practice
Essentials for Public Health and Healthcare Leaders
Chapter 17: Creating Effective Public Health Messengers
Susan C. Helm-Murtagh, DrPH, MM
Paul C. Erwin, MD, DrPH
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Chapter 17 Objectives
By the end of this chapter, the reader will be able to:
Recognize the historical and political conditions that currently challenge public healths ability to change law
and policy in order to meet urgent community needs
Address ways in which public health and healthcare leaders can communicate more deeply and meaningfully
with communities of all backgrounds, given the politically polarized culture
Apply practical communication strategies that public health can use internally to improve its political skill sets,
as well as externally to nurture the voices of other non-public health allies to support common efforts
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Factors Contributing to the Public Health Communications Gap
Local and state public health leaders have scarce resources and insufficient clout
Frequently must shape messages in a dynamic situation, without waiting for 100% data certainty
Communication about issues that are evolving, complex, nuanced, and subject to unexpected change
There has been a long decline in public healths political skill sets
Decreasing levels of civil discourse in the U.S. cultural and political environments undermine the ability
to form the coalitions critical to solving public health problems
The good news is that public health, healthcare, and local elected leaders share a common goal: to take
care of their communities
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Inputs to Communication
The sender
Leaders should assess their own interpersonal and communication skills
Influenced by senders personal and professional credibility, their power and authority, and their social capital
The receiver
Receptivity influenced by receivers values, knowledge, beliefs about message and perception of sender
The message
Effective framing is key
The channel
Delivery of method may involve traditional or social media, direct action advocacy, one-on-one, or other
methods
The context
Many issues compete for stakeholder attention
Historical or cultural contexts, current political climate, other external factors may impact effectiveness
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Figure 17.3: McGuires Persuasion Matrix.
Source: Reproduced with permission from Martin BA. Improving Public Health Communication in a Politically Polarized
Environment: Exploring the Use of Moral Values in Message Framing. Dissertation. 2021. University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill. https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/dissertations/dj52wf88m
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Ways for Public Health and Healthcare to Communicate
Figure 17.4: Ways for Public Health and
Healthcare Leaders to Communicate.
Source: Reproduced with permission from
Martin BA. Improving Public Health
Communication in a
Politically Polarized Environment: Exploring the
Use of Moral Values in Message Framing
[dissertation]. 2021. University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/dissertations/dj5
2wf88m
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Considerations for Effective Communication
Channels
Context
Credibility
Be aware of unintended effects
Consider a public health championidentify unexpected validators
An unexpected stakeholder may make a bigger impact as the message sender
Framing
Diagnostic framingfocuses on what the problem is and how to define it
Prognostic framingfocuses on how to solve the problem
Motivational framingoffers the call to action
Crafting
Keep the intended audience in mind
Create messages that combine facts and data with emotional appeals
Messages should be culturally relevant, transparent, respectful, and flexible to change
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Considerations for Effective Communication (continued)
Crafting (continued)
Use concise and easy to remember headlines and subject lines
Communicate in clear, simple language
Utilize empathy and intuitive moral values to frame the message
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Using Empathy for Effective Messaging
Beware of shaming and name calling
Offer individuals a sense of control
Enlist trusted partners who may be unexpected validators
Emphasize benefits over threats
Connect to whats meaningful to the audience, not to you
Remember that public health is a long game
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Centering Equity in Public Health Communication
Know your audience
Focus on systems, places, or conditions
Use storytelling
Be authentic
Understand the opposition
Always be aware of your own limitations
Confirmation bias
In-group favoritism
Framing effect
Authority bias
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Using Moral Foundations Theory to Inform Communication
Figure 17.6: Overview of Moral Foundations.
Source: Reproduced with permission from Martin BA.
Improving Public Health Communication in a Politically
Polarized Environment: Exploring the Use of Moral
Values in Message Framing. Dissertation. 2021.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/dissertations/dj52wf88m
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Becoming a Better Messenger
Take the moral foundations assessment to learn which moral foundations you naturally resonate with
Practice how to speak to the moral foundations that you dont necessarily resonate with
Consider the moral foundations of your audience
Politically liberalmessage on care and fairness
Politically conservativemessage on all six intuitive moral foundations
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Summary
Recognize that stakeholders may view public health issues and solutions very differently
Appreciate that communication has become more complex, due to political polarization and the
proliferation of news and other information from mainstream and social media
Consider the major elements in communication
Give careful attention to empathy and centering equity in public health messaging
Tap into intuitive moral foundations in communicator and audience
The bottom line is there is no alternative: Public health leaders must learn to message better
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Leadership in Practice
Essentials for Public Health and Healthcare Leaders
Chapter 16: Talent Management: A Leadership Imperative
Susan C. Helm-Murtagh, DrPH, MM
Paul C. Erwin, MD, DrPH
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
1
Chapter 16 Objectives
By the end of this chapter, the reader will be able to:
Highlight the growing leadership imperative to effectively unleash the power of the workforce in an
increasingly competitive public health healthcare industry
Provide a brief overview of the organizational components of human resource strategies/people
management and how they impact the leaders approach to talent management
Introduce a toolkit for enabling leaders to unearth, polish, and deploy their employees skills, talents, and
aspirations in a manner that creates value for the organization, the customer/patient, and the employee
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Talent Management in Public Health and Healthcare
Increasing staffing challenges and competition trends will continue into the future
Growth within healthcare industry at a pace that increases staffing challenges
Insufficient talent pool
Changing needs and expectations of public health and healthcare workers
Hypercompetitive staffing landscape
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Organizational Talent Management: The HR Context
Leader needs to understand explicit and implicit HR goals and strategies
HR functions
Necessary functions for basic operations
Ensuring consistency
Ensuring regulatory compliance and reporting
HR and organizational leaders must engage in integrated planning for future needs
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Organizational Design
Structure evolves over time and especially with growth
Basic structure needs to be understood
Who does the work?
How does the work get done?
How are resources allocated?
Questions to assist assessment
How does the organization determine its strategy and goals for the foreseeable future?
How are the major work tasks and people organized to deliver the mission, vision, values, and goals?
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Job Design
Addresses how work is structured into specific jobs and roles
Defines individual scope of responsibility
Scope and design of roles impacts meaning and growth opportunities
Increasingly important to talent recruitment and retention
Role design and description must be accurate and attractive
Key considerations:
What are the goals and objectives of the role?
What level of education, training, and experience are required to perform that role (i.e., minimum
requirements)?
How dependent or integrated is the role with other areas or other roles within the organization? How many
layers for decision-making? Who decides what (i.e., level of autonomy)?
What is the target span of control (i.e., how many employees per leader)?
What kind of flexibility does the role have in terms of when and how the role is accomplished?
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Recruiting and Attracting Talent
Annual forecasts of recruiting and headcount needs
Compensation levels of jobs/roles
Corporate HR provides guidelines and parameters for roles
Market pricing to set compensation ranges based on comparable roles in the industry
Define other elements of the total rewards package
Paid time off
Health insurance and benefits
Retirement programs and contributions
Tuition reimbursement
Relocation assistance
Employee assistance programs
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Engaging and Supporting Talent
Orientation to the organization
Consistent onboarding
Builds common culture and set of expectations
Standard training and development programs
Internal and external programs and events
Ensure the requisite skill sets
Rewards and recognition
Linking performance management to the monetary and non-monetary outcomes
Employee relations and support
Ongoing mechanisms for employee feedback and issue escalation
Supports a positive employer/employee relationship
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The GEM Model
Toolkit to unearth, polish, and deploy employees skills, talents, and aspirations
Three distinct aspects of talent management
Goals and expectationsdefine how the employee is seen and valued
Engagement and executionshowcase the employee through successful job performance
Management and motivationspur the employee to higher levels of achievement over time
Figure 16.1: The GEM Model of Talent Management.
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Goals and Expectations for the Employee (G)
Set and communicate meaningful, measurable, and feasible set of expectations
Job description should meet needs and objectives of organization and employee
Do not assume the value or impact of the job is clear
Role-specific goalsmust be specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-based
Hiring requirements must be clear and include necessary qualifications
Recruitmentbuild and cultivate a network of potential employees
Interview process
Consider who should be involveddiverse panel of interviewers
Use a disciplined interviewing approach
Collectively rate and rank candidate pool
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Engagement and Execution (E)Onboarding
Onboarding should have a set plan
Schedule for proactive communicationswritten and verbal
Established week 1 schedule
Establish goals and expectationsconsider four levels of authority model
Level 1act upon instruction
Level 2act upon approval
Level 3decide on action, inform, and act
Level 4decide and act
Meaningful team integrationestablish regular and meaningful dialogue
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Engagement and Execution (E)Meetings
Team and department meetings
Distribute meeting agendas at least 24 hours in advance
Encourage ongoing team reflection and feedback
Action items and tracking create a closed loop on assignments
Regularly scheduled 1:1 meetings to build foundation of trust
Solicit and agree upon agenda topics in advance
Create expectation of upward management
Manage discussion for meaningful dialogue
Beware of communication pitfalls
Goal planning, refinement, and refreshannual top-down/bottom-up approach
Take advantage of coaching and development opportunities
Identify needed skills and experiences and invest in training and development
Hold work focused or problem-solving sessions
Provide real-time feedback
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Motivation and Management for Success (M)
Effective performance managements
Performance assessment
Balance the how and what of performance
Manage the performance discussion effectively
Tips for tough performance management discussions
Clear written articulation of performance shortfalls and gaps
Clarify potential consequences of not addressing shortfalls and the necessary timeframe
Determine drivers of performance shortfall
Allow time for silence and emotions
Ask employee to take a few days to process and reflect and schedule a follow up discussion to plan for
moving forward
Plan for rewards and recognition
Use traditional reward levers wholistically
Create employee-specific motivation plans
Include non-monetary tools
Career Planning
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Summary
Effective leaders must understand both organizational and individual components of talent management
Organizational context include HR policies, programs, parameters, and expectations
GEM Model of talent management
Employee goals and expectations (G)
Employee engagement and execution (E)
Employee management and motivation (M)
© Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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Enchacing Talent Management in Public Health.
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