Difference between revisions of "Competency management"

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==Definition==
 
==Definition==
 
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'''Source:''' [[Mapping organizational competency in nuclear organizations]] - June 2013 draft
 
  
 
==Summary==
 
==Summary==

Revision as of 09:16, 29 October 2013

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Definition

Competency management is A collection of processes used to identify and evaluate the current strengths and needs as well as predict the future needs within an organisation and finally to implement the required corrective actions.

Summary

Competency management should be integrated in the management system of the organization. Competency management involves both individual and organizational competencies and thus connects with the main business processes of the organization. Eleven essential components of competency management have been identifies in nuclear organizations:

  • Align competencies with the Mission
  • Align competencies with external requirements
  • Support organisational change
  • Understand organisational capability
  • Manage competency risk
  • Manage the externally sourced competencies
  • Develop new competencies
  • Build teams
  • Recruitment strategy
  • Improve organisational competency
  • Performance metrics

Description

Competency management in the management system

Most nuclear organizations have built a management system which integrates all elements of an organization into one coherent system to enable all of the organization’s objectives to be achieved. Also competency management should be integrated in this overall management. Fig 1 summarises the integration of competency management into a management system (developed based on [1]).

Fig 1: Competency management in management system. Reference:developed based on [1]

All processes of competency management and their key performance indicators should be aligned with the mission, vision and strategy of the organization. This should ensure that also the competencies are aligned with mission, vision and strategy of the organisation.


Essential components of managing organizational competency

Figure 3 summarises the eleven items an organisation must take care of in order to manage its competencies well. For discussion on how to construct a competency map which informs the methods for managing the components, see the article on organisational competency mapping

Figure 3: Components of good competency management.

Organisational competencies should be aligned with the mission, vision, strategy and business processes of the organisation. The typical methods to acchieve this include creating a scheme of competencies and long-term workforce plan based on the mission, vision and strategy and using the national workforce plan.

Organisational competencies should also be aligened with external requirements and regulations. The typical methods to achieve this include forming an independent governance and audit committee, integrated quality management system, nuclear safety committee, maintaining and reviewing the minimum staffing required for safe operation (Nuclear baseline) and implementing a management of change process.

An organisation should support the processes of organsational change and transformation by aligning the competencies with the new requirements. This includes developing a forward looking business plan, employee development policy, strategy and plan and a change management plan.

An organisation should understand its own organisational capability e.g. by creating and maintaining a human capital index.

Managing competency risks is an essential part of competency management. The typical methods for acchieving this include creating a map of competency risks at the levels of department, business unit, function or organisation, creating a risk-based competency retention plan followed up with knowledge retention and transfer actions and creating a long-term workforce plan, substitution plan (short term) and a succession plan (long term).

An organisation should manage its externally sources competencies which includes maintaining the capability to outsource, ensure that outsourced capabilities are maintained and managing the risk to outsourced competency. The typical methods to acchieve this include developing "Intelligent customer" roles and an outsourcing policy to manage outsourced competency.

Organisation should develop its technical and functional competencies. The typical methods acchieving this include performing job-task analysis, maintaining role and training profiles, having a process for performance assessment and appraisal, analysing learning needs, evaluating the impact of learning, developing a competency development programme which includes e.g. coaching, mentoring, training and directed reading.

An organisation should also Build teams and team level competencies as a part of its competency management. The methods for acchieving this typically include maintaining and using the organisational structure chart, creating and maintaining, individual and team role and task descriptions, creating and promoting networks and communities and using the business Unit plans.

Developing a recruitment strategy supports importing new competencies. The typical methods for acchieving this include developing a recruitment process and plan and having processes for reassignment, redeployment and job rotation.

Organisations can also improve their competencies through benchmarking. The typical methods for achieving this include improving job descriptions and role profiles, restructuring posts, processes and systems based on the found good practices.

Developing organisational performance metrics is a way to evaluate the the effect of competencies on performance. The typical methods for achieving this include developing performance assessment and evaluation methodologies.

Management of individual competencies

For nuclear organizations, demonstrating staff competence to regulators and clients in a very important management practice. A related activity is the actual process of maintaining and enhancing competence throughout the entire organization. IT tools are available to help do this. The functionality of most systems available on the market allows:

  • The management of personnel data (name, address, job position, qualifications, certifications, experience etc.);
  • The construction of competency frameworks;
  • Allocation of competencies to roles;
  • Competence of individuals to be recorded;
  • Training requirements to be allocated and training records maintained;
  • Role and task information to be captured;
  • Gap analysis reporting

The advantages of implementation of such a system include:

  • Means of measuring and thus improving competence in a systematic manner;
  • Enables expert competencies to be identified and made available to others in the organization;
  • Tangible demonstration of staff competence to clients and regulators, thus assuring regulatory compliance in this area;
  • Enables cost effective planning of training across the organization;
  • Validity periods for refresher and update training are provided with automatic warnings of expiry;

Some examples of skills/competency systems are given below, together with the links to the relevant web-sites:

  • Tritaium: SkillsXP (www.tritanium.com);
  • Avilar: Web Mentor Skills (www.avilar.com).

Source: Knowledge Management for Nuclear Research and Development Organizations

Mapping competency loss risk

Based on the assessment results, managers should develop a strategic plan addressing organizational competence (knowledge) loss and perform corrective actions Corrective actions mainly can be focused on:

  1. Determination of prioritized list of competences at risk;
  2. Critical positions detection;
  3. Detection of key expert at risk (employees and their critical knowledge and competences);
  4. Development of substitution plan (reserve) for key employees which are going to leave organization;
  5. Pairs mentor-successor forming and development of individual plans for knowledge transfer;
  6. Start of knowledge risk assessment for the critical knowledge identification in accordance with Section 4.

Source: Practical Approaches to Risk Management of Knowledge Loss in Nuclear Organizations

References

[1] S. Gardielliano, Intergative Organizational Competency - A practical and cost-efective model.

External links

Other related articles

Asset management

Assessment of organizational competency

Competency

Competency map

Organizational competency

Organizational competency loss risk assessment

Organizational competency mapping