MIT Sloan Website




STORE
Search   
 
Home View Cart Check Out Contact Us Help/FAQs

Business Ethics and Public Policy
Corporate Strategy
Financial Management
Human Resources
Global Business
Leadership
Information Systems
Technology and Innovation
Managerial Economics
Marketing
Operations
Service and Quality
Miscellaneous
Back Issues
Sustainability
Collections
When ‘Stars’ Migrate, Do They Still Perform Like Stars?
By Boris Groysberg, Lex Sant and Robin Abrahams
Fall 2008
Reprint 50112
Volume 50, Number 1, pages 41-46, 6 pages
Primary Topic: Human Resources
Secondary Topic: Corporate Strategy

Related Articles

Summary

Past research is clear on the benefits of high-performing, or star, workers. Star computer programmers, for example, are more productive than average ones by a ratio of eight to one. But reaping the benefits of such talent is not so simple. Say you hire a number of stars. How can you guarantee that they will be able to replicate their success in a new environment -- in short, how portable are they? In the past, portability has been viewed as an attribute of a person, team or organization, but it can also be looked at as an attribute of a position. Specifically, certain jobs do require different levels of company-specific human capital, thus making some workers less portable than others. Consequently, organizations should not think of talent management as a simple build versus buy dichotomy. Rather, there are some positions for which they can buy, and others for which they must build. Within investment banks, for example, the retail brokers (who handle individual clients) work primarily on their own. In contrast, institutional salespeople (who sell to major institutional investors such as Putnam, Vanguard and Fidelity) are more likely to perform their jobs in teams. Thus, retail brokers are more portable and can easily be hired from the outside. Institutional salespeople, however, should be developed from within, and efforts should be made to retain them. Understanding such differences is crucial for companies attempting to attain sustainable competitive advantages that derive from human capital. The authors' research, which has probed the application of human capital theory to talent portability, should help companies recognize that an entire class of factors -- specific roles within an organization -- greatly determines the portability of performance. With that knowledge, executives can gain a deeper understanding of the pros and cons of hiring certain star employees.

OR

Includes one pdf to copy from.
Pricing is based on # of
copies made.

Info on pricing and academic discounts.


Related Articles

Rethinking the ‘War for Talent’

By Deepak Somaya and Ian O. Williamson
Summer 2008
Reprint 49402



Making People Decisions in the New Global Environment

By Claudio Fernández-Aráoz
Fall 2007
Reprint 49109



Getting the Right People at the Top

By Claudio Fernández-Aráoz
Summer 2005
Reprint 46412



 
 
Copyright © Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1977-2009. All rights reserved.
877-727-7170, mitsmr@pubservice.com