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Business Services


Catch a rising star



How to identify your company's top performers

By Abby Cymerman


Smart Business Columbus | November 2008

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Steve Wolever<BR />owner and CEO, Signature Worldwide
Steve Wolever
owner and CEO, Signature Worldwide

Steve Wolever is always on the lookout for stars, those people who shine and who have the potential to one day run his business.

“What’s really driven succession planning home is this baby boom, because all these people are going to be leaving the work force, and who’s going to take their place?” says Wolever, owner, president and CEO of Signature Inc., which does business as Signature Worldwide.

Wolever, whose company provides training to service-based organizations, says Signature Worldwide’s succession program identifies top performers and helps them move up the ranks. Its U.S. operations and seven licensees reported $14.5 million in 2007 revenue.

Smart Business spoke with Wolever about how he finds the stars among his 300-plus employees.

Q. How can CEOs prepare for succession planning?

We’ve literally looked for our stars, and we try to identify them: What career path do they have, and if someone would leave, who is the next likely person? It’s OK to say, ‘Our next likely person is going to come from outside because we don’t have anybody,’ but you need to know that.

It really is planning, and that’s something you can’t just leave to HR. The key senior management people need to be involved in succession planning because that’s the strategic part of the future of your company.

Q. How do you identify the stars?

We have a committee that includes our director of HR, our CFO, my wife [Becky Wolever, chief operating officer,] and I. We set a time once a year with each one of the department heads, and they name two or three people in their departments that they consider their stars and explain to us why.

It gets that department head thinking about who they would have as a succession for themselves and who is showing extra talent or energy within their job that would be considered a star.

We ask them this question: If this was your business and you could only take two people from your department with you to start it, which two would you take and why? That has brought on some very interesting rethinking of who they thought were their stars.

Early on, when we asked the question about who they would take with them, when the department heads were in the room with us, they really stopped and thought and changed their mind.

Too often in companies, people get promoted because they do their jobs very well, and they might get put into a supervisory role; they were good workers, but they’re horrible supervisors. That’s not fair to them, either.

Some people do a lot of work and get a lot of things done, but they’re not necessarily the stars. You need a whole bunch of those worker bees that do great work and love their job, but they might not have the desire to go any further that. It’s not just about whether they do their jobs really well; that’s not the definition of a star in our company.

Our definition is a person who does good work but also has an aptitude and a desire to move, in most cases, into a higher position.

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