HR arising issues from the LeBron decision

Reviewing the HR issues that arise from the LeBron decision - recruitment, retention, benefits, corporate culture and more.
 
July 14, 2010 - PRLog -- From the most casual of sports fans, to NBA fanatics, “The Decision” was hard to miss last week. LeBron James, perhaps the greatest basketball player of this generation, and a Cleveland native, left the Cleveland Cavaliers to play for the Miami Heat, joining his good friend (and fellow superstar) Dwayne Wade and another star in Chris Bosh, who left the Toronto Raptors to be with the Heat. Following 2 years of deliberation amongst fans and interested parties, and a variety of potential suitors for LeBrons talents, the Heat ‘won’ and the three friends form what is potentially one of the most devastating 3-person groups ever to play together in the league.

The move has been commented on in every conceivable way amongst sport websites, publications, blogs and I’m sure has provided Twitter with serious need to review its current bandwidth. What has not been considered by anyone, as yet, are the incredibly interesting HR issues that this entire situation and series of events bring to the forefront. The article here will discuss some of these - http://sutletgroup.blogspot.com/

Retention
The Cavaliers could not retain LeBron James, despite being able to offer him MORE money that their competitors. Despite 7 years of employment, not only did LeBron leave them, but hurt them in the worse possible way by announcing his decision on live TV. In Cleveland, fans burned his jersey and openly wept as the decision was shown on live TV. The bottom line though is that Cleveland did not do enough to retain LeBron James.

This demonstrates a serious issue in today’s workplace. Retaining key staff has never been more important, and it does not come down purely to money.

In Cleveland’s case, they lost LeBron because they did not build a contender around him, and provided only an average level supporting cast that could not carry the load when LeBron was ‘off’. In organisations, the provision of a ‘supporting cast’ can be applied to the provision of Employee Benefits.

Without a unique, creative and valuable Employee Benefits Program (EMP), employees feel less valuable and are provided less ‘ties’ to the organisation. An EBP cannot just include cash bonuses, pensions schemes etc, it must be more creative. Why not plan for team building events, off-site training to address specific needs, consider support for dependents of employees, provide staff loans at reasonable rates, plan staff events that will build unity and trust. It should be a holistic approach that takes in to account personal needs, not just financial needs.

As well as the above, the article covers these HR issues in more detail:

Long term planning
Recruitment
Balance
Stakeholders
Greater good

See http://sutletgroup.blogspot.com/ for the full article.

Written by Stuart Blott, General Manager, Sutlet Group Co., Ltd - http://www.sutletgroup.com

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About Sutlet Group:
Sutlet Group is Thailand’s leading provider of business services and solutions, including accounting, visa and work permit management, HR, legal services and marketing solutions. See www.sutletgroup.com for more information on how to start up, development, support, management and grow your business in Thailand.
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Page Updated Last on: Nov 03, 2010
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