A life's work is not a series of stepping-stones onto which we calmly place our feet, but more like an ocean crossing where there is no path, only a heading, a direction, which, of itself, is in conversation with the elements.
David Whyte, Crossing the Unknown Sea
The future of talent management will always be discovered on the frontier, and the frontier is always messy. There will always be charlatans selling snake oil and the latest personality assessments. What can be done? When operating at the edge of the map, one cannot rely on having the right answers because the challenges and the answers will be novel. However, adventurers can rely on the capabilities and processes that allow them to adapt and figure it out as they go.
A critical question then emerges: What are the processes that can ensure that industrial and organizational (I-O) psychology is promoting positive talent management practices at the edge of what is known? Several factors already work in our favor. For example, our field is grounded in scientific empiricism and therefore has a systematic process to test new ideas and build on previous knowledge; the I-O psychology network includes both researchers and practitioners who share and argue ideas; and we actively work across a broad variety of organizations and at multiple levels within organizations (e.g., individual, team, system). Furthermore, several strategies have been proposed and adopted in our field to increase our ability to leverage the scientist–practitioner bridge (Avolio, Reference Avolio2017; Bartunek & Rynes, Reference Bartunek and Rynes2014).
We propose three additional approaches that I-O psychologists should embrace to remain relevant on the frontier of talent management: (a) Adopt more action research methodologies; (b) learn how to sell I-O psychology; and (c) make humanitarian psychology central to our work. Although there are many potential solutions for dealing with anti-industrial-organizational psychology (AIO), these three strategies were selected because they address how I-O psychology can operate at the edge of our knowledge, they are actionable, and they can interact to enhance each another. In a dynamic environment, the three elements work together: action research enables adaptation, selling I-O psychology enables environmental acceptance, and humanitarian psychology provides direction. In the following sections we discuss the strategies in more depth, ways in which I-O psychology has leveraged the strategies in the past, and challenges to disseminate the strategies going forward.
Adopt More Action Research
As organizations are required to adapt more quickly to changing external realities, they have learned to be more innovative. Our work and research in I-O psychology could mirror this approach. The good news is that this might simply be going back to the future. Kurt Lewin (Reference Lewin1946) introduced the concept of action research decades ago: find a problem, design a quick study, iterate, design another study, and iterate until a comprehensive answer emerges. As time progressed, we abandoned this territory (at least in our journals), favoring complex, well-designed research approaches that are also time consuming. Yet, the capacity for well-designed action research is possible. For example, emerging talent management processes can be studied to identify the issues that are at play (e.g., Church & Rotolo, Reference Church and Rotolo2013), and examples of simple theory-driven research abound in our history (see Latham [Reference Latham2011] for instances where the author combined research and practice at Weyerhaeuser to advance both). I-O psychology has a long history of operating in the messy place where science and practice meet.
The opportunity to use action research methodologies could be a real asset where “fail fast” is an accepted part of an organization's culture. Big data provides the means to interactively test and refine talent management theories and processes. Making this knowledge a sustainable part of I-O psychology and testing talent management processes in ways that do not have strong, negative, unintended consequences can be challenging, but they are doable.
Two opportunities could significantly increase I-O psychology's capacity to operate in this space. First, organizations often guard their data. More effort in the future could be invested in practitioner–researcher partnerships, professional consortia (like the Mayflower Group), and expanding research samples beyond large corporations. Second, I-O psychology does not have a journal where applied action research can readily be published. This is arguably due to the value placed on high-quality, peer-reviewed research, which takes time and resources to produce. The quality of research is important. For example, one would be right to have misgivings about taking a new drug that has not undergone rigorous pharmaceutical testing. However, publishing in premier journals is costly and the lag time too great for most I-O practitioners. Consequently, results get presented at SIOP or the Academy of Management, and most are lost to time. Smaller, incremental studies rarely become part of the I-O knowledge repository. Comprehensive, rigorous studies are important but, in a highly dynamic environment, need to be complemented with a publication outlet for smaller, iterative studies. Hopefully, the IOP Practice Forum can begin to address this issue. This could provide a basis for answering both quick, iterative questions and larger high impact-high risk questions. As Karl Weick (Reference Weick1984) has noted, some social problems are so big that an iterative approach is the most effective.
Selling I-O Psychology: If You Can't Beat Them, Join Them
Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018), citing Miller and Hartwick (2002), note several characteristics of business fads that I-O psychologists should be able to do as well as, if not better than, AIO practitioners. After all, theory- and evidence-based approaches to science mirror what makes a good fad. They build on previous findings (“novel but not radical”), look for generalizable results (“one-size-fits-all” solutions), prioritize parsimonious theoretical explanations (“simple”), and find ways to integrate talent management initiatives within other organizational processes (“easy to cut and paste”).
Furthermore, if anyone should be able to leverage evidence-based practices to “sell” ideas, should it not be us? After all, psychology is the place to find research-based, applied strategies to persuade and make things stick (e.g., Cialdini, Reference Cialdini2008; Heath & Heath, Reference Heath and Heath2007). Similarly, I-O psychology professionals know which practices are most likely to promote organizational change and intervention sustainability (Hedges & Pulakos, Reference Hedges and Pulokos2002; Yost et al., Reference Yost, McLellan, Ecker, Chang, Hereford, Roenicke and Winberg2011). For example, we know how to craft research-based practices to identify and involve key stakeholders, build top management support, and use feedback processes to improve program effectiveness.
Of course, it is one thing to know what to do and quite another to actually do it. I-O psychologists are well-trained to identify best practices logically and rationally. In their first jobs, many I-O psychologists tend to start conversations with phrases like “Research would suggest” but soon realize that this approach is not particularly compelling to most people. A host of other research-based influence tactics are available, such as inspirational appeals (Lee, Han, Cheong, Kim, & Yun, Reference Lee, Han, Cheong, Kim and Yun2017). In the future, we need to get much better at applying the influence tactics and change management processes that are readily available to us.
For the Sake of What? Humanitarian I-O Psychology
Action research gives I-O psychologists a way to meet some current organizational demands (particularly for haste) while maintaining some degree of empirical rigor and creating opportunities for “selling” ideas that will be adopted. However, as Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018) note, some talent management trends evolve so quickly that they are not answerable with empirical data. This brings us to a third strategy for operating at the edge: Use humanitarian I-O psychology to identify the questions that matter (Leftkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2010). Thus, even in the absence of knowing if a process will lead to higher organizational performance, we can sometimes determine the actions that will facilitate other important dimensions or enhance societal well-being.
Strong value positions are helpful because they provide a basis for alternative epistemologies and decision-making heuristics in the absence of empirical data. For example, values can (and should) be used to answer questions such as, is this talent management intervention morally right? Or, what are the ultimate goals and criteria that should be used to assess whether an appraisal process is “effective”? With a defined I-O psychology–based values system, Lefkowitz (Reference Lefkowitz2010) argues, “We'd still develop performance appraisal standards and evaluation systems but only if we were assured that the organization provides adequate means and opportunity for all employees affected to meet those standards and a safe mechanism for employee appeals” (p. 297). In the absence of an established moral values system, we risk reflexively adopting a business’ values (Lefkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2008), which, depending on the business, can perpetuate AIO talent management.
Humanistic values and the treatment of employees have been discussed in the I-O psychology literature (Leavitt, Reference Leavitt2007; Sikula, Olmosk, Kim, & Cupps, Reference Sikula, Olmosk, Kim and Cupps2001). However, some have argued that the moral and ethical values of our field are also often missing from the broader conversation (Katzell & Austin, Reference Katzell and Austin1992; Salas, Kowzlowski, & Chen, Reference Salas, Kozlowski and Chen2017). Consequently, we must surmise what humanistic I-O values (Lefkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2010) would look like beyond American Psychological Association ethical guidelines to further promote humanistic organizational theories and practices (Ghoshal, Reference Ghoshal2005). For example, in talent management, relevant questions include: What is a compensation structure that prioritizes (or at least does not undervalue) the dignity of workers? How can we design a process for contesting performance appraisals that creates the greatest social justice for all? Does our talent management system give all workers the opportunity to thrive?
Conclusion
In combination, these three practices—action research, selling I-O psychology, and humanistic I-O psychology—should significantly increase I-O psychology's ability to operate on the frontiers of talent management now and in the future. We know what to do . . . time will tell if we do it.
A life's work is not a series of stepping-stones onto which we calmly place our feet, but more like an ocean crossing where there is no path, only a heading, a direction, which, of itself, is in conversation with the elements.
David Whyte, Crossing the Unknown Sea
The future of talent management will always be discovered on the frontier, and the frontier is always messy. There will always be charlatans selling snake oil and the latest personality assessments. What can be done? When operating at the edge of the map, one cannot rely on having the right answers because the challenges and the answers will be novel. However, adventurers can rely on the capabilities and processes that allow them to adapt and figure it out as they go.
A critical question then emerges: What are the processes that can ensure that industrial and organizational (I-O) psychology is promoting positive talent management practices at the edge of what is known? Several factors already work in our favor. For example, our field is grounded in scientific empiricism and therefore has a systematic process to test new ideas and build on previous knowledge; the I-O psychology network includes both researchers and practitioners who share and argue ideas; and we actively work across a broad variety of organizations and at multiple levels within organizations (e.g., individual, team, system). Furthermore, several strategies have been proposed and adopted in our field to increase our ability to leverage the scientist–practitioner bridge (Avolio, Reference Avolio2017; Bartunek & Rynes, Reference Bartunek and Rynes2014).
We propose three additional approaches that I-O psychologists should embrace to remain relevant on the frontier of talent management: (a) Adopt more action research methodologies; (b) learn how to sell I-O psychology; and (c) make humanitarian psychology central to our work. Although there are many potential solutions for dealing with anti-industrial-organizational psychology (AIO), these three strategies were selected because they address how I-O psychology can operate at the edge of our knowledge, they are actionable, and they can interact to enhance each another. In a dynamic environment, the three elements work together: action research enables adaptation, selling I-O psychology enables environmental acceptance, and humanitarian psychology provides direction. In the following sections we discuss the strategies in more depth, ways in which I-O psychology has leveraged the strategies in the past, and challenges to disseminate the strategies going forward.
Adopt More Action Research
As organizations are required to adapt more quickly to changing external realities, they have learned to be more innovative. Our work and research in I-O psychology could mirror this approach. The good news is that this might simply be going back to the future. Kurt Lewin (Reference Lewin1946) introduced the concept of action research decades ago: find a problem, design a quick study, iterate, design another study, and iterate until a comprehensive answer emerges. As time progressed, we abandoned this territory (at least in our journals), favoring complex, well-designed research approaches that are also time consuming. Yet, the capacity for well-designed action research is possible. For example, emerging talent management processes can be studied to identify the issues that are at play (e.g., Church & Rotolo, Reference Church and Rotolo2013), and examples of simple theory-driven research abound in our history (see Latham [Reference Latham2011] for instances where the author combined research and practice at Weyerhaeuser to advance both). I-O psychology has a long history of operating in the messy place where science and practice meet.
The opportunity to use action research methodologies could be a real asset where “fail fast” is an accepted part of an organization's culture. Big data provides the means to interactively test and refine talent management theories and processes. Making this knowledge a sustainable part of I-O psychology and testing talent management processes in ways that do not have strong, negative, unintended consequences can be challenging, but they are doable.
Two opportunities could significantly increase I-O psychology's capacity to operate in this space. First, organizations often guard their data. More effort in the future could be invested in practitioner–researcher partnerships, professional consortia (like the Mayflower Group), and expanding research samples beyond large corporations. Second, I-O psychology does not have a journal where applied action research can readily be published. This is arguably due to the value placed on high-quality, peer-reviewed research, which takes time and resources to produce. The quality of research is important. For example, one would be right to have misgivings about taking a new drug that has not undergone rigorous pharmaceutical testing. However, publishing in premier journals is costly and the lag time too great for most I-O practitioners. Consequently, results get presented at SIOP or the Academy of Management, and most are lost to time. Smaller, incremental studies rarely become part of the I-O knowledge repository. Comprehensive, rigorous studies are important but, in a highly dynamic environment, need to be complemented with a publication outlet for smaller, iterative studies. Hopefully, the IOP Practice Forum can begin to address this issue. This could provide a basis for answering both quick, iterative questions and larger high impact-high risk questions. As Karl Weick (Reference Weick1984) has noted, some social problems are so big that an iterative approach is the most effective.
Selling I-O Psychology: If You Can't Beat Them, Join Them
Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018), citing Miller and Hartwick (2002), note several characteristics of business fads that I-O psychologists should be able to do as well as, if not better than, AIO practitioners. After all, theory- and evidence-based approaches to science mirror what makes a good fad. They build on previous findings (“novel but not radical”), look for generalizable results (“one-size-fits-all” solutions), prioritize parsimonious theoretical explanations (“simple”), and find ways to integrate talent management initiatives within other organizational processes (“easy to cut and paste”).
Furthermore, if anyone should be able to leverage evidence-based practices to “sell” ideas, should it not be us? After all, psychology is the place to find research-based, applied strategies to persuade and make things stick (e.g., Cialdini, Reference Cialdini2008; Heath & Heath, Reference Heath and Heath2007). Similarly, I-O psychology professionals know which practices are most likely to promote organizational change and intervention sustainability (Hedges & Pulakos, Reference Hedges and Pulokos2002; Yost et al., Reference Yost, McLellan, Ecker, Chang, Hereford, Roenicke and Winberg2011). For example, we know how to craft research-based practices to identify and involve key stakeholders, build top management support, and use feedback processes to improve program effectiveness.
Of course, it is one thing to know what to do and quite another to actually do it. I-O psychologists are well-trained to identify best practices logically and rationally. In their first jobs, many I-O psychologists tend to start conversations with phrases like “Research would suggest” but soon realize that this approach is not particularly compelling to most people. A host of other research-based influence tactics are available, such as inspirational appeals (Lee, Han, Cheong, Kim, & Yun, Reference Lee, Han, Cheong, Kim and Yun2017). In the future, we need to get much better at applying the influence tactics and change management processes that are readily available to us.
For the Sake of What? Humanitarian I-O Psychology
Action research gives I-O psychologists a way to meet some current organizational demands (particularly for haste) while maintaining some degree of empirical rigor and creating opportunities for “selling” ideas that will be adopted. However, as Rotolo et al. (Reference Rotolo, Church, Adler, Smither, Colquitt, Shull and Foster2018) note, some talent management trends evolve so quickly that they are not answerable with empirical data. This brings us to a third strategy for operating at the edge: Use humanitarian I-O psychology to identify the questions that matter (Leftkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2010). Thus, even in the absence of knowing if a process will lead to higher organizational performance, we can sometimes determine the actions that will facilitate other important dimensions or enhance societal well-being.
Strong value positions are helpful because they provide a basis for alternative epistemologies and decision-making heuristics in the absence of empirical data. For example, values can (and should) be used to answer questions such as, is this talent management intervention morally right? Or, what are the ultimate goals and criteria that should be used to assess whether an appraisal process is “effective”? With a defined I-O psychology–based values system, Lefkowitz (Reference Lefkowitz2010) argues, “We'd still develop performance appraisal standards and evaluation systems but only if we were assured that the organization provides adequate means and opportunity for all employees affected to meet those standards and a safe mechanism for employee appeals” (p. 297). In the absence of an established moral values system, we risk reflexively adopting a business’ values (Lefkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2008), which, depending on the business, can perpetuate AIO talent management.
Humanistic values and the treatment of employees have been discussed in the I-O psychology literature (Leavitt, Reference Leavitt2007; Sikula, Olmosk, Kim, & Cupps, Reference Sikula, Olmosk, Kim and Cupps2001). However, some have argued that the moral and ethical values of our field are also often missing from the broader conversation (Katzell & Austin, Reference Katzell and Austin1992; Salas, Kowzlowski, & Chen, Reference Salas, Kozlowski and Chen2017). Consequently, we must surmise what humanistic I-O values (Lefkowitz, Reference Lefkowitz2010) would look like beyond American Psychological Association ethical guidelines to further promote humanistic organizational theories and practices (Ghoshal, Reference Ghoshal2005). For example, in talent management, relevant questions include: What is a compensation structure that prioritizes (or at least does not undervalue) the dignity of workers? How can we design a process for contesting performance appraisals that creates the greatest social justice for all? Does our talent management system give all workers the opportunity to thrive?
Conclusion
In combination, these three practices—action research, selling I-O psychology, and humanistic I-O psychology—should significantly increase I-O psychology's ability to operate on the frontiers of talent management now and in the future. We know what to do . . . time will tell if we do it.