Andre said:
Agree broadly with Jaaqui's comments and would add the following.
Junior and middle level specialists on the other hand can often be expected to have their responsibilities potentially limited to thinking and proposing, but certainly not the more senior jobs who will need to be more delivery oriented.
How can we advise managers on how to be good managers and deal well with their people if we are not good at dealing with people ourselves?
I think Jaqueline has explained it completely.
The role of HR (as a profession) is not to "manage people" (line managers' role) but to manage "how" people are managed.
That certainly can be done without having line management roles oneself (as also described by colleagues) through working alone in a small organisation, or specialising an some aspect of HR that focusses on research or statistical analysis for instance, but just as you would not trust the designer of an aircraft to fly it unless they had also trained as a pilot: How can other managers trust advice from someone who has never managed? Because in telling those managers "how" to best manage their people, we are in fact managing them.
For example: A manager needs to discipline one of their reports: they steam into our office spitting fire about: "...that damned Joe Bloggs...." and what they would like to do to him... Or maybe they enter quietly but with the same message: They want 'rid of him (by tomorrow). How do we deal with either situation? Do we simply pass them (or read from) a copy of the ACAS Code? No: We address their ire, we identify the key issues raised by Joe's conduct; we warn them of any associated problems that need to be addressed.... (Like Joe's disability or mental heath problem)... and we do it all in a way that responds to their attitude, needs (both as a manager and personally), and understanding (both academic and work-cultural).
Those are skills no book, or degree of study, can provide. They are learned from "dealing with" people, specifically at work but in general terms also, and they are being applied as a means of managing Joe's line manager's approach to his misbehaviour, or lack of capability, and in either case, performance.
It would certainly be possible (in theory) to take on the (essentially strategic "hands off") role of an HRD based purely on academic qualification, but the result would possibly be better provided by AI, since AI can store more information than can a human, and collate it (all) in a fraction of the time; so should be able to spit out uniform answers based on strategic analysis alone far faster and more effectively, leaving less senior practitioners (and LMs) to make the oracle's pronouncements fit. (....and do I hear whispers on the breeze that this might be the way HR is heading? ....I hope not). But the difficult is that most companies looking for an HRD want one who has actually experienced working with (and thus, inherently, "managing"... as above) people or other (line) managers. So whatever one's "route to the top" I think it would be highly unlikely that anyone could become a competent and practically effective HRD without having "line managed" someone, in some context during their career.
P
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