VN firms lack talent strategies

May 10th at 13:39
10-05-2017 13:39:28+07:00

VN firms lack talent strategies

Multinational companies focus on building talent management strategies right from the early stage of their businesses, but many of their Vietnamese counterparts do not, a seminar heard in HCM City on Tuesday.

 

According to Tieu Yen Trinh, CEO of Talentnet Corporation, many Vietnamese firms, after a period of rapid growth, encounter a bottleneck when they do not have enough human resources with the skills and mindsets needed for that stage of development.

They then think of investing in talent, but by then it is too late.

A recent poll of 63 CEOs of large local and multinational companies by Talentnet found that an overwhelming majority believed people capacity was one of the major concerns for the business and had HR strategies in place.

A majority perceived “Talent management” as a system with defined tools to help them achieve talent objectives, and it was more defined at multinationals than local companies.

However, talent strategies were lacking at nearly half of the local companies and a few multinationals.

Trinh said 47 per cent of the CEOs polled said they had a talent strategy linked to the business strategy, while 17 per cent said they had a strategy but it was not linked to the business strategy because it was too complicated systems and depended on HR and line managers’competence to execute it.

The remaining 36 per cent said their business did not have a talent strategy.

According to the survey, the main HR focus this year at both local and multinational companies was training and developing their existing workforce and enhancing workforce productivity.

Trinh said 69 per cent of multinational companies had defined criteria and a framework to select their talent pool, meaning they have a tendency to do so internally.

For local companies, the talent pool is a mix of different sources (build, buy and borrow).

The survey pointed out some obstacles Vietnamese companies face in developing and implementing a talent strategy, such as the lack of line managers’involvement in identifying employees’ profiles, their bias in assessing talent and their belief that the development of people’s capacities and careers is HR’s job.

Other obstacles are that line managers do not want to share their talented workers with other departments or business units and there are no different reward schemes to recognise and retain talent, she said.

"Viet Nam is ranked 86th out of 118 countries in the annual Global Talent Competitiveness Index, which measures how countries grow, attract and retain talent," she said.

According to the report, Viet Nam scores relatively better in global knowledge skills (i.e. using the available higher skills to support innovation and engage in entrepreneurship).

But the country is struggling in terms of attracting talent and developing a pool of vocational and technical skills, she said.

Talking about talent challenges in the region, Joanna Yeoh, a strategic HR and talent management practitioner, said "the region has a very large number of young workers but lacks depth of expertise and managerial skills, suffers from a brain drain and migration".

"It has an improving educational system but low skill confidence, multinationals entering the markets and hiring away talent, compensation costs outpacing productivity and ability," she said.

High salary increase

A survey by human resources providers Mercer and Talentnet last year found that Viet Nam was among the three countries in Southeast Asia with the highest salary increase rates.

At the higher career levels, Viet Nam pays higher than Singapore or Australia, she said.

Organised by Talentnet Corporation, the “Talent Management Strategy for Visionary CEO: Build to Win” seminar attracted more than 40 CEOs and other executives from Vietnamese and multinational companies.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

PM calls for further investment from New Zealand

PM Nguyen Xuan Phuc called on New Zealand businesses to invest more in Viet Nam at a reception for visiting Trade Minister of New Zealand Todd McClay in Ha Noi on...

VN eyes 4th technical revolution

The Vietnamese mechanical industry will have more opportunities to improve their competitiveness if they apply technologies to meet the standards of the so-called...

Private investment up in 2017

Grant Thornton Vietnam Limited’s 16th survey of the Vietnamese private equity sector showed largely positive economic progress and optimism for the country’s level...

Almost 700 firms lose export license to US

The American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cancelled the import licences of 679 Vietnamese food and beverage manufactureres that did not re-register with...

VN eyes fruit, vegetable exports to UAE

Viet Nam is witnessing the potential for fruit and vegetable exports to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Workshop promoting e-commerce with EU to be held in Ha Noi

A workshop on promoting trade with EU market via Amazon online shopping channel will be held in Ha Noi on May 10, according to the Vietnam Textile and Apparel...

Forum promotes Viet Nam-Indonesia economic co-operation

The Embassy of Viet Nam in Indonesia and the Indonesia – Viet Nam Friendship Association (IVFA) jointly organised a forum to connect the two nations’ enterprises in...

Ministry lays emphasis on quality and disbursement speed of FDI

Vietnam is attracting a large amount of FDI, but the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) called attention to the quality of the capital and the speed at which...

DOC cancels anti-dumping review

 The US Department of Commerce (DOC) was rescinding the administrative review of the anti-dumping duty order on steel wire garment hangers from Viet Nam, said Viet...

Thua Thien – Hue aims to attract $400m in FDI

The central province of Thua Thien – Hue aims to attract around US$300-400 million in foreign direct investment (FDI) this year, according to the province’s recent...


MOST READ


Back To Top