"HR professionals need to think about themselves as business consultants specialising in people," says Miller. The British expat only worked a little in the transactional and administrative side of HR, setting off on a consulting/strategy-based path early in her career with Vodafone. Her first major project, at 25, was bringing together 52 promising people from around the globe in the 25- to 35-year-old age bracket. They each had to complete a three-month project for Vodafone's business customers. Under a rotation system, candidates rolled out the work at no cost to the customers.
"HR professionals would do well to consider themselves an integral cog in the workings of a company. This requires a leading attitude but often this sector sees itself as a follower, subservient to other management teams."
New Zealand appears to lag behind the times compared with other Western countries. A 2008 survey by the American Corporate Leadership Council showed that "more than three-quarters of over 100 chief human resources officers surveyed indicated they had a performance objective based on revenue, profit or cost". The results indicated the focus paid off: "Increased HR functional effectiveness improves the likelihood of exceeding business unit revenue performance by 7 per cent, and business unit profitability by 9 per cent."
Payroll expert Susan Doughty, of DSD Consulting, agrees: "Innovation in product development and achievement of quality revenue (that leads to long-term profitability) will only happen through having the right people fully engaged in the right places." But it must be driven by a range of people-related initiatives and HR pros need to speak business lingo to do it effectively.
Peter Boxall, director of the postgraduate diploma in HR management at the University of Auckland, says: "HR people should regularly stretch themselves outside of their usual role and develop exposure to business."