Susan is an innovative and forward-thinking leader, designing intentional, purposeful solutions that solve problems and create memorable experiences across organizations. She has a passion for excellence, high performance and driving meaningful change. Her experience advising successful teams and organizations has clearly established Susan’s proven track record of revenue and profit growth in dynamic, fast-paced, international and entrepreneurial organizations.
At Herschel Supply Company, she is responsible for ensuring that evolving strategies, ideas and initiatives, on both a small and large scale, are aligned with the Company's overall culture vision and business goals.
When away from work Susan spends time hiking, playing tennis, boating, skiing and enjoying the outdoors with her Husband Richard and 2 amazing sons.
I noticed you have your professional engineering designation, so I'm guessing people in culture wasn't really your initial career plan. What attracted you to it?
I started my career in engineering in Montreal and I studied at the McGill University. I started engineering and really was passionate about the process, and how things worked. I started my career in the food manufacturing side, understanding how to set up businesses; and there was an interaction between how things work and then how do people get involved in making sure it can work effectively and optimizing those business processes? So it was almost a natural career progression for myself, going from operations to the people side of business. I'm really passionate about people development.
What has your org achieved that you are most proud of so far?
We are a 10 year young organization, and like other companies the last 2 years have been challenging. I am most proud of our employees and how they have grown over these last 2 years. The energy, thoughtfulness and commitment that everyone brings is truly inspirational. Our purpose, "Open to Every Journey" will continue to drive our brand, employees and young creatives on their journey through life.
Describe your culture in 4 words.
4 words - that is tough!! Our culture is driven by our values, so I am going to describe our culture in 4 phrases:
What single tactic do you feel has the biggest positive influence on your culture?
By truly living our core values while ensuring alignment and transparency throughout the organization we have been able to have a huge impact on our culture. At Herschel, we recognize that we do our best work together and have fun when everyone feels empowered to share their individual voices and experiences.
You've implemented a very clearly defined OKR process where everyone knows what the objectives and key results are. What are some of the challenges you encountered and how did you manage those?
One of the challenges we had was a lot of employees who were asking, "Do I really have an impact on the organization?"
We had to do a lot of training, in terms of everyone understanding that we are not all working on different projects. We're not working in silos - we're working together.
In our first review of everyone's inputs and their OKRs, we realized we're working on a thousand different projects / priorities. In our first quarter we had 33% of our objectives and key results accomplished.
So we really had to tone that down and make sure that the entire organization is working on the critical elements. We asked everyone what are the top three to five things that need to be accomplished in that quarter and how are we going to support each other?
It's a process that we're getting better at. We still have lots of learning to do, but we are a learning and growth organization. We're not going for perfection. We're about learning and growth and getting better.
Is there anything that you've carried with you from your time in Operations that maybe helps you see People and Culture a little bit differently to most?
I think everyone brings a different approach to P&C, but I think my engineering and operational background brings that analytical approach to the people and culture function.
When I started on a new team, I insist everyone has an understanding of how to read financial statements, understand the balance sheet, understand the P&L and cashflow. We are here to support the business, so we need to understand the business and the financials. I'll bring in finance team to do training, to ensure that the people and culture team have that business approach and can support the business as business specialists.
What's the one thing that you wish you knew at the start about people on culture?
Great question. We are not all the same and along my journey, I have made that mistake. When I first started out, I thought that by being fair in an organization you treat everyone the same; but we don't, we are all unique. We have different strengths. It's important to understand everyone's strengths and understanding at certain points in time in people's careers, they might be struggling, and that's okay. They can contribute other areas of the business. So understanding that we are not all the same, we all bring different aspects to the business and different strengths, and focusing on our strengths is really important.
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