By Patty McCord Presented by Maryam Halimi Background 1997 1999 2006 2007 2011 2013 2014 2017 Founded in 1997 by Reed Hastings and Marc Rudolph as a way to rent movies online Background ID: 582999
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Slide1
How Netflix Reinvented HRBy Patty McCord
Presented by: Maryam HalimiSlide2
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Founded in 1997 by Reed Hastings and Marc Rudolph as a way to rent movies onlineSlide3
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix introduces subscription service.
Unlimited movie rentals, for one monthly fee.Slide4
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix announces an open competition to create a new algorithm for filtering and online browsing.
“Netflix Prize” of $1M is awarded to team of 7.Slide5
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix begins online streaming service.Slide6
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix announces plans to split streaming and DVD rentals.
Announcment
of
Qwikster
(DVD by mail) causes a sharp decline in subscriptions.
The idea is quickly abandoned by Netflix due to customer complaints.Slide7
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix invests $100M in 2 seasons of “House of Cards”
Resulted in an increase in Netflix’s exposure.Slide8
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix has more than 50M subscribers.
Stock price: $400/share (10x more than in 2009)Slide9
Background
1997
1999
2006
2007
2011
2013
2014
2017
Netflix nears 100M subscribers markSlide10
Company Culture: Freedom and ResponsibilityHow did it start?
2001
–
Company forced to layoff one-third of employees due to the dot com bubble burst and the 9/11 tragedy. IPO was put on hold.
Rise in DVD popularity increased subscriptions for DVD-by-mail service.
Workload increased greatly, with 30% less staff to shoulder the increase.
Management response:Employees that were laid off were not critical to operations.The laid off employees actually caused more work.
Lesson: “The best thing you can do for employees…is hire only “A” players to work alongside them.”Slide11
The Five Tenants of Netflix’s Talent Acquisition and Management
Hire, Reward, and Tolerate Only Fully Formed Adults
Tell the Truth About Performance
Managers Own the Job of Creating Great Teams
Leaders Own the Job of Creating the Company Culture
Good Talent Managers Think Like Businesspeople and Innovators First, and Like HR People
Last
.Slide12
Hire, Reward, and Tolerate Only Fully Formed Adults
Treat your workers like adults.Instead of developing long-winded company policies, ask employees to act in the best interest of the company.
Will work 97% of the time if you hire the right people.
Have strict hiring criteria, and take action quickly if hiring mistakes are made.
Create a company culture of honest and clear communication.
For example:
Vacation Policy: Take whatever time you feel is appropriate.Expense Policy: “Act in Netflix’s best interests.”Slide13
Tell the Truth About Performance
Eliminated formal reviews: “too ritualistic and infrequent”No PIP’s: Performance Improvement Plans
Not effective
Lead to the same ending most of the time
Encouraged employees to have informal and honest conversations frequently with one another (initiated by both managers and subordinates).Slide14
Managers Own the Job of Creating Great Teams
Managers should start by imagining their ideal team:What accomplishments do you see the team achieving in 6 months?
What skills are required to reach this goal?
Does your current team meet these skill requirements?
Recruit people with the right skills.Slide15
Leaders Own the Job of Creating the Company Culture
Three areas that need attention:
Mismatch
Company ideals not matching behaviors of management.
Making employees aware of what is driving the business towards success
Letting employees know what exactly it take for the company to succeed.
Example: Taking expenses into considering, not just revenue.Split-Personality
Being aware of the differences between different departments and sectors of an organization.Example: Difference between Sales and Finance.Slide16
Good Talent Managers Think Like Businesspeople and Innovators First, and Like HR People Last.
What’s good for the company?
How do we communicate that to employees?
How can we help every worker understand what we mean by high performance?
Lesson: Expectations should be clear, for both management, and employees.Slide17
Key Takeaways
Netflix strongly emphasizes:Working towards the benefit of Netflix.
Creating ideal teams with “A” workers.
Correcting hiring mistakes quickly.
Treating employees like adults.
Think like businesspeople,
not HR people.Slide18
Conclusion
When you hire the right employees, you can treat them like adults and expect them to use common sense 97% of the time.Slide19
Quiz
What is Netflix’s Expense Policy?
What realization did Netflix have in 2002, after it’s initial layoff?
What is Netflix’s key approach towards management of employees?Slide20
Quiz Answers
Act in Netflix’s best interests.
That company performance is not dependent on the number of employees, but by the performance of the individual employees.
Treat employees like adults.