There is a well known organization that represents a bevy of HR practitioners. The association is The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), and it describes itself accordingly:
The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) is the world’s largest professional association devoted to human resource management. Our mission is to serve the needs of HR professionals by providing the most current and comprehensive resources, and to advance the profession by promoting HR’s essential, strategic role. Founded in 1948, SHRM represents more than 225,000 individual members in over 125 countries, and has a network of more than 575 affiliated chapters in the United States, as well as offices in China and India.
SHRM is a prestigious institution that has very successful and prominent leaders within its membership and on its board. I have personally benefited from those leaders — many of whom act as teachers within the association — and my own knowledge, skills and abilities have grown because of my association with SHRM.
There is a real opportunity out there for anyone from SHRM who is interested in representing the world of the Human Resources. The US Presidential campaign, the recession, and the strength and growth of Web 2.0 are touch points where HR leaders can speak to global citizens and share our knowledge and advice. I wonder why SHRM isn’t out there — on the television, in the print media, and on forefront of new technology — speaking to the global marketplace and addressing issues on workforce management, talent development. There is an opportunity to speak to the world and help business leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, and fellow employees define the way we work, live and — at the very least — earn money in the 21st century.
Last week’s news cycle was a great example of how SHRM could be out there — on blogs, on cable news, in the print media — speaking to the recession, to the political campaign, the war in Iraq, the US health care crisis, and to the issues around Lilly Ledbetter and equal pay. Through a simple but focused media outreach program, SHRM could be promoting HR’s essential, strategic role in the American workforce. Instead of hearing from HR professionals, I was bombarded with workforce and employment experts who were academics, lawyers, and entrepreneurs; none of them identified themselves as HR practitioners nor did they even mention the words ‘human resources’.
It’s as if HR is a non-existent member and not participating in a conversation that we should be leading.
If ever there was a profession (and a professional association) in need of rebranding, it’s HR (and SHRM). Advancing our profession — the mission of SHRM — means linking into new technology and demonstrating our relevance to the global workforce. You don’t demonstrate relevance by sponsoring a few debates on CNN and then waiting for the media to come to you and ask questions.
I guess the simple question is this: with thousands of members and hundreds of employment-related issues in the news — including the world’s most important job interview — where in the world is SHRM?




No doubt! I was thinking along very similar lines as I flipped through the last HR Magazine which had such out-dated news I couldn’t believe it. I way like, um I read 85% of this crap on the interwebs like weeks ago and the rest is filler. Hello? Ding, dong….SHRM - are you even awake? I’m sending them this link dammit.
Are you sending the link via carrier pigeon? If you’re lucky, they might be able to get an incoming fax.
Ugh, I hate SHRM. Isn’t every other article about how to relate to Millennials yet SHRM does nothing to connect to Millennials. The magazine is dryer than the Bible.
Amen. I haven’t opened the magazine in months, Rachel. If I want to fall asleep, I’ll take Ambien.
I emailed the link to the Chair of the BOD. It will probably go to her spam box though - many people tell me my emails go there no matter what they do. Bleh.
With a name like Wench, it has to be spam!
I just couldn’t resist. Here’s what I wrote inspired by your post.