Mail & Guardian

Top Employers Enabling five generation­s of employees

With close to 13 000 employees in over 520 stores across SA and in neighbouri­ng countries, the Clicks Group takes a flexible approach to engaging five generation­s of employees

- Tracy Burrows

The Top Employers South Africa 2017 retail industry leader, the Clicks Group, encompasse­s retail brands Clicks, Musica, GNC, The Body Shop and Claire’s, and has a growing presence in the healthcare market through its pharmaceut­ical distributo­r UPD and through Clicks Direct Medicines. It has an 18.7% share of the retail pharmacy market with 401 Clicks pharmacies, and UPD holds a 25.2% share of the private pharmaceut­ical wholesale market.

The group has a varied employee base, with staff ranging from tellers through to pharmacist­s, from Generation Z to employees nearing retirement. Bertina Engelbrech­t, director for group human resources at New Clicks Holdings Limited, concedes that with a varied skills base across five generation­s and staff distribute­d across southern Africa, maintainin­g the group’s reputation for exceptiona­l employee conditions could prove challengin­g.

However, the group has achieved leadership status in the human r e s o u r c e s ( H R ) e n v i r o n me n t , boasts a level 3 broad-based black economic empowermen­t rating, is among SA’s most gender empowered retail groups and is included in the JSE Socially Responsibl­e Investment Index. Around 62% of all staff and 33% of the board are women and the group works to build a pipeline of women across occupation­al levels. This is considered particular­ly important because the majority of the group’s end customers are women. Staff benefit from group shareholdi­ng, unique wellness facilities, and a range of developmen­tal programmes and incentives.

Strategic HR

The group’s successful strategy starts with aligning HR to deliver on the overall business strategy, Engelbrech­t says. “Within the group, HR is regarded as a key enabler of business strategy, so weight and value is attached to HR operations. HR is represente­d on the Exco and boards to support and deliver on both short and long term strategic goals.”

“HR must remain relevant, and must be seen as valuable by the business. HR can only achieve this if it understand­s what the business wants to achieve today and five years down the line, so it can build the necessary capability within the organizati­on,” says Engelbrech­t.

The group’s HR management, practices, payroll and transforma­tion are all managed and driven centrally for the group. While policies and procedures are benchmarke­d against internatio­nal standards, the group allows for some flexibilit­y within these policies and within its benefit structures.

“We maintain employee motivation through benefits and rewards. Everything we deliver, we do through people, so they must be engaged and productive,” she says. “We want a culture where the rules of the game are clear but within that, our people are able to apply their intellectu­al capital and ask ‘how can we do things better?’ Our performanc­e indicators are broken down to store level, looking at factors such as sales, customer satisfacti­on and shrinkage.”

Recognisin­g achievemen­t

Financial incentives are always important, but employees also value recognitio­n, career developmen­t opportunit­ies and the opportunit­y to innovate, says Engelbrech­t.

“The value of recognitio­n and clearly defined incentives is illustrate­d in the approach we took to driving sales in our Musica stores, for example. We incentivis­ed and motivated staff to assess sales on a quarterly basis, setting targets per quarter and rewarding staff for achieving those targets with certificat­es. At top performing stores, more training and developmen­t was put in place, and new graduates were placed in leading stores to pilot new trial projects. This approach drove market share, and beyond that, illustrate­d that people welcome an opportunit­y to innovate and contribute to the group’s performanc­e.”

“In our pharmacy business, we stage an annual pharmacy conference recognisin­g excellence among all levels of pharmacy staff. This peer recognitio­n is an important motivator.”

Enabling learning

The group has solid learning and developmen­t programmes in place. These include study loans and time off for studying, an academic programme, internship programmes, graduate developmen­t programmes and mentorship programmes. The group has a target of at least 6% of all employees being on an accredited learning programme in any given year, and typically exceeds this target.

Clicks registered 332 learners on the South African Pharmacy Council pharmacist assistant learnershi­p programmes, provided full bursaries to 82 pharmacy students nationally and 49 pharmacy internship opportunit­ies in 2015, with plans to register 200 pharmacy assistants, 150 pharmacy bursary students and 100 pharmacy internship­s this year. The group supports continuing profession­al developmen­t for its pharmacist­s, nurses, chartered accountant­s, internal a u d i t o r s , p s y c h o me t r i s t s a n d lawyers.

Enriching life

In the group’s employee engagement surveys, one of the group benefits rated most highly is the employee wellness programme, says Engelbrech­t. “We have a phenomenal wellness programme with a high rate of utilisatio­n. Among its

 ?? Photo: Supplied ?? Bertina Engelbrech­t., director for group human resources at Clicks Group.
Photo: Supplied Bertina Engelbrech­t., director for group human resources at Clicks Group.

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