Developing talent in South
Eastern Europe
By Expatica
While Central Eastern Europe is coming into its
own by realising the value of intellect in business, South Eastern Europe
continues to develop more slowly. Victoria Fine looks at what this means for
people managers working in the region.
While Central Eastern Europe is coming into its
own by realising the value of intellect in business, South Eastern Europe
continues to develop more slowly. The south remains a relatively tabula raza
compared to its northern counterpart, which can mean huge opportunities and huge
headaches for international managers.
Years of communism have left South Eastern Europe with few corporate structures,
said Nina Noeva, Bulgarian director of London-based SNM Solutions.
"Everything thing was state regulated and all people were paid almost equally,
so there was no corporate culture," Noeva said. "Years of that regime have a big
impact. There was no human relations system to encourage people to be more
active in the work place."
Central Eastern Europe has begun to find its
niche in western business through its core group of well-trained native managers
and corporate value of a highly educated populace.
As Central Eastern European countries find their footing in the EU and American
markets, local managers have begun to phase out their expatriate counterparts.
Private sector developing fastest
On the other hand, South Eastern Europe's
economic maturity remains several years behind their northern neighbours. While
these countries' economies continue to grow, they lack the north's level of
infrastructure and streamlined training, said Elena Platon, a Romanian
businesswoman with experience in both the public and private sectors.
"Everything is imported, [including] the
American model of doing business," Platon said.
"But in the private sector, there is a lot more
competition," which drives a higher level of development to sustain business
growth, she said.
"In the private sector, it moves much faster
and it changes much faster," which means foreign investors are much more likely
to find qualified nationals in management positions. But this is still more the
exception than the rule, Platon said.
The region has long been derided for its
rampant corruption and lack of infrastructure and legislation to deal with these
problems.
Slovenia takes the lead
Slovenia has for the most part conquered
corruption and other holdovers from communism, said Peter Szabo, Hungarian
country manager for SpenglerFox Executive Search & HR Consultancy, who travels
to the region regularly as a recruiter.
"Slovenia is a very little country, quite well organised, and well ahead of all
the new EU members, in economy, growth, stability, and currency," making it the
most developed of the southern European countries, Szabo said. "There will be a
bigger percentage of nationals in senior management than other central southern
European countries. Slovenia is not only striking out from the Balkans but also
from more advanced EU countries."
But for right now, Slovenia is the exception
and not the rule for South Eastern Europe, Szabo said.
Building the infrastructure
"With Balkan culture it takes a longer time for
many of the [administrative and legal] structures to be installed and used,"
said Szabo. The World Bank reports that
despite corruption and bribery easing up in EU transition countries over the
past five years, "judicial reform was often neglected in the early years of
transition, and corruption in courts does not appear to have fallen overall."
Countries are beginning to address this problem,
reports the World Bank. For example, Croatia has done so "through adopting
automated case management systems to improve efficiency and transparency."
Although transition countries are increasing
political accountability, reports the World Bank, "excessive immunities for
legislators - making Parliamentarians all but untouchable - remain a widespread
issue."
Serbia's development has been especially slow
due to political instability and slow reforms, Szabo said, making it difficult
to effectively establish international corporate presence there.
On a less extreme level, other parts of South
Eastern Europe, particularly Romania and Bulgaria, continue to use expatriate
managers in mid and high level management positions to install and moderate
structures of capitalist business.
"Start with an expatriate manager who will bring a team [of people] for finance,
administration marketing, and sales," he said. "In this way, expatriate managers
can start finding nationals to take over, but otherwise they have their own
people that they can motivate and travel with them."
A talent for languages
Expatriate managers will
have little problem communicating in the region as most South Eastern Europeans
know several languages, including English, French, Italian and German. But while
speaking is no problem, understanding South Eastern Europeans can be very
difficult for Western expatriates with no endemic understanding of the holdovers
of communism.
Importing Central Eastern European managers
into South Eastern Europe has become increasingly common, Szabo said. "If
someone is coming from a Central European country, it will be easier because
they're used to how these cultures function," he said.
"If a person who is working for [an international] company has proved him or
herself in local subsidiary like Poland or Hungary, this would be a quite wise
choice to promote him or her this way," said Szabo.
Source:
http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=165&story_id=32691
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