Unfortunately, not every good HR practitioner will make it as an HR consultant. Be prepared for some brutal honesty in this section. You’ll need a fair number of the following competencies to make it. We didn’t include the obvious ones, such as communication and writing skills. These are a little off the beaten track and not ones that you’ll find in a consulting text book.
Tolerance for risk & ambiguity: If you need a strong routine and regular patterns of work and a regular income, stop now. HR consulting is not for you.
Self-confidence: (if you don’t have this, it’s probably a deal breaker) Your most important function is to influence people who don’t know what they don’t know. You can’t do that without self-confidence. You’ll need a thick skin, grit, ability to be an island, and be sure of yourself in order to convey competence, wisdom and know-how. You’ll need to be comfortable setting the structure, not following it. Otherwise, your clients and their staff will smell the fear and may just eat your for breakfast!
Ability to dumb it down: You’ll need the ability to simplify complex HR issues or solutions in a way that everyone can understand them. If your PowerPoint presentation slides are jam packed with text, you may not have this skill set.
Builder of relationships: You’ll need to be able to develop strong trusting relationships with managers, staff, and senior management. Even if you don’t side with a particular individual on a particular issue, if you build strong relationships and trust, you’ll be known as someone who does the right thing — even when it’s not popular.
Wearer of multiple hats – juggler: You have brilliant organizational skills. You juggle tasks, work strange hours, travel at short notice and produce great work to challenging deadlines without support. You’re a strong project manager – read: herder of people who don’t always support HR!
Understand who your client is: Here’s the thing about clients. A client isn’t a person. It’s not the CEO, the staff, the senior management team. Your client is this ‘thing’ or entity you want to see succeed. It’s your client’s bottom line - be it profit for shareholders or higher grants for the community. You’ll need to be fully invested in that bottom line success. This competency is another way of saying that you really care about your client, but it’s important to remember that it doesn’t have a face.
Practical: You’re pragmatic. You’re resourceful. You’re not a binder lady who points to statutes and HR text books. Some of that stuff just doesn’t translate into the real world and sometimes doesn’t result in workable solutions for clients.
Professional | tight lips: The truth is that this one is hard to do — no matter how professional you are — because we’re all human. Being an HR consultant means holding yourself to a high standard. Sometimes that means that you can’t become buddies with someone on the senior management team or with the receptionist who loves cats just as much as you do. In this role, we also see and hear a lot and it’s essential that we don’t inappropriately share information with others. Our clients need to trust us.
Listening skills: Sounds cliché, but this one is important. You’ll need to leave your ego at the door and park the urge to be the first one with the best answer. Before solutions can be discovered, problems need to be fully understood. In order to be successful as an HR consultant, we need to listen carefully and understand. 2 ears, one mouth.
We’ll also meet different people with unique characteristics on client sites. Some will be verbose, others reticent. Having strong listening skills will encourage all types to talk freely. This leads to more information sharing which, in the end, is an important result given that our roles are often tasked with making quick judgments.
Focus | discipline: Yes, you’ll have more freedom as an HR consultant. But there will also be a lot more scrutiny on results and deliverables. You’ll have to work hard and prove your value every time you submit your bill. That can only be done with focus and discipline.