“It’s right I’ve ended up in HR. I’ve found my home,” says Jo Webb, talent director at brand consultancy, The Marketing Store.
Like so many graduates before her, Webb went travelling when she finished her studies. But unlike most graduates, she ended up creating a successful business while on her travels.
The fact that she’d set up her own business and successfully negotiated with some big name clients such as the Holiday Inn gave her immense confidence, however. “It taught me how to sell to companies and that I liked working with people, so I thought that PR would be a good career,” Webb says.
But she began to get itchy feet again. “I got to the stage where I felt I’d done enough in agencies. In agencies, you only get so close to the client and I wanted to get under the skin of a company and so I wanted to go in-house. So I left Workstation without a job,” she says.
It wasn’t the first time in her career that Webb had left a company without having had a new position lined up, but she’d always felt confident that something else would come along. Luckily, her instincts proved correct.
It was her next role at AKQA, a 250-strong digital “ideas” agency, however, where everything began to click into place. Webb started in a recruitment role, but within three months was made head of HR.
“I said ‘no’ to the job three times because I didn’t have the experience,” she remembers. But she eventually relented, recognising that in the creative industries having an understanding of the business counted for more than knowing the HR handbook.
“I took it on as a challenge and it was challenging beyond belief! There were three or four people in HR, but I ended up leading them by default almost, because I had more experience in number of years,” Webb notes.
During her time there, employee numbers swelled from 250 to 450 and offices were opened in Berlin and Amsterdam, which gave her an opportunity to learn and grow with the company.
Since joining a year ago, she has concentrated on setting up a dedicated recruitment department focused on enhancing The Marketing Store’s brand in a bid to attract top-class candidates. And this emphasis on direct recruitment has enabled her to reduce overall recruitment costs in the process, Webb believes.
Her key challenge over the year ahead, however, is to encourage the development of a performance management culture in order to both help people improve their performance if it falls below expectations and also recognise those that are exceeding them.
While it may have taken her a while to find her niche, Webb had always known that she wanted to work with people. So her risks paid off and the experience gained along the way has proved invaluable.
Who do you admire most and why?
Cheesy as it might sound, my parents, I guess! But also lots of sports stars and those that triumph in face of adversity (for example, Prince Harry walking with the wounded).
What’s your most hated buzzword?
I generally don’t really like buzzwords, although we all fall in to trap of using them. I particularly detest ‘low hanging fruit’, which is more of a buzz phrase really. But in HR terms, I’ve never really liked ‘personnel’ because it gives the idea of administrative HR and so little more than keeping records.
What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?
‘Be – Do – Get’. Be the person you want to be by acting in that way and doing the things that they would do….
How do you relax?
Sport – either watching it or playing it as well as relaxing with friends and family.