HR practitioners know the value of having a varied CV.
Hughes has been a footballer and Manchester United coach, sports psychologist, HR director, author, youth club leader, public speaker and consultant. Earlier this month, he was also awarded a professorship by Manchester Metropolitan University for his contribution to the business world as a writer and speaker.
Among this long list of achievements, you may have spotted that Hughes was an HR Director. In fact, he spent eight years at Unilever, where he was responsible for turning round the fortunes of the UK’s oldest manufacturing site, the evocatively named Port Sunlight.
But his career began very differently. As a teenager, Hughes had been a promising footballer. He played for England Schoolboys but, even at that young age, knew that a career in the Beautiful Game wasn’t his dream. So Hughes worked for all of the coaching badges that he could and subsequently joined Manchester United as a coach.
His girlfriend at the time was working in HR and suggested that he give it a go. So, in his mid-20s, Hughes took the unusual step of jumping from the world of professional football to the corporate HR environment of Unilever.
Despite experiencing impostor syndrome, Hughes rose quickly through Unilever’s ranks. During his time at Port Sunlight, he managed to turn the factory around from languishing in the bottom three of the firm’s 100 European plants when he started to becoming one of the top five by the time he left, greatly reducing absence figures and improving productivity in the process.
But not content with being on an upward trajectory at Unilever, Hughes also started writing his first book entitled ‘Liquid Thinking’, which outlined the lessons and techniques that could be used to realise one’s ambitions – be they personal or professional.
But alongside these sporting and business greats, Hughes likewise interviewed the lads from the Port Sunlight factory about some of their own victories, which ranged from beating cancer to building their own house. In doing so, he showed how the techniques that they used were the same as those applied by the likes of Branson and Ali.
After multiple rejections from publishers, meanwhile, Hughes published the book himself and then went off to South Africa for 18 months as HR director. Back at home, however, his book had begun to gather momentum and he kept on receiving calls from companies asking him to come and help along with requests for public speaking.
In the end, the demands on his time grew to such an extent that he decided to leave Unilever and set up his own consultancy, Liquid Thinker, in 2006, the aim being to help companies develop inspiring leaders and thinkers and instigate change.
Hughes describes the four pillars of emotional intelligence as creating an environment where people feel involved, where they are in control, where they feel emotionally safe and where they feel they belong. “What we teach in business and sport is that if you chose to ignore these responses, then you get ‘chimp brain’. Your chimp brain basically has the choice of freeze, flight or fright,” he says.
These reactions translate into various behaviours – ‘flight’ will appear as increased absences and attrition, ‘freeze’ as apathy and ‘fight’ as a sarcastic, aggressive and abrasive workforce. “When I go to conferences, I want to see where people sit – if they want to sit at the back, that’s chimp brain telling them they want flight,” Hughes notes.
He remembers one chief executive who talked about the apathy of his staff because the company suggestion box was always empty. “My answer was that they are giving you loads of feedback – that silence should be deafening you. They don’t trust you or the environment,” Hughes says.
So how do you go about building that trust? At Port Sunlight, factory workers were offered the chance to dedicate one day each month to a project aimed at tackling a frustrating work issue or that enabled them to do something more effectively.
“Another team ended up negotiating with their own trade union to resolve an issue that had been going on for seven years about the high level of temporary staff,” recalls Hughes.
The problem for many companies is that, because they move so fast, this is exactly what they do – miss the bleedin’ obvious. He illustrates the point with a leaf taken out of former Tesco boss Sir Terry Leahy’s book.
Hughes’ latest book may just have been out for a couple of weeks, but he is not resting on his laurels. He is already working on the next boxing biography with his dad as well as another leadership book, which is focusing on the teaching profession.
While the fantasy of many a teenage boy is to play professional football and Hughes came pretty close to living that dream, ultimately it was not his. Instead he was smart enough to realise that you’ve got to follow your own path. And that meant being and remaining true to himself.
And finally…
Bill Sweetenham, who used to coach the British swimming team as he was responsible for changing some deep-rooted problems in British swimming and stuck to his guns in the face of adversity.
Also Tony Smith, who is an ex England Rugby league coach and now coaches the Warrington Wolves’ as he’s a great man who just happens to be a coach.
What buzzwords do you hate?
‘Touching base’ and people ‘bringing their A game’.
What’s the best piece of advice you’ve been given?
Richard Branson said: “You can never fail at anything – you can only learn from the experience.”
How do you relax?
I write.