Natalie Rast is a people-first leader and the former Director of People Operations at an email creation platform. She also has the distinction of being named a 2nd Annual People Pioneer, honoring her work as a forward-thinking HR leader who has driven impact with people-first strategies. We sat down with her to discuss what it takes to build a people-first People program.
Natalie Rast: I oversaw the full employee lifecycle for the US team. We had a unique structure in which I had a peer as Head of People in Latin America. So we worked really closely to provide a consistent and inclusive employee experience across the different countries in which we operated.
NR: I was the first People person in the US, so that definitely shaped my onboarding experience. Re-examining values came up because throughout my interview process, I couldn’t tell if we had core values; they didn’t feel like they were at the forefront. To me, values are really the guiding foundation for everything related to culture and the employee experience. I wanted to be able – before I started any other work – to look at the employee lifecycle, figure out what was working well, determine what to change, and really understand and align our values. Values and DEIB are the driving foundation that you build everything else around. I therefore didn’t want to think about hiring, onboarding, separation planning, or anything like that before we were aligned on our core foundation.
NR: After chatting with the CEO when I started, I found out the company did have values; there were nine at the time. We did a little test and no one at the company could name all of them. We wanted to capitalize on the moment, so I started around the Thanksgiving holiday with a goal to launch them in the New Year. We asked the following questions to make sure we moved with speed, but not lose integrity in the process:
We then sent out a survey to our workforce to get their voice and input about their employee experience. We then carved out a three hour session to review the feedback and nail down our core values. From there, the CEO and I met a few more times and worked async with a task force of tenured employees to finalize what was important to the company and the people.
NR: It was amazing to roll them out! But the question is: how do you make them a part of everything you do versus just words on a wall? We decided to create a quarterly value focus program, and it just so happened that we ended up with four, so it works really well.
We’re also intentional about our actions and provide that intentional touch to each other and clients. And to really carry that mantra through the quarter, we do a values recognition program. These values are also embedded into the hiring process, specifically, with a culture interview that asks questions targeted to each of the four values. That lens is used to ensure the right folks are being brought onto the team.
NR:
NR: What I love about People Ops, and why I got into it, is because we spend so much of our time at work. If we’re not using it as a place to better ourselves – not just professionally, but personally – then what’s the point? I think about how much I’ve grown as an individual and have learned so much from what I do. It’s beautiful that I get to do this work every day, and help managers and employees figure out how to do that too. You need to have that guiding lens that being people-first really matters. Every decision you make not only impacts people, but potentially the organization’s bottom line as well. It’s important to think about short and long term effects, and if those decisions will ensure your people are promoters of your company.
Interested in even more lessons learned from senior HR leaders? Check out the full list of 2nd Annual People Pioneers and read more about the people-first initiatives they implemented to drive impact through creating a connected team, growing intentionally and sustainably, implementing wellness benefits, and much more.