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Deanie Ilukowicz headshot

Deanie Ilukowicz

Chief People Officer

TPI Composites, Inc.

Episode 285

Beyond Policy: HR's New Role in Driving Strategic Business Growth

0:0018:51

Current chapter: Covering monthly expenses is the number one concern for employees in 2024

Built By PeopleBuilt By People
Podcast

March 3, 2025 · 18:51

Strategic HRChange ManagementGlobal HR LeadershipCareer Development

Thesis

HR must be a strategic driver of business outcomes, deeply understanding and solving real-world business problems rather than being purely policy-driven. This involves empowering individuals through intentional choices, continuous learning from experiences, and consistent personal renewal to prevent burnout and foster growth, especially during major transformations.

Show notes

Title: Deane Ilukowicz, Chief People Officer at TPI Composites, Inc. Date: Mon, 03 Mar 2025 10:31:00 GMT Duration: 00:18:51 Link: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/previ/episodes/Deane-Ilukowicz--Chief-People-Officer-at-TPI-Composites--Inc-e2v5dvc GUID: 892c8c60-6d6c-4f7d-a85c-c40f3ec1a3b9 ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

HR Leadership Journey and Strategies with Deane Ilukowicz.

In this episode of the Built by People podcast sponsored by Previ, host Dave D'Angelo welcomes Deane, the Chief People Officer at TPI Composites.

Deane shares her unique career journey from operations to HR, the significance of integrating business strategy with people strategy, and the concept of the 'career energy triangle.'

She also talks about effective communication during major transformations, building an inclusive culture across global teams, and offers practical advice for HR leaders to provide consultative advice and build trusting relationships within the business.

00:00 Introduction to the Built by People Podcast

00:16 Sponsor Message from Previ

00:44 Guest Introduction: Deane

00:49 Deane's Career Journey

06:12 Transition from Operations to HR

07:42 Strategic HR Leadership

09:45 The Career Energy Triangle

13:23 Leading HR Through Major Business Transformations

15:45 Building an Inclusive Culture at TPI Composites

17:26 Parting Advice for HR Leaders

18:43 Closing Remarks

What you'll take away

  1. 1Anchor people strategy to business strategy, ensuring HR solutions solve real-world business problems and proactively drive business outcomes.
  2. 2Practice flexibility with HR policies (beyond non-negotiables) to adapt to business needs and retain critical talent, making exceptions where appropriate for top performers.
  3. 3Manage career energy by making intentional choices, seeking challenging experiences for growth, and prioritizing personal renewal, which may not always mean rest.
  4. 4During major business transformations like IPOs, prioritize intentional communication by sharing what is known, when it's known, in the most thoughtful and engaging way possible, even with information restrictions.
  5. 5Build inclusive cultures in global workforces through transparency, empathy, clear expectations, and creating platforms where all voices are heard, fostering a sense of belonging.

What most organizations get wrong

  • Challenges the concept of 'work-life balance,' advocating instead for 'choices' with intentional awareness of their consequences.
  • Pushes back on HR professionals being 'too policy-driven,' urging them to prioritize understanding and solving business problems over strict policy adherence.
  • Suggests that 'renewal doesn't have to mean rest,' emphasizing physical activity and other non-rest activities for recharging one's energy.

In Deanie's words

I tend to approach HR as a driver of that business outcome, and how do we align the people function as not just the people function, but really the driver of how we're going to achieve the business strategy.

This highlights her core philosophy of HR as a strategic business partner rather than a purely administrative function.

I'm one of the, the lone voices out here that says I don't believe in work-life balance. I believe in choices, right?

This is a contrarian perspective on a widely discussed topic, emphasizing intentional decision-making over an elusive balance.

My general mantra about communication is we communicate what we know, when we know it, in the most thoughtful and engaging way possible.

This provides a concise and practical guiding principle for communication during complex organizational changes.

I tell HR people, I tell leaders all the time that I'm about to give you this burden of knowledge. That now you have to tuck away.

This quote perfectly captures the challenge of navigating sensitive information during transformations like an IPO.

I think inclusion or belonging also starts with listening and finding a platform to ensure that all voices are heard.

This emphasizes the foundational role of active listening and creating safe spaces for diverse perspectives in fostering inclusion.

But to pause the conversation and really listen to what problem the leader is trying to solve is going to help you understand and maybe think through different options to solve a problem than just jumping to, no, you can't do that.

This advice encourages HR leaders to be consultative problem-solvers rather than gatekeepers of policy, building trust and engagement.

The problems this episode addresses

  • Companies struggle when HR is 'too policy-driven,' leading to missed opportunities for talent retention or business adaptation (e.g., losing a top performer due to strict compensation or remote work policies).
  • During major business changes (like IPOs or M&A), organizations face challenges in communicating effectively and transparently without oversharing sensitive information, leading to potential talent flight or disengagement.
  • Employees (especially leaders) struggle to maintain career energy and avoid burnout without intentional strategies for 'renewal' and understanding the consequences of their 'choices.'
  • Large, global workforces face the challenge of fostering genuine inclusion and ensuring 'all voices are heard' across diverse cultural contexts, which can impact engagement and feedback.
  • Business leaders often view HR as a reactive/administrative function rather than a strategic partner that drives business outcomes, making it hard for HR to be 'pulled in' to critical discussions.

In this episode

Covering monthly expenses is the number one concern for employees in 2024

Built by People

Denia Lukwitz is currently the Chief People Officer at TPI Composites

Inspiring leaders: Denia Lukwitz's story

Deanna says it's crucial for HR professionals to understand business first

Deanna and Tom: People Strategy

Dana says many HR professionals can be too policy-driven

Are HR Policies Too Policy-?

Deena says choices, experiences and renewal play a role in career energy

The Career Energy Triangula

On the third side, you have renewal. For me, renewal is physical activity

The 3 Ps of Career Renewal

Having gone through IPOs and also significant organizational changes, what have you learned

Leading HR Through Major Business Transformations

With TPI Composites' global workforce of 13,000 employees

TPI Composites CEO on Building an Inclusive Culture

Deanie, what parting advice would you like to share with our audience

A Final Word from Deanie Jones

Topics covered

Organizations and entities mentioned

Full transcript

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