Erika Broadwater – An experienced Talent Acquisition leader positively impacting talent analytics through improved hiring strategies.
The 10 Most Revolutionary Black Corporate Leaders in 2023
There are many different tactics for how to
be successful in life, but the strategy that works best for you may depend on
your view of success itself. There is no single right way to be successful.
What works for you might not work for someone else. Erika Broadwater, National President
of the National Association of African Americans in Human Ressources states that her
definition of success is the result of those who have led are now leading
others. She has always felt that there are good leaders, great leaders, and
successful leaders. “A good leader is one you want to work for; a great leader
is one you want to follow; a successful leader has been pushed beyond their own
limits,” she says.
Taking a step of faith in the
competitive industry of talent acquisition
Erika’s journey began almost 30 years ago as a talent liaison – in those days there was no internet or online job posting,
recruiting strategies, or applicant tracking systems. There were job ads in
newspapers and magazines, where candidates would walk into your office and
complete a (paper)employment application. Since then, she has evolved to AI
doing most of the legwork for them and their work has become more complex.
“I simply love working with people; it’s
just that simple,” she says. She believes that Talent Acquisition is one of the
best sides of Human Resources because she gets to meet people from all
backgrounds, all around the world, and learn multiple skills just by
interviewing candidates and intake calls with line managers. “Think about it;
in TA, we have to know every unique job profile, business purposes and goals,
industry talent trends, salary indexes, developing recruiting strategies,
analyzing talent data, and being company ambassadors – all while selling
careers to candidates and candidates to hiring managers. We wear so many hats
in TA, whereas other sides of HR are very specialized (like Compensation &
Benefits, Payroll, and Employee Relations). We work hard and we have fun, and
best of all, we don’t ever have to terminate an employee,”
explains Erika.
Challenges are the roadblocks to
success.
Without making any assumptions about how
she is seen by others with the obvious fact that she is a single Black woman in
a white-dominated field of work – Erika has had many stereotypical challenges
to overcome. Most recently, and this is not the first time, she has felt the
sting of discrimination. The way she overcomes her challenges, in any form, is
by being a woman of Faith. “I put my God before everything I do, and Christ in front of every day,”
she states. Being grounded in her faith has allowed her to focus on the
important things in her life and her career – that’s how Erika
stepped into her professional journey, and that’s where she has
remained.
National Association of African Americans in Human Ressources.
Erika strongly believes that NAAAHR is part
of her life – they are a family. To make it clear, her professional career is
the Head of North America Talent Acquisition for a global health and hygiene
company. Her other career life is (currently) the National President of the
National Association of African Americans in Human Resources. They are
a not-for-profit organization, and all of their roles (at the
Chapter level and National level) are volunteerism.
She began as the first Delaware State
Chapter President in 2011. For six consecutive years, she led the Chapter with
tremendous success and growth year over year. She was then promoted to the
National Board of Directors as the SVP of Membership and remained in that role
for a year. Then in 2019, Erika was prompted again and appointed the National
President.
Artificial Intelligence has taken Talent
Acquisition to a whole other level. “As I have built-in TA Best Practices in
all of my strategies (DEBI, Recruitment and Retention, Executive Consulting,
etc.) AI has been a focal point. I don’t claim to be the
only TA leader with AI redirecting the way our teams work, but I have made a
point of ensuring AI is not taking over the work of my teams and my practices,”
she says. As intelligent as technology is, she has been building up her teams
to be more intelligent by ways of being Talent Advisors and industry
specialists. Talent Acquisition can be generalized in that they support all
lines of business and functional areas. But a Talent Advisor combines Talent
Acquisition and Artificial Intelligence to be more strategic and more
specialized. That’s the secret sauce.
Redefining the industry with innovative ideas
Before there was a “Black Lives Matter” and “Me Too Movement”, Erika
became heavily involved in Affirmative Action, Equal Employment, and Diversity
& Inclusion. In the early stages, she found that there was so much more that
needed to be done and addressed; therefore, she built a model that is now
called “DEBI” – Diversity, Equity, Belonging, and
Inclusion. “I began this work over 12 years ago and have met with Company
Presidents, Executives, and Global Leaders, to educate, strategize and
implement DEBI into the DNA of their companies. It allows companies to
incorporate better cultural values beyond a D&I statement, improve retentions and employée
engagement, and truly be or become a “great place to work”, have accountability by all (not just senior
leaders), and drive stakeholder engagement; just to name a few,” explains
Erika.
Within the structure of DEBI comes five (5)
“A’s” – Awareness,
Acceptance, Acknowledgement, Accountability, and Action. The 5-A structure
allows companies to be more intentional about the changes needed internally,
improve external partner relationships, and community advocacy, and increase
employee performance with deliberate calls to action. It also fosters better
collaboration and communication – which are usually the leading “négatives” on
Pulse or Employee Surveys.
The best recognition received as a
leader.
Erika was mentored by a Black female
business owner who started a Recruiting Agency and Executive Consulting Firm
out of Texas. She needed a representative in Delaware, and she was introduced
to her by a mutual friend. She taught her everything she needed to know about
recruiting, talent acquisition, leadership, business partnership, and
management. Again, that was almost 30 years ago, and Erika constantly pays
homage to her for what she invested in her as a young professional.
Throughout her career, she has obtained
nine (9) certifications, and seven (7) HR awards, listed in the 2010 Global
Directory of Who’s Who in Human Resources publication
named the DE&I Champion at three (3) companies she works (ed) for, listed
in the 2021 HR Tech Top 100 Influencers, and several more. “But honestly, the
recognition as a leader that means the most to me is the title my children have
given me “Momager”. As they
are both now young adults and moving quickly through their careers, they
watched my journey from a distance and have always respected the work I do; to
the point where they have been right by my side at conferences and events,
being introduced to industry leaders who look just like them and understand
there are no goals out of their reach. Momager is the best recognition I could
ever receive as their leader,” she says.
Responsibilities as the National
President of NAAAHR
Being the National Président is quite a heavyweight;
one that Erika says she may have even taken for granted while she was the
Delaware State Chapter President. She has to always think of “strategy” in every decision she makes or task she completes. She has
to be a leader by influence and not by dictatorship. Erika is responsible for
building, cultivating, and mastering the art of partnership management. She is
also responsible for 35 US Chapters (including USVI and Hawaii, expanding the
organization globally (UK, Africa, Canada, Puerto Rico, and Jamaica over the
next 3 years, then parts of Europe thereafter).
“I am requested on as an HR and DE&I
Consultant, and a Keynote and Conference Speaker,” she says. Erika is a member
of the Office of the Chairman and leads the Executive Board of Directors. And
along with the Chairman, she is the face and spokesperson for the organization
on a National and Global level.
Maintaining a work-life balance
Erika states that her time is always split
between her family, career, and her organization. Her family always comes first
and with their support, she claims that this is an easy priority. Her
professional career as the Head of North America Talent Acquisition comes
second. Then is her role with NAAAHR, her passion. She states that
the work that she does in her professional career and passionate career both
keep her motivated – because she enjoys what she does.
“I simply love working with people. Talent
Acquisition, DEBI, and all therein give me energy, purpose, drive, and vision.
I always like to see bigger and better ways of doing things – hereto in my
personal life with my family, my professional career, and my passion,” she
exclaims. Her personal goal is to spend the next ten years leaving a legacy in
this industry and her Professional career so that her children’s children will
have better career opportunities and choices than what she had 30 years ago.
Her message for aspiring business leaders is to think beyond your tomorrow – think about the work you’re doing today and what it will look like years from now. Are you making an impact, are you driving sustainable change, and are you leaving a legacy? “I used to teach on leaving a legacy, using persons in the Bible as examples. What will be said about you 2000 years from now!” states Erika.