âItâs been a massive opportunity for meâI donât know what would have happened if Iâd have done something with linguistics!â Britta Werner, Director and HR team member at Unicorn Grocery speaks to us about developing a career in HR Leadership.
As part of our commitment to supporting candidates to develop fulfilling careers, weâve invited some HR Leaders to share the secrets of their success. This week, we had a great conversation with Britta Werner at Unicorn Grocery, who began her career as a Co-operative Grocer before becoming a full-time member and director, joining the HR team, and serving as Non-Executive Director and Vice Chair for Co-operatives UK, which she performed alongside her current roles until June 2019. Can you tell us how you got into HR and why? In my previous life, I studied linguistics. I moved to the UK from Germany, and when I finished my BA and MA in Linguistics at the University of Manchester, I kind of ended up working at UnicornâI was vegan, and itâs a vegan shop, so it was nice. I quickly realised they had a very different way of doing business, so I applied to be a memberâa full-time employee. I really liked that kind of flat structure; people respect each other; there isnât a managing director looking down on you, and there are no managers that just happen to be there because theyâve worked there long enough. The really good people and mutual respect really stuck out for me. After a year of being a full-time member, I started doing the staff rotas and all those kinds of things. There was an internal vacancy for HR, and I applied and got the job. I ended up doing a CIPD college course, and then a couple of years later I did my Masters in Human Resource Management and started doing more strategic stuff at Unicorn. Weâre still a smaller businessâweâve got around 90 employees, 70 of those are permanent members of the team âso you do end up doing a bit of everything; thereâs four of us in HR, but none of us are doing it full-time. It sounds really cheesy, but I wanted to get into HR because Iâm a natural people person. Iâm quite good at relating to people and understanding what people are about. I definitely feel I have the empathy you need to have, and Iâm non-judgemental, so it really appealed to me. Because I was doing all the rotas and things beforehand that definitely went into HR territory, it was kind of a natural progression. I got into the work with Co-operatives UK because a founding member of Unicorn Grocery contacted me and asked if I would be interested in standing for the Worker Co-op Council, which is a kind of sounding board organized by Co-operatives UK. I always like to challenge myself and find different opportunities, so I stood for that position and got elected. I did that for quite a few years, and it was really interestingâ doing it, you meet not only people from the UK, but all over the world. That really supplemented my HR experience as well, because doing HR in a worker co-op is very different; not just in terms of things like employment law, but all the softer skills you need. I organised a worker co-op HR network, and weâve done a couple of events and got people together from different worker co-ops in the UK. Can you tell me about the prevalent challenges that youâre seeing across the co-operative and HR sectors? One of the biggest ones for me is performance management. It can really affect co-operatives, whether thatâs because of the lack of incentive in flat pay, or itâs just not what people want to do. The flat structure of most worker co-operatives can make managing really challenging. The absence of line management has a lot of positives, but it can be difficult. For example, when you have a line manager in an office, they can pick up if youâre not feeling right or your performance is off, but in a worker co-op, it kind of gets a bit lost, and sometimes things like that can get found a bit too late. Everyone has times when they need a bit of managingâfor example, you might have trouble at home or whateverâand not having that monitoring can be quite difficult for the individual, because a lot of people donât want to run to HR and say theyâve had an argument with their boyfriend or something. At Unicorn, weâre really good at the bigger picture leadership and strategyâeveryone has the opportunity to take that leadership role in different areasâbut itâs the smaller things that can be more of a challenge. What advice would you give someone who was either looking to follow in your footsteps or just getting started in their HR career? If youâre looking to go into a co-op, especially a smaller worker co-op, do a basic college course. It will give you a bit more confidence that you know what youâre doing, and people will see that youâre making an effort and actually trying to get qualified. People think HR is just âpeople stuffâ and that anyone can do it, but if you want to do it well, you have to make that effort. Working in a co-op, and in a worker co-op especially, you have to manage yourself quite a bit, and a course will also help with that. Theyâre not expensive, and you can even do them online. Unicorn and other worker co-ops provide a massive opportunity. A lot of people think youâre just working in a shop, but the business skills and the understanding you learn from a business like this are absolutely unique. Itâs been a massive opportunity for meâI donât know what would have happened if Iâd have done something with linguistics! You can make it as little or as big as you want to; if you just want to work in a shop, you can do that, but thereâs so many opportunities connected with that. Britta has been working as a Unicorn Grocer, Member, Director, and as part of Unicornâs HR team since 2004, and provides support for HR teams