HR Leader of the Year tells all

How an Alberta-based HR initiative caught the attention of national judges and won Sherri Wright-Schwietz industry recognition

How an Alberta-based HR initiative caught the attention of national judges and won Sherri Wright-Schwietz industry recognition.

When Sherri Wright-Schwietz heard her named called at the Canadian HR Awards Gala in Toronto, she was in shock.

"On the walk up, I kept thinking to myself, did they say the wrong name?" says Wright-Schwietz, Head of Talent and Mastery for ATB Investor Services, the wealth management arm of Alberta-based ATB Financial.

"When the presenter handed me the award I said, 'Are you sure?' She showed me the piece of paper and asked me if that was my name. I said, 'Yeah.' So she said, ‘Make a speech!’”

Wright-Schwietz claimed the Canadian HR Leader of the Year award for her work to champion transformative initiatives, implement new or improve existing strategies and demonstrate leadership through staff training and development. Wright-Schwietz edged out finalists from seven other organizations across Canada for the award.

"For me, it was a huge, proud moment for ATB and Alberta," says Wright-Schwietz. "We never get the big kudos nationally. We're just this little company doing these amazing things, but nobody knows. For everybody in Toronto to be talking about ATB is pretty special. This award represents all the great work at ATB and it's a moment for all of us."

Of the initiatives she's worked on, Wright-Schwietz is most proud of ATB's Workplace 2.0, which created a flexible work environment for team members, including when and where they do their jobs. ATB team members are actually encouraged to work from home if that's what best suits their lifestyle.

"Workplace 2.0 transformed ATB into a results-focused environment with self-managed flexible work hours and locations," says Chris Turchansky, President of ATB Investor Services. "The empowerment and autonomy our team members now enjoy has vastly increased overall employee engagement and productivity."

Wright-Schwietz's work has had a ripple effect throughout the entire organization, says Lorne Rubis, ATB Financial's Chief People Officer.

"Sherri's passion for innovation and linking the right and left brain learning is something I appreciate," says Rubis. "Not only is she an exceptional human resources professional, she's a respected and innovative business leader."

Wright-Schwietz isn't about to rest on her laurels. She's ready to tackle human resources issues she feels are about to become prominent in the very near future, such as addressing workplace bullying and evolving flexible work environments for the next generation of employees.

"How they interact, how they do their work, how they form teams, will be completely different from the current generation," says Wright-Schwietz. "We're just going to have to be so different in our thinking going forward. ‘One size fits all' does not work."

More like this:
Calls for TSX-listed companies to improve diversity
Is “Sky to Ground” thinking the way forward?
Can you dock pay on election-day? 

Recent articles & video

Mercado Libre to hire about 18,000 people: reports

'Terrifying' trend: Over 11 million malware attacks recorded globally in past 4 years

AI may speed up recruitment – but it won’t get any easier

Where are the best destinations for remote workers in 2024?

Most Read Articles

Remote work to blame for Nike's innovation slowdown, says CEO

McKinsey & Co. to lay off over 300 employees: reports

Novartis to cut over 600 jobs amid global restructuring