We have measured data in HR for decades, but, to be blunt, much of it has been navel-gazing. We measure how well we are doing what we do, but don’t spend enough analytical energy on what HR should do to help the business.
Efficiency and effectiveness measures are helpful, but they will not set your CEO on fire. All the buzz about “aligning to the business” has done little but point out the difference between what CEOs want from HR and what HR does (Figure 1).
Talent analytics will change the way HR does business, and soon. The scarcity of talent, competitive pressures, and the need to align people to the business are driving expectations for CHROs to make better decisions based on data. Investment in analytics is the next move for HR, and it will change the way their companies manage people.
Four trends changed what is possible in people analytics.
Most of the people we work with are not ready for advanced analytics -- they are just getting better at reporting. You can gauge where you are by comparing what you do now to our modification of Jac Fitz-Enz’s levels of analytics (Figure 2).
There is no need to jump into advanced analytics today to create impact. Use the tools you have today. Making the move now will lay the groundwork to grow your capability, and in what may seem like no time, you will answer questions like these:
When we speak of creating an analytics team, you may think of data experts, analysts, and functional experts. They are important -- but first, you need a powerful executive team. Ally yourself with Marketing and Finance. Not only do they have analytical experience, they control a lot of resources.
Marketing has been using predictive analytics for twenty years or more. Effective marketers refined their analytics to where they can provide an individual experience to people in an audience of millions. It creates possibilities for adaptation to the employee experience that were not possible just a few years ago. The techniques they use in managing the customer life cycle will help form the basis for managing the employee life cycle. If anyone knows how to use analytics to predict human behavior, Marketing does.
Your CFO has been predictive analytics for decades to optimize the ROI of capital investments, but until recently CFOs had difficulty quantifying human capital. They viewed people only as an expense. That perception is transforming, and now, Finance executives want to quantify both the cost and contribution of the workforce.
If your CFO doesn’t think way yet, try a simple statement of value. What creates value in an organization is how people interact with machines, processes, information, and each other. So, without people, the only value capital assets have is their resale value. Through analytics, we can measure the value of human capital, and we can influence its contribution.[1]
Before you begin these conversations, we recommend a little reading. Making Human Capital Analytics Work: Measuring the ROI of Human Capital Processes by Jack and Patricia Putnam Phillips, written for business people, will give you a solid grounding. The authors worked with Jac Fitz-Enz, whom we know as the father of HR metrics.
Once your executive team in on board, the next steps are straightforward:
One last bit of advice: stop trying to prove HR’s value to the business. Instead, increase the value of the business. Two things of which we are sure: first, once you do, you will be asked to repeat; second, you will find resources easier to obtain.
References :
a) [1] Phillips, Jack and Patricia Pulliam Phillips. Making Human Capital Analytics Work: Measuring the ROI of Human Capital Processes. McGraw-Hill Education. 2015
b) Survey Study :
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