Tags
Administration
Benefits
Communication
Communication Programs
Compensation
Conflict & Dispute Resolution
Developing & Coaching Others
Employee Satisfaction/Engagement
Executive Coaching
HR Metrics & Measurement
HR Outsourcing
HRIS/ERP
Human Resources Management
Internal Corporate Communications
Labor Relations
Labor Trends
Leadership
Leadership Training & Development
Leading Others
Legal
Management
Motivating
Motivation
Organizational Development
Pay Strategies
Performance Management
Present Trends
Recognition
Retention
Staffing
Staffing and Recruitment
Structure & Organization
Talent
The HR Practitioner
Training
Training and Development
Trends
U.S. Based Legal Issues
Vision, Values & Mission
Work-Life Programs & Employee Assistance Programs - EAP
Workforce Acquisition
Workforce Management
Workforce Planning
Workplace Regulations
corporate learning
employee engagement
interpersonal communications
leadership competencies
leadership development
legislation
News
Onboarding Best Practices
Good Guy = Bad Manager :: Bad Guy = Good Manager. Is it a Myth?
Five Interview Tips for Winning Your First $100K+ Job
Base Pay Increases Remain Steady in 2007, Mercer Survey Finds
Online Overload: The Perfect Candidates Are Out There - If You Can Find Them
Cartus Global Survey Shows Trend to Shorter-Term International Relocation Assignments
New Survey Indicates Majority Plan to Postpone Retirement
What do You Mean My Company’s A Stepping Stone?
Rewards, Vacation and Perks Are Passé; Canadians Care Most About Cash
Do’s and Don’ts of Offshoring
Error: No such template "/hrDesign/network_profileHeader"!
Blogs / Send feedback
Help us to understand what's happening?
Reason
It's a fake news story
It's misleading, offensive or inappropriate
It should not be published here
It is spam
Your comment
More information
Security Code
5 Best-Practices for Successful Workforce Analytics
Created by
Dave Weisbeck
Content
Complexity in today’s workforce, new technology investments, economic pressures, talent as a competitive edge, aligning the people strategy with the business strategy and many other reasons are driving a change in HR to be information-savvy. This has turned workforce analytics to the hottest topic in the HR technology arena, but this change has also created confusion as to how best to proceed to make programs to implement workforce analytics successful.
#1. Begin with the end in mind.
It was fabulous advice when Stephan R. Covey detailed this in his book, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, and it remains great advice today and is especially relevant for workforce analytics projects. The challenge those implementing, or upgrading, analytics have to face is that analytics provides for many possible applications: deliver dashboards to executives, measure the most important HR metrics, create predictive models of future trends, improve turnover, and many more. Without a clear understanding of what you would like to measure, who will use the information, and what decisions will be made with the new analytics the risk becomes you fail to satisfy any one stakeholder’s expectations in a complete way. Set clear goals for what the project will achieve, and what it will not and ensure these goals are clearly communicated.
#2. Deliver value each step of the journey.
Ultimately, all analytics projects, workforce analytics projects included, will be journeys rather than destinations. Organizations cannot expect to go from no implementation and experience to advanced usage of predictive analytics and planning in a single leap. Those that have tried to overreach often find themselves either with solutions they can’t use to full effect, or are burdened with changing project plans that lead to delay. Conversely those who have taken a stepwise approach can more clearly articulate, and demonstrate, tangible value the project has delivered. This creates many benefits including support for further projects, to more successful training and onboarding of users.
#3. Create transparency.
As the old adage goes, information wants to be free. Too often we question the sharing of information and seek means to lock it down, or seek to hoard it for ourselves. Certainly, organizations have sensitive data, especially employee data, and must be responsible to limit access. The challenge is this is used to justify putting information only in executive’s hands, or HR holding too tight to the keys to the workforce data. The value of analytics is to make better, confident, fact-based decisions, but decisions are being made across the entire organization every day. The opportunity is to create a multiplier effect that sees better people decisions made throughout the organization by every people leader. The risk to limiting information sharing is the use of workforce analytics stagnates from limited usage and a lack of alignment or trust that comes from only sharing partial views of information. Challenge what can be shared, and work to create a culture that makes information based decisions.
#4. Simple is better.
One of my favorite quotes is from Mark Twain, “I didn’t have time to write a short letter, so I wrote a long one instead”. It very elegantly captures the notion that simple is harder, and in analytics this is especially true. There is always more information, or different ways to show information. The danger with not simplifying is that information over-load can be just as dangerous as information under-load as users struggle to understand what is meaningful. Always challenge what information is valuable, versus what information is interesting. What decisions will you make, or what actions will be taken with the information? If you can’t clearly state how the information will be used, then challenge the need to include it in your workforce analytics.
#5. Don’t ignore the technology.
As a technologist, I know this is easy for me to say and I know many of my colleagues in HR struggle with this one. The key here though is not that you have to be an expert, but that you don’t remove yourself from the technology discussion and decisions. There is nothing wrong with relying on experts to provide you with advice, but ultimately you have to ensure the technology will support the goals you are trying to achieve. Ask the curious questions and understand trade-offs that the different solutions may incur.
Take these best-practices to heart and you too can become a leader in this new era of information-savvy human resources.
Copyright © 1999-2025 by
HR.com - Maximizing Human Potential
. All rights reserved.