HR Metrics for HR Strategists
The Golden Opportunity: Collect Data From People ABOUT The Business
I am advocating taking the simple path to improving firm performance - get more
information. And why can't HR be the group that gets information ABOUT the business from the people who are doing
business every single day? Why not ask your employees what's going on out there? They
are in the front line working with customers; they see processes
working and not working; they know if something unethical is occurring; your
employees in many cases ARE your customers. Why not supplement your talking TO employees by asking your employees to
talk TO YOU?
When HR collects data ABOUT the business that is FROM employees, and then delivers that
information to people who can act upon it, then HR is in the business of
reducing the information asymmetry problem, and HR helps the firm maximize its
performance. What happens when HR walks
into a board meeting or the senior executive meeting with new insights about
customers, strategy, new business opportunities, problems that need to be
solved and more? Executives listen.
In fact, executives listen much more intently than they do when HR comes in with only the latest
satisfaction, engagement, or culture scores. Management listens because the additional data HR is providing obtained through employee surveys is
meaningful, actionable, and about something in which they care deeply. I'm not saying that data ABOUT people is not
valuable. Data about satisfaction, absenteeism, turnover, and more are critical metrics, but they do not always
grab the attention of executives in the same way that information about their
business problems and new opportunities for growth can engage managers. Even better, when you collect data from
people about the business, you quickly will find out that many things are
working well. You can learn from your strengths as well as from your weaknesses.
The Key to HR Being Strategic?
We meet with a lot of HR executives who have said the following: "We just finished outsourcing
much of our HR work; our employees are effectively using self service; we have
all our HR data in our centralized data base, and now we're ready to be
strategic. But we don't know what to do." We've looked at their dashboards, reviewed
their pages of reports, and we worry that if these HR executives are
having a tough time figuring out what to do with their own HR metrics, then
what do we expect managers to do with the reports they receive?
If we want to be strategic, we have to reach out to managers with data that they care
about. Once we get them hooked, we can then teach them about other statistics and data. The
hook just may be data about the business that you collect
from your employees through employee surveys.
Challenge to HR Strategists
There is quite a bit of research demonstrating the fact that employees want their firms to
succeed; they are not self-serving creatures trying to benefit themselves and
not caring about the team. Employees
want to contribute to something that is bigger than themselves. Unfortunately, in most cases, the company
does not provide employees with simple and non-threatening modes of voice or
with enough alternative ways to communicate.
As HR strategists, we are in a position to help senior
executives make their companies more successful. Humans
are the targets of HR, and if we utilize what we know
about humans, and engage them in our businesses to share information with
management, then we can be truly strategic business partners with our
leadership teams.
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