Companies of all sizes are struggling to manage the massive amounts of data related to human resource management. This program will examine the various solutions technology offers to deal with this challenge, and provide examples to increase department efficiency while adding strategic value to the business. The following objectives will be covered during this presentation:
- Learn about the current and future trends in HR technology, including Employee Self Service, Business Intelligence, and Social Media.
- Discover how to harness technology to make strategic business decisions
- Learn how to turn data into knowledge through Key Performance Indicators, Dashboards, and other metrics.
- Learn how to develop a solid business case for HR technology.
2. Objectives Current Trends in HR Technology Getting Strategic with Technology Building a Business Case for Technology
3. Who Is This Guy? HR Strategist HR/Payroll Systems Expert Trusted Advisor Social Media Advocate Self-Professed Geek Early Adopter
4. Terminology – HR Technology Acronym Soup SHRM Core Discipline David Ulrich, University of Michigan Primary HR Competency Domain ITM WFM SaaS HCM ERP HRIS HRMS
5. Terminology Long-Term Big Picture Thinking Holistic View Company Goals/Objectives Value/Outcome Focused “S”-word “HR must give value, or give notice.” – David Ulrich
11. Trend #1 – Web 2.0 Collective Intelligence User Content
12. Trend #1 – Web 2.0 Blogs & Wikis RSS Feeds Aggregate Sites Social Networking
13. Social Media in Business Branding Marketing Public Relations Customer Service Loyalty Building Customer Acquisition Networking Recruiting Onboarding Sourcing Scheduling Learning Thought Leadership Employee Engagement Internal Communication
17. Trend #2 – Mobility Statistics 70% - Mobile phones for work 50% - Check work email on weekend 89% - U.S. companies offer telecommuting 51% - American workforce is mobile Sources: Socialcast Telework Coalition
18. Mobility – HR Opportunities HR Leadership Alerts/Triggers Social Media Work/Life Balance
30. Leverage HR Technology TWO: Serve the Business M, V, G, O HR Goals Corporate Goals HR Metrics Business Decisions Data Integration
31. Leverage HR Technology THREE: Measure the Right Things Baby Steps K.I.S.S. Few, But Layered Start With the End in Mind
32. Leverage HR Technology FOUR: Make Value, Not Activity Key Performance Indicators Scorecards Analysis
33. Leverage HR Technology FIVE: Inquiry, Not Intuition Get Answers From Metrics Use Standardized Data Measure Consistently “... when HR uses fact-based decision making – instead of intuition or best guesses – the group becomes a more credible partner to the business it serves. Fact-based decisions help HR improve HCM practices, recruit and deploy the right talent, cut costs, contribute to business performance and provide evidence of those contributions.” - BusinessWeek Research Services, May 2009
39. Justifying HR Technology Why HR Technology Isn’t Implemented: Budget/Funding approval Unclear Goals No Buy-in Resistance to Change IT Infrastructure “No Decision”
40. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech Expand Your HR Technology Knowledge Webinars IHRIM Follow HR Tech Experts
41. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech 2. Determine Your Current Reality Technology Processes Workflow
42. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech 3. Develop “Needs” and “Wants” List
43. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech 4. Create a Business Case Goals and Objectives Costs and Saving Measures Define Current HR Issues Outline Productivity Increases More Strategic Opportunity Metrics KPI’s Business Impact
44. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech 5. Calculate ROI and Rate of Return Hard Costs Soft Costs
45. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech 5. Calculate ROI and Rate of Return Tactical Benefits Strategic Benefits
46. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech Determine Budget Use Business Case Use ROI
47. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech Research Software & Companies Evaluate Systems Flexibility Scalability
48. 10 Steps to Obtaining Tech Set Implementation Expectations Make Purchase Decision 1/3
49. In Summary Social Media and Workforce Mobility are changing the dynamics of HR Technology. Popularity of Employee Self Service and Talent Management systems has increased. HR Technology can increase HR effectiveness, but will ultimately make HR more strategic. Utilize technology to create business oriented analytics and metrics. Justify HR Technology by creating an ROI with clear goals and objectives.
50. Thank You! Harold G. Ford III Dresser & Associates, Inc. http://www.linkedin.com/in/haroldgfordiii
Editor's Notes
Something everyone wants to talk about, HR Technology!I love tech, and HR Tech is my passion – technology & building better tech strategies in companies
Current and trends in HR techHow HR Tech can make you more strategicWhy an ROI matters
17 years providing technology advice to HR/Payroll deptsExpert – person who predicts the project will take the longest and cost the mostUse a smartphone? End of 2010, 1.2 billion people carry smartphonesUse GPS? Tweeted that they were here today?
Acronym soup –daze and confuse, almost as much as HRBenefits admin, HR info mgmt, recruiting, training/learning mgmt, performance mgmt, payroll, work timeCore HR discipline by SHRM and is a facet of all other HR disciplines.HR Guru David Ulrich HR Magazine’s Most influential HR person#1 management educator by Business WeekMastery of HR Technology as one of the five competency domains
Everyone talks about it, who’s doing it? What does it even mean?Term borrowed from military - having an impact outside your own military unit. Strategic – taking a ‘longer term’, ‘big picture’ approach. vs. Tactics HR’s Direct contribution to long-term corporate objectives.Understand all parts of organization, how organization fits together, and how any change will impact organization as a whole
Yes, Technology can do all of these things to HR, but the real value lies in building better strategic vision.
Enable HR - Make predictive correlations between traditional HR metrics and the businessMore holistic view of human capitalIMPACTS to businessTransform HR from tactical to strategicKnowledge EconomyWorkforce AgilityMake decisions about human capital to continuously improve and enhance the value of the business
5 Trends taken from a variety of sources:Watson Wyatt Research, SHRM, IHRIM, our customersThese 5 trends all incorporate a similar theme:Better strategic design, & HR’s role in that strategyChanges in how employees work
Connecting with people Building CommunitiesCommunicating and Collaborating with your customers, employees, and peers to improve your brand.Provide Clarity and transparency about yourself & your company.Cultivating loyalty and trust.Sharing ContentConvergence – a complete transformation on how we do everything
Web 1.0 – push content out to masses; “advertising”We searched for information and consumed it
2nd generation of web development and design Facilitates communication, information sharing, and collaboration on the world wide web
Blogs –200,000,000 blogs Wikis – Collaborative user communities (ex: Wikipedia)RSS – Updates are automated, update site and RSS updates thousands of areas on the webAggregate – sites like indeed.com – one stop shopping for candidatesSocial networking sites – online communities that provide users a variety of ways to interact3 out of 4 Americans use social technology.
Branding - #1 business use when polledRecruiting is driving Web 2.0 in HR, FB & LI drive people to employer’s career site.Build brand awareness, attract new talentEnhance learning opportunities through virtual networks
88% look for jobs online, 60% apply online28% Millennials seek work through LinkedIn, report by I Love Rewards and Experience Inc.86% of Americans plan to look for a new job in 2011 – CNN MoneyOpen transparent conversation, build trustInbound Activities (search aggregate sites, research companies, ask friends)Passive job seekers – job hunting consumes 0% of their time60% think that hiring passive candidates results in better employees – LinkedIn poll, 2009Gather info to mitigate risk - Right person – right position
Gartner Research – 80% learning comes from informal trainingImmediate, relevant trainingUse to identify people who know a lot about their jobsConnect EE’s with experts in the companyUsing more sophisticated training tools that harnesses the power of social media and virtual worlds in favor of slides and conventional classroom environments
We know that the best use of SM is relationship building and branding, you can be the one that gets your company ready for the movement!What’s working? Good Content, Good Community, Value of RelationshipsGoogle “The company as a wiki” – BestBuy’s move to Web 2.0, leading edge & bleeding edge
1.2 Billion people carry smartphonesBy 2013, mobile will take over PC/Laptop use. 45% of all Social Media is done on mobile phonesNearly 75% of the American workforce will be mobile by 2013, according to market research firm IDC.“You” are your office – text, phone, wifi, 3G - ‘central office’ model is barely recognizableSHRM Q1 2010 Study – Virtual office is the office of the future
HR must be able to support the virtual workforceGenerational changes - The emerging workforce will be a blend of Baby Boomers, GenXers, GenYers, and the coming wave of graduates. New EE/Transferee changes HR Role as leader – review policies, cultural ‘fit’, worker responsibilities, employer of choice
Automate AdministriviaSimplify/Enhance CommunicationConsolidate DataImprove EEsatisfactionReduce Paper
Employees directly view, create, and maintain information in a Web browser.‘Paperless’ office - Paperless payroll a big trend currently38% use ESS33% use Manager Self Service
Talent Management, or Integrated Talent ManagementMany silo’d applications are consolidating, traditional HRMS closing the gap on ITM.Learning systems and training up 2% in 2010, after 2 years of spending cuts – Bersin & AssociatesSHRM – “Biggest investment challenge over the next 10 years” - Obtaining and Optimizing Human Capital – 47%86% of Americans plan to look for a new job in 2011 – CNN Money29% cite lack of advancement opportunitiesMore optimism, + recovering economic pictureWar for talent – 1997 McKinsey study coined the term
Manage inordinate amount of data we collect on our best talentLeverage inordinate amount of data we retain on our best talentHeightened competition for skilled workersRetirement of baby boomersHigh cost of turnoverOutsourcing trends
Turn data into information, information into knowledge, and knowledge into plans that drive profitable business actionsData - Collection of raw value elementsInformation - Facts can be gathered on data to draw conclusions.Intelligence - Use information to perceive, discover, and understand abest course of actionHow do we get from information to intelligence?
Link HR to overall business strategyMetrics can add to the HR professional’s credibility and garner support for HR programs.
Honest look into HR and Technology
Admin/transactional nature draws of HRComfort zone activities are EASY (transactions, paper admin)Soft side of business – the people, and not the hard side – the numbersForrester Research - over 50% of HR dept’s time is spent processing EE information and answering EE questions.Employee’s are children, and HR is their mommy and daddyDifferent skill sets – regression analysis, causal pathway modeling, predictive modeling
HR doesn’t serve corporate objectivesActivity driven - not delivery driven. Reactive around services. Forfeits long term value for short term efficiency.Due to labor regs, corporate policies, etc., HR is bad cop that is focused on here and nowHR and Executives don’t speak same language. HR not only doesn’t have a seat in the board room, it doesn’t have a key!THE KEY IS TECHNOLOGYHR Technology can overcome all 4 arguments.
Measure HR’s Impact on the bottom lineUse to influence CEO, CFO, CIO, CIA, CBS, or any other C-level executive in the companyMarketing – decisions about customers Finance – decisions about moneyIT – decisions about technologyHR – decisions about peopleHR is the only department that has direct access to both the “C”-suite and people assets of an organization. HR has it’s finger on the pulse of a company, and can report that data directly to those who need it most to make better business decisions.
Technology will reduce admin so we can focus on strategy
Understand mission, vision, goals, objectives of companyAlign HR Goals with corporate onesTie metrics to business decisionsDirect correlation of human capital performance and business performanceIntegrate your metrics with other departments (finance, customer satisfaction, etc.)
What metrics are important to the company?Compare over time8-12 KPI’s ("keep it simple and straightforward“)Measures should be few, but layeredWhat is to be gained
Make value, not activity (from HR Value Proposition – Dave Ulrich). Pick KPI’s that add value in making decisionsTraining attendees per month vs. Effectiveness of training Did trained staff learn anything to make them better workers? How did quality improve? How did customer loyalty improve?
Drive operational-decision making without “hunches”. Use metrics to answer important workforce questions.Use standardized auditable data Measure consistently (measure twice, cut once)Gain insights and credible “what-if” scenarios
Revenue / FTE – Links time and effort associated with firms human capital to its revenue output. Greater efficiency and productivity. $154K average
Turnover clarity – don’t just focus on turnover rate, study data on different data points and multi-dimensional analytics – TenureBy wage ratesBy ageBy top producers
Benefits – cost factor, percentage of total compensation, worker’s comp, etc.Profit Indicator/Human Capital ROI – Pre-Tax Profit less Financial capital costs/human capital costsAttrition Rate / Survival Rate
Investment in human capital is company’s largest investment.HR - take the lead in identifying where people assets can best be allocated to meet the company’s goalsHow to hire, develop, and retain the human capital the company needs to stay competitive now and in the future.I’m preaching to the choir here, but…In a knowledge economy, companies with the best talent win
Pull data from all sources and put into dashboard formDashboard – graphical snapshot of business health from an HR Perspective.Easy to read, summary of company’s current state of affairs
Spending is at an all-time low in the current economic situationOnly 1/3 of those polled in SHRM’s 2005 Technology survey say their HR technology implementations were extremely successfulWhy buy more after being burned?Current technology (10+ year old legacy systems) ‘works’
Understand current trends, where technology is headed for HR. Webinars, etc.Twitter – good place to follow experts
2. Determine current reality – The project is a journey to a destination.You need to know where you are now to determine how to get where you want to go.
Need vs. Want – I need a car, I want a Mercedes S-ClassSeek help – plenty of great organizations that determine current reality and analyze needs
Align goals/objectives with business Show that investing in HR Technology will have operational impact.
SHRM estimates the paper costs associated with benefits enrollment at $27.50 per employee.ROI Example: $1.92/check delivery (forms, ink, MICR, time to fold/stuff, distribution & mailing)Annual cost = $20,616Investment to provide employee self service = $20KHard Cost ROI in less than 12 monthsHOWEVER – Soft costs (added employee value, less admin = more productivity for HR)
Work with mgmt on budget – having ROI helps!‘We don’t have a budget’. Everyone has a budget, whether it’s for a gallon of gasoline or a new carBoth of which will cost the same very soon.Ask consultant – “How much do you charge?”“Typically we scope and plan the project in advance, so we charge $50,000 for three questions”“Isn’t that a bit expensive?”“Yes, now what’s your third question?”
We typically start at step 7, which is a mistake – this is the fun stuff, the easy stuff. Exercise due diligence on technology vendorsFind someone that you will want to work with in current and future That understands ourVision,Mission,Goals, your Business ObjectivesPick 3-5 technology solutions to review
Less than 1/3 of all IT projects finish on-time and on-budget. – Standish Group 2006 Chaos reportFrom poor planning, unclear goals/objectives, lack of buy in, and unrecognized destination
What is your HR technology strategy?What system functionality do you need?What results do you wish to accomplish?What work processes do you wish to change?How will we handle change?Software or subscription?How does this system support the overall needs of the business?What HR metrics help drive business decisions?Who are the decision makers internally?What is your internal technology environment?What is your budget?