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“As the service-based economy continues to
grow, companies must be more rigorous in how they measure and
engage with their employees”
Mark Frost, General Manager of the Human
Capital Management division of PeopleSoft
Leading
corporations will be increasing their investment over the next
three years to measure how people practices such as low
turnover, diversity and the engagement of their employees
contribute to the bottom line, concludes a report from
The
Conference Board released today.
The report is the result of a working group of
leading companies and is co-sponsored by
PeopleSoft, a leading
provider of application software for business. It is based on a
survey of 110 human resource managers in major companies based
in the United States and Europe.
While 40 percent of survey participants consider
senior management support to have been high for human capital
measures during the past three years, 76 percent predict an
increase in top-level backing during the next three years.
The report defines human capital measures as
including employee engagement, turnover, diversity, leadership,
and productivity among others.
Focus on Lowering Costs and Boosting
Productivity
“The major reason that management lends increasing support to
people metrics projects is that they help lower costs and
improve the return on people investments while helping align
these investments with business strategy,” says Dr. Stephen
Gates, author of the report and principal researcher at The
Conference Board. “Human resources leaders need to determine how
to link people measures to business processes. They should
involve line managers at all stages of the human capital metrics
process, seek advice and input from finance and strategy
colleagues, and eventually embed people metrics in managers’
bonus plans.”
“This study illustrates the importance of human
capital management to every business’ bottom line,” said Mark
Frost, General Manager of the Human Capital Management division
of PeopleSoft. “As the service-based economy continues to grow,
companies must be more rigorous in how they measure and engage
with their employees.”
Linking People Metrics to Strategy
To gain their support from top executives, HR specialists must
demonstrate that people metrics can be successfully aligned with
business strategy. According to the results of a recent exercise
by The Conference Board’s Human Capital Measurement Working
Group, this process is still in its earliest stages at many
companies. Although many people measures are cited as currently
being used by working group companies, few firms feel confident
about how metrics relate directly to business strategy.
Human resource directors are still the primary
sponsors of people metrics in most organizations, although 36%
of surveyed companies report that business unit leaders are also
involved.
Other study findings:
-
Survey data suggest that managers become less
involved in the selection and execution of people measures as
the size of a company grows.
-
Utilizing metrics in bonus plans is growing, but
is still a minority practice. Only 39% of surveyed companies
reward managers based on people measures.
-
The financial measures of cost reduction and
revenue growth are more commonly linked to people metrics than
intermediate performance drivers such as process and product
innovation and globalization. However, the survey results
suggest that people measures are more successfully linked with
intermediate performance drivers than financial measures.
Top Lessons for Managers
The study cites the following top lessons for
managers:
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Involve HR professionals in the development of
overall business strategy.
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Enlist leaders from outside the HR department to
help develop and back human capital metrics.
-
Collaborate with business managers to ensure
that people measures link to the strategic goals of business
units.
-
Focus more attention on the links between people
measures and major performance drivers (customer satisfaction,
innovation, etc.) and place less emphasis on their connection to
cost reduction, revenue growth, and other financial outcomes.
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Include human capital metrics in bonus plans.
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Audit metrics (internally and externally).
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Develop ad hoc analytical reports that detail
how people investments can deliver business results.
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