HR Analytics Essentials You Always Wanted To Know: Self Learning Management
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About this ebook
- Functions as a supplement to a textbook for undergraduates studying Human Resources Management
- Blends theory with practical guidance, making it easy to begin implementing analytics best practices
- Comes with helpful video tutorials for using Excel to manipulate quantitative data
A practical guide to using human resource analytics for making optimal business decisions.
Read this book if you want to be able to:
- Define what HR Analytics can do for an organization
- Determine the best HR analytics role for you
- Assess the readiness of your organization for undergoing a study using HR analytics
- Apply HR Analytics in various HR disciplines
- Use Excel to efficiently manage data for your HR analytics
- Tell your organization's story - whether you are a seasoned professional or a newcomer
Part overview of the field, part handbook, HR Analytics Essentials walks readers through the many benefits of using analytics to make better people decisions. HR Analytics requires more than just strong gut instincts and a talent for talking with people; it requires a good understanding of your organization's human capital. As this guide will show, HR Analytics is both an art and a science that can help your organization make informed decisions that benefit all stakeholders. With case studies and online tutorials, including a step-by-step guide for using Excel to efficiently work with your data, HR Analytics Essentials is the perfect handbook you need.
About the Series
The Self-Learning Management Series is designed to help students, new managers, career switchers and entrepreneurs learn essential management lessons. This series is designed to address every aspect of business from HR to Finance to Marketing to Operations across any and every industry.
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HR Analytics Essentials You Always Wanted To Know - Vibrant Publishers
Introduction
What is HR Analytics?
The topic of HR analytics has become increasingly popular over the last ten years. The chart below depicts Google search interest over that time period. Search interest has increased over 1,600%!
Figure1.1
If we ask 10 people how to define HR analytics, we will probably get 12 different answers. And that’s ok. More on that later. For now, let’s focus on a broad definition of HR analytics for our purpose as, the use of data collected on or about people within an organization to make better business decisions.
Given that this definition is so broad, that means that we can use HR Analytics in just about every scenario that could come up, right? Right! This is the power and scope of analytics. We can use data (if we have the right data) to answer just about every question that we might have about an organization, how it works, what motivates employees to exhibit certain behaviors and how to change those behaviors. Once we realize that HR data is all around us and learn how to use it, the sky is truly the limit.
That means that we can answer questions like, How can we create a more inclusive culture?
Inclusive culture
is a pretty nebulous term. A term like that feels kind of fluffy,
but we can quantify that. We can measure that using data.
What drives retention of our highest performers?
We can measure retention. We can measure performance of our employees and so we can bring those two things together using analytics and measure the factors that lead to greater retention of our highest performing employees.
What is the best way to predict the performance of our hourly workforce?
So often companies will think of the salaried workforce and how to predict performance of jobs like salespeople or managers. We will learn in a later chapter how the hourly workforce is one of the most untapped sources of data in an organization and how to use those data.
Why are people really leaving?
Oftentimes our leaders might come to us and say, Everyone is leaving because of compensation!
or another superlative. Using analytics, we can tease out the real reasons why people are leaving and create recommendations for how to keep those employees who matter most to the organization.
We do all this using a scientific approach. We use this approach to isolate those things that really matter to the question at hand. THAT is the crux of analytics. That is what analytics is all about. It’s about teaching us how to ask the right questions, teaching us how to answer those questions and understanding how we can use those data that we have in order to answer those questions.
The Art and Science of it All
Because numbers are involved, we often think that analytics is all numbers and that there is a right answer. Well, there is a right answer. The trick is that the right
answer might be different for one organization than another and another. Hopefully, as you read this book, I will demonstrate that, when using data generated by people and about people, analytics becomes part art and part science.
All the preparation that we do before the analysis such as determining the right questions, setting up a field experiment, even structuring the data that we will use in our analysis is a bit of an art form. The decision making that happens prior to the data analysis is just as important and accounts for a lot of the time and effort spent on any given analytics project.
The bottom line is that HR Analytics is absolutely both art and science and not something to be afraid of.
The Four Roles of HR Analytics
As with many things in life, the roles that one can play in an organization’s HR Analytics journey can be summarized into a 2x2 matrix (Figure 1.2). What role can you play? As you will see below, and with any good question, that depends. It depends on the answer to two important questions.
Where do you fall on the spectrum of analytical capability?
Where does the organization fall in terms of analytical readiness?
When compared to one another, personal capability and organizational readiness create four different roles that an HR practitioner can play. Those roles are Amateur, Advocate, Apprentice, and Advisor.
Each of these roles will be explored in greater detail below.
Figure1.2
1.3.1 Role 1: Amateur
Amateur. Noun am▪a▪teur | ˈa-mə-chər: one lacking in experience and competence in an art or science (Merriam-Webster, 2020)
The role of an amateur is defined exactly as listed above. It simply means that you are lacking in the experience and competence in an art or science. In this case, that art and science is HR analytics. Professionals who are first starting out in the analytics discipline simply do not have the experience needed to better understand and use analytics. Hopefully, this book will help to change your mind if you fall into that category.
Perhaps the first thing you will notice about the capability and readiness matrix is that the box for amateur is the largest in the matrix. This is intentional. Because it can take a lot of time and effort to advance your skills and influence organizational readiness, this quadrant is the biggest.
If you fall into the amateur quadrant there are several things that you can do in order to increase your personal capability. The first is finishing this book! Second, there are several resources available to anyone online who may want to increase your analytical capability. Some of these resources are focused on technical capability such as how to manipulate data and perform analytics in various software packages. Other resources available will help you to better understand the business issues that organizations face and how to apply analytics to those issues. Another place to go for resources are the hard
sciences such as chemistry or biology to help you better understand the scientific method and how to conduct field experiments. More on conducting field experiments later in this book.
The other factor that we must consider in the amateur bucket is organizational readiness. This is the hardest factor to change, which is another reason why the amateur quadrant is so large. Changing organizational readiness requires a multi-month or even year-long effort to help the organization better understand how to use analytics. In my experience, this is one of the hardest things that an HR practitioner must endeavor to accomplish. The journey from low readiness to high readiness contains many steps forward and several steps backwards along the way. Because changing organizational readiness is not as easy as going out to a website and learning about technical expertise or statistics, it often takes a very long time.
When starting in the amateur quadrant, in order to move the organizational readiness from low to high the first thing you should do is focus on your own personal capability. Once you have increased your personal capability, bringing the organization along for the journey will be much easier. At that point you will be able to demonstrate value using analytics and help organizational leaders to better understand how analytics can play a role in decision-making.
1.3.2 Role 2: Advocate
Advocate. Noun ad·vo·cate | ˈad-və-kət: one who supports or promotes the interests of a cause or group (Merriam-Webster, 2020)
Once your personal capability has increased to the point of being an advocate, you are now ready to help the organization understand how analytics can play a role in decision-making. If you had taken the journey from amateur to advocate you can take your newly found knowledge to organizational leaders and help them understand the impact that you can have using data and analytics. If joining an organization from the outside already having acquired those skills, the journey might look a bit different.
In order to help the organization understand the skills and capabilities that you bring you will need to demonstrate quick wins
that are appropriate for the organization. This could include things like using data to tell stories about organizational issues or to explain the answers to questions that organizational leaders might have. When in the advocate quadrant, you will not do yourself any favors by conducting advanced analytics such as predictive algorithms and or predictive modeling. The organization will likely not be able to digest the information nor will they have an appetite for more. The key to being an advocate is that you are able to communicate with the organization using data in a manner that demonstrates the value of analytics while, at the same time, helps to prime the organizational appetite for more analytics. This increase in analytics can be both from a technical perspective such as moving from dashboards to predictive analytics, but also from a quantity perspective in terms of generating demand for analytics work and projects. The role of the advocate is to educate the organization and therefore create more demand for analytics.
1.3.3 Role 3: Apprentice
Apprentice. Noun ap·pren·tice | ə-ˈpren-təs: one who is learning by practical experience under skilled workers a trade, art, or calling (Merriam-Webster, 2020)
The third role that we will talk about is the role of an apprentice. If you fall into this quadrant, your personal capability is low and the organizational readiness is high. This means that people in your organization likely have more skill and experience in analytics than you do. The good news is this is not a bad thing. You can use those people as mentors and teachers as you go on your personal journey to learn more about analytics. In this quadrant, the focus of an HR professional should be to gain experience and skill in order to move to the advisor quadrant.
Internal resources are often a great place to start for learning more about how to use analytics in your organization. Not only do they bring a technical expertise, but they often understand how to apply that expertise to the organization. Because the contextual environment dictates so much about how the organization views analytics and the interpretation of those analytics, having an internal mentor or coach is a great idea for anyone, but especially if you fall into the apprentice quadrant.
While working with an internal mentor or coach, you can also gain technical experience with external resources (such as this book!) or other resources that are widely available. The great part about being an apprentice is that you will be able to immediately apply your skills to organizational issues. As you learn new skills, you’ll be able to immediately utilize those in your day-to-day life which makes learning much more enjoyable and useful. The apprentice quadrant can be one of the most robust and richest learning experiences of an HR practitioner’s career.
1.3.4 Role 4: Advisor
Advisor. Noun ad·vis·er | əd-ˈvī-zər: someone who gives advice (Merriam-Webster, 2020)
You might notice that the advisor quadrant is the smallest quadrant in the matrix. You might also notice that there are no borders on the top or right side of the quadrant. This is very intentional. Because your personal capability will continue to develop and organizational readiness will (hopefully) continue to increase, the goal for the advisor quadrant is to stay in sync with the organization. For example, an individual who falls into high personal capability and whose organization has high organizational readiness for analytics may suggest that an organizational network analysis (Organizational Network Analysis (ONA) is a very advanced type of analysis that can help isolate how information flows within an organization. Because it is necessary to understand who