In a times of economic uncertainty, increasing regulatory requirements and competition it should be no surprise that HR and C-Suite leaders are under a great deal of pressure. According to The Hackett Group’s newly released report entitled, “2013 Key Issues Study” high pressure is a reality. As a result, HR leaders are focused on cost reductions, process improvement, improving the effectiveness of talent management, and obtaining value from data for better decision making among other issues.
The pressure is derived from the need to aggressively grow revenue while doing more with less. This reality makes the business environment volatile at best.
Additional findings of the study include:
- Decreasing HR budget and staff, but increased service demand,
- Increasing flexible, virtual, data enable model for service delivery,
- Organizations are seeking to improve the quality of HR data analysis and reporting capabilities,
- Rolling out web-based and self-service tools continue to be a priority,
- Strategic workforce planning appears to continue to be a challenge for HR,
- Increased “back to the basics” approach to HR measures (i.e.: HR transaction errors and costs).
I found the last two points surprising. In my observation, HR analytics are becoming more sophisticated and business result driven as a whole. So why would we take a step backwards in our analytics let alone no real forward movement in strategic workforce planning? According to the report the trend appears that HR is going back to the basics in metrics in order balance cost and quality, thus demonstrating its value.
I would love to know what you think. Take this short poll and/or comment and let me know what is happening in your world of metrics and strategic workforce planning.
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I couldn’t disagree more about HR going back to basics. The basic HR measures are just a starting point. Yes, they give us transaction quality and cost and that is great. However, if we are going to make leaps in understanding what really impacts revenue from the people side we have to get more sophisticated and even predictive in our approach.
Cathy, I agree with your sentiments on this topic. In fact I was surprised when reading the report indicating “back to the basics” for metrics. Especially in a time when business performance is so critical. What better way to manage performance than to understanding how labor impacts impacts the bottom line today and tomorrow? Thanks again for commenting. Tresha