Effective Strategies for Maximizing Your Profit When Selling Gold Jewelry
Are You Using Data To Drive Your HR Strategy
1. Are you using Data to Drive Your HR Strategy?
2014 is shaping up to be a year that will disrupt the way traditional HR functions operate. As technology, social media
and data continue to become interwoven into the fabric of the workplace, HR must start to think and act like business
functions by using data and insights to drive their strategy.
Not that long ago, thought leaders called upon companies to treat HR as a strategic partner alongside the CEO, CFO,
CIO, etc. to bring insight to human capital within the organization. HR, like business functions will need to rely on
data, trending and analysis to assess and shape new initiatives. Over the
last few years, business functions (marketing, sales, legal,
communications, products, operations, compliance; just to name a few)
have expanded their data sources to include social media insights,
internet analytics , search and traffic patterns. That coupled with
“listening” to what people are saying about the company on social
platforms provides key information on developing and/or tweaking
strategies. This data is also extremely useful for HR to gage satisfaction,
employee insights and dissatisfaction.
You may wonder how HR can use data for strategy when most of the data is based on operational transactions. To
that I say, follow the lead of the business. HR can use a combination of operational, internet and social media metrics
to analyze recruitment volume, sourcing effectiveness, candidate experience, retention and brand impact.
Here are a few ideas on how you can put data to work to help build your strategy:
1. Recruitment (Talent Sourcing)- Building your workforce is critical to achieving the organizations’
goals
Measures Data Sources Strategy
Source of Application,
Source of Hire, Cost of
Sourcing Channels
RMS/ATS What channels have proven to be most effective for hires? Are there any
shifts or trends that are emerging quarter over quarter or year over year?
Invest your sourcing dollars wisely. Analyze data over time so you can see
what sources are yielding and providing good ROI. Your data will guide
you to make sound, informed decisions.
Recruiter capacity RMS/ATS Do you have enough people to execute the work? Analyze recruiter
capacity against volume and complexity. Be prepared to dig deeper to
speak to efficiency of work. Recruiter capacity impacts both service levels
and the quality of output they can provide in a realistic timeframe.
2. 2. Talent Sourcing Interactions- impacts brand and consumer opinions about the organization
Measure Sources Strategy
Candidate experience Glassdoor, Indeed,
Facebook, Twitter,
etc.
As social recruitment becomes more dominant, candidate experience is
playing a more critical role impacting attraction. Like it or not candidates
feedback about their employers are becoming more prevalent and visible
online, whether the employer has a social media presence or not. It’s
important to understand and assess chatter as more candidates rely on
authentic feedback to make employment and product decisions about
the organization. Organizations that embrace feedback and make
improvements not only impact talent sourcing, but may also impact
bottom line sales.
Manager experience,
Recruiter Performance
Survey How do businesses know if their products or services add value?
Feedback about the service and its value is critical to fostering good
working relations to achieve the organizations goals. Use manager
feedback to fine tune your service offering. Identify areas for
improvement and acknowledge and reward great service.
3. Talent Management - retention is critical to building and sustaining human capital in the organization
Measure Sources Strategy
Retention ERP, Performance
Tools, Exit Interviews,
LinkedIn
Why are employees leaving your organization? Where are they going?
Are certain departments or job functions prone to lower retention than
others? Analyzing data will provide insight on which companies are
attracting your talent and what jobs they are moving into. Social media
has made it easy to get that information. Channels like LinkedIn can run
talent analytics on employee changes (coming and going) to help you
understand your competition.
Employee experience Glassdoor, Indeed,
Facebook, Twitter,
etc; Engagement
Survey, Internal
The ability to solicit feedback from employees has never been easier for
HR Functions. With internal and external social media and collaboration
tools available it’s quick and simple to get a sense of what’s working and
what isn’t. Canned annual engagement surveys may feel like a corporate
exercise rather than an employee centric forum to voice opinions or
3. Crowdsourcing ideas. Happy and engaged employees are more likely to stay and move
within your organization than those who feel they have no voice.
I hope these few examples get you excited about the possibilities that are at your fingertips. Be cognizant that your
metrics should be meaningful and actionable. Use your data to drive strategy, not to file in your metrics folder!
I would love to hear about some metrics your company has used to help drive your strategy. Tweet me
@annzaliebarrett
Ann Barrett
Director, eRecruitment & Social Media Strategy