Will HR Lose the Battle Over Analytics?

Will HR Lose the Battle Over Analytics?

Most HR organizations have been slow to adopt analytics – too slow, in fact, in the minds of many impatient business leaders. Our research conducted last year showed that just 14% of HR organizations in the U.S are using advanced or predictive analytics to make talent decisions. These companies have created strong analytics teams with a diversity of skill sets and have established data governance processes for data quality and integration.

Despite the prognostications that 2014 would be “the year of predictive talent analytics,” things haven’t changed all that much. I keep hearing the same questions from HR leaders over and over again: “How do I get started with analytics?” “How do we clean and integrate our data?” “How do we upskill our staff to be more data savvy?”

If HR continues to drag its feet, it risks losing control over its data, and its chance to gain some real power within the organization.

Witness the articles in support of CFOs owning analytics within corporate America. CFOs understand the value of data and are already using analytics to help them understand and predict margins, pricing models, and potential new revenue streams. For decades Finance has been using analytics to better understand where the business is strong and where it needs improvement.

CFOs could be a natural fit to lead analytics across the organization – taking over responsibility for HR analytics, marketing analytics, and operational analytics. Most CFOs are in a position of power within their organizations. They already control much of that data on company financials and operations. They have credibility and are seen (in many companies) as the source of truth. They understand data and know how to use it.

In many organizations, HR falls short on all of the above. Which is why HR risks losing control of its talent data to CFOs, who may be looking to further expand their leadership roles and spheres of influence throughout the company – and who are tired of waiting for HR leaders to “get it” when it comes to analytics.

I’ve already talked with several companies over the past two months that have centralized their analytics across functions. In a some cases, the CFO is running the analytics organization. In others, it falls under the COO or CIO. This should be a wake-up call for HR leaders. The battleground over corporate data is threatening to heat up, and HR can’t throw up the white flag and lose its stake in the one area that promises to bring it credibility with executives and power over talent and business decisions.

If your HR organization is still new to analytics, here is one thing you can do: Find a business leader who is willing to partner on an analytics project to solve a problem (e.g. reducing turnover, improving engagement, reducing accidents/theft/leakage, etc.) Put together a skunks works team, borrowing talent from another department if necessary or partnering with a university or external supplier, and look to get a small ‘win.’ After that, evangelize the results and find another internal stakeholder or two to partner with on another, slightly larger, project.

After you have a few small wins and have built some credibility with business leaders, you can ask for some additional resources and start building an analytics team. Many HR people say, “I can’t get the funding for analytics,” and it's no wonder...since they haven’t proven the value and their credibility yet.

So start small – look for a supportive business leader with a pain point - and grow from there. Any don’t wait too long, or before you know it, your CFO may be managing your talent data.

Praful Tickoo

Leveraging Artificial Intelligence to transform HR

9 年

So true Karen O'Leonard ... I am in HR analytics role in my organization and I know how much the industry has awakened to the power of analytics ... However, I would want to know from you ... What is it that the leading organizations are doing as part of analytics in HR domain ? I can think of attrition or engagement surveys as big ones ... Could you please help me with some other analysis that the leading organizations are conducting. Thanks !!

I think it is harsh to suggest that HR failed to deliver on analytics. Analytics require a different skillset - statistical knowledge, data modelling, data management etc.- that may not be readily apparent in HR professionals. Building a strong team of analysts and having HR professionals add the context would yield better results than farming it out to the CFO. Just my thoughts on this subject.

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Dr. Salvatore Falletta

Author, Creepy Analytics: Avoid Crossing the Line and Establish Ethical HR Analytics for Smarter Workforce Decisions (McGraw-Hill, 2024)

9 年

Nor would you want an HR executive talking to Wall Street during a quarterly earnings call. Ideally -- we want data scientists and organizational behavior/psychology professionals doing the "HR" analytics and intpreting the results and encourage finance to stick to their knitting.

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Dr. Salvatore Falletta

Author, Creepy Analytics: Avoid Crossing the Line and Establish Ethical HR Analytics for Smarter Workforce Decisions (McGraw-Hill, 2024)

9 年

While an IT specialist, financial analyst, or data scientist might possess the technological and statistical chops to mine and model data, it takes an applied researcher with the right disciplinary background (i.e., advanced degrees in the social, behavioral, and organizational sciences) to accurately interpret the data and identify any predictive insights in the context of individual, group, and organizational behavior. I wouldn't want a finance professional running around with "people insights" and making assertions about talent management strategy or day-to-day human capital decisions. A scary, brave new world.

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Volker Mayer

Gesch?ftsführender Gesellschafter der STRIM Gesellschaften | Mit klarer Linie zum Umsetzungserfolg

9 年

Thanks very much for this statements. It is also one of my concerns that CFOs take over. However, at the end of the day it is important that HR Analytics is well done, who ever takes care for that issue. HR had enough time to prepare themselves. Now it is time to deliver.

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