7 tips to making better HR tech and data investment decisions in 2024
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7 tips to making better HR tech and data investment decisions in 2024

Having been a CHRO of a listed company in my last role, I can empathise with the confusion and exhaustion that comes from navigating the myriad HR tech products flooding the market whilst trying to manage many ongoing HR change initiatives.

Last year, as CEO of an HR tech start-up I did what most do in that role — I spent a whole lot of time talking to customers, CHROs, heads of talent, recruiters and business owners, listening to their challenges to build a product that works for them. There are a few themes I picked up on through these conversations.

Improving procedural fairness?— ensuring the most important processes (recruitment, promotion and REM ) are fair in both perception & application

Solutions which deliver?integrity of both recruitment and promotion decisions?(as more companies aim to promote from within)

A strong desire to?leverage automation?for low value, manual and/or repetitive HR tasks

Make everything simpler?for the HR team and employees

More insights?to make better, fairer decisions

The challenges of knowing what data matters and?building the internal capability?to make use of it

‘What’s the right tech stack for my team and our company’ and ‘how do I integrate all these technologies’ are questions every CHRO of any sizeable company is grappling with. And the answer is more complicated than committing to a new HRIS.

Whilst I am not a tech expert, I spend many hours a week thinking about one critical part of the HR function that is ripe for technology innovation — recruitment. In that vein, I am sharing some things I have learnt which I hope will be useful to your investments in your tech stack in 2024.

Decision-making transparency to enhance organisational trust

There are HR tech products that give you insights on engagement hot spots, employee sentiment, and screen applicants for roles by scraping and analysing people’s personal profiles or communications. If you believe (as I do) that transparency enhances trust, especially when it comes to anything coming out of HR, these tech products could undermine organisational trust and maybe even your employer brand. Look beneath the hood of a tech product to validate how it works. AI and the concern of algorithmic bias is one every CHRO needs to be ready to talk about. Understand the source data and how it will be used in the solution. For candidate selection, any front-end testing needs to not only be valid but feel valid to the user. That’s why we use relatable and valid questions to assess candidates in building our predictive models. No CVs, no video and no games.

Any extra discretionary effort by employees is going to be heavily influenced by how much trust your people have in you. Better to invest in tech solutions that allow for more transparency around how decisions are being made, that use reliable, objective and valid data.

Create and source forward looking data for prediction

Think of the people analytics generated by HR today — turnover reports, engagements stats, culture diagnostics, exit survey analysis, 9 box talent management. All of it is backward looking reporting on the past performance of talent. Much of it also subject to the vagaries of human analysis, therefore biased insights. How many of your organisations use data to validate placement of people on the ‘potential axis’ of a 9 box? Or use NLP to extrapolate the key themes from engagement surveys and exit survey verbatim?

A bigger challenge for all of this backwards analytics is connecting the dots — how does a culture survey actually move you towards and predict a different culture? My colleague who spent his early years building up the data science team for a leading engagement survey platform and led the benchmarking analysis for their clients observed that year after year the same companies were in the top and the bottom quartile of engagement. Changing culture is hard, unless you change the people — the people you hire and the people you promote.

The best investment you can make to change the culture and help the organisation move towards?forward?looking predictive analytics is to start to capture data from the outset — from your applicant pool, through to the people you hire. Having a data DNA profile of your applicant and hired pool means you can better target your employer branding, you can identify with high accuracy the profile of the stronger performers, the people who are high flight risk in the early months, the talent that moves fastest to productivity. Knowing these profiles means you can seamlessly feed back into your recruitment a better hiring profile. This is the power of predictive analytics over psychometric testing which has no feedback loop back to the business on whether the person with the high OPQ test was any good in the role.

Data authenticity matters

‘Garbage in garbage out. This is usually a reference to a data quality issue.

Data can take many forms- it’s not always hard numbers (more on that later), it can be data that is structured and regulated by you vs data that is unstructured and not regulated by you, such as CV’s. The former is always better — closer to the objective source of truth, usually owned by you, and less prone to gaming.

CVs are a poor man’s data substitute and rarely indicative of anything. A CV is a highly gameable type of data and relying on CV data to select talent exacerbates the risk of bias, as was experienced by Amazon when they built their hiring models around a 10 year database of CVs (mostly male).

I won’t spend time on the risks of bias in CV screening as enough has been written about that, other than to share this from a blog post which quotes academic research that?‘both men and women think men are more competent and hirable than women, even when they have identical qualifications ‘, and that ‘resumes with white-sounding names received 50% more calls for interviews than identical resumes with ethnic-sounding names’.?https://www.lever.co/blog/where-unconscious-bias-creeps-into-the-recruitment-process .

Removing bias in the screening process is no longer about social justice, now it’s about commercial outcomes — McKinsey has documented each year since 2014 that companies with top quartile diversity experience outsized profitability growth?https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/organization/our-insights/delivering-through-diversity

Think broadly about what?is?data

There are a plethora of surveys that make the point that HR functions are starting to invest in the power of people analytics.

Making data more visual has been a big driver behind the success of engagement analytics companies such as a Culture Amp and Glint, transforming ugly engagement decks and the traditional circumplexes into insights driven real-time dashboards. Visualisation offered by tools like Tableau is table stakes these days for HR.

Data doesn’t always?look?like data in a traditional sense. Take textual search data, human behavioural tracking data for example. Google has been making money off that data strategy for years and there are now books written about how google search terms are the most accurate mirror to our true beliefs and values (Read?Everybody Lies?for a fascinating insight into the power of text).

Tracking human behaviour has been mainstream in marketing teams for years, but has been slower to be leveraged in HR. In consumer marketing, no one cares why a person is more likely to buy an item, they are only interested in optimising for the outcome. There has been some interesting research applying consumer behaviour analysis to HR with fascinating insights, for example that your choice of browser in completing an online assessment is a strong predictor of your performance in the role.?https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/03/people-who-use-firefox-or-chrome-are-better-employees/387781/

Provide data driven actionable insights for the business

In consulting there is an often used accusation of consultants ‘boiling the ocean’, which usually refers to those 100 page decks with chart after chart, visualising every data point possible as if the sheer weight of the deck is somehow testament to its accuracy. Most junior consultants aspire to writing the ‘killer slide’, the elusive one slide that crystallises the strategy in one data visual that will transform the company’s trajectory.

As HR teams start to produce more output on people analytics, there is a risk of ‘boiling the ocean’ on people analytics — quarterly engagement surveys, monthly churn data, diversity reporting. Figuring out the ‘so what’ of the data and using those insights to move the needle on business metrics that matter is harder, but also necessary. For HR integrating non-HR owned data is also important to get a fuller picture, especially for sales led businesses. For example, if sales drop off at the 2 year mark, what can HR do about that ? What HR processes change as a result of seeing high correlations between sales trajectory in the first 6 weeks and tenure greater than 6 months. In building predictive models for our clients, this is a sample of some of the actionable insights that were revealed through analysing both HR and sales performance data:

● We found that female sales recruiters had a faster performance trajectory, but with a noticeable slow down at 2 years — this led the client to change their targets at recruitment to hire more women and embed new development programs for women at the critical 2 year mark

● We observed a strong statistical correlation between outbound inside sales performance in the first 6 weeks and retention beyond 6 months, which led to changes in their onboarding but also more stringent probation processes earlier on to avoid holding onto people for too long

● We identified better team leaders based on relative performance of new starters by team leaders, where performance is defined as speed to sales productivity and retention at the 1 year mark

● We reduced the complexity and time invested in KPI tracking for both recruiters and the operations team through knowing which KPIs truly mattered as lead indicators of performance

Think creatively about what?business?data can help in HR

HR’s role is very much one of building bridges across the organisation — taking a helicopter view of talent, ensuring that the needs of the business will be met in 3 years, 5 years by the people in the business, in enabling communication and collaboration channels across teams and geographies.

Building a single source of truth about their employee base often justifies HR’s biggest tech investment in helping achieve those objectives — the so called ‘one size fits all’ HR system. Yet it’s a big step to assume that even with the HRIS in place that HR has all the data it needs to do its job. Every function is making similar investments — sales & marketing into CRMs, operations teams into rostering systems, LTI and OHS data that might sit in the BU or a separate OHS team.

Last century, HRs accountability might have ended when they filled a role. Today, HR is accountable for ‘talent optimisation’ and that means ensuring people’s success through their career with the organisation, and often even beyond. Knowing how that talent is performing on the job – roster adherence, injury patterns, call centre metrics, sales performance - are integral to optimising that talent pool.

Capitalise on these various streams of data!

I encourage HR leaders to be expansive about what is performance data, especially objective performance data, and being relentless in sourcing that data from their non-HR colleagues internally.

HR as a data generator for the business

Data generated within HR can help drive broader organisation decisions. B2C companies with large volumes of sales and marketing applicants can leverage the power of those volumes for the benefit of the rest of the business.

Big brand companies can receive half a million plus applications in one year, often engaging meaningfully with just a fraction. Technology allows you to test and engage meaningfully with every one of those applicants. Instead of thinking of that pool only as a candidate pool relevant to recruitment, for a B2C business, that pool is most likely also your consumer base and a rich source of data for your business.

Customer acquisition cost (CAC) for product and services like travel, retail, software, financial products range from $7 to $400?https://www.propellercrm.com/blog/customer-acquisition-cost ?, with companies committing substantial advertising budgets to reach that kind of audience, yet over in recruitment, they are engaging with them for free, at a point where the candidate / consumer is at their most willing and motivated to engage with you.

Imagine what consumer data you could capture from that applicant pool for the benefit of the business ?

Transparency and authenticity, forward-looking predictive data, business impact first, think creatively and broadly, and HR as data generator. These are 7 themes that can transform your organisation in 2024 by leveraging the data hidden within HR through the efficient use of technology.

?#aiforgood

#HR

#innovation

Renee Hughes

Client Relationship Manager @ UpperGround by Hudson, supporting Queensland Government clients to fuel transformation with on-demand tech talent.

10 个月

An insightful and interesting read.

Diana Wolfe

AI Research Leader | Doctoral Candidate | Data Scientist | Psychometrician | Rare Book Hunter

10 个月

Great read Barb! Loved this bit: “Figuring out the ‘so what’ of the data and using those insights to move the needle on business metrics that matter is harder, but also necessary.”

Victor Perton

"That Optimism Man"

10 个月

Thanks for the interesting and positive article.

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