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Common Characteristics. Leadership focused on business vs. administrationWorkforce sensitive to operational efficiencyInformation flow is timely and accessibleHR leadership contributes to profit or vision HRM (and use of technology) is strategic Technology is ?fit" to the culture (not reverse)
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2. Session Topics Characteristics of H-P Organizations
Leveraging Technology
Increasing Workforce Productivity
Aligning Business ~ HRM Goals
Assessing Transaction Cost vs. Real Value
Strategy, Planning, and Implementing
Some Insight into Trends and Quick Payoffs
3. Common Characteristics Leadership focused on business vs. administration
Workforce sensitive to operational efficiency
Information flow is timely and accessible
HR leadership contributes to profit or vision
HRM (and use of technology) is strategic
Technology is “fit” to the culture (not reverse)
Routine processes farmed out
A continuous measurement of H-P exists
4. The Cost of HRM Human resource expense
Executive management
Corporate staff
Field and line management
Employees
IT support
Materials, supplies
Technology
Service providers, contractors
Internal/external program management
5. HRM Business Processes HR and payroll administration
Compensation management
Compensation and benefits administration
Bargaining and workforce relations
Regulatory reporting
Organizational design (transformation)
Succession and career planning
Employee communication and content management
Competency management
Decision support (comp. planning, union negotiations)
Strategic planning for M&A
Industry, global, economic management
6. Building Your HRM Plan Conduct an audit of technology and processes
Assess internal infrastructure team capabilities
Build case for acquiring/improving technology
Build “bite sized” implementation steps
If not strategic, don’t do it
Evaluate partners for:
integration capabilities
match with your IT strategy
innovativeness and adaptability
training and usability
Develop a “Cost Justification Plan”
7. Defining Value
8. Workforce Readiness Beyond costs savings….
A more mobile workforce needs access to HR information at various locations and times
Changes in work style resulting from the proliferation of more functional wireless devices (phones, pagers, handsets, laptops and palmtops)
More than 100 million people use the web with more than 200 million new users expected in the next three years
Global delivery supported through eHR apps
Categorizing of global content versus local country variations
Culture diversity is more easily managed
Data security and “roles” management
Support for broader “portal” integration tools and content
9. Why Self-Service? Employee, manager and HR professionals
Employee self-service isn’t enough
Need manager tools to achieve workforce performance gains
HR must empower line managers to better manage employees
HR saves time to work on higher value activities
10. Self-Service Strategy Determine present operating costs
Volume
Duration
Peak activity during business cycle
Who owns and supports HR process
Define reasonable increase in productivity
Speed
Accuracy and integrity
Communication improvement
Usability and acceptability
What strategic initiatives will HRM staff re-focus on?
Identify “low hanging fruit” vs. phased-in goals
Define training and knowledge transfer needs
11. HR Tech Sophistication
12. Measuring Results 3 months, 1 year, and 2 years after “go live”
Pay cycle, quarterly, calendar and fiscal year-end
Is technology/solution adapting to business direction?
Are anticipated transaction costs achieved?
Reassess ownership, lease, or rental strategy
Are partners performing to contractual agreements?
If piloted in one BU, re-apply to other organizations
Is the entire cycle as efficient as possible?
New hire thru on-boarding
Annual performance appraisal
Annual benefits enrollment
HR focus on strategic objectives
13. Reality of Self Service Actual value (ROI) is specific to organization
Workforce accessibility
Transaction duration and volume
Capability and number of HR-related staff
Stakeholder philosophy
Use of newly available hours / savings
Adaptability of management and employees
Greatest return created from largely manual processes
Delineation of roles to support workflow
Employees
Direct managers and supervisors
Executive management
HR professionals
14. Case Study: Ben Enrollment
15. Case Study: Manager Self Service
16. Summary In short, achieving High Performance means…
Building a new “self-service-based” organization focused on connecting:
people to business strategies
people to each other
to shared knowledge and to the operational tools necessary to drive organizational success
Investing in and measuring results of HRM & self-service technology
Aligning HR technology initiatives with strategic business management objectives