It is increasingly assumed that HR professionals have a working knowledge of the key tactical and operational metrics that measure the role and the value of HR. However, as HR moves into higher positions within their organizations and as managing human capital becomes more critical to their organizations success, HR professionals must increasingly also have a working knowledge of the key strategic metrics. That means that HR professionals must be able to identify and present key HR metrics that will help their organizations make critical decisions, identify and plan for risks, and improve the bottom line.
Strategic HR metrics play an increasingly important role.
Such metrics as the Revenue-per-Employee (RPE) and the Return on Investment (ROI) are now standard measurements and ones that should be regularly measured human resources. Other metrics such as implemented impact of innovations on corporate revenue and the recruiting and employer branding effectiveness are also gaining attention. Together these and other important metrics are becoming important metrics that should be measured and watched.
As organizations increasingly place value on business metrics, HR will need to identify and update the strategic and operational metrics that it measures and reports.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?
The purposes of an organization’s human resources are to add value, make the organization more competitive and help the organization achieve its business objectives. The purposes of HR metrics are to help communicate the value added, demonstrate the contribution of human capital and measure employment related risks. As HR professionals are increasingly expect to become strategic partners, they increasingly need to understand and speak the language of business. Inherent in that language is the lexicon of business measurements and metrics - including HR metrics.
In this environment, HR professionals are increasingly being expected to become important contributors in their organizations planning and discussions activities. As a result, HR professionals must develop and maintain an understanding of the key strategic and operational issues affecting their organizations. This webinar discusses the use of HR metrics as a core competency, reviews the role HR metrics play in helping the organization make critical business decisions, describes the calculation of employment practices liability risk exposure and provides a discussion of some of the more widely used HR metrics.
AREA COVERED
Since HR metrics can assist your organization identify weaknesses and failures in its human resource management and employment practices compliance activities, your organization’s selection and use of specific HR metrics is not only an indicator of what issues it considers important, but is also an indication of your organization’s commitment to identify and ferret out ineffective or unlawful practices and processes. Thus, your organization may be scrutinized not only on the issues it chooses to measure, but also the issues it chooses to ignore.
Thus, your use of HR metrics considers both quantitative and qualitative methods and measurements, should help you assess your organization’s performance, and should provide you with data that will allow you to evaluate human capital outcomes.
This webinar identifies and discusses many of the HR metrics and measurements currently being used. It is designed to provide background material to help you analyze key metrics, help you determine the “right” metrics for your organization, and assist you use these metrics in the decision m making process.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Gain an understanding of key HR metrics
- Be able to identify and assess the strategic and operational impact of HR metrics
- Learn the role of metrics in measuring and communicating value
- Review the basics of using HR metrics in assessing human capital related risks
- Learn how HR metrics improve strategic and operational decision making
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
- *HR professionals
- *Managers and supervisors
- *CFOs
- *Internal auditors
- *Compliance officers
- *Risk managers
The purposes of an organization’s human resources are to add value, make the organization more competitive and help the organization achieve its business objectives. The purposes of HR metrics are to help communicate the value added, demonstrate the contribution of human capital and measure employment related risks. As HR professionals are increasingly expect to become strategic partners, they increasingly need to understand and speak the language of business. Inherent in that language is the lexicon of business measurements and metrics - including HR metrics.
In this environment, HR professionals are increasingly being expected to become important contributors in their organizations planning and discussions activities. As a result, HR professionals must develop and maintain an understanding of the key strategic and operational issues affecting their organizations. This webinar discusses the use of HR metrics as a core competency, reviews the role HR metrics play in helping the organization make critical business decisions, describes the calculation of employment practices liability risk exposure and provides a discussion of some of the more widely used HR metrics.
Since HR metrics can assist your organization identify weaknesses and failures in its human resource management and employment practices compliance activities, your organization’s selection and use of specific HR metrics is not only an indicator of what issues it considers important, but is also an indication of your organization’s commitment to identify and ferret out ineffective or unlawful practices and processes. Thus, your organization may be scrutinized not only on the issues it chooses to measure, but also the issues it chooses to ignore.
Thus, your use of HR metrics considers both quantitative and qualitative methods and measurements, should help you assess your organization’s performance, and should provide you with data that will allow you to evaluate human capital outcomes.
This webinar identifies and discusses many of the HR metrics and measurements currently being used. It is designed to provide background material to help you analyze key metrics, help you determine the “right” metrics for your organization, and assist you use these metrics in the decision m making process.
- Gain an understanding of key HR metrics
- Be able to identify and assess the strategic and operational impact of HR metrics
- Learn the role of metrics in measuring and communicating value
- Review the basics of using HR metrics in assessing human capital related risks
- Learn how HR metrics improve strategic and operational decision making
- *HR professionals
- *Managers and supervisors
- *CFOs
- *Internal auditors
- *Compliance officers
- *Risk managers