Register now or log in to join your professional community.
Good answer from Mr. Mohammed Mohammed Marzouk,I agree with him in all ponints .
As a recognized expert in the area of HR metrics, I’ve had the opportunity to advise numerous large firms on what HR metrics they ought to be utilizing. Through this experience, I have observed that a good number of firms make the same two errors when it comes to developing and implementing metrics. Avoiding these two errors will not guarantee success by itself, but it will go a long way towards ensuring that you are set up to handle any roadblocks or problems you may encounter along the path to using world-class metrics in your organization. These two common errors are:
The most common error that I find is that of HR managers trying to create and implement metrics in a vacuum. Instead, I recommend a collaborative approach, in which you take a list of strategic HR metrics that you can live with to the CFO and let him or her select the specific ones that are most likely to measure business impact and be easily understood and considered strategic by top management. By letting the CFO play a role in the selection process and allowing them to make the final decision on what metrics you will move forward with, you eliminate many of the roadblocks you may encounter ó and you’ll recruit a high-level champion at the same time. The second most common error that senior HR managers make in developing metrics is that they develop and track too many. A large number of metrics is both unnecessary and difficult to maintain. I recommend instead that you settle on between 8 and 12 really important metrics that demonstrate HR’s impact on the business. Because collecting data and calculating metrics is time-consuming and expensive, it’s important to focus your energies on the ones that really matter. My Hot List Of HR Metrics The following is a list of the 37 individual metrics in 14 different categories that I would recommend for consideration by a large organization, or even one that is not ready to do sophisticated data collection and analysis. These are not the most sophisticated metrics I can provide, but each of them is relatively easy to understand and the data needed to answer them is relatively easy to acquire. I recommend that you use this list of 37 powerful HR metrics as your initial list that you run by your CFO. Remember, before they have made their final selection, encourage them to limit the final metric count to 10 or less really strategic measures. First-Tier Metrics Overall Workforce Productivity The very best measure of overall HR success is workforce productivity. Any HR department that takes responsibility for improving workforce productivity is sure to be a hero among senior executives. The key is to continually improve the ratio between the dollars spent on employee costs (wages, benefits and overall HR expenses) and overall company revenue. Metrics in this category include:
Employee Engagement It’s essential that you balance employee engagement with employee productivity in order to ensure that managers don’t abuse or burnout their employees in an effort to maximize productivity. Both are important, and there are studies that demonstrate the impact of high engagement on productivity and a firm’s success. Managers should be rewarded for both high productivity and high employee engagement scores. Metrics include:
Recruiting Managers consistently rate recruiting among the top three things they expect from HR. Without overdoing it, here are some simple metrics that you can use to assess recruiting effectiveness:
Retention Retention is also a highly rated management issue. In this case, most turnover measures are too simple. Potential metrics include:
Overall HR Costs Even though overall HR costs are relatively small compared to all general and administrative expenditures, it never hurts to have a metric to ensure that the dollars spent in HR are resulting in a continuous rated improvement of workforce productivity.
Manager Satisfaction While many HR departments strive to assess manager satisfaction with HR, I offer caution. Because most HR people are great at building relationships managers seldom rate HR professionals low when they are asked directly whether they are satisfied with HR or their HR representative. However, if they are asked a different question relating to how satisfied they are with HR’s impact on their business unit’s productivity and success in reaching its goals, you quite often get a different less positive answer. As a result, I recommend you use a forced ranked survey that includes not just HR but every individual overhead function. Within that survey managers are asked just one particularly important question: “Rate each of these individual overhead functions on how much they contributed directly to your business unit’s productivity and its success at reaching its goals?” The metric to use:
Dollar Impact of HR on the Business
Second-Tier Metrics Compensation and Benefits Rather than trying to use a statistical method to determine pay fairness, I recommend that you survey employees on their perceptions of pay fairness compared to work expectations.
Employee Relations The metrics focused in the employee relations area analyze whether poor performing employees rapidly improve their performance or are terminated within a year.