GMCS
Editorial: Successful organizations have
already started to deploy data driven strategies in HR through utilizing our popular
Employer Branding Services to win the war on talent and to attract and retain the
best and the brightest for their organizations. GMCS Employer Branding Services
help your organization to:
- Understand Talent: What is it? Where and how can it be found?
- Build Talent: training and developing people rather than relying on educational systems or other employers to do it for you
- Creating organizational agility
- Tying all of these efforts together into the Employer Brand
Big data’s
importance to HR field grows.
HR and benefits professionals need to start using big
data to move their own departments and their companies’ end goals forward.
“You are not going to be a successful HR leader in 10
years if you don’t get data,” said Mike Bollinger, vice-president of HCM
transformation and thought leadership with Oracle during the Human Resources
Professional Association conference in Toronto this week.
The theme of his presentation, What's the Big Deal with
Big Data, looked at how HR practitioners can use big data as an analytical tool
to better drive not only their department and workforce, but the company as a
whole.
Bollinger cited survey results from the Economist
Intelligence Unit that said organizations that make data-driven decisions are
more likely to be stronger performers than those that make decisions that are
more instinct-driven.
“You have to have data to make good decisions,” he
stressed. “But at the end of the day it doesn’t change the art of going with
your gut.” Still, added Bollinger, people who use data to go with their gut do
better than those who do not.
The Economist survey further stated that not only is it
important for HR and benefit professionals to use data but to use the right
data. They say that predictive and trend data is the most important, while
things like real-time and qualitative data fall at the bottom of the list.
Expectations of HR and benefit practitioners are changing
dramatically, noted Bollinger. “We are expected to be change agents and I would
suggest we have to provide the same scientific rigor to our internal employee
population as we do to our customer data,” he said. With that in mind, HR
practitioners need to be good diagnosticians, he added.
Source: Employee
Benefit News
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