May 23, 2018
The Future of HR
10 min read
Mathematics: Chaos Theory
HR executives face daunting challenges when managing the human capital of an organisation. While trying to maintain a productive workforce and addressing a myriad of sociodemographic challenges, leaders have to:
- Capture and share knowledge from an aging or retiring workforce
- Manage the needs of a multigenerational workforce
- Communicate with a multilingual workforce
- Optimise productivity among a dispersed, international, and virtual workforce
- Coordinate operations with offshore/outsourcing partners
Information Technology: Big Data
In 2012 and 2013, Big Data became the hot topic in business literature. While the topic is seemingly simple in name, the issue is more complex. The industry standard definition of Big Data consists of three data characteristics:
- Volume: The amount of data being created on a daily basis is overwhelming.
- Velocity: The speed and rate of change at which data is collected and processed is difficult to fathom.
- Variety: The range of data types and sources is expanding, making standard analytics difficult to enact.
- Learning management systems store courses, serve up e-learning, track compliance, manage registrations, issue certifications, and even administer tests.
- Talent systems manage candidate applications, employee demographics, salary information, performance reviews, promotions, and many other things.
The Future
We can expect that there will be a verifiable Grand Unified Theory of Human Capital. It will explain the driving factors that lead to hiring, promoting, and retaining the best talent available. More importantly, the theory will be tested, confirmed and modified by billions of HR records. Big Data will allow analysts to ignore samples and focus on the big picture – the really big picture.
Due to the individual systems and consolidation of data sets through acquisitions, HR data proliferates. Today many HR organisations have an opportunity that existed only in the realms of science fiction for most large companies – an integrated view of HR data from cradle to grave for employees.
Choose LBTC for the training and development of employees in Human Resource Management.
Big Data will allow analysts to uncover what is happening within an organisation on a grand scale. Instead of focusing on a segment within an organisation or a sample across all of the organization, Big Data affords N = all. When possible, all available data will be analysed. Using standard descriptive statistics, analysts will be able to describe the current state and tell leaders what is happening. Correlation techniques will also be used to examine relationships among measures. Data sets that were once disparate will be joined so analysts can examine new relationships and test new hypotheses. Does increased salary lead to higher engagement? Or is it better to invest in development funds or special projects to increase engagement? Does the source of hire and the time to fill a position correlate with performance quality a year later? By examining these relationships, analysts will uncover what is happening in the organisation.
Video Interview:
The future of recruitment is virtual, and job seekers will need to adapt to this new reality. Video interviews are already an integral part of the recruiting process for bigger companies, thus needs to be practiced. Embracing these new technologies comes with obvious advantages for employers, but they also present certain challenges for job seekers. To keep up with this evolution, job seekers will need to adapt it in the recruiting process.
Check out LBTC’s HR generalist training course.
Companies will become more sophisticated with their analytic techniques. Understanding what is happening in an organisation will not be sufficient. Leaders will want to understand why things are happening. Correlation will still be useful, but it will be a gateway to more sophisticated techniques, such as multiple linear regression, structural equation modelling, logistic regression, linkage analysis, and discriminant analysis. Three things will support this change:
- Thirst for information among leaders:The C suite will quickly get bored with descriptive statistics, dashboards, and correlations that simply define the current state. They will want predictive analytics, and they will track future performance against predictions.
- Tools will be readily available: Advanced statistical tools will enable analysts to dig past the whatto the why. In fact, these tools are currently available, but you can expect that they will be packaged with established systems so analysts can conduct statistical tests without downloading the data to an offline system.
- Resources will be abundant:The sexiest job of the twenty-first century is data scientists (business analysts, statisticians, quants, data jockeys). You may be asking, “Really?” Well, there is a business need, and it has been publicly marketed. Additionally, universities are responding by offering analytics degrees.
