The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

The lifeblood of any business enterprise is its people. Yet it wasn’t until the publication of the groundbreaking book The ROI of Human Capital that there was a reliable way to quantify the contributions of people to corporate profit. Completely updated with new metrics, the book shows executives and HR professionals how to gauge human costs and productivity at three critical levels:

organizational (contributions to corporate goals)
• functional (impact on process improvement)
• human resources management (value added by five basic HR department activities)

The second edition contains new material on topics including corporate outsourcing, developments in behavioral science, and advances in trending and forecasting that have dramatically changed the way organizations measure the bottom line effect of employee performance. Utterly up-to-date, this is the go-to resource for organizations performing the essential task of measuring the value of their people.

1100624479
The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

The lifeblood of any business enterprise is its people. Yet it wasn’t until the publication of the groundbreaking book The ROI of Human Capital that there was a reliable way to quantify the contributions of people to corporate profit. Completely updated with new metrics, the book shows executives and HR professionals how to gauge human costs and productivity at three critical levels:

organizational (contributions to corporate goals)
• functional (impact on process improvement)
• human resources management (value added by five basic HR department activities)

The second edition contains new material on topics including corporate outsourcing, developments in behavioral science, and advances in trending and forecasting that have dramatically changed the way organizations measure the bottom line effect of employee performance. Utterly up-to-date, this is the go-to resource for organizations performing the essential task of measuring the value of their people.

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The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

by Jac Fitz-enz
The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

The ROI of Human Capital: Measuring the Economic Value of Employee Performance

by Jac Fitz-enz

Hardcover(Second Edition)

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Overview

The lifeblood of any business enterprise is its people. Yet it wasn’t until the publication of the groundbreaking book The ROI of Human Capital that there was a reliable way to quantify the contributions of people to corporate profit. Completely updated with new metrics, the book shows executives and HR professionals how to gauge human costs and productivity at three critical levels:

organizational (contributions to corporate goals)
• functional (impact on process improvement)
• human resources management (value added by five basic HR department activities)

The second edition contains new material on topics including corporate outsourcing, developments in behavioral science, and advances in trending and forecasting that have dramatically changed the way organizations measure the bottom line effect of employee performance. Utterly up-to-date, this is the go-to resource for organizations performing the essential task of measuring the value of their people.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814413326
Publisher: AMACOM
Publication date: 02/23/2009
Edition description: Second Edition
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.30(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jac Fitz-enz (San Jose, CA) has been called “the father of human performance benchmarking.” He is founder of the Saratoga Institute, known worldwide for its pioneering research and reports on performance measurement and improvement, and of the consulting firm Human Capital Source.

Read an Excerpt


Excerpt


Guiding Principles


"You may be flexible on strategy, but must remain consistent on principle!"

—Anonymous

Throughout the writing of this book, I made notes about the principles that underlie my thinking and experience. Originally, my thought was to place them in the book where their point would fit in the text. However, I now believe that it makes more sense to put them all in one place. As you review these principles, please pause for a moment on each one and ask yourself what the point is behind it. Why did I decide that it would be useful to reinforce these issues?

The Foundation Stones of the Human Capital Measurement Pathway

Principle 1: People Plus Information Drives the Knowledge Economy

You've heard it before and you'll hear it again: This is the Information Age, and people are the most important resource. It is true—profoundly true—with implications that are still difficult to fully grasp. Imagine going into the twenty-first century without current telecommunications technology. It would be impossible to sustain the growth of the world market without the rapid movement of information. And, as we increasingly automate our organizations, we change our cultures. Since communication is so central to a culture, new channels and media force a culture change. Bringing people and organizations along as fast as technology is the primary challenge.

Principle 2: Management Demands Data; with Relevant Data We Start Managing

To say that we have no data is not accurate. We collect data constantly through our senses in interaction with our colleagues and our environment. However, we need relevant information with which to make good decisions. Many decisions are made without adequate data. Sometimes it can't be helped. An apparent emergency springs up, and we must respond. Nevertheless, this does not provide an excuse for the lack of a human capital information database and reporting system. People who have the best information are the winners.

Principle 3: Human Capital Data Shows the How, the Why, and the Where

Since people are the only self-determining assets, it follows that they are the cause of everything that happens. If something goes well, it is due to the behaviors of the people involved. If it blows up, literally or figuratively, that is also the result of human behavior. It must follow, then, that in order to know how to improve something, we must know how people are dealing with it. Cost, time, quantity, and quality data on human capital provide the base for effective action.

Principle 4: Validity Demands Consistency; Being Consistent Promotes Validity

The principal criticism of human capital measurement is that it is neither as consistent nor as accurate as financial information. This is because people have started measurement programs by adopting unproven external metrics or by making up their own. When the system is not standardized, everyone who comes along is free to change it to suit their personal needs. Then there is no way to compare their view with that of others, since the definitions are idiosyncratic. They build a modern Tower of Babel. However, when a standard set of metrics is established and used consistently over a long period, they are as accurate as a financial system.

Principle 5: The Value Path Is Often Covered, and Analysis Uncovers the Pathway

One of the major barriers to measuring qualitative, intangible human capital factors is the belief that we cannot demonstrate cause and effect. Many unknown and unknowable forces constantly in action make it impossible to prove anything in business. Nevertheless, being clear about our destination, knowing the positive and negative forces along the way, and understanding the process necessary for the journey increase the odds that we will travel by the most expeditious route and arrive ahead of the hunch players.

Principle 6: Coincidence May Look Like Correlation but Is Often Just Coincidence

It is a great temptation to claim that factors moving in parallel are correlated. Unfortunately, often what we observe is only a random variation. This error can be avoided if we start our observation from valid principles. Believing that two things that are basically unconnected to each other are related is the basis for most misperceptions. To produce a true correlation, we must first demonstrate the probability that A and B have something to do with each other. Starting from this base avoids false conclusions.

Principle 7: Human Capital Leverages Other Capital to Create Value

People make things happen. Equipment, processes, and intellectual property are leveraged not by their inherent capability but by the actions of human beings. Employee skill, knowledge, and motivation generate the incremental values that lie within the potential of organizational assets. Management provides the structural capital at the best cost possible. Employees give life to that capital and create value through interaction with coworkers and outside stakeholders.

Principle 8: Success Requires Commitment, and Commitment Breeds Success

The history of sustained excellence in business shows that commitments were made to a long-term core strategy. That strategy described the organization's dedication to dealing with employees, customers, suppliers, competitors, and other stakeholders, including community and government. Frequent oscillations between divergent philosophies and behaviors are a recipe for failure. Despite accounts of sensational results in isolated and short-term situations, the rule is inviolable. Building an institution of value is the only management practice that guarantees long-term excellence.

Principle 9: Volatility Demands Leading Indicators, and Leading Indicators Reduce Volatility

Walking into the future with our eyes glued to the results of the past is a very dangerous act. The wide-open, volatile, global marketplace of the twenty-first century allows everyone to compete. Cyclonic changes in technology make yesterday's processes obsolete overnight. The instantaneous access to information and the annual doubling of knowledge demand a constant view of the horizon. We absolutely must have intelligence systems that provide clues to what is coming. That includes intelligence on human, structural, and relational capital. It is as vital to a successful future as a healthy lifestyle is to extended longevity.

Principle 10: The Key Is to Supervise, and the Supervisor Is the Key

All evidence points to personal relationships as the cornerstone of employee performance. The talented employee depends on the supervisor for guidance, support, and development. Throughout one's career, the supervisor is the principal route for two-way communications. This person interprets what is happening and what is coming. This person describes how change will affect the employee. This person defends the employee and is the primary channel through which employee ambitions are fulfilled.

Principle 11: The Future Is Harder to Prepare for Than the Past

I leave you with this business koan. Think about it. Let me know what it says to you (my personal e-mail: source@netgate.net).



Excerpted from The ROI of Human Capital by Jac Fitz-enz. Copyright © 2000 by Jac Fitz-enz. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Table of Contents

  • CONTENTS

     

    PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION

    PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION

     

    CHAPTER 1:

    Human

    Leverage

    CHAPTER 2:

    How to Measure Human Capital’s Contribution to Enterprise Goals

    CHAPTER 3:

    How to Measure Human Capital’s Impact on Processes

    CHAPTER 4:

    How to Measure Human Resources’ Value Added

    CHAPTER 5:

    End-to-End

    Human Capital Value Reports

    CHAPTER 6:

    Human

    Capital Analytics: The Leading Edge of Measurement

    CHAPTER 7:

    Predictive

    Analytics: Leading Indicators and Intangible Metrics

    CHAPTER 8:

    How to Measure and Value Improvement Initiatives Results

    CHAPTER 9:

    Outsourcing:

    A New Operating Model?

    CHAPTER 10:

    How to Change the Game

    CHAPTER 11:

    Eleven

    Principles, Seven Skills, and Five Metrics

     

    INDEX

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