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Training: HR Analytics

Training: HR Analytics

Topic 1 - Introduction


Formal vs. Real Organizations

Digital Disruption: Data as the New Asset

  • Uber — largest taxi company, owns no taxis
  • Airbnb — largest accommodation provider, owns no real estate
  • Facebook — most popular media owner, creates no content
  • Alibaba — most valuable retailer, holds no inventory
  • Netflix — largest movie house, owns no cinemas

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)

Querying vs. Data Mining

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)

The Beer and Diapers Story

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)

Big Data Requires Big Theories (Huselid, 2016)

  • More data is not always better. Without a clear purpose, more data creates noise, not insight.
  • Behavioral science theory matters. Moving from raw data to actionable knowledge requires understanding how and why people behave as they do.
  • The biggest challenge is not data infrastructure. Knowing what to measure and how to measure it is harder — and more important — than building the data pipeline itself.

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)

Don't Start with the Data

  • Define the business question clearly.
  • Identify what information would answer that question.
  • Collect and analyze the relevant data.
  • Develop cause-effect understanding before thinking about statistics.

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)


Exercises - Topic 1: Introduction


Exercise 1: The Goal of HR Analytics

What is the main goal of HR analytics?

Exercise 2: The Value of Data

Why is data useful in organizations?

Exercise 3: Digital Disruption

What does digital disruption highlight about data?

Exercise 4: Data Mining

What is the key advantage of data mining over querying?

Exercise 5: Beer and Diapers

What does the "beer and diapers" case primarily demonstrate?

Exercise 6: Starting Point

According to Mark Huselid, where should analytics start?

Topic 2 - Frameworks & Measurement


The Goal Framework: Understand → Explain → Predict

  • Understand: What did actually happen? What is happening right now? (descriptive analytics)
  • Explain: Why did something happen? What caused this outcome? (diagnostic analytics)
  • Predict: What will happen in the future? How can we prepare? (predictive analytics)

Source: “Strategic HR Analytics course”, Dr. Jan de Leede & Luuk Collou MSc. University of Twente (NL)

Hitting the Wall in HR Measurement

Source: “Investing in People: Financial impacts of Human Resources Initiatives”, W. Cascio and J. Boudreau.

Decision Frameworks: Learning from Finance and Marketing

  • Finance: Equity → Asset Productivity → Margin → Profits
  • Marketing: Investments → Mix (4 P's) → Customer Response → Customer Value → Lifetime Profits
  • HRM: Investments → Programs & Practices → Effectiveness → Organization & Talent → Sustainable Strategic Success
  • Efficiency metrics: Link spending to programs and practices (most common in HR today)
  • Effectiveness metrics: Link programs to their impact on the target group
  • Impact metrics: Connect effects to overall organizational success (currently underdeveloped in HR)

Source: “Investing in People: Financial impacts of Human Resources Initiatives”, W. Cascio and J. Boudreau.

The LAMP Framework (Cascio & Boudreau)

  • Logic (L): Can we articulate a clear connection between HR investments and organizational effectiveness?
  • Analytics (A): Can we create a design and analysis that will answer the questions we want to pose?
  • Measures (M): Do we have — or can we build — indicators for the key components of our logical analysis?
  • Process (P): Will the approach be compatible with the organization's values, culture, and readiness to act?

Source: “Investing in People: Financial impacts of Human Resources Initiatives”, W. Cascio and J. Boudreau.

The HR Analytics Value Chain (Kathryn Dekas)

  • 1. Opinion: Decisions based on intuition or "gut feeling" — no data involved
  • 2. Data: Raw, unstructured data that HR departments already possess (e.g., HRIS records)
  • 3. Metrics: Regular indicators or dashboards that track trends over time
  • 4. Analytics: Identifying relationships, trends, and patterns in the data
  • 5. Insights: Meaningful findings that explain what is happening and why
  • 6. Action: Business decisions — policy changes, process improvements, new programs — that drive organizational change

Source: Kathryn Dekas, "People Analytics: Using Data to Drive HR Strategy and Action"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6ISTjupi5g

Behavioral & Performance Analytics

  • Email traffic metadata (who communicates with whom, frequency, response times)
  • Calendar data (meeting patterns, cross-functional collaboration)
  • Records on corporate intranets and collaborative platforms
  • Browsing patterns on company systems
  • Instant messaging records

Exercises - Topic 2: Frameworks & Measurement


Exercise 7: Analytics Sequence

What is the correct sequence of analytical questions in HR Analytics?

Exercise 8: The Measurement Wall

What is the "wall" that HR analytics teams often hit?

Exercise 9: Learning from Other Disciplines

What should HR learn from marketing and finance?

Exercise 10: Decision Frameworks

What is the purpose of a decision framework in HR?

Exercise 11: Metric Types

Which type of metrics are most commonly used in HR today?

Exercise 12: LAMP Framework

What is the starting point of the LAMP framework?

Exercise 13: Value Chain Start

What comes first in the HR Analytics Value Chain?

Exercise 14: Raw HR Data

Why are raw HR data often insufficient on their own?

Exercise 15: Behavioral Analytics

What is the goal of behavioral and performance analytics?

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