The purposes of an organization's Human Resources department are to add value, make the organization more competitive, and help the organization achieve its business objectives. The purposes of HR metrics are to help communicate the value-added, demonstrate the contribution of human capital, and measure employment-related risks.
Thus, to become a strategic partner, HR professionals need to speak the language of business. Inherent in that language is the lexicon of business measurements and metrics? Including HR metrics. HR metrics help communicate the value added by the HR function, demonstrate the contribution of human capital, and measure employment-related risks. This webinar discusses the use of HR metrics as a core competency.
This new 2020 HR Metrics session reviews the utilization of HR metrics and analytics and as a key competency, reviews the role they play in helping the business make critical business conclusions, discusses the computation of employment practices risk, and provides a list of more widely used HR metrics.
HR metrics and analytics play a vital role in business management. Top management makes use of HR analytics as a crucial part of its strategic planning and application activities. It increasingly makes essential decisions based on the important data HR analytics provides.
Operational management relies on HR metrics to ascertain and handle vital operational and transactional issues. HR metrics give them the power to understand, anticipate, and monitor important areas and help management make important, organization-wide decision making. For operational administration, HR metrics can provide real-time data on how effectively operations are running.
For HR professionals, HR metrics and analytics can provide crucial and useful information about how effectively the organization uses this intangible resource - its employees. For HR Professionals, HR metrics provides a scorecard on employment practices.
This webinar identifies and discusses many of the HR metrics and measurements currently being used. It is designed to provide background material to help you analyze key metrics, help you determine the "right" metrics for your organization, and assist you to use these metrics in the decision m making the process.
Ronald L. Adler, president of Laurdan Associates Inc. has 42 years of HR consulting experience and has served as a consulting expert on work force, workplace, and HR management issues for The Wall Street Journal, HRMagazine, and other publications and newspapers across the country. Mr. Adler's research findings have been used by the Federal Reserve Board, the EEOC, the National Conference of State Legislatures, the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), insurers, and international organizations.
Mr. Adler is a frequent lecturer and author on HR management, employment practices, and UI issues. Mr. Adler is the author and editor of the Employment-Labor Law Audit (ELLA), the internationally recognized HR auditing and employment practices liability risk assessment process.
Mr. Adler is an adjunct professor at Villanova University where teaches a graduate level course in HR Auditing. Mr. Adler is also a certified instructor for The Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters (CPCU) Society on employment practices liability and HR auditing issues and has conducted continuing education courses for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) on HR management and HR auditing topics. Additionally Mr. Adler has served as an adjunct instructor at the Baltimore City Community College on workplace diversity and sexual harassment.
Mr. Adler is an appointee to State of Maryland's Unemployment Insurance (UI) Oversight Committee and previously served as an appointee to the State's UI Funding Task Force, the UI Advisory Committee, and the state's Workforce Training Initiative. Mr. Adler has served as a moderator at the State of Maryland's Annual Human Relations Conference and at the state's Annual Small Business Conference.