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    Don't Be Fooled by a Low Salary Offer - The Cost of Living is Where It's At
    There are a number of factors to be considered when you are looking at taking a job at an international school, on the financial side there is:* salary* medical insurance* housing allowance* annual flightsOn the conditions side there is:* class size* facilities* contact hours* teaching days in a school yearMost of these factors can be taken at face value. However, if you like to travel and want your work to pay well as I do, you may be turning down lucrative positions if you take a salary offer at face value and don’t take the cost of living into account.For example, when I moved to Poland in the late 90s I accepted a job that only paid 900USD a month. It doesn’t sound like much, does it? I can tell you, I lived well on my money. During that year I explored Poland, spent Easter in the Czech Republic, went skiing in Austria for two weeks, started a Masters through distance learning and saved a little as well.How did I do this? Well, the cost of living was quite low in Poland compared to other countries in Europe. I regularly had two thirds of my salary left after I’d paid all my expenses for the month. As I said, it’s the cost of living that makes all the difference.Some countries have a high cost of living and some don’t. I know that’s a clumsy statement, but consider this… If you were to rent an apartment in Tokyo it would cost you 673USD a month for around 20 m2. That’s small! In Bangkok you can rent a 44 m2 furnished apartment for 337USD a month. I hope you can see that this kind o
    ver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to

    A Relationship Recovery Program: A Proactive Approach to Handling Customer Complaints
    Every organization has its share of complaints and, while every company would prefer not to have them, complaints do play an important part in the organization’s ability to continuously learn, improve and develop long-term client relationships. Complaints provide a feedback mechanism that help organizations rapidly and inexpensively shift products, service style, and/or market focus to meet the needs of the customer or continuously improve internal systems and processes that make it easier for the client to work with the organization. Complaints are one of the primary means to communicate directly with customers and should be welcomed as opportunities to engage in a dialogue with the client.Technical Assistance Research Programs (TARP), an Arlington-based market research firm, is the most widely quoted research group on complaints. Their work sheds additional light on the value of complaints.“TARP found that if companies can get customers to complain directly to them, they can minimize damage. Customers who complain about their dissatisfaction are also more likely to repurchase, even if their complaint is not handled satisfactorily. In fact, TARP concluded that customers who do not complain are the least loyal customers. Those who complain may become the most loyal customers. They are more likely to tell their inner circle how pleased they are that the company addressed their complaint, even if it wasn’t resolved to their liking. If the problem is resolved to their satisfaction, they will tell even more people about the successful resolution of their problem.”Version 1.1

    What is Human Capital?
    Human capital is just one of an organisation’s intangible assets. It is basically all of the competencies and commitment of the people within an organisation i.e. their skills, experience, potential and capacity. Other examples of intangible assets include: brand, software, design, working methods and customer relationships. The human capital asset captures all the people oriented capabilities we need for a business to be successful.

    It’s important to remember, however, that individuals are only an asset insofar as they choose to invest their human capital in an organisation.

    Some people find the term Human Capital somewhat mechanistic, but human capital is not about describing people as economic units, rather it is a way of viewing people as critical contributors to an organisation’s success. This then throws the spotlight on how businesses invest in their human capital asset, in order for it to add value. For any commercial organisation, this is an important component to understand. If a company understands how its human capital contributes to their business success, it can then be measured and managed more effectively.

    Human capital management is a reciprocal relationship between supply and demand: employees, contractors and consultants invest their own human capital into business enterprises and the business enterprises need to manage the supplier. Any organisation interested in its performance will naturally ask how well they are managing this asset to ensure maximum return on their investment. In the same way, all employees, contractors, consultants and providers of human capital want to ensure they are getting the appropriate return for their own human capital investing through salary, bonuses, benefits, and so on. Understanding how and why people add value or not to an organisation is an important, and difficult, management skill for the 21st century.

    Why is Human Capital an increasingly important issue?
    Human capital has never been more critical to competitiveness, because the world has changed. Over the last 15 years we have witnessed a revolution in the workforce, as well as in the workplace.

    The Workplace
    Increasingly the developed world has evolved into a service and information economy. In an information economy, people are the critical asset and in a service economy many more outputs are intangible, as much as 80 per cent of a company’s worth is now tied to its people. Access to financial capital is no longer a source of competitive advantage; our competitiveness increasingly derives from know-how, or people’s abilities, skills and competence. People, the human capital asset, with the right profile and capability provide an advantage, which is not easily replicated by competitors.

    The Workforce
    At the same time, the labour force has also changed dramatically. Organisations know they need people to deliver value in new and different ways, and that those people they depend on have changed. For example, we see an aging, more diverse population, with more women entering the workforce, more dual-earner couples. However businesses can still struggle with a general shortage of the skills required in a service and information economy.

    The war for talent in the human capital market place means businesses can’t take for granted that individuals will want to invest their own human capital in an organisation. Elements, other than traditional pay and job security, need to be put in place to attract and retain top talent.

    These changes have culminated to ensure that human capital is becoming a major driver for organisational performance. Forty-six per cent of Chief Executives say that finding good people and keeping them is their single biggest worry and most fear their employees are ill-equipped in terms of skills. The investment community is now probing human capital issues, yet most Chief Finance Officers say they have only a moderate understanding of the returns they get from what is often their largest single investment – people. Human capital then is a critical contributor to competitive advantage.

    What is the challenge for organisations?
    Human capital may well now be the most critical source of competitive advantage, but it is also the most difficult to measure. If people are a company’s greatest asset, how do we quantify the value of this asset?

    The phrase ‘our people are our greatest asset’ has become a tired clich? around which real cynicism has justifiably been created. The cynicism is based on the gap between what a business says and what it does. If an organisation can’t prove that its people are its greatest asset, then it isn’t being measured and it can’t really be managed. The quantifiable evaluation of human capital is a challenge and there is currently no accepted way of doing this. There is no single measure, independent of context, which can describe the impact of employee competencies and commitment on business performance. There are reliable methods for measuring the return on investment on physical capital, but not for human capital; it’s a new and evolving science.

    Causality is the issue; it is very difficult to prove links between ‘cause’ and ‘effect’ in a complex working and social environment. Assigning causality is a challenge because a business context is a very different social environment, e.g. is customer satisfaction really improved because employee retention has improved, or is it because that business invested in better technology and improved their product? Is an organisation getting discretionary effort from its people because they have been allowed flexible working, or because they are being paid more than competitors’ offers, or even a mixture of both? Correlations are not the same as causality either. The challenge for most organisations is that if the value of human capital can’t be quantified, where and how do they make the best investment in their asset, and how do they know what the return on that investment will be?

    What does this mean for HR?
    The pressure on HR functions to perform is greater than ever because of the critical role human capital plays in an organisation’s wealth, success and competitiveness today. If the role of HR is to optimise ‘people performance’ then businesses need to ask what ‘good’ HR looks like for their organisation.

    Increasingly it’s understood that a good HR function can add significant value and make a real contribution to an organisation’s performance, however looking at HR through a human capital lens puts further demands on the function. HR needs to make causal connections clear between their practices and business value. This means moving from describing good HR practice to proving it.

    For decades HR has wanted greater legitimacy for their role; often without a seat at the top table. With human capital now being such a source of competitive advantage, the door is open for HR to bring to the table the value they have for many years been espousing. But how do they do this?

    The HR paradigm shift
    If we accept human capital is one of the key assets driving creation of value, then HR is not a cost centre but an asset provider. It is a function that enables businesses to manage people better than other companies, but to prove this, HR needs to change its approach quite fundamentally.

    Most HR functions are on this route, in some form or other, already:

    • Moving from efficiency to effectiveness
    • Moving from cost to value-add
    • Moving from inputs to outputs
    • Moving from data collection to data analysis
    • Moving from traditional HR data to linking it to operational performance

    Having this intelligence informs our answer to the question of what HR should be doing in order to deliver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to

    Business Success Means Achieiving The Success Advantage Factor Through 3 External Capacities
    Much is written about the how to achieve business success. From the Balance Scorecard for business to The On-Purpose Business, business owners have a wealth of information to turn their hard efforts into bountiful success. Yet, success still eludes many.What I have recently discovered as a small business coach, is that there are 3 distinct and separate capacities that every business has regardless of size and how these are used determines The Success Advantage Factor. Planning Execution Measurement How the business leverages, balances and aligns these capacities within each area or department or dashboard is the Success Advantage Factor.Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance? by Louis V. Gertner, he shared that IBM did great planning, but had a terrible time in the capacity of execution and measurement. Research suggests that many small business coaches are missing the boat because they fail to measure their progress. Business consultants, Jason Jennings and Laurence Haughton, in their book It’s Not the Big that Eat the Small . . . It’s the Fast that Eat the Slow revealed that most business executives spent less than 15 minutes a day planning the future.Each capacity must grow proportionally to the other. When one capacity overwhelms the other capacities, the success advantage factor is diminished.Internet web sites or Internet marketing is a prime example of how these ca
    Capital an increasingly important issue?
    Human capital has never been more critical to competitiveness, because the world has changed. Over the last 15 years we have witnessed a revolution in the workforce, as well as in the workplace.

    The Workplace
    Increasingly the developed world has evolved into a service and information economy. In an information economy, people are the critical asset and in a service economy many more outputs are intangible, as much as 80 per cent of a company’s worth is now tied to its people. Access to financial capital is no longer a source of competitive advantage; our competitiveness increasingly derives from know-how, or people’s abilities, skills and competence. People, the human capital asset, with the right profile and capability provide an advantage, which is not easily replicated by competitors.

    The Workforce
    At the same time, the labour force has also changed dramatically. Organisations know they need people to deliver value in new and different ways, and that those people they depend on have changed. For example, we see an aging, more diverse population, with more women entering the workforce, more dual-earner couples. However businesses can still struggle with a general shortage of the skills required in a service and information economy.

    The war for talent in the human capital market place means businesses can’t take for granted that individuals will want to invest their own human capital in an organisation. Elements, other than traditional pay and job security, need to be put in place to attract and retain top talent.

    These changes have culminated to ensure that human capital is becoming a major driver for organisational performance. Forty-six per cent of Chief Executives say that finding good people and keeping them is their single biggest worry and most fear their employees are ill-equipped in terms of skills. The investment community is now probing human capital issues, yet most Chief Finance Officers say they have only a moderate understanding of the returns they get from what is often their largest single investment – people. Human capital then is a critical contributor to competitive advantage.

    What is the challenge for organisations?
    Human capital may well now be the most critical source of competitive advantage, but it is also the most difficult to measure. If people are a company’s greatest asset, how do we quantify the value of this asset?

    The phrase ‘our people are our greatest asset’ has become a tired clich? around which real cynicism has justifiably been created. The cynicism is based on the gap between what a business says and what it does. If an organisation can’t prove that its people are its greatest asset, then it isn’t being measured and it can’t really be managed. The quantifiable evaluation of human capital is a challenge and there is currently no accepted way of doing this. There is no single measure, independent of context, which can describe the impact of employee competencies and commitment on business performance. There are reliable methods for measuring the return on investment on physical capital, but not for human capital; it’s a new and evolving science.

    Causality is the issue; it is very difficult to prove links between ‘cause’ and ‘effect’ in a complex working and social environment. Assigning causality is a challenge because a business context is a very different social environment, e.g. is customer satisfaction really improved because employee retention has improved, or is it because that business invested in better technology and improved their product? Is an organisation getting discretionary effort from its people because they have been allowed flexible working, or because they are being paid more than competitors’ offers, or even a mixture of both? Correlations are not the same as causality either. The challenge for most organisations is that if the value of human capital can’t be quantified, where and how do they make the best investment in their asset, and how do they know what the return on that investment will be?

    What does this mean for HR?
    The pressure on HR functions to perform is greater than ever because of the critical role human capital plays in an organisation’s wealth, success and competitiveness today. If the role of HR is to optimise ‘people performance’ then businesses need to ask what ‘good’ HR looks like for their organisation.

    Increasingly it’s understood that a good HR function can add significant value and make a real contribution to an organisation’s performance, however looking at HR through a human capital lens puts further demands on the function. HR needs to make causal connections clear between their practices and business value. This means moving from describing good HR practice to proving it.

    For decades HR has wanted greater legitimacy for their role; often without a seat at the top table. With human capital now being such a source of competitive advantage, the door is open for HR to bring to the table the value they have for many years been espousing. But how do they do this?

    The HR paradigm shift
    If we accept human capital is one of the key assets driving creation of value, then HR is not a cost centre but an asset provider. It is a function that enables businesses to manage people better than other companies, but to prove this, HR needs to change its approach quite fundamentally.

    Most HR functions are on this route, in some form or other, already:

    • Moving from efficiency to effectiveness
    • Moving from cost to value-add
    • Moving from inputs to outputs
    • Moving from data collection to data analysis
    • Moving from traditional HR data to linking it to operational performance

    Having this intelligence informs our answer to the question of what HR should be doing in order to deliver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to

    What to Look For in an Oil Analysis Lab
    Most industrial plants in need of oil analysis services might begin their search on the web. While this is a common and effective place to begin the evaluation process, it definitely will not tell the whole story. Knowing the right questions to ask after the initial search is completed is crucial in uncovering a superior provider from an average oil analysis provider.While the discerning potential customer may ask questions regarding testing capabilities, process and protocol, and price there are other questions whose answers may mean the difference between a seamless interaction and a laborious one. It is these questions that are most commonly overlooked and most important to understand.With your time and money on the line, and so many oil analysis labs to pick from, how do you choose the right company? Here are five critical questions to ask when evaluating an oil analysis laboratory to ensure a successful long term oil analysis program.1. What is your normal turnaround? Contrary to popular belief, there are oil analysis laboratories out there that have the capability to provide high quality results and reporting in 24 hours. If the lab you’re working with doesn’t provide this, at least make sure expectations are defined up front. Know exactly what you’ll be receiving, and when. Do “days” include weekends? What about business hours?While sample turnaround varies, just asking this question up front can give you a good idea of the overall process efficiency. No matter what the turnaround time, there should always be notification systems in place so
    issues, yet most Chief Finance Officers say they have only a moderate understanding of the returns they get from what is often their largest single investment – people. Human capital then is a critical contributor to competitive advantage.

    What is the challenge for organisations?
    Human capital may well now be the most critical source of competitive advantage, but it is also the most difficult to measure. If people are a company’s greatest asset, how do we quantify the value of this asset?

    The phrase ‘our people are our greatest asset’ has become a tired clich? around which real cynicism has justifiably been created. The cynicism is based on the gap between what a business says and what it does. If an organisation can’t prove that its people are its greatest asset, then it isn’t being measured and it can’t really be managed. The quantifiable evaluation of human capital is a challenge and there is currently no accepted way of doing this. There is no single measure, independent of context, which can describe the impact of employee competencies and commitment on business performance. There are reliable methods for measuring the return on investment on physical capital, but not for human capital; it’s a new and evolving science.

    Causality is the issue; it is very difficult to prove links between ‘cause’ and ‘effect’ in a complex working and social environment. Assigning causality is a challenge because a business context is a very different social environment, e.g. is customer satisfaction really improved because employee retention has improved, or is it because that business invested in better technology and improved their product? Is an organisation getting discretionary effort from its people because they have been allowed flexible working, or because they are being paid more than competitors’ offers, or even a mixture of both? Correlations are not the same as causality either. The challenge for most organisations is that if the value of human capital can’t be quantified, where and how do they make the best investment in their asset, and how do they know what the return on that investment will be?

    What does this mean for HR?
    The pressure on HR functions to perform is greater than ever because of the critical role human capital plays in an organisation’s wealth, success and competitiveness today. If the role of HR is to optimise ‘people performance’ then businesses need to ask what ‘good’ HR looks like for their organisation.

    Increasingly it’s understood that a good HR function can add significant value and make a real contribution to an organisation’s performance, however looking at HR through a human capital lens puts further demands on the function. HR needs to make causal connections clear between their practices and business value. This means moving from describing good HR practice to proving it.

    For decades HR has wanted greater legitimacy for their role; often without a seat at the top table. With human capital now being such a source of competitive advantage, the door is open for HR to bring to the table the value they have for many years been espousing. But how do they do this?

    The HR paradigm shift
    If we accept human capital is one of the key assets driving creation of value, then HR is not a cost centre but an asset provider. It is a function that enables businesses to manage people better than other companies, but to prove this, HR needs to change its approach quite fundamentally.

    Most HR functions are on this route, in some form or other, already:

    • Moving from efficiency to effectiveness
    • Moving from cost to value-add
    • Moving from inputs to outputs
    • Moving from data collection to data analysis
    • Moving from traditional HR data to linking it to operational performance

    Having this intelligence informs our answer to the question of what HR should be doing in order to deliver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to

    Car Wash Fundraiser Pre-Flyer Announcement Strategies
    If you are going to have a carwash fundraiser it makes sense to print up fliers in advance and to hand them out to people around the city. One of the best places to hand out carwash fundraiser fliers will be local small-business people, realtors and companies that sell food items. Perhaps the local pizza place will put your carwash fundraiser fliers on top pizza boxes.We have noted that many grocery stores will put one inside each bag at the checkout. There are many ways to distribute fliers in advance of your carwash fundraiser and it indeed will bring out many more people.It is recommended that these carwash fundraiser pre-fliers be printed in a bright color, specifically solar yellow. These fliers should have the logo for your nonprofit group or sports team and the time and date of the carwash fundraiser in bold along with a car or truck graphic as well. Simple and to the point flyers work best with a little graphic work.Making fliers on a computer these days is very easy and certainly someone in the group can design a flyer rather quickly and take it down to the print shop. Sometimes the print shop will put their logo and small advertisement on the back and therefore print them for free and this might also be something you might consider. Think of this in 2006.
    at if the value of human capital can’t be quantified, where and how do they make the best investment in their asset, and how do they know what the return on that investment will be?

    What does this mean for HR?
    The pressure on HR functions to perform is greater than ever because of the critical role human capital plays in an organisation’s wealth, success and competitiveness today. If the role of HR is to optimise ‘people performance’ then businesses need to ask what ‘good’ HR looks like for their organisation.

    Increasingly it’s understood that a good HR function can add significant value and make a real contribution to an organisation’s performance, however looking at HR through a human capital lens puts further demands on the function. HR needs to make causal connections clear between their practices and business value. This means moving from describing good HR practice to proving it.

    For decades HR has wanted greater legitimacy for their role; often without a seat at the top table. With human capital now being such a source of competitive advantage, the door is open for HR to bring to the table the value they have for many years been espousing. But how do they do this?

    The HR paradigm shift
    If we accept human capital is one of the key assets driving creation of value, then HR is not a cost centre but an asset provider. It is a function that enables businesses to manage people better than other companies, but to prove this, HR needs to change its approach quite fundamentally.

    Most HR functions are on this route, in some form or other, already:

    • Moving from efficiency to effectiveness
    • Moving from cost to value-add
    • Moving from inputs to outputs
    • Moving from data collection to data analysis
    • Moving from traditional HR data to linking it to operational performance

    Having this intelligence informs our answer to the question of what HR should be doing in order to deliver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to

    Networking is Like Black Jack
    Playing Black Jack (aka ‘21') requires that you play by the rules, or you ruin it for the other players. When the dealer has a card showing between 2 and 6, you never risk going over 21. That's the rule. More times than not, you will come out ahead and so will everyone at the table.You need to know and follow the rules in networking, too, or you risk upsetting everyone at the table! For example, when you have 30 seconds to talk about your business, respect that time.When you follow the rules consistently in Black Jack – combined with some skill - you win. When you follow the rules consistently in networking – combined with some skill - you win there, too!One of the rules that – when followed consistently – will work for you, is to network at the right location. Either you attend networking events where your target market hangs out (direct) or where your strategic alliances gather (indirect).For me, because there are numerous networking groups organized just so my target market can gather, I am able to gather where they meet. I target women small business owners. If you have not yet selected a target, consider in your selection process how accessible they are as well as if they will actually pay you for your product/service.Another important rule of networking is to give it enough time. If you only attend sporadically and/or expect great returns after only a few visits, you will probably be disappointed. The way you win at networking is to build relationships with people so you will be the first person they think of when they need you or when the
    ver business impact.

    Linking HR practice and individual or organisational performance is therefore at the heart of what HR needs to do so it can identify how HR policies translate into performance. As a minimum, HR should have reliable data in conventional areas, such as churn, absence, labour costs, time and costs of recruiting, etc but they must also have access to performance measures, such as production figures, sales targets, service level agreements and be able to make links between the two.

    Increasing the capability of HR to deliver more commercially will be the key to demonstrating how HR can really add value to an organisation.

    What does this mean for Finance Directors and the CEO?
    The gap between a company’s tangible assets and its stock market value is growing. For many businesses the tangible assets on the balance sheet represent a small part of their stock market valuation or the value to a potential acquirer. In most organisations, reporting and evaluation of human capital is non-existent. As the world has changed and human capital has become more critical to competitiveness, it has exposed the limitations of traditional accounting practices in being able to identify the real value-adding components of an organisation. The issue is, if we don’t know how to measure intangible assets, how do we know whether to invest, or how much?

    How do we link investment in the following areas to business performance?

    • Induction
    • Skills and technical training
    • Management training
    • Organisational roles
    • Process design
    • Workforce planning
    • Reward management
    • Retention management
    • Employee feedback
    • Performance management, etc

    We know the evaluation and measurement of human capital is difficult and that it’s an evolving science, but for most Finance Directors, understanding the performance of their human capital investments is extremely weak compared to their understanding of any other asset in their business.

    Many finance professionals see people as an operating cost, not as a source of value creation. They also then treat all expenditure on human capital as a cost to be minimised, as opposed to a cost that can be optimised. Without the measures and links, however, it is hard to know how to do the latter and who in the business is responsible for that: HR; Finance; or both?

    There is also a difference between internal and external reporting. Increasingly, externally a company will be assessed on the basis of the amount of information it can provide about its internal labour market and how well that market serves its business objectives. External human capital reporting required of organisations today is still limited and is largely narrative, but this may well change.

    The real challenge is how to move along the continuum, using HR analytics, to deliver a picture of how human capital investments create business value. To move from generating HR information, to reporting human capital and then measuring that asset, so it can be managed.

    What does this mean to Ceridian clients? Our Vision is that “Everything we do is focused on increasing the value of an organisation’s human capital and enabling HR to deliver real business impact.”

    The scenarios outlined previously represent a real opportunity and a real challenge for Ceridian. As an HR service provider we are dealing with HR and Finance professionals who are struggling with the issue of human capital in their own organisations. We therefore have an opportunity to create a value-add proposition that moves us out of the‘efficiency’ box of a classic outsourcer, i.e. just being cheaper, and into the effectiveness box, i.e. that we add value to our clients’ business.To do this we need to create tools for HR and Finance in order to allow them to understand their human capital strengths and weaknesses, and then develop solutions to increase the value of their human capital.Ceridian has therefore engaged a human capital partner to create the tool that will establish the links between HR practice and business value. This will be linked to our overarching market proposition, but will be founded in sound research and development.

    Ceridian will create a simple, pragmatic tool that is also academically robust to demonstrate our capability, credentials and leadership in this field. The model will be innovative and a differentiator that positions us as human capital specialists, helping HR become more commercial.

    This also means that Ceridian will be ‘practising what we preach’, opening our doors with pride to clients and prospects in terms of our own human capital reporting, analysis and management. It will also be imperative that we work with foundation clients to build compelling case studies of the evidential links between human capital and business value. It also means that for every one of our solutions, human capital management and interventions will be linked to ROI.

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