Summary
Commentators are currently polarised around the future of the HR function. Some suggest that the function is about to enter a boom period as after several years of cajoling, organisations are placing far greater significance on talent management and putting strategic HR activities at the heart of the business. On the other hand others believe that HR is still struggling to rise to the challenge and is destined to remain a transaction based cost centre for the foreseeable future. As with most things, in the truth probably resides somewhere in the middle. This article explores the evidence for both perspectives and suggests that solving apparently intangible human capital problems is the best way for HR to profit from the current circumstances.
The Case for Boom
In examining the factors contributing to the possible ‘boom’ scenario, there are at least four underlying developments which contribute to this[1].
The Talent Management Agenda
The most significant development is recent research conducted by Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) and McKinsey which suggests that talent management is now a major priority for business leaders. PwC report that 89% of 1,150 CEOs agree that the people agenda is a top priority and a further 67% believe this is where their time is best spent. Meanwhile, McKinsey state that “By far the most significant trend - cited by 47 percent of the executives - is the intensifying battle for talented people. Shifting centres of economic activity and increasing technological connectivity were the next most important trends, each with 34 percent.” Such data paints a clear picture that executives are now firmly focused on talent management as a key, if not the top priority.
The Growth of Talent Management Software
The second development is the growth of the talent management software market, suggesting that leaders are paying more than lip service to the “our people are our greatest asset” mantra. Gartner defines such software by saying that “most large companies have implemented an integrated set of administrative human capital management applications. Now, these companies are turning their attention to strategic talent management applications to get more value from their investments in people.” As reported by the Yankee Group, this market has a CAGR[2] of 26%, making the market worth $4.0bn by 2009. The forecast also seems to be holding good with Gartner analyst Jim Holincheck reporting more enquiries for talent management software this year compared to last, along with a record growth rate for 2007 of 20%.
Rising HR Salaries
Likely to be of greatest interest to practitioners is the increase in salary and interim rates for HR professionals. Reed Human Resources reports an 11% rise in salaries during 2007 and a 30% increase in the size of the interim market. In similar fashion, agency Josline Rowe reports a rise in interim day rates from £350 to £500. As with the software market, such growth rates suggest that the intentions reported by PwC and McKinsey are being translated into the market and show a genuine commitment to act[3] and recognition of the value that HR can contribute.
The State of the Profession
There are a number of other trends that also suggest a positive future ahead for HR. The launch of the Human Capital Management Institute along with Jackie Orme, CEO of the CIPD speaking of “the headroom to grow our role as a function” and that “this gives us tremendous opportunity” suggests the profession is looking to develop itself. Further to the rhetoric, PwC’s research shows that between 2002 and 2006, the HR function has increased its HR staff to FTE ratio from 105 to 90, while raising the number of managers and professionals as a proportion of total staff in the department by 5.9% to 65.7%. Such improvements have been realised alongside an increasingly efficient HR department. HR departments are now 14.8% more efficient, costing £1,110 to run per FTE in 2006 as against £1,275 in 2002.
Bust
While there are four factors that contribute to the ‘boom’ of HR, there are three factors that point towards the ‘bust’ side of the debate.
HR’s opinion of HR
Both formally and informally, there are a number of diverging opinions as to the current state of HR. While the CIPD speak of “opportunity” and “headroom to grow”, PwC suggests that “the future of the profession remains a matter for speculation”. Perhaps the most telling comment comes from the CIPD website itself where someone asks “I would so dearly love to work for an organisation that can see the connection between HR and day to day business running. Do these organisations exist?” Such opinions become more stark when seen in light of practitioners views of the CIPD. An August 2008 survey found that 61% of people don’t believe the CIPD is relevant to modern business leaders while Barry Hoffman, branch secretary for central London said “The structure, constitution and operation of the institute should be reviewed, there can be no sacred cows.”
The Verdict on Business Partnering
While Dave Ulrich’s work on Business Partnering has been historically well received within HR, more recent opinion suggests a questionable legacy. Research from Roffey Park has found that half of 479 mangers found that business partnering was less than successful in their organisations. Opinion on the practice ranges from “if you re-badge people without giving them training and awareness, you are setting them up for failure” to “I consider my role to be about adding value to the business and understanding the business model”. While the debate about business partnering goes on, Ulrich defended his work by saying “HR has been woeful at knowing the business well enough. We still have people in HR that cannot talk to board members when they start talking about cashflow or numbers. Equally, partnering was not about how HR can get into the boardroom, but what it does once it's there.”
HR’s Capabilities
With opinion divided about the state of the profession and (arguably) its modus operani suffering from a lack of wholesale acceptance, it is worth turning our attention back to the research. McKinsey report that 58% of line managers agree that HR lacks the capability to develop talent strategies, while only 25% of HR practitioners hold the same view. Also, in a similar vein to the thoughts above, 60% of managers and 51% of practitioners view HR as an administrative department. Meanwhile, PwC report on the top 10 barriers to change, of which 6 (as indicated by the *) are arguably the remit of HR.
Table 1 - Top Barriers to Change
Top Ten Barriers | Percentage of Companies |
Competing resources | 48% |
Functional boundaries * | 44% |
Change skills * | 42% |
Middle management | 38% |
Long IT lead times | 35% |
Communication * | 34% |
Employee opposition * | 33% |
People issues * | 32% |
Initiative fatigue * | 32% |
Unrealistic timetables | 31% |
What is the cause?
While people may debate the merits and likely outcome of the ‘Boom’ or ‘Bust’ scenarios, it is useful to understand some of the causes and contributing factors.
A Macro Perspective
There are a number of macro factors that go towards creating today’s circumstances and these are most simply distilled via the PESTLE framework.
- Political factors, similar to legal, outline the political will of the state that has seen the championing of individual rights. For example, the human rights act, corporate manslaughter legislation and reaction to migrant workers.
- Economic influences include compensation and benefits strategy, costs of acquiring and developing talent, business model success and the impact of economic forces on an organisation’s objectives.
- Social elements include demographics, changes in lifestyle and living arrangements, the need to account for multiple generations of people in the workforce and changes in society that impact the workplace.
- Technological changes include greater availability of computing power and software, the increased sophistication and appetite for talent management software, greater efficiencies through systems, the relative maturity of the IT industry, innovations and R&D activities.
- Legal issues include employment law, health and safety legislation, discrimination, competition law and related Acts of Parliament.
- Environmental factors consist of sustainability, impact on the environment, an organisation’s carbon footprint, corporate social responsibility and the perception of the organisation in the eyes of its stakeholders.
While this overview is brief, it is designed to introduce some of the external factors which have contributed towards the rise of the talent management agenda. For a more detailed analysis and a view of long term drivers, PwCs report “Managing tomorrow’s people: The future of work to 2020” may be of further interest.
A Micro Perspective
While macro factors impact industries, economies and society in terms of raising awareness of HR and in particular the talent management agenda, micro factors concentrate on internal issues, creating a resource based view of the organisation in the process. Diagram 1 illustrates a number of micro factors and their impact on each other.
Diagram 1 - Micro Factors and their Relationship
Click to enlarge
While diagram 1 shows the relationships between the micro factors that impact on HR, table 2 explores how the polarity of each factor plays out.
Table 2 - Perspectives on Micro Factors
Sponsorship of HR | |
High | Low |
Annual salary surveys from Robert Walters suggest that HR salaries are comparable to and sometimes higher than finance According to CEO Eric Schmidt, Google's famed 20% rule is as much about encouraging line managers to take ownership of talent management as it is about creating new products | According to the CIPD, training budgets have fallen 2.5 times between 2004 and 2008, from £756 per employee to £297 while the number of training days has remained steady at 5 days per employee per year There are just 5 HR Directors who serve on the boards of FTSE 100 companies |
Type of Work | |
Strategic | Transactional |
PwC state that “maximising the value of organisational resources has never been more challenging. Now, more than ever is the time for innovation and creativity. Keeping a watchful eye on the turbulent world economy and responding effectively is critical to sustainable business success.” | Chris Bones, Dean of Henley Business School has argued that "many organisations have applied the business partner model to enable HR to achieve its aims, when it doesn't fit them. By relegating the transactional to the back office, we have devalued the one thing that employees care about. HR needs to restore the value of transactions the personnel function.” |
Nature of Work | |
Integrated | Fragmented |
HP VP of Learning and Development talks about the silos in HR organically disappearing In terms of a shift towards integration, Systematic HR writes “however, I think we’ve reached a point where functionality is becoming much less important. As we focus ourselves on the customer rather than internally on HR, the shift is going towards integration and customer usability” | Dave Lefkow comments “There are so many silos and disparate processes in HR that the sum of its parts are often greater than the whole. Which brings us back to at least the spirit of the original question - who will step up and tie this all together?” McKinsey builds on this when they write “silo thinking - focusing on the interests of one part of the organization rather than the whole - not only hinders the mobility of talent within a company but also undermines the sharing of knowledge and the development of interpersonal networks (or "social capital") across the organization.” |
Perception of HR | |
Positive | Negative |
Harvard Business School graduate Daisy Wademan Dowling writes “in business school, we were trained to seek out underappreciated investment opportunities and to create value in surprising places. Unlike our peers searching for bargains in private equity or at hedge funds, though, we see the deepest discounts in the complex task of identifying, attracting, developing, and deploying people” Research from Deloitte finds that 82% of executives believe HR will be seen as a strategic, value adding function within 3 – 5 years | Only 23% of executives believe HR currently plays a crucial role in strategy formulation and operational results, as reported by Deloitte Fast Company writer Keith Hammonds states that “in a knowledge economy, companies with the best talent win. And finding, nurturing, and developing that talent should be one of the most important tasks in a corporation. So why does human resources do such a bad job and how can we fix it?” |
Human Capital Metrics
While influences on HR are many and varied, making the most of the opportunity is likely to be of greatest interest to practitioners. While there is no shortage of focus in the profession on metrics and human capital, it is worth remembering that;
- Better measurement of something does not necessarily improve it or solve any problems
- While human capital efforts are to be applauded and encouraged, some have warned against placing too many eggs in this particular basket
Human capital efforts clearly move HR forward and help with talking the language of business. While we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater, it is useful to recall Jeffrey Pfeffer who wrote the following in 1997.
“Equipping human resource managers with additional analytic tools and language is all to the good, as far as it goes. In the end, however, all one accomplishes is being a more skilled player at someone else’s game. By so doing, one buys into the ultimate sensibility and reasonableness of the basic measures and ideas in the first place; this is often a mistake. Being skilled at the wrong game is not a very promising strategy for either the company or the human resources function. It is unlikely that human resources will ever be able to win playing the number games against those with much more experience who also get to set the rules. Even if they do win, the victory may have extracted a large cost in terms of losing the distinct perspective and competence of human resources in the process of becoming like other staff functions… If all human resources becomes is finance with a different set of measures and topic domains, then its future indeed is likely to be grim.”
Rather than trying to beat finance at their own game, as Pfeffer implies, focusing on the unique abilities of HR is likely to progress the agenda much further, more quickly. With this in mind, it is interesting to read of the stories in IT and Marketing and their chosen methods in advancing their own agendas. It will come as no surprise that ‘sticking to the knitting’ and exploiting your own competencies and skills, rather than re-inventing the wheel is the key message!
In terms of adding value and making HR indispensable, this is no simple task. There are statutory and legal obligations to fulfil along with balancing transactional and strategic efforts. Equally, recognising who owns and then facilitating talent management is par for the course. Even more significant perhaps is the notion that there is no industry wide best practice model or framework to follow, each organisation’s HR and human capital values, processes and resources are likely to be unique. Even models such as Accenture’s Human Capital Development Framework or Watson Wyatt’s Human Capital Index are far from a one size fits all approach. More encouraging is the fact that HR and in particular, Learning and Development professionals are willing to try new and different approaches to advance their cause. The proliferation of tools, techniques and approaches cannot be understated, while a quick glance at the CIPD’s annual Learning and Development survey for 2008 details a list of 14 different techniques with ‘most effective’ scores ranging from 53% to 1% with an average of 20.7%. This in itself is clear evidence of the fragmentation and unique needs of organisations.
Solving Problems and Leveraging the Opportunity
While experimentation is a good thing and the apparent fragmentation of approaches arguably being evidence of the silos seen in diagram 1 and table 2, focussing on solving problems that are specific to line managers and their teams is likely to yield positive results. Efforts in this direction have already begun with attempts to develop line managers being reported by 72% of respondents to the CIPD L&D survey. Similarly, 86% of line managers are involved in determining L&D activities and 49% of practitioners believe that line managers will have more responsibility. Such an approach, while perhaps in contrast to the more traditional focus on the development of ‘management populations’ is likely to see greater value being provided by HR and its perceptions amongst colleagues rising as a result. Diagram 2 illustrates this sequence of events.
Diagram 2 – A focus on high value work, helping line managers solve traditionally intangible problems
Click to enlarge
While the focus on high value work with line managers may need some education time in terms of acknowledging the difference between transactions and more strategic input, this type of work ultimately benefits both HR and the business. By equipping line managers with the skills and information to proactively manage their own teams and reports, the HR function permeates and extends throughout the organisation in a far more meaningful and practical way.
Taking this as a starting point, it is intriguing to see Emily Lawson of McKinsey talk of the fact that while talent management has changed much over 10 years, there are currently no definitive answers for organisations. Given McKinsey’s research access and resources, this arguably legitimises the existence of the boom scenario while leaving unanswered the means of fulfilling its potential. For those who like to rise to the challenge, has there ever been a better time to be a HR practitioner?
Footnotes and references
[1] At the time of writing, the effects of the credit crunch, potential recession and the need for governments to provide financial support to banks makes it difficult to be optimistic about future economic conditions. That said, the trends and observations within this article are likely to endure and in some circumstances, increase in significance.
[2] CAGR – Compound Annual Growth Rate
[3] While salary rises and market growth is undoubtedly positive, it is unknown how much of this for the development of HR practice and how much is due to companies need to reduce headcount. Given that GDP growth in 2007 was 3.1% and is currently at 1.4% for 2008, assuming the former would not be unreasonable.
By Sven Ringling December 8, 2008 - 11:42 am
Good article!
In a nutshell, I am pretty sure that better management of Human Resources (People, Human Capital,…) will become more important, as in the triangle of Process-Technology-People, it is the least well managed aspect in most businesses (which is a bit surprising, considering that people have been around for some time longer than IT 🙂 )
Particularly the most complex elements of HCM (well, at least in our understanding HCM does comprise these aspects), Organisational Culture and Organisational Learning, will differentiate the winners from the losers in the years to come.
I am NOT so sure whether the growing importance of these aspects will see the HR department gaining importance – and thsi is independantly from how capapble or incapable HR departments will be to meet these challenges.
Just because these topics become so important, they may not be left with one department to deal with, but we may live to see the day, where line managers actually start seeing managing their people as the most important task AND act on this insight by devoting most of their energy to it.
Of course, you’ll need some strategists and coaches to get all teh efforts aligned and enable line managers to become outstanding in their jobs. But this may only require a smallish group to develop people strategy and lead change, maybe using some external resources as required to get in extra capacity or special expertise.
So (and this is really crystal ball gazing) we may see a completely different model with HR as we know it, but even more focused on admin and a small strategic group (call them HCM, or CTO with his staff,…). You might compare it with finance and accounting in some companies, where finance is a small team developping finacial strategy and accounting does the operational and tactical stuff.
Just one possibel scenario…
please feel free to comment and shoot me down 🙂
cheers
Sven
By Allan December 8, 2008 - 4:41 pm
I tend to lean towards the camp that believes in the boom for HR. Some of the bust evidence is primarily psychological and not grounded in facts and data. The numbers point to growth of HR. Certainly, HR could do a lot better to integrate itself into the larger corporation as an essential function like marketing and finance. Nevertheless, enlightened organizations and leaders already know the importance of HR and demonstrate that knowledge with deep commitment.
For practitioners in HR, the smarter strategy is to join such enlightened organizations like Google rather than to try and fix organizations that don’t “get it.” The resultant divergence in talent acquisition ability will accelerate the natural evolution in the marketplace. Unenlightened companies die and the enlightened ones survive as role models for new organizations. The importance of HR spreads organically and the industry itself will have to engage in less self-defeating hand-wringing and doubt.
By Sven Ringling December 8, 2008 - 10:33 pm
Hi Alan,
good point and I agree 100% that what you call “enlightened organisations” who know about the importance of their Human Resources will be tomorrow’s winners.
As you seem to know numbers, I have a burning question: do these organisations have larger HR departments?
This is an honest and open question and would be very interested in knowing the answer…
kidn regards
Sven
By Bruce Lewin December 9, 2008 - 8:11 am
Hi chaps,
Some very interesting perspectives and like you, I tend to feel that better human capital management will be a key differentiator going forward. Its certainly not as explicit as bottom line performance but over years (as opposed to quarters) it will have a large bearing on things. The trick of course is the ‘how’ part!
By Anon December 9, 2008 - 8:35 am
I concur on the bust side but for different reasons.
From my current company’s perspective, there is emphasis on saying-the-right-thing (pleasing the stakeholders & all that). To some degree, there are processes to manage people & their growth. But, the reality is that long term human capital development (HCD) just doesn’t happen – at least for the vast majority of staff.
There is no connection to strategic direction (business growth areas, etc) and no indication of human capital development to lock into the future. Coupled with an HR function that seems stuck in “personnel days” (=adds little value) and the business’ view of HR is further downgraded.
As a knowledge-leveraging company, I find this very worrying – this affects future staff hiring, current staff enagement & retention of core knowledge assets.
I have been in the mindset of “personal HCD” for many a year now, so I look after myself. Trouble is, many of my peers are as well & that(too)
cripples any attempt at corporate HCD. Come the upturn (late 2009, imho), there are many, many people who will have their bags packed & ready to go.
By Patrick Ballin December 9, 2008 - 9:52 am
Bruce,
As always, you write well, persuasively and eruditely. Thank you for sending this link.
My perception is that the current market conditions are polarising organisations. They are either trimming programmes and moving strategic HR off the agenda, sometimes brutally so; or moving to the other side and working harder than ever to attract, develop and retain the best people. I have no doubt that the former approach is short-term and cyclical; the latter is a minority interest but may prove a better way to breed survivors.
One thing that is becoming clear is that the skills, attitudes and capabilities required in these tough times are subtly different from those that have got leaders through boom time: and this is true for all areas of business, including HR. Moreover, many of today’s senior practitioners have no past experience of the current economic conditions – having still been students or in early career stages in the last UK recession of the early 1990s.
The question then becomes: how do we equip today’s HR practitioners, and business leaders in general, to be best able to deliver in present market conditions? Or, indeed, are organisations going to need to buy in this expertise in various forms such as interims or consultancy?
By Duncan Bolam December 11, 2008 - 8:39 am
I read your article with interest. Good on you for piecing it together. However, I feel compelled to come back to you with an overriding observation; HR shouldn’t be doing Talent Management!
I’ve been banging on about this for years but the bottom line is that internal HR professionals delivering talent managers cannot truly overcome the conflict of interest. Plus, even more importantly, real talent management is the domain of the career profession who can offer impartial and discipline-specific coaching in a way that constructively complements the HR profession’s well-defined toolkit.
By Bob Marshall December 11, 2008 - 9:28 am
Thanks for the pointer – it’s a really interesting post that echoes another article I was reading, at ZDNet, recently, saying in effect that the whole HR thing has been a monumental waste of time and money.
Personally, that’s long been my view. HR involved in talent management? That’s laughable, in practice. Although someone should be managing it… For me HR = payroll + related employee administration, and keep ’em tightly locked in that little box!
Talent Management software? More snake oil peddled by the Toolheads.
This chap http://www.altitudeblog.com/?signup=true&s=10041& quotes a pundit as saying that one bad hire can cost a business IRO $1M. I can get down with that, too.
In summary, I’m on the BUST side (fnarr, fnarr!) For me, the closing question is more like: “Will there *ever* be a good time to be an HR “professional”? I’d be interested to hear your view.
By Jo Hennessy December 12, 2008 - 6:36 pm
As the Director of Research at Roffey Park, I wanted to make sure that our research results are being reported accurately here.
Just to set the record straight, Roffey Park’s Management Agenda 2008 published research showing that, of the managers who had HR business partners in their organisation, 46% said it was successful, 26% said it was ineffective whilst the remaining 27% either did not know or felt it was too early to tell. As a consequence, we would not want readers to assume that those who did not say it was successful were all suggesting the model was failing. In fact further analysis of the comments from those who perceived it as ineffective indicate that the current failings may be more due to poor implementation of the model rather than the fault of the model itself.
To pursue this vital question further, we have conducted research with a wide cross section of UK organisations to understand what makes the implementation of the HR business partner model more or less successful in practice. Results of this research will be published in January 2009.
I was interested to read your article and will keep in touch with the ongoing dialogue on this site exploring these important issues.
By Sven Ringling December 15, 2008 - 9:30 am
Dear Jo,
thanks for this clarification. However, while the principle in court is “in dubio pro reo”, in management we do need results.
So, judging from your data, it doesn’t look too good for the business partner model:
1) Of those, who have formed an opinion, the vast majority say it failed.
2) Few widely used management models these days are wrong in principle. However, they have to be implementable with the quality and quantity of resources you can appropriately apply to the case.
However, there are also two points which may suggest to have another go with the model:
– It is still in it’s infancy and there are certainly lessons to learn to make implementation more effective in future. Particularly it will take time to attract business minded people into HR. If the model can achieve this, then it will be a success no matter what other shortcomings it may have.
– The BP model ideally leaves line managers with more of their core task: managing their people. Again, it’s not possible to have managing managers from one day to another, when in the past they were chief experts and happy to leave people management with HR. Of course, those managers would not be happy to have to do, what they don’t like. This issue needs a longer transition period as well, but again, it would be a huge step forward for manay organisations to have line managers taking people management tasks over from HR.
By Dominic Took December 18, 2008 - 9:28 am
I thought the big bucks would always be in HR remodelling financial efficiency. What I mean to say is, from my limited knowledge I saw the crux of HR being about revitalising a workforce and bringing them closer together so that they would in turn from that process, boost efficiency and hence financial income.
By Anon December 18, 2008 - 9:29 am
Interesting! I’ve been following some HR issues in a chinese/american logistics company — the americans are compalining that the HR director is typically the 1st or 2nd (along with the CEO) most important person in chinese companies — of course, for HR professionals that might not be a bad thing!
By Buckley Brinkman December 21, 2008 - 11:34 pm
HR is a function that is very situationally sensitive. To discuss it in a general “Boom or Bust” fashion does it a bit of injustice. It minimizes the impact each of us can have.
HR should be a critical partner in any firm’s senior leadership. It requires a unique combination of talents, philosophy, and persistance to make that a reality.
There must be talent on both sides of the equation. The HR professional must have the general business capabilities to appreciate the business’ overall position and create a strategy for the HR function to support the business.
On the other side of the equation, the other functional leaders must have enough knowledge of the HR function to be able to integrate those issues into theior approach. HR can only have a seat at the table if their peers can truly understand the value of the function.
Philosophy also plays a part in HR being able to rise to “full partner” status in the firm. The senior leadership team must approach their responsibilities as a team and not as heads of individual departments. That approach shares the responsibility for each member’s success and opens the door for HR to take a shared role in running the business.
Finally, it takes a bit of persistance to make any change a reality and making HR a full partner is one of the most difficult. Line managers have a difficult time incorporating HR concerns into their day-to-day operations. It seems hard enough to run the business without also including HR concerns. It takes a personal, visible stance by senior leadership over a period of time to make the organization incorporate the needed chages. That takes persistence.
The proper mix of talent, philosophy,and persistence will determine whether HR “Booms or Busts” in any given situation. This is one case where the overall trend depends on success in individual situations.