Five Ways to Select a High Value, Predictive HR Project

Five Ways to Select a High Value, Predictive HR Project

1: Identify a business problem to solve. 

Almost everyone working on modern predictive analytics discusses the need for a defined business problem before engaging in a predictive project. And yet, the #1 question I get in speaking with businesses is “I need to do a predictive project, but I don’t know what to work on”. 

Without a specific problem to solve, your analyst or vendor will do nothing more than crunch data hoping to find something interesting. Crunching data without a specific objective, is a very expensive and typically a very unproductive use of your company’s time and money. 

Consider these examples:

a.    Imagine searching for a house on the internet before you’ve decided what kind of house you want. You’ll find some interesting ideas but nothing that will make you “act on” buying the house. 

b. Imagine reading Wikipedia looking for some “truth” without defining what question you’re trying to have answered. You’ll find some interesting ideas but likely none of them will give you the truth you’re looking for.

You need to first know what you’re looking for before you embark on a predictive project.

2: Decide if you want to solve an "employee-related process problem in HR" -- or an "employee related business problem in a line of business".

a.    Examples of HR Problems: Predict who is going to retire; predict which training will yield the highest attendance; predict how your current hiring processes will affect discriminatory hiring practices; predict your company’s requirements for engineers

 i.    Benefits of solving an HR problem: You’re solving a problem that is meaningful to your department (and typically only to your department).

   ii.    Downside of solving an HR problem: a) The rest of the business will be less excited about the working you’re doing to solve an HR process problem and b) It is harder to quantify the business impact of solving an HR process problem.

b.    Examples of Workforce Problems: Predict which job candidates will be top sales producers for open sales roles, predict which Call Center Reps will be a good fit as a Call Center Manager; predict which truck drivers will be in more accidents

        i.    Benefits of solving a workforce problem: You’ll solve a problem that is meaningful to the entire business as it is likely to affect revenue or cost. This will get your project much more visibility and additional resources for ongoing predictive work.

ii. Downside of solving a Workforce problem: You are likely to get many more requests for predictive work from the business after they see the kind of work you can do that affects revenue and cost.

3: Combine HR data with line of business data. If you are looking to predict and solve a workforce problem in the line of business (i.e. increase sales, reduce errors, increase calls per day and the like…) the outcome data in the line of business exists in software systems in the lines of business, not in HR. 

As an example, sales performance, or calls per day data exists in Sales Operations or the Call Center or some other non-HR database somewhere.

You can’t predict which sales candidates are going to make their sales numbers without sales data from the sales department. You need to use line of business data as well as HR data. Unless you only want to predict something that impacts HR, you’ll need data from the line of business as well.

4: Go beyond predicting trends. “Individual” predictions deliver the greatest ROI.

Many departments have been forecasting trends for years – and in fact many predictive projects we hear about are in fact older-school forecasting projects. We need to move beyond forecasting to deliver the kinds of ROI that excites your C-Suite.

Forecasting examples include

  • Forecasting future inflation rates
  • Forecasting product demand
  • Forecasting workforce trends over the next 1 – 5 years so you can plan
  • Forecasting sales next quarter, next year

While forecasting is extremely necessary – it is quite different than modern predictive analytics initiatives. To reap the ROI of modern predictive capabilities – organizations need to move to predicting to the individual. 

Predicting “to an individual” examples include:

  • Predicting which specific job candidate has a high probability of being a top / bottom performer
  • Predicting which specific customer prospect is going to click the coupon and buy the offer
  • Predicting which specific vendor is going to go out of business

The ability to predict to this level of granularity should be the goal of modern predictive projects. ROI is higher because it helps your company to take specific action with high cost or high revenue potential targets.

5: Go beyond predicting flight risk of "existing employees". Make a prediction about flight risk before you hire a candidate.

Many companies focus on predicting the flight risk of existing employees as an early predictive project. This reminds me of a bank predicting which loans will fail “after” they’ve already loaned money. After the relationship is extended is the wrong time. It’s too late.

Modern predictive analytics allows you to predict “before”. That’s the point. Predict before you make the mistake. Banks put a lot of effort into creating predictive models that predict your probability of paying or defaulting on a loan before they extend the loan. 

To discuss your predictive HR project reach out to: +0-1-617-864-7474 or www.talentanalytics.com



Sergio Garcia Mora

People Analytics | Data Scientist | Analytics Translator | I ask questions, make drawings, and from time to time I code in R and make dashboards in Visier, Qlik Sense and Power BI | HR NeRd

6y

I love reading you. You are disruptive, honest, and you care more about being effective and deliver business results than caring about what people wants to hear and what's trendy. I teach metrics and analytics courses all over Argentina, and what I see is that most of HR people is looking for a ready to use tool. It's like they were looking for a magic pill to lose weight, and there is no magic pill: you need to make exercise and eat healthy. But no one wants to sweat and with analytics happens the same thing.

Keith Mitchell, CISSP

Founder at Holistic People Analytics, LLC

6y

Excellent points, with the exception of #5. Predicting and making selection decisions on candidate flight risk is a high risk proposition, particularly in the US with our employment laws and regulations. This will be an area of increased scrutiny and litigation.

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