When you first read the topic , does it seems as though the profession is heading towards a paradoxical ( not paradigm) shift? In the past, there were hardly any instances of HR having to make a business case to the Board or CEO or senior management – which in essence means that today’s HR professional across levels has a clear understanding of the fact that each people related intervention also needs to have a cost-benefits analysis done, a feasibility or viability exercised conducted, senior management buy-in and clear linkages to business performance. Interesting as it sounds, it’s a challenging approach right ? Well, it certainly will be - because making a business case is not just an additional responsibility, it is a change of mindset which the HR professional must be cognizant of in current times.
Does this need to make a business case mean that each initiative has to
have a defined ROI or a clear monetary impact? Not really and not in entirety.
What it does mean is that the HR person will need to think beyond – he or she
will need to assess what happens after the initiative in a more structured
manner and the resultant effect of the initiative on the business. What it also means is that HR should be
able to speak the business’s language and explain this effect to the leaders.
Finally what it also means is – an absolute end to working on silos! It means
collaboration and buy-in, thinking through and coming together.
So in brief how is it that HR makes a business case for its
initiatives? To keep it simple – here are some quick, generic steps that will
apply across most initiatives - this is indicative, not exhaustive, so you
could add more aspects that you find relevant:
- Understand the organization’s vision and business objectives, its implications on people and particularly to the concerned initiative/intervention.
- Do a viability/feasibility study or a cost-benefit analysis – whatever you may choose to call the same, but basically a listing of the pros and cons ( should cover tangible and intangible impacts).
- Budgetary and resource support needed and for what duration.
- Market study of such initiatives ( if similar ones are run by competitor and your exit analysis shows that there has been attrition due to this being absent, as one of the study elements).
- Challenges/Roadblocks that you perceive and senior management’s involvement in the same.
- Project/Work plan with timelines and if this initiative has linkages to other future initiatives
If you are able to work along the above steps, your business case will
be as comprehensive as it can be. The rest depends on how clearly this case is
communicated and shared with the senior management!
Simran Oberoi is currently working as a
Knowledge Advisor in SHRM India. She has over a decade of experience
primarily in HR advisory services in the areas of Rewards (Benchmarking,
Strategy, Job Mapping, Measurement), covering APAC, South Asia and the US),
Long Term Incentives engagements, Organization Restructuring, Capacity
Building, Competency Frameworks and Talent Development. In consulting roles,
she has significant experience in key global client accounts, project and
people management. She has an accreditation in Hay methodology and Job
Mapping and as an APAC leader she has driven the Reward Information Global
Sector Development strategy for 14 countries. In her current role she works in
Knowledge Development which involves evaluation of key future areas, content
creation as well as review for HR disciplines such as Executive Coaching &
Leadership Development and Diversity, alongside Talent Development/Management
and Rewards. It also involves research in key areas, the most recent ones being
CXO/Leadership Development and Competencies.
She has published several articles on
different HR areas, with leading HR journals such as People Matters, Human
Capital, Business Manager – HR magazine and industry magazines such as Oil
Asia. She regularly contributes the SHRM perspective across print and
electronic newspapers. She can be reached on Simran.Oberoi@shrm.org
2 comments:
Simron a very interesting read.
Very interesting read Simran.
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