eQuest's Big Data for HR division is featured in this article that discusses this new technology trend and how HR can leverage this for competitive advantage.
Big data, Bigger Deal - Workforce Magazine Article featuring eQuest
1. 4/11/13 Big Data, Bigger Deal - Workforce
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By Michelle V. Rafter
Featured Article
Big Data, Bigger Deal
Friday, April 5,2013
Black Hills Corp. is taking a new approach to the old problem of finding employees.
After a 2008 acquisition, the 130-year-old energy conglomerate doubled its workforce to about 2,000
employees. With that, the average age of line and operations technicians and other workers at the $1.3 billion
public company jumped from approximately 45 to 50. Forecasts showed that, within seven years, close to a
quarter of the workforce would be eligible to retire.
That kind of turnover could have spelled trouble for utilities that the Rapid City, South Dakota, company runs
because it's bound by state regulators to provide gas and electric power with minimal disruptions.
To calculate exactly how many employees would retire a year, the types of workers needed to replace them,
where those new hires were most likely to come from and how much training they would need to safely take
over for outgoing workers, Black Hills turned to an untried source of help: big data.
It's a move more companies are taking.
It has been more than a decade since Oakland Athletics General Manager Billy Beane used scientific
methodology and statistics to take the then-low-performing A's to one of the winningest teams in the Major
Leagues, even though it had one of the league's lowest payrolls. It's a revolutionary gamble depicted in the book
and movie Moneyball. More recently, statistician blogger Nate Silver became an overnight sensation after
correctly predicting President Barack Obama's overwhelming victory in the 2012 presidential election. As
horrific as the damages were from Hurricane Sandy, they could have been much worse had meteorologists not
accurately interpreted weather data to estimate when and where the storm would land, helping hundreds of
thousands flee to safety ahead of time.
It's all big data, and the world is generating and analyzing more of it. Websites, social networks, smartphone
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2. 4/11/13 Big Data, Bigger Deal - Workforce
apps, cloud-based software services, cheaper data storage—all of it is contributing to the creation of information
that this year alone is expected to reach 1.2 zettabytes. That's the equivalent of 1 billion terabytes of raw,
unstructured data.
Companies rank business analytics as the most important technology innovation they face, according to a
December 2012 report from tech industry analyst Ventana Research.
Advocates believe precision number crunching can help companies become better at things like picking the
perfect job candidates, keeping valued employees from leaving, grooming the right people to move up in an
organization, planning future workforce needs and more.
It's an area that's ripe for a makeover. In the U.S. alone, companies spend 40 percent or more of their total
revenue on payroll, says Josh Bersin, a human resources analyst who is the founder of Bersin by Deloitte, writing
on his Forbes.com blog.
The buzz over successes at early workforce analytics adopters such as Google Inc. and Xerox Corp. is giving
HR practitioners a bad case of big data fever. They're buying workforce analytics software or adding modules to
existing enterprise resource planning and human capital management software suites. In 2012 alone, SAP's
SuccessFactors Inc. division quadrupled its customers using workforce analytics tools, says Tony Ashton, the
company's senior director of product management for workforce planning and analytics.
HR departments also are contracting with outside workforce analytics companies, bringing data scientists and
"people analytics" specialists on staff, and prepping themselves with conferences, blogs and books devoted to
the subject.
So far, though, the promise of big data to transform workforce management has remained just that, a promise.
"Big data is still the wild, wild west," says Phil Simon, author of the just-published Too Big to Ignore: The
Business Case for Big Data.
In the area of talent management alone, less than half of the global companies use objective data when making
workforce decisions, and fewer than 20 percent were satisfied with the ability of their current data management
systems to manage talent data, according to an SHL global assessment report published in February.
The obstacles to adopting better workforce analytics are many, starting with entrenched HR attitudes and
practices that favor relationship-based decisions over cold, hard facts. It's still too common for executives or
hiring managers to go with one candidate over another based on a hunch or
because they went to an Ivy League school, Simon says.
For HR and other functions, just because companies are investing in Big Data software or services doesn't mean
they know what to do with it. Or they might not want to change how they operate despite knowing better. "You
have to overcome the employee or cultural resistance to it," Simon says.
The term "HR big data" gets tossed around to mean any number of things. Students of the discipline generally
take it to describe a massive amount of information with a large number of variables that is quickly processed
and analyzed so results can be used to make faster, evidence-based decisions. "We see more and more of our
clients constructing a workforce strategy that's as detailed and evidence-based as any financial strategy or
business strategy they have," says Haig Nalbantian, an HR industry veteran and senior partner at HR
management consultant Mercer.
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3. 4/11/13 Big Data, Bigger Deal - Workforce
Instead of looking back at the end of an activity to see how it worked so HR can put in improvements for the
next round of things, Big Data lets them be proactive, says David Bernstein, vice president of the data analytics
division of jobs listings distributor eQuest Inc. He is also a blogger. "If something isn't working, it can be changed
right away, he says.
Generally, Big Data doesn't just refer to information obtained from inside a company's current employee records
or operations, but to a mix of personnel data and information from competitors, industry or other benchmarks.
Getting HR to switch to data-driven decision-making isn't easy, but sometimes the alternative is too serious to
ignore.
That was the case at Black Hills, which three years ago didn't have a formal plan for replacing retiring workers.
Continuing the status quo wasn't an option after the company acquired a Kansas City, Missouri-based power
company with five utilities and saw its workforce double and age overnight.
Replacing retiring workers wasn't going to be easy. Many of its employees, from engineers and power-line
mechanics to systems operators and natural-gas technicians, have highly specialized skills that make them hard to
replace.
As part of a companywide strategic initiative, Black Hills ran a pilot project at one utility to assess its future
workforce needs. Black Hills used workforce analytics software and other data to discover how many of the
utilities' employees were expected to retire or leave voluntarily within five years, and how much the business was
expected to grow. They did calculations to find out how many job functions were expected to be added,
changed or relocated, and also on promotion rates and how long it takes replacements for different jobs to get
up to full productivity.
Based on the pilot, Black Hills created a five-year-plan that outlines the companies' labor needs for all of its
businesses, in specific jobs and locations. It has led the company to make a number of changes on how it
recruits, hires and trains, including filling the recruiting pipeline for certain highly technical positions earlier, says
Bob Myers, Black Hills' chief human resources officer.
Toward that end, Black Hills is working one-on-one with technical schools to develop training programs to
produce a specific number of entry-level jobs every year for a set number of years.
To address the potential skills gap retiring workers could create, the company is enticing them to stay on the job
longer. This year, Black Hills started offering all employees a retirement readiness and financial planning benefit,
and employees who are 50 and older can work with a company-sponsored certified financial planner.
To help fill future labor demands internally, Black Hills started a management-training program for front-line
supervisors and midlevel managers. Taught by senior managers, the training includes classroom sessions, 360-
degree feedback and individualized development training. The company also hired a technical training and safety
director and is considering building training centers to do more consistent training on the technical sides of the
business, Myers says.
Finally, Black Hills is automating some processes to do more with fewer workers. The company switched to
automatic meter readings and redeployed about 40 former meter readers into new jobs, and more may make the
switch in the next couple of years.
Black Hills' workforce planning programs are run by an in-house organizational development team that worked
with business unit leaders to create labor demand models and use workforce analytics software. Myers declined
to share the company's budget.
"There's an old saying that chance favors the prepared," Myers says. "This is what this is about: How do you
develop such an understanding of this that you can prepare well in advance and reap the benefits of being
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