In Full Bloom

Lies, Damns Lies, and Metrics – – With Apologies To Mark Twain – – Part III

In my last two posts, I introduced the importance and use of metrics in the running of the HRM business and it’s HRM delivery system (HRMDS).  I then introduced my HRM domain model to provide a precise and consistent terminology for the HRM processes when discussing HRM and HRMDS metrics (or any other aspect of or delivery method for HRM).   Having now set up your metrics spreadsheet, as recommended in my last post, with the domain model’s processes defining the columns, we’re ready to set up the rows.

For these, I’m proposing an HRM metrics taxonomy which goes from easiest to develop but furthest removed from achieving business outcomes to most difficult to develop but most directly related and important to achieving business outcomes.  The proposed taxonomy, therefore the rows in your spreadsheet, are going to be:

In Part IV of this series on metrics, we’re going to explore in detail what each of these types of metrics is used for and provide examples for each of them across the HRM domain model.  While it’s fairly easy to suggest universally useful metrics for HRM administrative process activities and even administrative process outcomes, the more strategic and/or higher level metrics are really difficult to generalize — and that’s where the heavy analytical lifting by HR leaders and HRM process specialists comes in.  But to get us started understanding and using the taxonomy, here are some examples within the process Staff the Organizational Structure:

The bottom line. Stay with me as these columns continue to define the different categories of metrics and provide examples across the HRM domain model. But first a word of warning: never agonize over how to categorize a particular metric; just put it somewhere reasonable so that you don’t lose a good idea.  And don’t hesitate to collapse categories, as I’ve done for the last two above, to simplify the examples.

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