Developing Human Capital: Using Analytics to Plan and Optimize Your Learning and Development Investments (Wiley and SAS Business Series) - Hardcover

Pease, Gene

 
9781118753507: Developing Human Capital: Using Analytics to Plan and Optimize Your Learning and Development Investments (Wiley and SAS Business Series)

Inhaltsangabe

Don't squander your most valuable resource!

Collectively, your workers are your company's most important and most valuable asset. To make the most of this asset, nothing beats quantitative performance and investment measurement. Learning and Development is an 80 billion-dollar industry, and every valuable employee represents a sizable investment on the part of your company. To keep your business moving forward, effective management of human capital is crucial. It generates plenty of data, and deep analysis of this data helps you provide feedback and make adjustments to capitalize on the combined knowledge, skills, and creativity of your workers. Developing Human Capital: Using Analytics to Plan and Optimize Your Learning and Development Investments provides a guidebook for collecting, organizing, and analyzing the data surrounding human capital so you can make the most of your employees' potential.

  • Use predictive analysis to optimize human capital investments
  • Learn effective study design and alignment
  • Get the tools you need for measurement, surveys, and analysis
  • Decide what to measure and how to measure it
  • Outline your company's current and future analytics technology needs
  • Map data sources, and overcome barriers to data collection

Authors Gene Pease, Bonnie Beresford, and Lew Walker provide case studies in which major companies applied human capital analytics to guide people decisions, and expand upon the role of analytics in Learning and Development. Developing Human Capital: Using Analytics to Plan and Optimize Your Learning and Development Investments is an essential guide to 21st century human resources and management practices, and can keep you from squandering your company's most valuable resource.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

GENE PEASE is the founder and CEO of Vestrics (a Capital Analytics Company), the leading provider of workforce optimization software and consulting services. The firm has been recognized with awards from Bersin and Associates, CLO Magazine, CIO Review Magazine, Gartner, and the ROI Institute.

BONNIE BERESFORD, PHD, is the Director of Performance Strategy and Design at AMCI Global. While Vice President at Capital Analytics, Beresford’s work has earned her clients three CLO Magazine - Business Impact awards.

LEW WALKER, SPHR, is the Vice President of Human Resources at AT&T. He serves on the Editorial Board of CLO Magazine and is a frequent conference speaker.

Von der hinteren Coverseite

In some ways, it’s surprising that learning and development (L&D) is such a large and fast-growing industry—to the tune of around $80 billion. We no longer live in an era of lifelong employee loyalty, so why are the most successful companies, from Defense Acquisition University to Pfizer, still spending so much on L&D? They know how to measure the business benefit of L&D spending. Using case studies from these and other top firms, Gene Pease, Bonnie Beresford, and Lew Walker walk you through how to ensure that your human capital dollars are well spent.

Developing Human Capital is one of the first works to explore learning and development from a data-driven, analytical standpoint. This text is remarkably comprehensive, explaining study design and alignment, measurement tools, and future analytics strategy. If you have no idea what to measure or how to measure it, this book is the perfect resource. Maybe you’ve been “building the business case” for training and other development for years, but without quantitative measurement, the business case is just marketing. This book explains why now is the time to develop a measurement strategy for your firm’s L&D investments.

To anyone in the HR or learning and development fields, it will come as no surprise that technology is central to developing human capital. Computer-based learning modalities, analytic software, and an overwhelming surplus of data are part of the new reality. The authors incisively add the generational shift and changing workplace to this mix, and the result is an enormous opportunity to gather information that will drive better human capital decisions. And by now it is so well known that it hardly bears repeating: in the 21st century, optimized human capital investment is the permanent home of competitive advantage.

Aus dem Klappentext

In some ways, it’s surprising that learning and development (L&D) is such a large and fast-growing industry—to the tune of around $80 billion. We no longer live in an era of lifelong employee loyalty, so why are the most successful companies, from Defense Acquisition University to Pfizer, still spending so much on L&D? They know how to measure the business benefit of L&D spending. Using case studies from these and other top firms, Gene Pease, Bonnie Beresford, and Lew Walker walk you through how to ensure that your human capital dollars are well spent.

Developing Human Capital is one of the first works to explore learning and development from a data-driven, analytical standpoint. This text is remarkably comprehensive, explaining study design and alignment, measurement tools, and future analytics strategy. If you have no idea what to measure or how to measure it, this book is the perfect resource. Maybe you’ve been “building the business case” for training and other development for years, but without quantitative measurement, the business case is just marketing. This book explains why now is the time to develop a measurement strategy for your firm’s L&D investments.

To anyone in the HR or learning and development fields, it will come as no surprise that technology is central to developing human capital. Computer-based learning modalities, analytic software, and an overwhelming surplus of data are part of the new reality. The authors incisively add the generational shift and changing workplace to this mix, and the result is an enormous opportunity to gather information that will drive better human capital decisions. And by now it is so well known that it hardly bears repeating: in the 21st century, optimized human capital investment is the permanent home of competitive advantage.

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