The interbiznet Bugler - Brought to you by Electronic Recruiting News

Click On Our Sponsors
                  

Home ERN Bugler Archives Blogs Sponsorship Recruiting Jobs
SPONSORS



Please Click On Our Sponsors


Please Click On Our Sponsors


Recruiting News for the Human Resource Professional


Please Click On Our Sponsors


Please Click On Our Sponsors



Please Click On Our Sponsors


Please Click On Our Sponsors




 

 

 

Click On Our Sponsors



Click On Our Sponsors





 

 

 




The interbiznet Bugler

Visit our Jobs In Human Resources Management Section.
March 18, 2009

Quote of The Day
"Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years."
Warren Buffett

Woman In The Workforce II
If you missed yesterday's article you will want to give it a quick review. We presented WallStJobs.com interpretation of the latest unemployment numbers. The idea is that women are fairing better in this crazed economy and will benefit in the long run. The premise is that companies are keeping them because they get paid less than their male counterparts.

We also presented a few charts showing the unemployment rates for men and women in the Labor Force. The review of those rates from 1973 to 2009 shows that the shift happened in 1982 when the unemployment rate for women fell below men and stayed equal to or below for the majority of the last 27 years. 1985 - 1987 shows women taking a slight jump above men in the chart.

We got the opinion of several readers to get addition input on the subject. (read more)



Click On Our Sponsors


From the BLS

Producer Price Index for February 2009. The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods advanced 0.1 percent in February, seasonally adjusted, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported. This rise followed a 0.8-percent increase in January and a 1.9-percent decline in December. At the earlier stages of processing, prices received by manufacturers of intermediate goods decreased 0.9 percent in February after falling 0.7 percent in the previous month, and the index for crude materials declined 4.5 percent following a 2.9-percent decrease in January.

In The News
Hazlet, NJ-based iCIMS, a leading Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) provider of talent management solutions, and Woodbury, NY-based Valiant, provider of comprehensive workforce management solutions, announced a strategic partnership that will allow clients, through a seamless integration of the two platforms, to take advantage of a complete human capital management solution.

BusinessElite is a new, invitation-only, recruiting community for top leaders and recruiters. The service is designed to match accomplished professionals within its exclusive Talent community to director through C-level positions at leading companies and startups. The BusinessElite service is available by invitation-only to top leaders and recruiters. The service is free to Talent. During the beta period, BusinessElite is offering special introductory pricing for recruiters. Founders are Glenn Fox and Thomas Lokar.

Bond Adapt, the global provider of staffing software solutions, has partnered with CareerStaff Unlimited, providing healthcare staffing solutions, to co-develop and configure a powerful and integrated healthcare staffing tool using the Adapt V11 platform.

S2Verify, LLC a newly launched provider in the employment screening market, opens an office in Atlanta, Georgia.

Many employers are increasing their employee wellness communications and most expect wellness budget cuts will be no greater than other cutbacks, because these programs help employees cope with issues brought about by the economic downturn. These are among the survey findings released by Buck Consultants, specializing in human resource and benefits consulting. Buck conducted its interactive audience survey with employer delegates attending the 4th Annual Employer Health & Human Capital Congress, held in February 2009.

InDepth
Data Mining Moves to Human Resources: Using sophisticated mathematics, HR departments are learning new ways to determine the value of each employee. BusinessWeek online reports.

The chart looks like colorful pop-art doughnuts flying through space. The message, though, is anything but playful. Based on a mathematical analysis of work at an undisclosed Internet company, each circle represents an employee. Those who generate or pass along valuable information within the company are portrayed as large and dark-colored. And the others? "On a relative scale, they don't add a hell of a lot," says Elizabeth Charnock, chief executive of Cataphora, the Redwood City (Calif.) company that carried out the study for a client. The upshot for managers faced with a mandate to downsize: Small and pale circles might be a good place to start cutting.

For most of its eight-year history, Cataphora has focused on digital sleuthing. The company hunts for statistical signs of fraud. But in the past few years, Cataphora has been dispatching its data miners into a new market: statistical studies of employee performance.

The trend, though early, is unmistakable, and it extends far beyond Redwood City. Number crunching, a staple for decades in the quantifiable domains of engineering and finance, has spread in recent years into marketing and sales. Companies can now model and optimize operations, and can calculate the return on investment on everything from corporate jets to Super Bowl ads. These successes have led to the next math project: the worker. "You have to bring the same rigor you bring to operations and finance to the analysis of people," says Rupert Bader, director of workforce planning at Microsoft (MSFT).

Such a mission might have been laughable a decade ago. But as the role of computers in the workplace expands, employees leave digital trails detailing their behavior, their schedule, their interests, and expertise. For executives to calculate the return on investment of each worker, their human resources departments are starting to open their doors to the quants.

Master Burnett, managing director of HR consultancy Dr. John Sullivan & Associates, estimates that only 1% to 2% of large corporations have begun harnessing analytics to evaluate their workforces. They're led by the data-focused tech companies, including IBM (IBM), Microsoft, and Oracle (ORCL), along with finance players such as Capital One Financial (COF). Elsewhere, says Burnett, HR pros often lack number-crunching skills. But as competition grows, he predicts, a new wave of math-savvy managers will do the numbers on "human capital."

A common starting point is to decode the patterns of success. Microsoft, for example, studies correlations between thriving workers and the schools and companies they arrived from. Also, by analyzing communications within Microsoft, analysts can ID "superconnectors" who help share ideas and others who appear to hold them up, so-called bottlenecks.

How to hold on to hotshots? New software offers a data-mining approach. An employee retention program developed by software company SAS, for example, crunches data on employees who have quit in the past five years-their skills, profiles, studies, and friendships. Then it finds current employees with similar patterns. Another SAS program pinpoints the workers most likely to suffer accidents.

The eventual goal is to project how much workers will produce over their careers. In a number-driven labor market, the value of their skills will rise and fall. With these figures in hand, companies will be able to carry out cost-benefit studies on recruiting, training, and employee retention (along with its counterpart, layoffs).

IBM leads the way on such studies. Research analysts are charting the skills and experience of the entire workforce. Then, studying technology and economic trends, they're trying to predict the skills IBM will need down the road-and whether the needed knowhow should be taught or recruited.

While tracking the value of a knowledge worker's ideas is in its infancy, social networks provide valuable laboratories. A few giants, such as IBM, build their own social nets. Others implement offerings from software makers such as SAS. These are designed to link workers and to study their ideas and circles of influence.

The challenge, then, is to figure out which workers come up with winning ideas. Cataphora starts by studying communications through a company. Certain employees produce chunks of data-whether words or software code-that later pop up in other messages. The people copied most often, Cataphora concludes, are thought leaders. They get big dark blue circles. Other people spot the valuable content and pass it on. Those are networked curators. Their circles are bright red.

What about the worker who dispenses priceless wisdom the old-fashioned way, through spoken words at the coffee machine? Much of that goes unrecorded by the analytic team. So there are limits to number crunching. Machines may advance in HR, but humans will retain a strong supporting role.

Checkster


Permalink  . -.  Today's In depth News  . -.  Send To a Friend  . -.  Feedback




Click On Our Sponsors


Newsletter Contact
The Bugler publishes recruiting industry news, featuring a Calendar of Events each Friday. Please send your company news to Polly Tasker for inclusion in The Bugler. More indepth news stories can be found in the Electronic Recruiting News.

Organizations to Support
Kuwesa HIV Widows Project in Kenya (Kuwesa Jackets and details for ordering your jacket.)

The Inspired Art Project
Buy tickets for the March Event in San Francisco.



The interbiznet Bugler
Sign-up to receive this newsletter in email each day.
Email Address:
Request: Subscribe Unsubscribe
 
The Electronic Recruiting News
Sign up and receive a daily article on recruiting industry news.
Email Address:
Request: Subscribe Unsubscribe
 

ERN | Bugler | Blogs | Blog Roll | Advertise | Archives | About | Contact |


Careers | Candidates | Listings | ToolKit | Companies | Exec Recruiters |

 
If you have any problem with this form please click on the link below and enter your email address:    SUBSCRIBE    REMOVE    Thank you.

Click On Our Sponsors


Click On Our Sponsors


RECRUITERS


Read the
Recruiting News




  Free Newsletters
  In Email:
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


 
 
    03/20/2009
    03/19/2009
    03/18/2009
    03/17/2009
    03/16/2009
    03/13/2009
    03/12/2009
    03/11/2009
    03/10/2009
    03/09/2009
    03/06/2009
    03/05/2009
    03/04/2009
    03/03/2009
    03/02/2009
    02/27/2009
    02/26/2009
    02/25/2009
    02/24/2009
    02/23/2009
    02/20/2009
    02/19/2009
    02/18/2009
    02/17/2009
    02/16/2009
    02/13/2009
    02/12/2009
    02/11/2009
    02/10/2009
    02/09/2009
    02/06/2009
    02/05/2009
    02/04/2009
    02/03/2009
    02/02/2009
   - Complete
     Archives



 
 
 
ADVERTISING:

Our Rate Card
Request Information

 

     © 2013 interbiznet.com
     Mill Valley, CA 94941
     Phone: 415.377.2255
     Fax: 415.380.8245