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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL KnowledgeAdvisors Our TDRp Journey October 24, 2014
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 2 Getting Started Our Implementation Journey −Managing Stakeholders −Finding the Right Data −Outputs Successes & Challenges Benefits Realized Tips, Advice, and Lessons Learned Questions Agenda
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 3 Getting Started
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 4 The Basics KnowledgeAdvisors is… −The founding organization for TDRp! −Started in 1999 and acquired by CEB in 2014 −Software (Metrics that Matter) and Advisory Services focused on Talent Analytics We got started because… −We were doing some of it already. Given Kent was one of the founders, the basic principles had been important to him for some time. −We wanted to be the ‘learning lab.’ Experiencing it first-hand would help us better understand, and be able to share, the value, challenges, and mitigating factors that others were likely to experience
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 5 Our Team The TDRp team (“the Team”) consisted of 3 people, whose time equated to approximately 1 FTE −Chief Talent Officer (Kendall Kerekes) Visibility into the broad organizational strategy and able to ‘connect the dots’ with Talent Executive Sponsor, in addition to the CEO, leading the TDRp initiative −Senior Measurement Consultant (Chris LeBrun) Expert in measurement and evaluation, reporting, and data management Focused on turning the data into business intelligence −Director, Human Capital (Michelle Reider) SME for all things Talent Responsible for translating the talent strategy into action
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 6 Our Focus Implemented TDRp in our key talent processes: −Learning & Development Employee Training −Internally Delivered −Vendor Delivered Customer Training −Talent Acquisition Low volume but high impact −Performance Management −Engagement Although not a typical outcome, this was an important focus for us
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 7 Our Implementation Journey
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 8 What we didn’t want to happen…
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 9 What actually happened…
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 10 Stakeholder Management The Team worked with the CEO to establish key linkages between talent and business outcomes, and then determine the associated KPIs to tell the story Discussions were facilitated with the senior leadership team on: −Our goals and what we were trying to accomplish −How it would benefit them (WIIFM) −What we would do to get there −What we needed from them Partnerships were established between Talent, Finance and Operations to ensure the right data was reported and understood −The Team established a data collection process
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 11 Finding the Right Data Outcomes Data −Knew the key metrics and they were ‘relatively’ available for us to report on Effectiveness Data −Had a good amount of data available through MTM but we weren’t sure if it was the right data or not…that’s where we started though Efficiency Data −Started with the basics −Was not readily available and lived in disparate (or no) systems −Bring on the spreadsheet nightmare!
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 12 Sample Outputs: Dashboard Our dashboard included the following tabs: −Talent Acquisition −Learning & Development −Performance Management −Engagement/Total Rewards −Customer Outcomes −Financial Outcomes
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 13 Sample Outputs: Operations Report
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 14 Sample Outputs: Program Report
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 15 Sample Outputs: Talent Summary Report
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 16 Sample Outputs: Effectiveness Statement
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 17 Sample Outputs: MTM Reports Additional, more detailed, reports were automated to key stakeholders that managed certain processes, such as: −Client training −Client relationships −Consulting projects −Services projects
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 18 Successes & Challenges
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 19 Challenges/Barriers Getting Clean and Usable Data −Changes to underlying assumptions −No system of record, in some cases −Spreadsheet nightmare! Lack of Time −Despite having dedicated resources, other organizational priorities often took precedent −Although we accomplished a great deal, there was still a lot of ‘potential’ Change Management −Need to help the organization transition from ‘the old way’ and what they were used to
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 20 Successes/Enablers Training and Development −Core team members attended the first CTR TDRp Certification Workshops −First certified participants −Allowed us to apply the learning and move forward quickly Senior Leadership Support −CEO sponsored the initiative and supported a team dedicated to TDRp −CEO assisted in facilitating business oriented discussions with the other members of the senior leadership team Organizational Structure −The team was in a unique position to have sight into the full Talent processes, as well as maintain ownership over the P&L
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 21 Benefits Realized
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 22 Benefits Realized Drove Different Conversations −Senior leaders were talking about talent in ways they hadn’t previously This was a challenge too but overall it was a definite benefit −Positioned Talent more strategically It wasn’t just ‘something that needed to happen’ (hiring, developing, engaging, etc.) Better Defined Investments −Collectively, once the alignment was determined, we were able to better understand and prioritize where we made investments
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 23 Benefits Realized Data Knowledge −Through the process, we learned what our data means, how to best track and report on our data, and what story our data was telling Common Vocabulary −We learned quickly that our operational definition of some terms was different than that of our CEO −The conversations around these differences allowed us to move forward with a common understanding
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 24 Tips, Advice, and Lessons Learned
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 25 Ah-Ha! Getting this right requires a lot of buy-in −As the founding organization we thought this part would be easy but it wasn’t always Getting data is hard! −There is no single source of truth for talent data −It’s going to require a lot of collection and, in many cases, transformation, to make the data reportable Keep tabs on data you don’t own −We found that in some cases, assumptions and calculations behind the data we received would change without our knowing
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL 26 Best Practices/Recommendations Take the time to understand the data −Ask questions about it and ensure you understand the context This will help with preparation and also ensuring you are seen as a SME to your stakeholders Put the extra time up front to ensure you have as automated (or minimally manual) a process as possible for managing your data −There are a lot of points in the process where you can introduce errors, so you’ll want to minimize that Data integrity is very important when working with the key stakeholders −If they can’t trust the integrity of the data, they will refuse to make decisions from it −Consequently, ‘dirty data’ decreases your credibility and the initiative as a whole
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© 2014 CEB. All rights reserved. Version: 01 Last modified: 09/25/2014 CONFIDENTIAL Thank you Kendall Kerekes SVP, Analytics Advisory Services, CEB kkerekes@executiveboard.com Chris LeBrun Senior Measurement Consultant, CEB clebrun@executiveboard.com
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