The critical role that the privacy, integrity and protection of employee data
plays in organizations was the focus of several sessions at the International
Association for Human Resource Information Management conference in Washington,
D.C., last month.
At a time when HR software vendors tout "strategic applications" such as
performance management and workforce analytics, many companies are wrestling
with a much more basic challenge: making sure their information is consistent
and their figures add up.
The Progressive Group of Insurance Companies is a case in point. Progressive,
a major auto insurance provider, struggled mightily before it made its employee
data uniform, said Laurie Munoz, HR systems manager at the company. Munoz told a
conference session that Progressive made a big investment in PeopleSoft software
in the late 1990s, but the resulting system failed to generate accurate reports.
"We got these numbers that were ludicrous, like 475 percent turnover in some
areas when we reorganized," Munoz said.
Among the obstacles to arriving at clean data, Munoz said, was a lack of
common definitions for such seemingly straightforward terms as turnover
percentage and headcount.
Similar issues can plague attempts to create worldwide HR systems, according
to participants at another conference session. For example, choosing whether to
use the term "family name," "given name" or "last name" in setting up data
fields can be tricky. And resolving such matters involves talks with a variety
of constituents within an organization, said session facilitator Rob Eidson of
Deloitte Consulting. "This is not for the faint of heart," Eidson said. "It’s
hard, challenging stuff."
Even such basic data as the number of employees can’t be taken for
granted.
"What’s (our) headcount? That’s what we’re struggling with," said Kathleen
Murray of Fidelity Investments.
As they work to get a grip on such basic measures, organizations also face
laws restricting the way they handle employee data in their HR information
technology systems. In a session titled "Can Data Privacy and HRIT Coexist?"
officials from Eli Lilly and Co. outlined challenges of dealing with privacy
laws and regulations that differ from state to state and nation to nation. "HR
privacy is the sleeping giant of privacy issues," said Carolyn Anker, who works
in Eli Lilly’s global privacy office.
Consultant Donald Harris went further in another session. Harris, president
of HR Privacy Solutions, said many businesses fail to abide by a law restricting
transfers of employee data outside of the European Union. "I’m sure that many
companies are (violating the law)," Harris said.
Harris led a session focused on "binding corporate rules," which are
corporate codes of conduct for data protection that can serve as a way to
observe EU law.
If organizations can keep their noses clean regarding privacy laws and keep
their data tidy, technology today promises to help companies set better
strategies. Munoz said that an HR scorecard at Progressive allowed the company
to realize it should focus on employee referrals as a good source of new
employees and to slow down its growth in a specific market because of high
turnover among claims adjusters.
A key, she said, was having the HR department lead the way in coming to
common understandings. "We needed to take control," she said.
—Ed Frauenheim