Value added from HR and the HR Scorecard
Chris Nutt - Chairman, FiSSInG; and Managing Partner
The Master Class offered you the opportunity to:
-Explore the cultural characteristics of your ‘organisation’ and your own preferences for the way you work within it, to change and sustain it for the better;
-Gain insights into OD as a philosophy and a toolkit that enables you to work up an approach that is good for you and your clients;
-Discover how to live with the complexities, be shrewd and practical as well as professional.

Earlier events in the Series are shown below:
Value added from HR and the HR Scorecard
Professor Andrew Mayo, Professor of Human Capital Management, Middlesex University Business School
This masterclass explored:
The different kinds of value HR can add to its stakeholders
How its operational activities and project initiatives can be effectively measured and monitored
Developing "a scorecard" which keeps track of performance.
Future Oriented Human Capital Benchmarking
Chris Nutt, FiSSInG HR Benchmarking Club
The business case for human capital benchmarking
How it determines the future role and priorities of HR
How it can increase the present value of companies
Legal requirements for it - and why go beyond compliance?
Attracting and Developing Talent
Wendy Hirsh and Linda Barber
Wendy Hirsh is an Independent Researcher and Consultant, Fellow, National Institute for Careers Education and Counseling, visiting Prof at Kingston University. Linda Barber, Research Fellow at the Institute for Employment Studies, has conducted leading work on graduates using what has become known as the IES Graduate Value Chain for developing, evaluating and reviewing the effectiveness of graduate strategy and its linkages.
Cracking the Performance Code - How Firms Succeed
Stephen Bevan, Director of Research, The Work Foundation
What unique blend of business strategies are most likely to drive competitiveness?
How should businesses transform what have traditionally been seen as ‘soft' or intangible assets such as leadership style and organisational culture into ‘hard' business drivers that deliver tangible economic value?
How do some firms produce levels of gross profit, revenue growth and added-value per head that outstrip those achieved by companies with apparently similar resources?
Do these high-performance metrics translate into improved share-price performance?
How can high levels of company performance be translated into productivity growth at firm, sector and national level?
Rhetoric and Reality - the Challenges of Partnership
Andrew Mayo.
Partnership is not a unilateral declaration - setting up mutual agreements;
"Being Strategic" - meaning what? Four types of business led HR strategies;
The "LCS" model - Leading, Co-Determining and Supporting;
Opportunities for HRM to accelerate the achievement of business goals;
"Numbers speak louder than words" - the measurement side of partnership;
Towards a Human Capital Plan as important to managers as the financial budget.
Performance Benchmarking
Chris Nutt
Exploiting the most widely used management tool in Europe and the USA.
Verifying the true performance drivers; devising the key indicators; obtaining the right data.
Modelling the critical Human Capital and Operational performance indicators.
Targeting human capital and operational performance, HR strategies and management processes.
Focusing actions on what is demonstrably critical for the particular enterprise and its HR team.
The process, the competencies and resources required for effective benchmarking.
Benchmarking the distinct impact indicators for leaders, line management and HR practitioners.
Examples of HR Scorecards, Models and Analytical methods; the art and the diagnostic science.
High Performance Organisations
Stephen Bevan, Research Director, The Work Foundation
The research on attributes of such organisations & why most of it fails to affect practice in real organisations.
Problems of defining and measuring organisational performance and productivity.
Why ‘single-factor' perspectives (such as ‘people management' or CRM) have only limited value.
Examples of the most compelling studies in this field and how they might help corporate practice.
Examples from business & public sector - statistical models or common sense?
Business-led research on firm-level performance & productivity from The Work Foundation.
Succession Planning
Wendy Hirsh
What succession planning looks like in practice - themes and variations.
How it links with broader HR planning, both quantitative and qualitative.
Succession planning and information - inputs and outputs.
The practical influence of succession planning on filling jobs.
The relationship with fast track development and career development more widely.
Who should do what in succession planning?
Measuring HR Return on Investment
Andrew Mayo
Why this is essential and where does it apply in HR?
Quantification and Measurement: types of measures, measuring capability, statistics, ratios and productivity, human capital measurement.
Cause and Effect - the general value chain.
Service Delivery - measuring its effectiveness.
HR processes - measuring their efficiency.
The financial and non-financial ‘value added' for stakeholders.
The "return on investment" from specific projects and programmes.