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There is no substitute for
sound HR management practices. It makes no difference if you are a professional
firm, retail outfit or contractor. It makes no difference if you have 5
employees or 50,000. It makes no difference if you have seasoned HR executives
or not. Many companies fail to see the true cost of poor HR practices and don't
embrace the right ones until they get whacked in the head enough times that it
begins to hurt!
Great companies don't wait for the pain, they
model best practices. This is not rocket science, it's just plain common sense.
By going through this calculator and using your own figures you will see the
bottom line distinctions HR That Works can help to create at your company.
To watch a short video of HR That Works president, Don Phin, explaining
how to use the calculator, click here.
Hiring
Consider the cost of a poor hire(s).
What effect do they have on a team going 65 mph when they enter it at 40 mph?
How do backups, road rage and accidents sound? How much did your last bad hire(s)
cost you? $25,000, $50,000, $100,000, more?
Additional considerations:
-
Cost of hiring someone without the necessary skills.
(i.e. a failure from day one)
-
Cost of hiring someone with significant character
defects. (In a recent case a woman fired for her abusive personality received a
190K verdict for violation of the ADA!)
-
Cost of hiring someone with a drug problem.
(2/3rds of all drug users have a job!)
-
Cost of hiring a workers compensation claim.
(Are you doing pre-hire physicals?)
-
Cost of hiring a
criminal. (How many
felons does it take to make for a bad day?)
-
Cost of the wasted time and energy going
through the hiring and enrollment process. (It should take many hours and weeks
to hire and train a new employee properly. 100% of that effort is wasted when
that new hire leaves or is fired in the first 90 days.)
-
Cost of the unemployment claim or frivolous
lawsuit when you fire them. (Remember, most employee lawsuits are poor
hiring decisions that never got better!)
Cost of your poor hire(s)
over the past 12 months: $
Retention of Good Employees
Consider the cost of turnover.
According to the HR That Works Turnover Cost Calculator, a 50K
white-collar employee costs at least 54K to replace. This is an average
figure only. One executive recently stated his loss of a top sales manager cost
him 300K easily!
Additional considerations:
-
What if they take other
good employees/managers with
them?
-
What if they take
valued customers or clients with
them?
-
What if they were top revenue generators?
-
What if they spread ill will in the business
community?
-
What if they take proprietary information such
as trade secrets with them?
-
What if they decide to start their own business
and compete directly against you?
Cost of losing good
employee(s) over the past 12 months: $
Performance Management
Consider the impact on your
organization if employees were more productive - even if only by
1%. For
example, if your payroll is $2 million and you make it only
1% more productive,
the bottom line impact is at least $20,000. Probably more than that since they
are there to add value. For example, if a 100,000/year professional bills $250,000 per year,
making him or her 1% more efficient adds $2,500 directly to the bottom line!
If your average revenue per employee is 100K and you have 10 of them we are
talking about $10,000. (Maybe even more given the synergies involved).
And - we are only talking about a hyper-conservative 1%
factor. What if it was 5% or 10%?
Additional considerations:
-
Chances are managers are not 100% clear about
what is most important to company leadership. (P.S. You'll never know if this
is the case unless you ask them).
-
As Dr. Deming stated, chances are managers are recycling
this ignorance to supervisors who are in turn recycling their version
of it to the rank and file.
-
Chances are nobody enjoys doing or receiving
performance evaluations.
-
Chances are your performance evaluations don’t
improve performance.
-
Chances are your performance meetings could be more fun and
effective.
-
Chances are if you have an employee suggestion
system it has more dust on it than suggestions in it. (P.S. there is a secret
to making employees contribute.)
-
Chances are you haven't developed Standard
Operating Procedures (SOP's) for the what and how of everything
you and your company does every day.
-
Chances are you haven’t captured your “best
practices” in a systematic manner. Which means some folks are doing the
exact same activity better than others because they know the “best way” to do
things, while their co-workers do not.
Potential benefit to your business if you increase
performance annually by 1% - 5%.
Total Payroll $
X
% = $
Discipline and Termination
Consider the fact that most
disciplinary systems were designed more than 50 years ago, when management controlled
employee performance and as a result owned employee problems. The goal
today is to place employees in a position where they are most likely to succeed
and then to let them "own" and take responsibility for their
problems. Let me show you how this works by asking you this: is there anyone at
your company that if they quit today you would be relieved as opposed to
upset? Then why are they there? What
damage will their continued presence create? What are
people not telling you about them?
Additional considerations:
-
Most managers don’t understand the distinction
between being responsible for an employee vs. being responsible to
an employee. Unless we want to play parent games we must be responsible to
the employee, not for the employee.
-
Most managers discipline employees in a manner that
sets off "fight or flight" responses, not the taking of responsibility.
-
Most managers do a poor job of rewarding good
performance and spend 80% of their time managing 20% of employees
causing most of the problems.
-
The failure to properly document poor
performance is one of the main reasons why we hesitate to fire poor performers.
-
Do you have someone you can call on a regular basis
to help you navigate through rough waters?
-
P.S. There is a way to get employees to take
responsibility!
Potential cost to your business of keeping poor
employees. Assume at least 5%
impact on fellow team members:
Impacted Payroll (i.e. team members) $
X
% = $
Time Management and Delegation
People can be very productive doing the wrong thing! Consider how many of your $100/hour
executives are doing $25/hour work. Consider that most of us feel overwhelmed
by the never-ending stream of information and accompanying choices
we have. Consider that our ultimate goal is to “control less and accomplish more.”
Are you working in your "highest and best use"? Are others?
Additional considerations:
-
What if all your supervisors and managers knew effective
time management techniques?
-
What if they were able to spend 80% or more of
their time working in their “highest and best use?” (i.e. if they make $100/hr,
they are doing $100/hr. work at least 80% of the time. Not $20 /hr work.
-
What if they learned methods for delegating all
other duties to subordinates in a way that significantly reduces their
propensity to make mistakes? (We will teach you that method.)
-
What if they knew a way to stay focused like a laser
beam and didn’t find their time gobbled up by everyone else’s
“gotta-minutes?” (Again, there is a technique.)
-
What if they had an effective method for analyzing
the use of their time? (HR That Works users are provided 3 Excel forms to do
this.)
Potential benefit to your business of increasing
time management and delegation by 1%-5%:
Total Payroll $
X
% = $
Playing Team
People can be very productive and efficient, yet work in silos and not play team. Consider that your experience on
teams differs from most everyone else, giving you a unique perspective on what
it means to be a team member. Also consider the truism that everyone thinks
they are more committed in a relationship than the other person. No wonder
it is so difficult to play TEAM!
Additional considerations:
-
Who wants to be on a team that generates more losers
than winners?
-
How are employees being incentivized for
playing team?
-
Have you figured out yet how to teach teams to
support each other? (There is in fact a very easy method to do this.)
-
Does everyone on the team know the rules or
is everybody assuming they do? (We have a powerful form that can get everybody on the
same page.)
-
How are you keeping employees focused on the value
of playing team?
Potential benefit of increasing
teamwork by 1%-5%.
Total Payroll $
X
= $
Workers Compensation Costs
Consider the fact that most
traditional safety programs do very little to help accidents, prevent frivolous claims and
reduce any malingering on legitimate ones.
Additional considerations:
-
Make no mistake, insurance companies don’t pay
claims, you do (Ask us to explain that to you.)
-
Many companies pay a hefty insurance premium
because their broker does not specialize in worker's compensation. As a result,
companies get poor advice on how to properly classify employees, manage claims
and lower their experience modifier. (Only work with a WorkComp
specialist)
-
Many times your employees are in the
wrong rating
classification. (And nobody
knows about it.)
-
Many claims are generated by a
corporate culture. (And we can show you how to fix that, too.)
Potential benefit of reducing your worker’s
compensation costs by 1-5% or more:
Total premium costs $
X
% = $
Benefits and Rewards
Consider that to some degree all
employer sponsored benefit and reward programs are under-utilized and
unappreciated. How much do employees appreciate yours?
Additional considerations:
-
Does your
health care program encourage employees to
be healthy?
-
Are your employees taking
full advantage of any
401(K) type programs?
-
Are your bonus, incentive and reward programs
aligned with your strategic plan and producing results in that direction?
-
Do you have a formula for analyzing their
effectiveness? (There is a great process for this).
-
Do your rewards create
more winners than losers?
What would be the financial impact
of increasing the impact of your benefit and reward programs by 1-5% or more?:
Total Benefits Cost $
X
$
% = $
Personnel Law Compliance
Consider the fact that the employee
wins their lawsuit more than two thirds of the time and that the average
employment practices verdict exceeds $250,000, with the cost of defense
easily exceeding $100,000. And it’s only getting worse, not better.
Additional considerations:
-
Some 15% of employee verdicts include a punitive
damage award exceeding $1,000,000.
-
The average settlement of an EPL claim is $75,000
-
It easily costs $35,000 to settle even the most
frivolous lawsuit. The cost of fighting a frivolous suit to prove you are
"right" is even greater.
-
Most employees won’t disclose compliance concerns
to management. Whether something wrong is happening to them or someone else.
(Fortunately, there is a way to make them do so).
-
Managers fear firing poor performers due to
litigation exposures. What is the cost of keeping on
dead weight because
someone at your company fears a lawsuit?
-
Remember, this is severity exposure, not a frequency one.
Potential cost to your business of remaining
vulnerable to today’s litigiousness (or how much did your last claim cost you?): $
Additional Considerations
Including absenteeism, health care abuse, customer satisfaction, dollars wasted on fruitless efforts and more $
Adding It All Up
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