While employees may be a company's greatest asset, it is data in the hands of these employees that can truly make a difference. Workforce data and people analytics can help employees make informed decisions, develop strong strategic initiatives and achieve measurable goals.
From increasing leadership effectiveness to analyzing employee performance to developing training for increased customer loyalty, the impact of a data-driven culture runs far and wide. But creating such a culture is no easy feat: it not only requires building an internal analytics team, but also getting buy-in from employees across your organization.
For many organizations, simply getting off the ground with an in-house analytics team is intimidating, much less forming a culture around big data. We talked with Teri Schmidt, manager of the Assessment, Measurement & Evaluation (AME) team at JetBlue, about how her team has created a ripple effect of evidence-based decision-making from within. Here, her best advice for other organizations interested in putting analytics at the center of their culture and strategy.
Start Small
You have to crawl before you walk (or run) with analytics. When you're just beginning a data program, focus on a single metric or goal that can prompt a larger conversation about the impact of analytics, Schmidt advises.
"If you can come up with even one metric that people can understand, talk about and utilize, that will have a huge impact," she says. "As people begin to see value in using data, you can continuously improve your metrics, gain more access to data, and get people interested in collecting new data."
Lead by Example
After you've prompted interest in analytics, continue growing the conversation by sharing anecdotes and case studies with the company. If people see the result of a data-driven decision, they are more likely to trust in the potential of evidence-based decision making themselves.
"We started our conversations in a quarterly meeting where people shared success stories about where they had utilized data," Schmidt says. "Getting people talking can help get the ball rolling and take you to a point where you can build and improve."
Offer Learning Opportunities
The real key to instilling a culture around data, however, is to create opportunities for people to engage with analytics themselves. While conversation and success stories generate intrigue, the next step is dedicating resources to transform intrigue into action. For JetBlue, that meant creating a mentorship program for other employees to learn from AME team members.
The AME certification is a performance-based program that educates employees organization-wide about applying analytics, teaching effective data collection, analysis, visualization, communication and use in performance improvement. Participants apply the processes they learn to a real-life project, Schmidt explains. Along the way, AME mentors teach participants how to involve stakeholders in data collection and how to communicate their results effectively.
The cumulation of these efforts is company-wide engagement in data analysis. In addition to making smarter and better informed choices, JetBlue employees are now proactively seeking out opportunities to use data to improve the company.
"A big part of what we've seen — beyond making improvements that I don't think would've been made without the evidence provided through data — is a big growth of culture where people look to find and use data when they have a decision to make," Schmidt says. "They get excited [when they're able] to say they improved a certain program because they had the data to back it up."
Photo: Creative Commons
関連資料
製品やお客様事例、最新の業界のインサイトなどをご紹介しています。
お客様事例
旭化成株式会社:次の100年に向けて新たな人財戦略を推進
合成化学や化学繊維事業でスタートし、事業ポートフォリオを積極的に転換することで時代のニーズに応え続けてきた旭化成。2022年に創業100周年を迎えた同社は、次の100年に向けた挑戦の礎として、一人ひとりの業務や志向性に応じて学習しながら仲間と共に成長することができる学びのプラットフォームの全社展開を進めています。「CLAP(Co-Learning Adventure Place/クラップ)」と名付けたこのプラットフォームを、旭化成はコーナーストーン・ラーニングCSXで構築しました。社外の学習コンテンツとの柔軟な連携やお薦めを共有できるコミュニケーション機能などを備えたCLAPにより、同社内では学びの輪が徐々に生まれています。新入社員研修での活用がスタートしたほか、社内外の学習コンテンツを組み合わせた研修コースの開発も始まろうとしています。