If remote employees arenât living up to productivity expectations right now, employers shouldnât immediately jump to âslacking offâ as the reason.Â
Not only is this skewed worldview insulting to employees, but this degree of virtual micromanagement is insensitive to remote workers during the coronavirus pandemic.Â
In fact, studies show that employees are usually more productive at home than in the office. One survey of 1,004 full-time employees across the United States found that on average, remote employees worked 1.4 more days every month, or 16.8 more days every year, than those who worked in an office setting. Nicholas Bloom, an economics professor at Stanford University, found similar results in his two-year study about working from home. Remote working made employees more productive and less likely to quit, according to his study.
Yet there are some paranoid managers who envision their remote workers lying on the couch, shirking work and watching trashy daytime TV. This isnât the reality for most workers in normal times, let alone during a pandemic.Â
Remote workers arenât on vacation right now. Theyâre dealing with the very real consequences of a deadly global outbreak. Most people are quarantining at home (if their job allows), avoiding people as much as they can, staying as safe as possible at the grocery store and home-schooling their children on top of their work and home responsibilities.Â
Meanwhile, as more companies turn to layoffs and furloughs, even employed people have financial worries. What happens if they lose their job and employer-provided health insurance? What about workers who live paycheck to paycheck and worry about affording rent and food if they get laid off? The vast majority of employees wonât use working from home as an excuse to do less. Instead theyâll do what they can to stay relevant to their employer and not lose their job and their health care.Â
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought further responsibilities to many employee populations, like caregivers of children or sick family members. These people donât have more freedom and free time due to their work-from-home status. According to a survey of 4,293 working parents that was conducted from March 28 through March 30, only 46.23 percent of men and 25.14 percent of women responded that they are able to juggle work and watching children. Even considering this âunequal divide of household laborâ and how mothers are impacted most, most fathers are struggling, as well.Â
Meanwhile, even if someone doesnât take care of a child or sick family member, they still need to care for themselves. Maintaining oneâs mental health is important during a pandemic, whether you simply feel more stressed than usual or have a mental illness that requires treatment and attention.Â
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people who may respond more strongly to the stress of the COVID-19 crisis include those who are especially vulnerable to the virus (older people and those with chronic diseases), children and teens, people with mental health or substance abuse issues and caregivers and health care providers who are helping others deal with health issues.
â[It] seems the world has gone bonkers about sick leave and time off from work. I’m hoping despite what we are facing that many people STILL have paid vacation leave due to them. This work at home thing â and this even more ever-present ‘digital presenteeism at work’ â may make us forget that we can take time off even if we or those around us are not ill. Remember? We are supposed to take holidays [and] vacations to refresh,â she wrote.
This is a great comment, and not something Iâve seen a lot from employers. I understand that businesses as well as individuals are suffering right now. Iâm not suggesting that companies should shift all focus from operations to comforting employees. But there needs to be a balance.Â
Rather than expecting employees to be 100 percent productive all the time and expecting them to not take any time off unless itâs for the âright reasons,â employers also need to show sympathy to their workforces right now. People arenât robots. They respond to the world around them. What weâre going through now with COVID-19 is anxiety-provoking at best and life-destroying at worst.Â
Several months ago I interviewed Morgan Young, vice president of client services, employee benefits at Holmes Murphy, and what she said about productivity expectations is especially relevant now.
âYou can acknowledge that fact that people are going to have struggles in their life and nobody is going to be at peak performance 100 percent of the time, and thatâs OK. Employers can have a healthy conversation about that and know that, âIf I can get [employees] through the valleys they have and back to their peak, weâre doing great,â â she said.Â
People share their experiences with depression on Twitter to show support for the mental health community. They join private Facebook groups to discuss similar health issues, without realizing that a âprivateâ online group does not actually offer privacy protections. Companies encourage employees to be open about their health in an effort to create a âculture of health.â And employees join âHIPAA-compliant” wellness programs without realizing that the health data they log in various apps may not be protected by any law if the program is voluntary.Â
When the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act was enacted in 1996, todayâs vast digital space didnât exist. Even if organizations comply with HIPAA, the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act and other laws that protect health-related data, that doesnât necessarily mean the data is protected in many contexts. There are gaps that have yet to be legally addressed. Meanwhile, employees increasingly share health information on digital health apps or online.
A vast amount of employee data is not legally protected. As collectors of employee data, employers should be aware of the health data privacy landscape and the concerns employees may have.
âAs much as it pains me to say, [data privacy] is probably nobody’s top priority,â said data privacy attorney Joseph Jerome. âIt only becomes their priority when something goes wrong or they get concerned or they hear something in the news.â
Employers in the U.S. and internationally have increasingly more data privacy regulations to pay attention to â as laws like the General Data Protection Regulation in the European Union and the California Consumer Privacy Act and Illinois Biometric Privacy Act in the U.S. move the data privacy legal environment forward. In this constantly changing world, thereâs information that can help organizations navigate this complicated intersection more intelligently.Â
There is a lack of understanding of what HIPAA protections apply where, when and to what data, Jerome said. At its core, HIPAA was enacted to facilitate the portability and interoperability of health care records, not for any greater data privacy reason. âWe act like this is a health data privacy law, but no. Itâs designed to govern data in hospital systems,â he said.
Employers want to learn increasingly more data about their employees, he said. They have the opportunity to do so through commercial apps that capture wellness and fitness data. âThese are things that people perceive as health data, but theyâre not covered by HIPAA, and they were never designed to be covered by HIPAA,â he said. Â
HIPAA â and therefore what data is considered health information â is limited to covered entities like hospital systems and doctorsâ offices. For example, within a health system, a patientâs email address is considered health information under HIPAA, but outside the health system, an email address is not considered health information and does not get HIPAA protection.
HIPAA also doesnât apply to anonymized data â the data remaining after being stripped of personally identifiable information from data sets, so that the people whom the data describe remain anonymous.
Further, anonymous data is fair game, legally. âThere is no regulation of âanonymizedâ data. It can be sold to anyone and used for any purpose.The theory is that once the data has been scrubbed, it cannot be used to identify an individual and is therefore safe for sale, analysis and use,â noted âRe-Identification of âAnonymizedâ Data,â a 2017 Georgetown Law Technology Review article.
A concern here is that anonymous data can be easily re-identified, and itâs tough to hold bad actors accountable for doing so, Jerome said. Further, itâs hard to do anything about it once the data is already identified and public information. Unfortunately, there are realistically not enough reinforcement resources, he added. Â
âThat’s a real problem right now, not just in health care or employment context, but you’ve got this giant ecosystem where a lot of companies are sharing information and they’re all saying they’re good actors, they’re all saying they’re not re-identifying information, they’re all saying they’re not even using personal information,â he said. âBut there’s data leakage all over the place. People are recombining profiles, and it’s very hard to attribute where the information originally came from.â
According to the Georgetown Law Technology Review article, the re-identification of anonymous data can lead to sensitive or embarrassing health information being linked to oneâs employer, spouse or community. âWithout regulation of re-identified anonymized data, employers, neighbors, and blackmailers have an unprecedented window into an individualâs most private information,â the article said. One of the privacy concerns some people have about their health data is that it could eventually be used against them and that they could suffer real-world implications like the loss of job opportunities, the denial of insurance or higher premiums for insurance.Â
The idea behind employee wellness programs is supposed to be a win-win, said Anya Prince, associate professor of law and member of the University of Iowa Genetics Cluster. Employees get healthier, and employers get lower health care costs and a more productive workforce.Â
But wellness programs are often not effective at changing employee health, she said.Â
âIf the premise is we’re doing this to benefit employees [but] there’s not actually evidence that it’s benefiting employees, the question then becomes why are [wellness programs] continuing to happen?â she said. âThe evidence shows that what theyâre doing is shifting health care costs back on to employees in various ways. That’s where the concern comes in.âÂ
Digital health apps on employeesâ phones play a part in many workplace wellness programs. But even though third-party health apps are common on peopleâs phones, the privacy landscape behind these apps is murky at best.Â
âSome of the medical apps are just completely bogus and donât give you anything helpful back,â Prince said about the general health data privacy environment. âBut they are collecting data on you, not just health information but geolocation and other data thatâs worth money.âÂ
Another trend in wellness programs is employers offering employees consumer-directed genetic tests to help them understand what medical issues they may be predisposed to and what preventative measures they can take to combat them. According to the Society for Human Resource Management, 18 percent of employers provided a health-related genetic testing benefit in 2018, up from 12 percent in 2016.
Many studies have shown that people are not aware of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act or what privacy protections they have through the law, Prince said. âGINA is quite protective in employment in the sense that employers are not allowed to use genetic information to discriminate, so they can’t make hiring, firing, promotion, wage, any decisions based on genetic information,â she said, adding that genetic information includes family medical history, genetic test results and more.
Still, she said, there are some exceptions with GINA, including private employers with fewer than 15 employees and any employee in a voluntary wellness program.Â
There is currently a legal debate on whether wellness programs are voluntary or if employees feel coerced to join them, Prince said. Some wellness programs are participatory â meaning that employees donât need to hit a certain health outcome target to earn the incentive â but others are health contingent. Employees need to lose some amount of weight or accomplish another target measurement to get the financial benefits of the wellness program.
These programs are more participatory currently, she said. But if programs that collect genetic information become health contingent, that could bring up ethical issues and become more invasive.Â
âIf you think of [Breast Cancer gene] testing, which is a predisposition to breast and ovarian cancer, one of the preventive measures right now is to prophylactically remove your breast and ovaries. My dystopian future is the employer saying, âHave you finished having kids yet? Get on that, so that you can remove your ovaries,ââ she said. Â
This discussion begs the question of who is ultimately the best actor to push people toward better behaviors and health outcomes, she said. Society has to ask if employment is the best place to do this.Â
âIn a way the answer is yes because we’ve created a system where health insurance and employment are so intertwined, but maybe employment isn’t the right space to be encouraging people to make the right health choices,â she said. âMaybe that should be a public health system or your primary care physician or researchers.âÂ
The Pentagon has advised service members not to engage in 23andMe genetic tests, said Glenn Cohen, professor of law at Harvard Law School, and faculty director of the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics.Â
Thereâs a major national security reason for this, he said, but part of the reasoning also has to do with protecting service membersâ privacy. The military is exempted from GINA, which is the law which prohibiting genetic discrimination by employers.Â
Employers could communicate with employees better, Jerome said. Privacy is more than just legal compliance, which may include a disclaimer in the company handbook or on the employeesâ computers that inform them âAll this can be tracked and monitored.â This can help set up the expectation for employees that they should have no expectation of privacy in anything they do at work.Â
While most employers have done their legal duty, theyâve yet to have a conversation with employees about what theyâre actually doing with this data, Jerome said.Â
âI get that those conversations can be difficult and uncomfortable and frankly might get employees riled up, but I think that’s probably a good thing in the end,â he said.Â
Employers â who sit on large troves of employee health data â may have the legal right to share data, but that doesnât mean employees and other parties wonât criticize them, said Cohen. âThey have to be worried a little bit about how it’s going to play as a PR matter and, in an industry where they’re competing for talent, how employees feel about [it],â he said.Â
When Ascension Health partnered with Google for the âProject Nightingaleâ initiative late last year â allowing the tech company access to the detailed personal health information of millions of Americans â it received a lot of backlash. It could be dangerous for an organization like Google, which already has so much of peopleâs personal data, to get access to peopleâs health records as well, critics argued. Supporters said it was perfectly legal.
âMy recommendation in general is even if you legally have the right to share the data, you may want to think about creating some internal governance mechanisms that have employees involved in trying to decide what gets shared or not,â Cohen said.Â
Practically, this could mean that the organization charters a committee that includes employers, employees and subject matter experts who can explain both the uses and the risks of adopting a certain solution, he said.
This could be a valuable decision for employers because better decisions get made and itâs better for the employer’s reputation, he said. When people find out a company has sold its employees data, it could look bad if there hasnât been employee input in the decision.Â
For most organizations dealing with health data and other personal data, their reputation is based on how they treat that data, said Ed Oleksiak, senior vice president at insurance brokerage Holmes Murphy. A data breach or misuse of data would be bad press, so the company would be incentivized to protect that data and ensure itâs used properly
When there is a health data mishap, there are a couple ways that organizations can address that breach of trust, he said. Organizations can provide impacted employees some kind of identity theft protection that will help them mitigate any harm. Further, the company is required to address whatever has resulted in the breach and do whatever it can to make sure it canât happen again in the future.Â
âWhether it’s the employer’s health plan, a hospital system, or a technology provider, everybody’s reputation is contingent on successfully mitigating that,â Oleksiak said. âYou just have to start over again, and try to fill that cup of trust back up.âÂ
Oleksiak also suggested that employers follow a key tenet of only getting and storing the minimum necessary data. Even though people involved with employee health plans most likely want to use patient data for the right reasons, people who can hack into these systems can access everything, including more unnecessary data.Â
Ultimately, this is an issue of balance. According to the aforementioned Georgetown Law Technology Review âRe-Identification of âAnonymizedâ Data,â âdata utility and individual privacy are on opposite ends of the spectrum. The more scrubbed the data is, the less useful it is.âÂ
Still, there are positive things companies can do with this data, Oleksiak said. No matter what privacy rules and regulations are put in place, a bad actor is going to find a way to do something that’s for their own benefit.
âHopefully we write rules that go after people that abused their position or access to data, but still allow everybody else that’s doing it for the right reasons to get the job done,â he said.
As COVID-19 cases rapidly increase all around the world, businesses, public servants, government officials and health care workers continue to take the necessary precautions to try to stop the spread.
Not only are large events such as conferences, sporting events, religious services and music festivals being canceled to help combat the pandemic, but businesses are also beginning to look at their own technology as potential health risks to their employees as well.Â
Biometric time clocks have become increasingly popular among many organizations in recent years as they heighten security and add convenience but are now being looked at as an epicenter for germs in the workplace that could include the coronavirus. This is one of the many examples of how the pandemic is affecting life at work.Â
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, it is possible for a person to get COVID-19 â commonly known as the coronavirus â bytouching a surfacethat has the virus on it and then touching their own face. Most vulnerable workers have to clock in and out, including in hospitals and health facilities. Considering the large number of people who must place their fingers or entire hands on these time clocks day in and day out, it didnât take long for employees to raise concern.Â
The New York Post reported that employees in New York City have protested the fingerprint biometric time clocks causing organizations such as the New York Police Department and the Metropolitan Transit Authority to reconsider their time and attendance systems. Since then, the NYPD decided to suspend fingerprint biometrics at its headquarters. The MTA also said that it will stop using fingerprint-scanning time clocks in an attempt to slow down the spread of the virus.
There are more than 150 countries and territories that have confirmed coronavirus cases, according to an NBC news report. The CDC has also reported that in the US alone, there are 7,038 total cases, including 97 deaths â and the numbers are still climbing globally. It is crucial to keep workplaces as clean as possible for those who are spending more waking hours at work than at home.Â
The workplace has many hiding spots for germs, such as keyboards, elevator buttons door handles and time clocks. Since the novel coronavirus is most commonly transmitted between people, touching infected surfaces can pass the virus, too. Keeping these smaller objects in mind, it is important to continuously clean every one of these surfaces throughout the day and eliminate as many risks as possible.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the CDC have recommended to wipe down workstations periodically, encourage employees to wash their hands more often, sanitize when soap is not available and save the handshakes for another time.
COVID-19 has no doubt taken a toll on businesses as a result of employee illness and temporary closures. Many workplaces are switching to mobile time and attendance technology not only in an attempt to make this process more convenient but to also create a more sanitary workplace by reducing possible exposure to their employees.
For Workforce.com users, there are features on our platform available to keep communication lines open during this difficult time. Engage with your staff, schedule according to operational changes, manage leave, clock in and out remotely, and communicate changes through custom events, among other things. Organizations impacted by COVID-19 can also benefit from Workforce.comâs employee app.
When it comes to scheduling hourly workers, time really is money. Managers and executives may recognize the significance of employee scheduling. Still, it can seem like an impossible task. Maintaining a fair and functional schedule that keeps everyone happy is a full-time job all on its own. Scheduling more than 100 hourly workers may be a burden for both the managers that spend hours trying to create these schedules every week and for the employees who donât always get the schedule they wanted.Â
Knowing exactly how to schedule employees isn’t easy. And there are many last-minute changes that occur, such as split shifts and requests for time off. Emergencies, such as employees calling in sick or needing their hours covered also need to be taken into consideration as extra time that managers will inevitably spend on trying to manage a cohesive schedule, said Leon Pearce, lead software engineer at Workforce.
âSchedules are never complete, theyâre constantly changing. Managing the lifecycle of schedules takes some pretty good tools to do it well,â Pearce said.
Matt Fairhurst, chief executive officer of Skedulo, a mobile workforce management platform, said that tackling these continuous challenges is organized chaos. âThe complexity of scheduling hourly workers is mind-boggling, and the chaos grows exponentially beyond 50 workers,â Fairhurst said in an email statement. âItâs a living, breathing, ever-evolving puzzle that never quite gets solved.â
Fair workweek laws are something else to be aware of when creating hourly schedules, Fairhurst said. Itâs smart for managers to do some research and ensure that the company is in compliance with local fair workweek laws, which right now are in flux.Â
âA large part of managing the hourly workforce is not just managing and communicating schedules, but helping establish and comply with work conditions, constraints and rules that help govern fair working practices, fatigue management and more,â Fairhurst said. âItâs important for systems managing the working week of any hourly employee to have the capability to ensure these constraints are understood, respected and optimized for.â
Employee scheduling software can help make sure that the schedule continues to work best for both the employees and the business by tracking time off requests, shift trades, availability changes, overtime and projected sales all in one place. This saves managers time and gives employees more control over their work lives. âIt leads to having a more engaged and happier staff, because theyâre more likely to be working the hours that they wanted, which is the best case for everyone,â Pearce said. âIt also gives a lot of time back to the managers and allows them to focus more on the actual business as opposed to the administration type of tasks.â
Itâs beneficial for employers to make scheduling more flexible and give employees a greater say in what their schedules look like, according to Mike Zorn, vice president of work strategy at WorkJam, an employee engagement app for the hourly workforce. âGiving people the ability to swap schedules is critical,â Zorn said. âIf you give people the ability to pick up schedules when they want to work, youâre less likely to have turnover because theyâre making a commitment to that time rather than the manager telling them [when to work].â
Managers should develop a self-service mentality to relieve themselves from the tedious scheduling tasks in order to put more valuable time into their responsibilities that will ultimately help the business succeed, according to Zorn.Â
âIt takes the manager away from those critical things that a manager should be doing, which is inspiring people, coaching people and making sure the strategies are being produced,â he said. âAnything that takes away from the key things that a manager should be doing is detrimental to the overall business.”
The impact of technology has not been equal among different segments of employees.Â
The introduction of automation and artificial intelligence-enabled labor management systems raises significant questions about workersâ rights and safety, according to the âAI Now 2019 Report,â which explores the social implications of AI technologies. AI Now is a nonprofit that works with stakeholders such as academic researchers, policymakers and impacted communities to understand and address issues raised by the introduction of AI.
While the use of these systems puts more power and control in the hands of the company, it also harms mainly low-wage workers, who are disproportionately people of color, according to the report. These systems donât work for employees when they set unrealistic productivity goals that can lead to injury or psychological stress and when they impose âunpredictable algorithmic wage cutsâ on gig workers that undermine their financial stability, for example.Â
Hourly workers such as warehouse workers may be adversely impacted by AI-enabled workforce management systems.
Lower-wage workers stand to lose the most with the rise of automation while white-collar workers are generally unaffected, the report noted. It cited a McKinsey & Co. study that concluded âlabor automation will further exacerbate the racial wealth gap in the U.S. absent any interventions.âÂ
Unions have been the traditional way for workers to contest harmful practices, but many employees donât have access to union membership and many fear retaliation if they bring up their concerns. Still, the report noted, tech companies like Amazon and others are using many tactics to prevent unions from forming in their workforce. For example, whistleblowers have disclosed the fact that in a time of employee unrest, Google hired a consulting firm âknown for its anti-union work.âÂ
Itâs critical to get the perspective of hourly workers on how technology is playing into their lives, said Annelies M. Goger, a David M. Rubenstein Fellow in the Brookings Institute. Her research focuses on workforce development policy, the future of work and inclusive economic development. She was not talking about unions specifically in her interview with Workforce, but she did stress the importance of respecting and addressing employeesâ concerns.
There are certain aspects of how technology is used in their jobs that hourly workers may appreciate, but they also have concerns or frustrations about issues like the influx of automated checkout lines and lack of consistency in scheduling, she said.Â
âThereâs a range of people who really want to embrace technology, but they want to make sure that workers have a voice at the table and that they have a way to provide feedback,â she said.Â
These employees may also have concerns when management changes at their company, Goger said.Â
As restructuring takes place new management might not take into account the needs of hourly workers, and these employees end up having less input on the quality of their jobs.Â
âFood, retail and grocery workers have witnessed rapid change in recent years, especially in the front end of their stores. Most feel they lack voices in these changes and feel pessimistic about the future for humans in their stores,â according to âWorker Voices: Technology and the Future for Workers,â a November 2019 paper by Molly Kinder and Amanda Lehnhart. Kinder is a David M. Rubenstein Fellow at the Brookings Institutionâs Metropolitan Policy Program and a nonresident Senior Fellow at New America. Lenhart is the deputy director of the Better Life Lab at New America.Â
âWorker Voicesâ also noted that low-wage workersâ low pay and economic insecurity is a barrier to them preparing for jobs that arenât as impacted by new technology. An excerpt:
âWhile technological change is not the direct cause of workersâ precarity, it can add insult to injury. Automation and the adoption of new workplace technologies can exacerbate financial insecurity when jobs change, wages or hours are suppressed, or when workers are displaced altogether. Economic insecurity also limits workersâ resilience to technology changes by undermining their ability to weather a job transition, pay for training or schooling, and move into better payingâand less automatableâwork. If workers cannot afford to make ends meet today, they will be ill-equipped to prepare for tomorrow. Raising income, reducing inequality and improving the economic security of workers is key to enabling a better future of work for those at greatest risk of change.â
Skill development is on some peopleâs minds. Chris Havrilla, leader of the HR technology practice for Bersin, Deloitte Consulting LLP, said that one application of AI could be to go through data and find potential new roles for people, in terms of talent mobility. From there, organizations can think about what employees need to accomplish and possibly help them develop the skills they need to get there.Â
âIâm seeing some interesting things around, âWe donât want to lose people who already know how to work within our organization. How do we help them find other roles that might be applicable to them?ââ she said.Â
That was the overarching message that I took away March 3 as I watched the opening keynote on day one of Ultimate Softwareâs Breakthrough Connections 2020 user conference in the cavernous Wynn Las Vegas and Encore Resort.
Less than two weeks into Ultimateâs merger with workforce management software provider Kronos Inc., the message of positivity was to be expected. And given Ultimateâs deeply ingrained people-first culture, maybe it wasnât such a big ask of employees to believe in the process.
Moving forward seems the simplest to accomplish. As I tried to put myself in the shoes of an Ultimate employee, I couldnât help but think, there isnât much choice but to push ahead. Because try as they might, things will never be the same as they were pre-merger.
I give credit to Ultimateâs Chief Relationship Officer Bill Hicks for addressing the merger head-on during the opening session because frankly, thatâs what most attendees wanted to hear about. Hicks, who has been an âUltipeepâ for 16 years, likened the post-merger atmosphere to that âawkward dating stageâ when you are trying to figure out where the relationship is going.
I think that crystallized as Hicks, who in years past would have handed the microphone to former Ultimate CEO Scott Scherr or outgoing CEO Adam Rogers, instead introduced Ultimateâs new boss, longtime Kronos CEO Aron Ain, to the Sister Sledge tune âWe Are Family.â It probably was asking too much to play George Michaelâs âFaithâ or Devoâs âWhip Itâ (with the lyrics âgo forward, move aheadâ).
Ainâs initial message to the assembled 4,500 combined Ultimate customers and employees preached the move ahead-faith-trust mantra. Ain, who became Kronosâ CEO in 2005, talked about his background, his philosophies and his legacy. âHow I want to be remembered is as a great father, husband and friend, not a CEO,â Ain told the crowd. Touching.
Still, there were a couple of moments during Ainâs 20-minute talk to ease his new customersâ angst that gave me cause to pause.
âYour investment is safe. You made the right choice when you chose Ultimate as your partner,â Ain reassured the assembled Ultimate customers. OK, got it.
Then he asked for one favor. âDon’t listen to people calling you up now,â a clear reference to the inevitable phone calls that come in after a merger or acquisition. Of course there will be concerns on the part of customers after their HR software provider merges. If Ultimate did their jobs properly â and it appears that they have â a request to ignore competitors is unnecessary. It seemed a bit perplexing to me, as if he didnât have the faith and trust in Ultimateâs sales and service teams.
And if we are being honest here, isnât that what any competitor worth its salt is going to do? I mean, this is business.
Why not put forth your faith in your new team and trust that the relationships built over Ultimateâs 30-year history will endure?
Then Ain took aim at pundits. First, who is a pundit in HR technology? Was he lumping analysts, the HR influencer community, bloggers and business writers into one big melting pot of pundits?
I personally did not see blowback written after the mergerâs announcement. Most of the experts and analysts I followed were taking the âwait and seeâ approach in their comments.
Yet Ain opted to tell us, âPundits, give me my strategy. ⌠They are not telling you the truth. They have another agenda, and look out for their best interests,â and added, âWe will communicate honestly, we will tell you whatâs going on. Trust is everything and makes everything else easier.â
He then curiously added, âDonât read all the propaganda about Kronos.â In the story I wrote about the merger on the day it was announced, I stated, âConsidering this is a merger of like organizations, the dreaded âduplication of effortsâ specter hangs heavy. Are layoffs, buyouts, rightsizing or downsizing in the future of this new marriage?â
I also pointed out, âWith the meshing of cultures, perhaps no department or staff member will be downsized. Maybe theyâll reskill portions of their workforce. ⌠For those of us who have been through a merger or acquisition, the reality is people leave. Some leave voluntarily because itâs not a good fit anymore, or theyâre simply laid off. ⌠I hope and pray that the people will retain their jobs and blend into one big, happy, 12,000-employee company with room to grow.â
I still stand by those statements.
The point was a bewildering dig at the media â sorry, the pundits â that we see all too often coming from this countryâs overly emboldened leadership.
Merging Kronites and Ultipeeps: A few uncomfortable chuckles broke out when Ain referenced what post-merger employees might be called. Ultimateâs employees are known as Ultipeeps, while Kronos workers are Kronites. He said he received a suggestion: âKronites and Ultipeeps ⌠Kreeps. I don’t think thatâs such a good idea.âÂ
Coronavirus concerns: Before introducing Ain, Hicks immediately addressed another pressing concern of attendees â the growing threat of coronavirus. He noted that hand sanitizers would be placed throughout the conference â which they indeed were. Hicks also said that even a traditional handshake is under the microscope now, so to speak. How did he plan to greet people? âSome people are huggers, some are fist bumpers. Iâll do whatever you want.â
Clearly the coronavirus is having a huge effect on travel and is taking a toll what is typically a busy time during conference season. SXSW shut down. Oracle took its conference online.
My Monday afternoon flight to Las Vegas was barely half full. I donât ever recall a flight where my row on both sides of the aisle was empty, as was the row in front of me.
And, word came during the conference that SAP Fieldglass canceled its mid-March user conference. This announcement came March 3 via Twitter:
âThe health of our employees, customers, partners and communities is our top priority. Due to concerns surrounding COVID-19, we are cancelling #SAPAribaLive Las Vegas 2020 and look forward to seeing you at our upcoming Ariba Live virtual experience.â
Whatâs in a name: A bit of a surprise that the merged organizations have yet to settle on a new name for the company. Attendees were informed that the new name will be revealed in the next three to six months.
One observer pointed out to me that it could come sooner, possibly during the annual Unleash conference in early May. It is beneficial to have an assembled audience that will include a bevy of analysts and influencers for such an announcement.
Just a guess here that the new name wonât be Kreeps.
Bakersfield Beat: In a week of ups and downs, country singer-songwriter Dwight Yoakamâs performance March 4 was a high point. Yoakam performed for over three hours straight without so much as a sip of water. His show at the Wynn Theater in the Wynn Hotel-Encore complex was not affiliated with the Ultimate conference and came as a welcome diversion as Yoakam took the full house on a 70-plus-year musical journey laced with plenty of anecdotes across Southern Californiaâs rich musical landscape.
Yoakam focused primarily on the legendary Bakersfield Sound that influenced so much of his own music. But his finale was a nod to Las Vegas (no, not a Brandon Flowers tune, although that would have been pretty sweet). âYou canât play Las Vegas and not play this one,â he said as he launched into Elvis Presleyâs âSuspicious Minds.â
Thanks, Josh Cameron. I really, really enjoyed the show.
Are you leveraging predictive analytics to reduce turnover? Using hiring data to improve recruiting? Monitoring internal social media comments to measure employee sentiment or identify diversity issues?
Executives are finally recognizing that the ability to hire, retain and mobilize top talent is the key to their business success. And they are turning to their CHROs for advice, guidance and data to chart their course forward.
âHR leaders who adopt AI tools for recruiting, engagement and reorganization are reaping the benefits of these trends,â said Ben Eubanks, principal for Lighthouse Research in Huntsville, Alabama, and author of âArtificial Intelligence for HR.â âThey can absolutely gain credibility and add value for the CEO and every business unit.â
But to become that indispensable business advisor, CHROs have to know how to capture and analyze people analytics, then link those insights to business decisions. And not all of them are ready to deliver.Â
When companies figure out how to leverage human capital analytics, they experience measurable business benefits that go well beyond improved engagement scores. Visierâs “The Age of People Analytics” report found organizations with mature people analytics processes generate 56 percent higher profit margins than those with less advanced capabilities. They also found that these organizations are more likely to link people analytics to improved business outcomes and labor cost savings.Â
However, just as many studies show that most HR leaders are still struggling to join the ranks of mature analytics users. PwCâs 2019 Saratoga benchmark report found 55 percent of companies failed their analysis of âgood people dataâ, and another 41 percent were only âpartway there.â They also found that lack of leadership around deploying people analytics severely limits how quickly companies can leverage this data for better business outcomes.
This combination of high interest in HR analytics and low maturity among HR leaders can either be viewed as a risk or an opportunity, Eubanks said. âCompanies need HR leaders who can be on top of human capital analytics,â he said. âItâs an opportunity to become a real partner to the business.â
How to get started
Historically, human resources has not had a lot of experience in using data and analytics in decision-making, said Dan Staley, global HR technology leader for PwC US. âFinance has always been viewed as more data-driven, but HR has to realize that it is sitting on a treasure trove of data,â he said. Companies constantly capture information about hiring, demographics, salaries, performance, turnover, diversity and other stats that offer powerful insights into the behavior and ability of the workforce, he said. The trick is figuring out how to access that data and ask the right questions to uncover actionable results.
Staley encouraged HR leaders to start by talking to the CEO and business unit leaders about what business obstacles they face and how they can use human capital data to overcome them.Â
Then look at what internal and external data sets you already have access to and what questions it can answer, Eubanks said. For example, combining internal salary data with industry benchmark reports can allow a company to determine whether it is offering competitive compensation packages and where they can afford to make more targeted offers to high-demand candidates. âItâs no longer just your opinion,â Eubanks said. âThe data can justify the decision.â
And when HR leaders have data-driven results, they need to communicate in business terms that are relevant to board members. âDonât just report on reductions in turnover or absenteeism or time-to-hire,â Staley said. âTalk about the impact those metrics have on the business.â
CHROs who embrace human capital analytics and who can communicate the value of linking that data to business strategy can become indispensable to their C-suite.Â
âHR leaders have the most influence when it comes to workforce decisions,â said Michael Moon, people analytics leader for ADP in North Attenborough, Massachusetts. They already have experience with hiring and performance management. By integrating data into these decisions, it replaces gut instinct with with evidence based decision-making, and makes it possible to pinpoint what is happening with the workforce and why, she said. âOnce analytics are part of the way things are done, it becomes easy to measure the impact on ROI.â
Call the merger of Ultimate Software and Kronos Inc. one of those surprising, not surprising deals.
The Feb. 20 announcement came as a surprise. But then, theyâre both owned by the same private equity company. Their HCM software â Ultimate Softwareâs human capital management and Kronosâ workforce management â play together nicely, although it would be an interesting comparison to put them both side by side and analyze their similarities and differences.
Also, both Ultimate Software and Kronos tout their employee culture as huge selling points. Earlier this week Ultimate was ranked No. 2 on Fortuneâs Best Companies to Work For list, while Kronos clocked in at No. 52. Ultimate Software also took the Gold in the 2019 Workforce Optimas Awardsâ Corporate Citizenship category.
Kronos Inc. CEO Aron Ain will head up the merger between his company and Ultimate Software.
In the press release issued just after 10 a.m. Central time, one of the first points made was their vaunted corporate cultures. âCombining two exceptional, highly compatible cultures will create a company that is People Inspiredâ (their italics, not mine).
Considering this is a merger of like organizations, the dreaded âduplication of effortsâ specter hangs heavy. Are layoffs, buyouts, rightsizing or downsizing in the future of this new marriage? During this honeymoon period they are saying all the right things, noting that the combined organization will have 12,000 total employees âwith further plans for growth including the addition of 3,000 employees over the next three years.â
 Aron Ain, longtime Kronos chief executive officer, will be the CEO and chairman of the combined company â âguiding an experienced executive team comprised of leaders from both Ultimate and Kronos.â
There was no mention in the release regarding the future of Ultimate Software CEO Adam Rogers, who took the full CEO title in January 2020. Rogers does offer up this quote in the release: âThe combination of Ultimate and Kronos paves the way to deliver the next generation of employee-facing solutions that will set the standard for the workforce of the future. This merger will enable our more than 12,000 inspired people around the world to deliver innovation in human capital management faster than ever before. Both companies remain fully committed to their core strengths as well as to the combined benefits that the new company will bring to employees and customers.â
That could very well be the case. With the meshing of cultures, perhaps no department or staff member will be downsized. Maybe theyâll reskill portions of their workforce.
Still, for those of us who have been through a merger or acquisition, the reality is people leave. Some leave voluntarily because itâs not a good fit anymore, or theyâre simply laid off.
I hope and pray that the people at Ultimate and Kronos â which according to the release will remain headquartered in Weston, Florida, and Lowell, Massachusetts, respectively â will retain their jobs and blend into one big, happy, 12,000-employee company with room to grow.
Now that I think about it, when I requested media credentials to cover Ultimate Softwareâs user conference in early March, PR maven Kelsey Donohue mentioned that I shouldnât miss the Tuesday general session.Â
I checked the agenda. Michelle Obama is speaking on Wednesday. That’s pretty awesome. But I could not find the keynoter for Tuesday. I didnât really give it much thought, but now ⌠the conference and especially Tuesdayâs opening session takes on a whole new level of verrrry interesting.
Eileen Naughton, vice president of Googleâs people operations, announced that she will be stepping down from her position later this year to be closer to her family. The company said in a Feb. 11 press release that she will not be leaving Google altogether but will be transitioning into a different role at the company that has not yet been specified.Â
During Naughtonâs time as vice president of people at Google, she has had to deal with a series of conflicts within the companyâs workforce, such as sexual harassment claims that lead to mass walkouts at several office locations, wrongful termination of several employees and being criticized for diversity issues.
During the backlash, Naughton led an effort to make it easier for employees to report misconduct by introducing a new program that allows employees to bring a friend with them to human resources when they file a complaint and during the investigative process as well, according to Fortune. The article also stated that Naughton responded to criticism about Googleâs poor treatment toward its U.S. temporary workers who lacked many benefits that their staff receives by implementing new standards including a $15 minimum wage, health care and parental leave.
Dania Shaheen, vice president of strategy and people operations at Kazoo, said that while Google has been known as a leading company to work in the tech world, they are now learning some valuable lessons as they are thrust into the limelight regarding the companyâs future and culture.Â
âWhat Google is now learning is that hard-fought gains in employee trust build up over a long time frame can easily be squandered,â Shaheen said via email. âWhile this change management situation may seem dire at the moment, thereâs hope for Google and other companies out there going through changes in their cultures.â
In terms of Googleâs next steps, Shaheen said they need to revisit what made it such a great company in the first place â its culture â to rebuild the trust with their employees, which begins with the companyâs leaders.Â
âFor a companyâs culture to flourish, the key is to build a purpose-driven culture of high engagement and high performance within the workforce, and one that evolves as the organizations evolves,â Shaheen said. âOne of the best ways to ensure culture will flourish within an organization is to create an environment of trust, transparency and open communication.âÂ
Considering Googleâs extended experience with facing backlash and employee tension over the last several months, management burnout is something to also think about. Shaheen says that every company is bound to experience these types of significant changes at some point, and that change can be especially difficult to deal with in the workplace.Â
âTo avoid management and employee burnout in these situations, company leaders can involve managers early on in the change management process to embrace, promote and facilitate the changes that need to happen,â Shaheen said. âWhen managers arenât completely aligned or involved with the organizational change, employees hear mixed messages and feel ambivalent toward the initiatives. While leadership drives desired culture changes, itâs imperative to solicit feedback and input from everyone impacted.âÂ
In times of turmoil in an organization, the role of HR leaders is to provide clear communications expectations and not to assume that all managers will know the expectations for sharing information with their teams, Shaheen said.Â
âBy keeping the employee front and center during all change management initiatives and conversations, companies can help reduce management and employee burnout during times of significant change.â
Valentineâs Day: On this day celebrating love and relationships, couples, friends, and family prepare their choice of gifts for the special people in their lives. Hearts adorn storefronts, packages and discounts abound, and behind the bustle and celebration are the retailers that make it all happen.
Today is one of the busiest days of the year for the Roses Only Group, a business founded in 1995 that has grown into one of the leading flower retailers. It brings together more than 45 years of floristry and retail experience to create a business that provides gifts of all kinds to those who want to share the love: boxed roses, seasonal flowers, full arrangements, wines and champagnes, chocolates, and more.
We caught up with Chief Operating Officer Kelly Taggart as she prepared for the busy season to ask about how she manages it all. âA day in the life of me,â Kelly says, âno two days are the same.â
The search for the perfect software fit
Not everything was always wrapped up neatly at the Roses Only headquarters. âOur biggest workforce management problem was really about planning scheduling,â Kelly says. âPreviously we were working in spreadsheets, and as a growing team, you tend to spend a lot of time in those spreadsheets. That time would be much better spent elsewhere, on making the business more productive.â
Using spreadsheets was an ordeal. Roses Only holds multiple warehouse locations and an online store. With many teams and all 300-plus staff working in-house, balancing administrative tasks without a good platform was challenging.
Kelly recalls: âWhen we were comparing solutions, what actually stood out was the feedback Workforce.com had received from all of their existing clients. And for me personally, and for us as a business, recommendations are so important. For Workforce.com to get that client feedback, that was a big factor in our decision.â
They implemented Workforce across the organization to positive reception. Changing from a manual process to a technology solution suited the team, with them even having some fun with the selfie photos in the employee time clock. The integrations the platform offered was a big part of that decision, as Roses Only uses bespoke systems and they found it fit neatly in alongside their preferred payroll software.
Trimming hundreds of hours from scheduling means more time for operations
The Roses Only Team
Roses Only has been using Workforce.com for so long, the team barely thinks of the problems it helped solve.
âThey would be things like the administration time managers take to look at what time people show up to work every day. You really want your managers to be leading the team and making them more productive and hitting those business targets, not clock-watching.â
All in all, Kelly estimates Workforce saves them 100 hours a week across all locations. These saved hours go a long wayâespecially on huge business days like today, Valentineâs Day, and other peak periods like Motherâs Day and Christmas where they use the shift scheduling software to compare labor data from the previous year.
Roses Only uses a significant amount of big data in its operations, and thatâs essential to their success each peak season. Understanding their processes and building efficiency into them is key to scaling for significant events. By having efficient operations already set in place, they donât need to make too many changes: itâs just the same, only bigger.
âWe found itâs even more beneficial with the extreme growth that weâve had in the last 2 years, that our managers have been able to focus on other things besides managing peopleâs time and schedules because they have such a great platform in Workforce,â Kelly adds.
Blooming in a competitive industry
So whatâs next for the retailer? As the market leader in delivered flowers and gifts, the organization is setting its sights on supporting the future of its business through leadership development. Theyâll also continue to serve their customers in the best way they know: with efficiency, productivity, and excellent service.
âEveryoneâs collecting information, and youâve got to be able to put that information through in the right way and understand what customers are trying to do, so you can provide them with what theyâre looking for. Then look at your own infrastructure and the way that your operations are set out, the way that your teams are set out, to support that offering to your customers.
âThis business, in particular, has been in the industry for the past 12 years, and we have been online in a big way from the beginning. So weâve already experienced many of these learnings and weâre making sure our infrastructure is supporting what weâre learning from that big data so that we can be the most productive that we can.â