Human Capital Management Analytics
22Feb/120

Oracle Mobile & Business Intelligence

Posted by Brian Gaspar

It's been sometime since I've had a chance to post a blog.  I have been truly heads down full-time doing the product strategy/management for a new Oracle Fusion wide product and still doing my other full-time job of Product Strategy for Fusion HCM Analytics.  The good news is that the product will be released soon, got a couple of new mobile/analytics patents and I am lucky enough to get to deliver the Oracle's first "official" conference presentation on it at Collaborate in April -

Session: #10475 - Oracle Fusion Tap – Mobile Solutions for the Anywhere, Anytime Worker

Description:
Oracle Fusion Tap is a collection of mobility application modules that work across the Oracle Fusion Applications Suite to provide mobile workers the ability to be productive anywhere and anytime. Hear about Oracle’s strategy for mobility in Oracle Fusion Applications and learn how this information-driven approach to mobility enables mobile workers to know what they need do, what they need to know, and whom they need to connect with to get the job done.

It's been a very exciting and creative project.

But this blog isn't solely about what I've been up to.  I also wanted to share a couple of Oracle videos on Oracle Mobile and Oracle HCM BI.  Enjoy

26Jul/11Off

Mobile Applications for Human Resources

Posted by Brian Gaspar

Co-Wrote an article recently that just got published in iHRIM's June/July issue on Mobile Applications...enjoy.

We all remember our first mobile device.  The anticipation of getting this little device made us giddy with excitement with the mere thought of how it would make our lives easier and more productive by allowing us to be continuously connected and reachable.  It made that $599 price tag or $299 with a 2 year contract with your mobile provider appear cheap and there is little doubt that in the past couple of years these devices have finally delivered on the value we expected.

With the re-invention of the tablet, with enough computing power to rival your standard laptop of 5 years past and smart phones now common place, the question is no longer a matter of “should Human Resources capitalize on this medium to better support the workforce” but ‘How can HR do so”.  The facts over the past year have clearly put that question to rest.

2010 Mobile Device Facts:

 

2010 Mobile Application Facts:

To put this into perspective, in 2010, there was more than twice as many people buying smart phones (304M) then there were people signing up for Facebook (118M users).  It’s now just a matter of how, what and when Human Resources will deliver.

Before You Start

Before seriously pursuing a Mobile HR Initiative, companies need the following questions answered:

Does your company support mobile devices?  Does your organization already have corporate accounts with providers (AT&T/ Verizon et al), has decided which mobile devices to standardize on (e.g. Apple iPhone & iPad vs. HTC Android and Motorola Xoom) and are all these programs accessible to your targeted workers.

Can your company support mobile devices? Emailing and calendaring support will now be just one facet of your mobile strategy, not your entire mobile strategy.  Some things like support processes can be leveraged but mobile applications will require new capabilities and possibly the hiring of new people to maintain them.  Also, for your major work centers, you need to make sure you have enough 3G/4G towers nearby and local Wi-Fi infrastructure to support the increase bandwidth demand.

Can your company afford mobile devices? Emailing and calendaring for a worker on a mobile device is relatively low data usage and costs the company a few dollars per month.  If you add applications to this, a worker’s data usage and costs could jump through the roof.  One large enterprise company in Europe did a pilot program on HCM Analytics/Apps and the data costs jumped from a few Euros to over 100 Euros per month per worker.  In the U.S. we are lucky to have cheaper “all you can eat” smart phone data plans which on average costs $49 per month domestically or $69 per month globally.  If you are going to support Tablets, get the Wi-Fi version for the non-road warriors.  Data plans for tablets do not support the “all you can eat” usage plans and charge by the gigabit.

Are your mobile devices secure and compliant? With mobile applications you are forced to potentially publish and locally store worker and organizational data such as headcount, compensation, performance ratings, etc. on the mobile device itself (if you want offline capabilities). Not only will you have to have deploy a multi-level security scheme (e.g. password upon entry, VPN, encryption of local data, if device lost-recovery or remote wipe capabilities), but you will also have to ensure you are compliant with Federal and local regulatory rules (e.g. Is passing employee data on a mobile device outside the corporate domain across international boundaries and then stored locally, compliant?).

Do you know which workers need mobile applications? Not all workers should be provided with a mobile device, let alone access to mobile HCM Analytics.  The standard workers who need mobile applications are executives, road warriors, sales, potential new hires, and workers always in the field (e.g. geologist looking for oil deposits, on-site project managers at a construction site, or consultants).  This roughly means only about 20% of your total workforce needs them immediately and even then, they will all probably need different applications.

If a company answered “no” to any of the 5 questions, it should wait until there is a yes to all.  If all were answered with a “yes”, then it probably already has mobile applications deployed and rolling out HR mobile applications just became a whole lot easier.

What Should these “Apps” Look Like

To get a sense of what and how people are using mobile devices let’s take a look at what applications people are using and how they are using the devices.

Top Grossing Applications on Smart Phones

Ranking

Top Grossing iPhone App

Top Grossing Android App

1 Texas Poker Paradise Island
2 Zynga Poker Bakery Store
3 iMobster Documents to Go
4 Tap Zoo Exchange
5 Angry Birds (I am a big fan) Restaurant Story

Source:  iPhone App Store, http://www.web-designers-directory.org/articles/top-rated-android-applications-for-2011-20.html

iPad Usage

What’s noteworthy about this is not the fact that people seem to play a lot of games, but that people are not using applications that require any substantial typing.  Ever try filling out a form on a smart phone or a tablet?  Not a fun experience.  For the 21% of time spent on an iPad “communicating”, they are at most either sending  a quick 1 to 2 line response to an email, writing a 160 character tweet and maybe a 1 liner comment or update on Facebook.

This is due to the fact that the form and function of a smart phone or tablet is significantly different then a laptop or desktop.  This may seem obvious, but people are not interacting with their mobile devices through a mouse and keyboard.  They are primarily interacting through their hands (specifically their thumbs) and probably doing a hundred other things at the same time.  Because of this, most existing Human Resource applications won’t be a good fit for being used in a mobile device but applications which fit the profile below would be a good fit:

No Need for a Portal: Most of our HR Application mindset centers on connecting transactions, analytics and information to some sort of Role Based HR Portal.  You don’t need to worry about that in a Smart Phone and the Smart Phone’s “desktop” should be the portal for a company’s workers.  The icons on the desktop replace the links on the portal.  Some smart phones allow for widgets on the desktop and content, such as alerts, can be pushed to the device.

Mobile Application vs Mobile Browser: The easiest and fastest way to get applications mobile is to make the existing ones accessible through a Mobile Browser.  As stated earlier, most HCM Applications won’t be a good fit for mobile devices but certain ones such as an employee directory, may be a better fit.  There are a lot of benefits to this approach - a company can leverage existing skill sets, support processes, you will not have to support at least 2 code lines (HCM web-based application and HCM mobile-based application) and your workers won’t have to learn a new application.

There are certainly some downsides to browser based mobile applications.  The screen size is significantly smaller whether you are using a smart phone or tablet and this will make navigating and filling out information more difficult for users.  It will also take longer for users to complete actions.  Mobile applications takes fewer thumbs presses to get to, they are faster to load, faster to get from one page to the next and are geared for completing actions with your thumbs.

End-to-End Actions: The reality is that a worker, 95% of the times, will only go to an HCM mobile application if they need to take action on a single item, like a vacation request, looking up a co-workers information, etc.  A more complex example could be; a Manager is trying to retain a worker while traveling.  He or she would go into a mobile HCM application to review the salary of their team, then look at their department’s salary budget to determine if there is room in the budget to allow a salary increase and  finally be able to  give an out of cycle increase to that worker.

Completed in 2 Minutes or Less: Human Resources needs to take a page from Facebook’s exceptionally easy to use mobile application.  A quick glance at an analytic, one or two thumb presses to take an action or at most one or two thumb presses followed by a quick one line write up of a note or justification.  Workers have a hard time writing long emails on the iPhone or a BlackBerry,   would you really want them to fill out a performance review on one of those devices?  A tablet, like the iPad, is a bit better but it still takes 2 to 3x as long as it would on a laptop or desktop.  Trust me, I did not write this article on an iPad.

“Mashed” with other Functional Areas: For ease of use and adoption, HCM mobile applications should be “mashed” with other functional areas like Sales.  Other than the employee directory, HCM-only mobile initiatives generally have a hard time getting off the ground and teamed up with other functional areas gives them a much better chance of being funded and to be able to provide a complete offering to workers.

HR Applications Which Should go “Mobile”’

Workers would greatly benefit from the ability to access certain HR applications at any time.  The greatest benefit would be in areas where information is needed or an action must be completed at a moment’s notice.

Learning: Mobile learning applications for tablets will have the greatest impact and benefits for workers.  I am not talking about traditional full blown web based training classes but imagine the Wall Street Journal or The Daily.  Instead of news, companies would provide highly interactive searchable content, videos, surveys, multiple-choice test and the ability for other workers to comment on or share material with others on topics such as product releases, latest marketing campaigns, targeted company profiles, etc.

Worker Directory: If there is only one mobile application a Human Resource organization is able to deploy, it should be an employee directory.  The good news is that most HCM Vendors are beginning to provide this in their latest releases and the basic smart phone version will have abilities such as search by name, title, location, etc.

Tablet versions will have significantly more robust functionality and should be viewed as a light weight ERP.  Along with the standard Smart Phone features, they will have organizational charts, full worker profiles, social networking and the ability to complete simple employee actions such as small job changes, updating of a goal, etc.

Workforce Communications: Intranet portals, email and twitter make up the bulk of.  I am not talking about traditional full blown web based training classes but imagine the Wall Street Journal or The Daily.  Instead of news, companies would provide highly interactive searchable content, videos, surveys, multiple-choice test and the ability for other workers to comment on or share material with others on topics such as product releases, latest marketing campaigns, targeted company profiles, etc.

Workforce Analytics: Similar to a worker directory, all of the major Business Intelligent vendors provide mobile applications today and there are several mobile-only providers who can build mobile dashboards off of information coming from data sources like excel.  All this makes getting Workforce Analytics out to your workers practical, relatively inexpensive and possible to be deployed in a week or two.

Recruiting: Whether candidates are new college grads or seasoned pros, a recruiting mobile application is a great method to keep them engaged while making it through the sometimes tedious hiring process.  It’s great medium in which to inform candidates of upcoming interview schedules, provide background on the company, the people they are interviewing with, sharing of recruiting collateral like videos, and if an offer is extended provide an updateable list of PreBoarding activities.

HR Applications that can wait to go “Mobile”

Not all HR Applications should go mobile right away. Usually the ones that would be the coolest looking are unfortunately the ones you probably want to wait on and some Human Resource applications are just too time intensive for workers or just too complex to have on a mobile device.  Major areas to wait on are:

Performance Reviews or anything requiring lots of typing: Approval of Performance Reviews- definitely.  A worker typing one out, manager responding on the workers review or co-workers providing a 360 should not be a mobile application.  Not only is typing difficult -  but do you really want a manager or co-worker providing feedback on a worker’s performance while walking from the car to the office building, walking the dog, or while grocery shopping?  They are mobile.  Where do you think they are going to do it?

Other major ones to wait on for the same reasons are: New Hire Paperwork, Termination Paperwork and Entry of a Resume.

Compensation Planning or any very complex transactions: Mobile applications are great for taking 1 to 2 actions such as an approval and adding a comment to that approval.  They don’t do as well when you have to take multiple actions.  Compensation Planning would make a great demo on an iPad and would probably make sense if that was the only way you allowed workers to give compensation increases.  For the time being though, it isn’t and companies should stay away from replicating large pieces of functionality on different mediums because it is very cost and time prohibitive.

In Summary:

The facts speak for themselves - mobile devices and applications are in your workers’ everyday lives and Human Resources have a great opportunity to improve engagement and productivity of its workers by providing targeted action packed mobile applications which will make them giddy with excitement.  The challenge now is whether Human Resources will be able to deliver mobile applications in the near term to meet the demand because if they don't, workers as they usually do, will develop what they need on their own and when HR ultimately delivers, it will be difficult to displace what’s already been adopted.

21Dec/100

Mobile HCM Analytics…Coolest Thing for Some

Posted by Brian Gaspar

To say I love the ease and convenience of mobile devices would be a dramatic understatement.  I had a pager in high school (lame, I know), got a big ‘ol Motorola flip phone when it was obsessed about like today’s iPads, and I bought one of the first consumer Personal Data Assistants, Sony Magic, way back in.  Even though I definitely wanted to throw them all in the trash at some point, my fervor for the freedom of mobility has only gotten stronger. 

I currently have 8 mobile devices and use them all 3 times a week at the minimum.  For example, I have already used 5 mobile devices today and it’s just the afternoon.  I am currently overlooking the ocean on a great stormy California day writing this blog on my personal laptop (not included in the total), playing with an analytics demo on my iPad and waiting for my phone to ring for a meeting.  Earlier this morning I went for a run and used my GPS/heart rate monitor and my iPod.  After the run, I did a ride on an indoor trainer with my bike’s GPS/Heart Rate Monitor/Cadence computer and watched a movie on my phone (movie was Restrepo and I highly recommend it).  Even using my high-tech friends as a baseline, I am still one of the very few who have these many devices or who use them this actively. 

Similarly, you should never build a mobile HCM Analytics Dashboard or Mobile HCM Applications for us few fanatics.  It’d be over kill for everyday line managers and workers.  However, before you or your company seriously pursues a Mobile HCM Analytics initiative, the following questions should be answered:

  1. Does your company support mobile devices?  I.e. do you already have corporate accounts with providers (AT&T/ Verison et al), decided what mobile devices to standardize on (e.g. iPhone vs BlackBerry) and are all these programs accessible to your targeted workers.
  2. Can your company support mobile devices?  Emailing and calendaring support will now be just one facet of your mobile strategy, not your entire mobile strategy.  Some things, like support processes can be leveraged but analytical applications will require new capabilities and possibly the hiring of new people to build and maintain them.
  3. Can your company afford mobile devices?  Emailing and calendaring for a worker on a mobile device is relatively low data usage and costs the company a few dollars per month.  If you add analytical applications to this, a worker’s data usage and costs could jump through the roof.  One large enterprise company in Europe did a pilot program on HCM Analytics/Apps and the data costs jumped from a few Euros to over 100 Euros per month per worker.  In the U.S. we are lucky to have cheaper “all you can eat” data plans and on average costs $49 per month domestically or $69 per month globally.
  4. Are your mobile devices secure and compliant?  With analytical applications you are forced to potentially publish and locally store worker and organizational data such as headcount, compensation, performance ratings, etc.  on the mobile device (if you want offline capabilities). Not only will you have to have deploy a multi-level security scheme (e.g. password upon entry, VPN, encryption of local data, if device lost-recovery or remote wipe capabilities), but you will also have to ensure whether you are being compliant with Federal and local regulatory rules (e.g. Is passing employee data on a mobile device outside the corporate domain across international boundaries and then stored locally, compliant?).
  5. Is your HCM Analytics actionable?  The reality is that a worker, 95% of the times, will only go to an HCM Analytic if they need to take some sort of an action.  Example could be; a Manager is trying to retain a worker while traveling.  The manager would go into a mobile HCM Analytic to review the salary of their team, then looks at their department’s salary budget to determine if there is room in the budget to allow a salary increase, and then give an out of cycle increase to that worker.  The other 5% of the time the worker will be looking at changes to Analytics that are updated from someone or something other than themselves (e.g. Finance releasing Quarterly Headcount budgets). 
  6. Can your actions be completed in 5 minutes or less?  HCM analytic driven actions should be similar to how you would take an action on Facebook.  Quick glance at an analytic, one or two thumb presses to take an action or at most one or two thumb presses followed by a quick one line write up of a note or justification.  Workers have a hard time writing long emails on the iPhone or a BlackBerry.   Would you really want them to fill out a performance review on one of those devices?  A tablet, like the iPad, is a bit better but I have tried writing documents on it and it still takes twice as long. 
  7. Can your HCM Analytics be mashed with other Functional Analytics?  For ease of use and adoption, analytics should be “mashed” with other functional areas like Sales.  HCM-only mobile initiatives generally have a hard time getting off the ground and providing mashed up views of functional analytics linked to actions, stand a much better chance of being funded and will provide a complete offering to workers.
  8. Do you know which workers need mobile tools? Not everybody should be provided with a mobile device, let alone mobile HCM Analytics.  The standard workers who need mobile analytics are executives, road warriors, sales, and workers always in the field (e.g. geologist looking for oil deposits, on-site project managers at a construction site, or consultants).  This roughly means about 20% of your total workforce needs it and they all may need a different view and actions of HCM Analytics.

If you answered “no” to any of the 8, then you should wait until you get to a yes to all.  If you answered “yes” to all of these questions, then your company is definitely ready to roll out mobile HCM Analytics.  What are you waiting for?

P.S. No need to worry about this code...it's for a blog aggregrator.  JBBPTXD82PS4