The True Value of Employees

The true value of an employee would rather be measured by his or her quality, creativity and productivity. To measure the true value just by counting all the cost the company has paid to the employee would be so naive. There is a big difference between cost and quality. The true value of an employee is demonstrated when the employee acts as an ambassador of the organization (whether currently working or not, these are the folks who speak highly of the organization); brings the advanced mindset, knowledge, skills, abilities and personal attitude that translates into expected performance outcomes; has the capacity to be resilient towards change and acts as a change agent; possesses a capacity to attract and/ or retain quality talent; A valuable employee is a self leader who makes positive impact in business culture; stays current in their field/profession; freely innovates, creates new efficient ways of working; mentors and coaches others (reducing training and development costs and positively impacting on the performance of others). And the company gives him or her some responsibilities and how well an employee could perform to deliver this responsibilities (even beyond expectation) would be the true value of the employee.
The fun challenge for HR, is the idea of what counts as an investment as opposed to an expense. Corporations often boast that their employees are their greatest asset. While this is true in a sense - employees do provide the intellectual capital and manual labor necessary to establish the foundation of any sort of business, what is the dollar value of every person working for an organization? Although economic theory would suggest that the value of an employee is the wage that they obtain! An employee's "book value" can be viewed as a function of what investments have been made in them. Often times, employees are the innovators in an organization. They bring about cost saving improvements that might be overlooked. HR needs to logistically place a book value to these scenarios in order to explain importance of an intangible to business executives. There is an impact to the bottom line due to inspiration and culture addition. When there is negative culture in a company, efficiency and productivity decrease, employee engagement decreases causing mediocre work and creativity & productivity is compromised. The intangibles affect the bottom line beyond productivity to objectives. A disengaged employee can meet objectives perfectly well if they choose in order to keep their paycheck, but what happens to the quality and long term sustainability of a company when the employees are busy wasting time and would rather gossip and complain rather than add to the company's success? Replacing an employee does not correct the larger issue at hand if a company only values the financial proof of numbers.
The true question is: "What is the CONTRIBUTION of an employee to the total output of the organization?"It may be very difficult to quantify the true value of an employee to any company with so many variables to consider, such as productivity, creativity, influence, contribution, and performance, just to name a few. Some employees add much more, but some cannot be quantified. When employees create solutions from an internal combustion of inspiration, desire to excel, innate capacity, applied skill, and desire for affirmation, it has the potential to generate incredible value for the organization. Putting a value on actual costs is the easy part. It is much easier to quantify a position's value to a business, in terms of accounting and the bottom line strictly by calculating the real salary costs combined with any benefits and other fixed costs. However, value is multidimensional both in qualitative or quantitative way. Here are a set of criteria: 1). The QUALITY of the output delivered (new ideas, accurateness, value, positive culture influence, etc.);2). The SPEED in which the output is delivered;3). The AMOUNT of work (productivity); and the TIME spend on production (in relation with non-productive activities);4) The INNOVATION of work.5) The TIME ratio spending on production, innovation and administration tasks.6) The level of influence (leadership is not equal to title, expertise, culture influence, etc)7). The effective USE OF TOOLS;8). The level of HANDLING STRESS, because of throwbacks/resistance/conflicts, etc.9). The level of COMMUNICATION with colleagues 10). The amount FLEXIBILITY (is one able to do other tasks if needed);11). The lever of SELF-SUPPORT; 12). The amount of RESPONSIBILITY13). The rate of LEARNING = How quick does one turn experience into valuable output;

All organizations face a challenge to ascertain a value to their human resources because the performance of this resource cannot be attributed to any one/two 'constant' reasons. Each valuation will obviously vary in outcomes and results, as each workplace and position within varies. When you look at the true value of an employee, you are looking at the return on the investment that you have made. It also looks at the overall success of the company. You would really want your employees to be profit centers, which is a new paradigm evolving. This would be contrary to the traditional cost centers that have existed in organizations. The true value of employees are their ideas and promotion of the company brand. Their retention adds maximum benefit to recruitment expense and overall organizational effectiveness. Their value proposition and intelligence drive organizational progression and maturity.
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Published on July 18, 2015 23:24
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