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Leveraging Human
Capital
By Kenneth Cline
Disappointing performance of front-line employees
reflects on banks' lack of rigor in managing human resources as an intangible
asset capable of driving market capitalization, says consultant Jeffrey
Schmidt.
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Now that the dissatisfaction has been acknowledged
(see "Front-Line Performance Gap"), what's the solution to the disappointing
performance of the industry's front-line staff?
BAI Research's The Front-Line
Factor found a fundamental disconnect between banking's adoption
of increasingly sophisticated customer relationship strategies and
management's satisfaction with the ability of its front-line employees
to successfully implement those strategies. While the survey of more
than 500 retail banking executives surfaces some ideas for dealing
with this problem, we've turned to consultant Jeffrey A. Schmidt for
added perspective.
In 2000-2001, while a managing director at Towers
Perrin in Chicago, Schmidt collaborated with Baruch Lev, a professor
of accounting and finance at New York University's Stern School of Business,
on a study that demonstrated how intangible assets such as human capital
can influence a company's financial performance and market capitalization.
Schmidt, today a partner with Third Path Management Research and Consulting
in Wilmette, Ill., continues to study the topic and was intrigued by The
Front-Line Factor data.
The results, Schmidt contends, are the byproduct of
banks' poor investment decisions when it comes to human resources (HR)
issues. Banks lack a sufficiently rigorous analytical framework to drive
those decisions, according to Schmidt. "How does a bank know for certain
that the money it's going to invest in specific programs will really
make a difference?" he asks. Given heavy reliance on anecdotal evidence
and guesswork, most institutions don't know, according to Schmidt.
He says bankers need to apply the same rigor to HR
decisions as they apply to other types of financial analysis. In an era
when intangible assets are driving market capitalization, he adds, it's
imperative that "banking companies understand how to create and leverage
their intangible assets, including their front-line human capital."
Banking Strategies: The
Front-Line Factor study exposed management disappointment
in the way banks apply relationship strategies on the front lines.
What does that say about banking's use of "human capital"?
Schmidt: The apparent
inability of front-line bank employees to deliver on increasingly sophisticated
customer relationship strategies is fundamentally a human capital issue.
Misaligned incentive plans, high turnover, and inadequate communications
and selling skills identified by The Front-Line
Factor are all manifestations of this issue.
Now, it's one thing to say that front-line employees
are not able to deliver on relationship strategies, but to know why is
another matter altogether. The study doesn't always explain the problems
it identifies. For example, is high turnover among bank tellers a consequence
of non-competitive base pay programs, unrewarding career opportunities,
toxic people managers, multitasking work overload, bank bureaucracy or
other factors?
A knee-jerk response might be to say: Our bank doesn't
execute strategy well, so let's put more money into recruiting or training.
In fact, as The Front-Line Factor study
suggests, the most important investment a bank can make is in its front-line
employees. But how does a bank know for certain that the money it's going
to invest in specific programs will really make a difference?
A wiser approach is to first understand how current
or prospective investments in HR programs shape front-line employee attitudes
and behaviors, especially those likely to cause growth in retail deposits
or achieve other business objectives. Stated another way, managers need
to understand how people investments connect with the bank's economic
model. When they do, bankers can make smart, informed, decisions about
which investments in front-line employees will address the human capital
issue surfaced by The Front-Line Factor.
Banking Strategies:
Please define "human capital" and how it translates into financial performance.
Schmidt: Human capital
is a form of intangible assets. By definition, an asset is something
that creates future economic value. Competencies of front-line employees
and the organizational capabilities of a bank are intangible assets.
These assets drive future bank performance as measured by new account
openings, deposit growth and customer retention.
A typical bank has a lot of tangible assets, virtually
all of which are financial in nature. From a financial accounting standpoint,
these tangible assets account for a bank's book value. But most banks
trade above their book values, which can be attributed to the fact that
the capital markets recognize some future value in these banks beyond
what's on their balance sheets. That difference is the value of their
intangible assets, which include structural capital, such as the proprietary
software a bank uses to manage its back-office operations; external capital,
such as brand value or customer relationships; and human capital, or
the know-how and creativity of the people who work in the bank. These
intangibles are interrelated. For example, a bank's brand promise is
conveyed largely by the interaction between retail customers and front-line
branch employees.
The banks that have higher-value intangible assets
are the ones that create the largest market premium to their book values.
The capital markets recognize banks that have the best prospects for
achieving the highest future earnings growth and the best returns on
investment. So, it becomes imperative in this era when intangible assets
are driving market capitalizations that banking companies understand
how to create and leverage their intangible assets, including their front-line
human capital.
As a practical matter, there are all kinds of things
that banks spend money on to build human capital — whether done
purposefully or not. But research and experience show that some of these
investments have low or even negative correlations to economic performance.
For instance, incentive plans often have very little impact on employee
attitudes and behaviors and as a consequence tend to be tweaked continuously. The
Front-Line Factor finds this to be true in many banks.
Banking Strategies:
Is building a bank's human capital a job for the HR department?
Schmidt: It should
be. Unfortunately, when HR lacks business acumen and financial literacy,
or the courage to take on complex human capital issues, it may not be
of much help. Ask HR people what the empirical research says about investing
in specific human resource programs, and you may well get a blank stare.
Many practitioners couldn't even name the relevant journals, much less
tell you what the research says. And, while analytical rigor is applied
to decisions about tangible assets, decisions about managing human capital
tend to be driven more by anecdotal information. If that's the case in
your bank, you are pretty much flying blind when human capital and customer
strategy converge at the front line.
Addressing the front-line people issues requires a
different approach. A bank needs HR people with a strong grasp of the
retail banking business, and who understand the intricate relationship
between economics and human capital. Equipped in this way, they can help
their banks figure out how to leverage the significant ongoing investments
in their workforces — particularly, in ways more likely to produce
measurable front-line performance improvements.
However, designing, deploying and measuring programs
and initiatives to enable front-line branch employees to deliver on the
bank's relationship strategies require the perspectives and the accountability
of front-line management. Investment decisions regarding incentive plans,
sales and communications skills training, leadership development, coaching
and feedback, and other people programs should be the province of front-line
management, albeit with consultation from the HR and finance departments
within the bank.
Banking Strategies:
For the bank that does possess that expertise, how might it tackle the
problems uncovered by The Front-Line Factor?
Schmidt: The challenge
is to understand the root causes for front-line employees' apparent inability
to execute on customer relationship strategies. You need to build tools
for diagnosing the causal factors and influences and for testing alternatives
to address them. Accordingly, banks should employ network analysis to
explain and evaluate how front-line employee know-how, attitudes and
behaviors influence operating results and financial performance.
Banking Strategies:
Network analysis?
Schmidt: Yes. Networks
comprise the factors and connections that collectively, along with human
capital drivers, make up a bank's economic model. For instance, the right
investments in HR programs and practices help to shape front-line employee
attitudes and behaviors — both individual and collectively — within
a branch. Some of these behaviors, such as the intensity of employee
engagement, directly influence customer retention and performance outputs
such as a bank's market share, and growth in new accounts and deposits,
and customer "share-of-wallet."
A bank's human capital drivers can be mapped at differing
levels of detail or complexity. As a practical matter, however, the resulting
network provides a summary view, and to some extent, intuitive hypotheses
about the configuration of the underlying human capital drivers.
A complete and scientifically accurate picture of
the human capital networks, especially for large banks, would be daunting.
Fortunately, such precision is also unnecessary. That's because the most
important properties of these networks, such as front-line employee engagement
and branch manager effectiveness, are characteristics that emerge through
the interactions within the model. These interactions can be measured
using employee research data and their dynamics investigated through
simulations and other forms of statistical testing.
With the modeling tools available today, it is practical
for banks to diagram and measure how their front-line employees make
relationship strategies happen. In so doing, they can develop fresh insights
into the optimal investments for building people skills and organizational
capabilities. These investments should focus on areas where the bank
has a high degree of confidence that it will be addressing a root-cause
problem that has relationship strategy consequences.
Analysis can also help banks avoid chasing cure-alls
and repeating past mistakes by allowing their managements to simulate "network
effects" before committing to new investments or launching new programs
for building front-line skills and capabilities.
At the end of the day, what banks should be looking
for in modeling the connections between front-line investments and relationship
strategy success is wisdom; specifically, the wisdom about how best to
acquire, develop, deploy and manage the bank's front-line employees.
Banking Strategies:
Based on your experiences in this area, how does banking rank in the
management of human capital compared to other industries?
Schmidt: In some
industries, virtually all of the market value depends on intangibles
like human capital. Microsoft Corp., for example, understands clearly
that its billions of dollars in market capitalization do not depend on
the paltry hard assets stated on its balance sheet. Microsoft's value
is actually in its people and in the intellectual property they create
and sustain.
Most banks, however, still use conventional approaches
to managing their front-line people. Employee attitude surveys and simple
association studies comparing employee satisfaction with financial measures
are used widely to demonstrate the value people add. But, using the same
survey research for in-depth studies of how banks create and leverage
human capital remains in a nascent state, and far behind some other industries.
That said, the banks that figure out how to leverage
the value of their intangible assets, including front-line employees,
will have a huge competitive advantage over everyone else. They will
know for certain what it means to say "our people are the bank's most
valuable asset."
Mr. Cline is senior editor of Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking Strategies,
published by BAI.
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