EXCERPT: How’s Your Return on People?
Companies that invest in employee development can outperform the
market. Just ask their shareholders.
By Laurie Bassi and Daniel McMurrer
Harvard Business Review, March 2004, p. 18
Managers are always claiming, “People are our most important asset.”
But deep down, they can’t shake the feeling that employees are costs.
Big costs. And they treat them that way. Quarterly earnings off?
Cut the perks, rein in training, and downsize. This strategy may
raise earnings in the short term, but it’s myopic. Recent studies
suggest that layoffs actually destroy shareholder value. And our
research shows that treating employees like the assets they are
– by investing in their development – boosts returns over the long
term…
…In December 2001, we decided to put our money where our research
was, creating a live portfolio of companies that spend aggressively
on employee development. In its first 25 months since inception,
that portfolio has outperformed the S&P 500 index by 4.6 percentage
points (2.2% versus a decline of 2.4 percentage points for the index).
In January 2003, we expanded our investment strategy by launching
two additional live equity portfolios composed of similar development-oriented
companies. The results speak for themselves: While past performance
is never a guarantee of future results, and while it is always possible
to lose money, each of these three portfolios outperformed the S&P
500 by 17% to 35% in 2003. (See the exhibit “The People Payoff.”)
How are you investing in your most important asset?
The full article is available for purchase from Harvard Business
Review by clicking on this web
link.
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