Most organisations have already invested heavily in HR technology.
They have reporting platforms. They have dashboards. They have People Analytics teams. Many have invested significantly in SAP SuccessFactors, reporting tools, and increasingly AI-powered analytics capabilities.
Yet despite these investments, many HR functions still struggle to become genuinely data-driven.
That was the focus of our recent webinar, How To Create a Data-Driven HR Function, where 3n Strategy Managing Director Nigel Dias explored why so many analytics initiatives fail to change decision-making behaviour — and what organisations need to do differently to turn data into action.
One of the key themes throughout the webinar was that many organisations misunderstand what it actually means to be data-driven.
Ask ten HR leaders to define a data-driven HR function and you'll often receive ten different answers:
Some focus on dashboards.
Some focus on reporting.
Some focus on technology.
Some focus on data literacy.
But very few organisations have a clear, measurable definition of what "data-driven" actually looks like in practice.
This creates a major challenge.
If nobody agrees on what success looks like, how can you build a programme to achieve it?
The webinar explores why creating a shared definition of data-driven behaviour is the essential first step in any successful People Analytics strategy.
Many organisations assume that implementing new analytics technology will naturally lead to more data-driven decision making.
Unfortunately, reality tells a different story.
Across countless HR technology and analytics projects, the same challenges continue to appear:
The problem is not usually the technology.
The problem is adoption.
As Nigel explains during the webinar, becoming data-driven requires more than access to information. It requires people to recognise when they should use data, know which questions to ask, understand the answers they receive, and apply those insights to real business decisions.
One of the most important concepts discussed in the session is that People Analytics is fundamentally about questions and answers.
A data-driven HR function is not defined by the number of dashboards it has.
It is defined by its ability to answer important business questions.
Questions such as:
The webinar explores how leading organisations build their People Analytics strategies around business questions rather than technology features.
This shift in thinking is often what separates organisations that generate genuine business value from those that simply produce reports.
Perhaps the most important takeaway from the session is that creating a data-driven HR function is not a one-off project.
It is an organisational transformation programme.
Successful organisations don't simply launch dashboards and hope for the best.
Instead, they build coordinated programmes that combine:
The webinar explores how these different components work together to create sustainable behavioural change rather than temporary enthusiasm.
Because the ultimate goal is not better reporting.
The ultimate goal is better decisions.
If your organisation has invested in People Analytics, reporting, dashboards, SAP SuccessFactors, or AI-powered analytics — but is still struggling to influence decisions consistently across the business — this webinar is essential viewing.
You'll learn:
Most importantly, you'll discover why becoming data-driven is not about implementing more technology.
It's about helping people make better decisions.