HR Portals and HR Metrics for Intellectual Capital
Development
1
Dino Ruta
Institute of Organization and Information Systems, Bocconi University
Department of Organization and Human Resource Management
SDA Bocconi School of Management
Via Bocconi, 8. Milan 20136, Italy
Abstract. Intellectual capital is nowadays considered a key issue when analys-
ing critical determinants to company performance. It represents one of the main
and difficult to imitate source for sustainable competitive advantage and it
helps organizations, which can create, maintain, measure and leverage it, gen-
erate a superior performance. Companies, according to their strategic needs,
generate a unique mix of human, social and organizational capital and exploit it
to achieve their strategy. This paper intends to explore how information tech-
nology, and in particular HR portals, could help the organization to really be
able to create a superior competitive advantage by leveraging its intangible as-
sets coherently with its strategy . In addition, the paper provides a deep analysis
of HR portals implementation benefits, focusing on their contribute at measur-
ing and aligning intellectual capital to company strategy.
1 The Intellectual Capital
1.1 Definitions and Dimensions
Intellectual capital can be defined as the sum of all knowledge that can be utilized to
boost a company performance sustaining its competitive advantage. According to
Yound, Subramanian and Snell [13], two are the peculiarities of this capital which
have to be considered:
1. Knowledge exists and is created a numerous levels within and outside the
organization and all of it has to be considered intellectual capital
2. Only the knowledge that is used and leverage in order to create competi-
tive advantage can be considered intellectual capital
1
I want to thank the reviewers of this paper which is at the early stages of its development.
They gave me many suggestions to improve the manuscript and for time constraints I was
able to adopt only some of them in this new version. Many others will be helpful for the next
steps of my research.
Ruta D. (2007).
HR Portals and HR Metrics for Intellectual Capital Development.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Human Resource Information Systems, pages 85-98
DOI: 10.5220/0002432200850098
Copyright
c
SciTePress
So, intellectual capital has both an extra-organizational dimension, constituted by
all the knowledge the company can attract from the outside players it interacts with
(e.g. customers, suppliers, competitors...) and an intra-organizational one, which is
constituted by all the knowledge, relationships and knowledge transfer/storage tools
the company possesses. Furthermore this global knowledge has to be effectively
utilised in order to be considered part of the intellectual capital, as it is essential to
maintain a strict connection between knowledge/brainpower and company’s perform-
ance and creation of superior economic value over time. According to Feiwal [8],
intellectual capital meant more than just “intellect as pure intellect” but rather incor-
porated a degree of “intellectual action”: intellectual capital is not only a static intan-
gible asset per se but an ideological process with an end [2] .
Therefore I will proceed in this study by defining intellectual capital as “the sum
of al knowledge an organization is able to leverage in the process of conducting busi-
ness to gain competitive advantage”.
As stated before, this knowledge expresses itself through different levels and in-
struments. A common classification, developed in recent years, presents intellectual
capital as a multidimensional entity, formed by three basic type of capital: human
capital, social capital and intellectual capital.
Human capital is composed by the personal and individual knowledge each em-
ployees within the organization has. His/her knowledge, ability and skills are part of
the company’s knowledge treasure and are a unique source of innovation and strate-
gic renewal. Human capital has been a highly discussed topic [25] [7], gaining a gen-
eral consensus about its conceptualisation. Four are the individual factors which,
combined, define human capital: the genetic inheritance, the education, the experi-
ence, attitudes about life and business [9] . Recent studies also observed how this
typology of capital does not naturally develop and evolve [13]. Rather, HRM, IT and
R&D investments are her particularly important in order to really foster and exploit
human capital.
A second expression of the intellectual capital is constituted by social capital,
where I mean the knowledge in groups and network of people [18] . The focus is here
on the relationships, the connections within different individuals and parts of the
organization and their ability to create and share knowledge as well on the potential
resources, knowledge embedded within, available through and derived from this
network of relationships. Summing up, social capital comprises both the network and
the assets that may be mobilized through that network Within this dimension, the
extra-organizational aspect of intellectual capital promptly emerges: such relation-
ships are not limited to the ones existing within organization’s boundaries but can
extend to linkages with customers, suppliers, partners, and so on. It is worth to be
mentioned that interaction is an essential precondition for the development and main-
tenance of high levels of social capital. Social capital has a tendency to accumulate in
networks structures in which linkages are strong, multidimensional and reciprocal.
Organizations can offer many opportunities for sustained interaction and conversa-
tions, by intentional design or by chance, helping the emergence of many facets of
social capital [19].
The last component of intellectual capital comprehends a more extended and for-
malized kind of knowledge, and it is called organizational capital. It includes all the
knowledge within the company which has been institutionalised or codified through
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some instruments. Tools like databases, routines, manuals, and patents belong to this
category. It has to be underlined how this is the only part constituting the intellectual
capital which could be really considered as owned by the enterprise, as, once knowl-
edge is externalised and stored, it becomes independent.
1.2 Interconnection and Combinations of Intellectual Capital
Even though intellectual capital presents a multidimensional nature, each of those
three categories can not be created, developed and leveraged alone. There is a strict
interconnection between them and a single action on one of those will surely impact
on intellectual capital in its totality. Patterns of coexistence among those three types
of capital have been identified but, as we have seen, recent studies have also focused
on those three variables independently, analysing which of those dimensions might
impact more on effective superior economic performance and how.
Empirical evidence, showed in fact that most companies have a tendency to focus
primary on one kind of capital and its development [13].
Different organizations, according to their peculiar strategy and tasks, will be more
likely to concentrate and focus on developing one of those three capitals. Contin-
gency plays here a fundamental role, if related to the predisposition of the company to
expand either human, social or organizational capital. According to an empirical
research carried out by Subramanian and Youndt [26], a focused effort on the devel-
opment of one typology of capital could directly improve a company ability to radi-
cally or incrementally innovate. Which also could be read as: a company, depending
on its need of incremental (e.g. consulting companies) or radical (e.g. pharmaceutical)
innovation will have to concentrate on the development of one particular dimension
of intellectual capital. The research, through the study of about 300 companies,
showed some interesting issues; the increase of organizational capital has been dem-
onstrated to be directly correlated to the improvement of incremental innovation:
institutionalised knowledge accumulated in and utilized through databases, processes
and systems seems to help the organization reinforce its prevailing knowledge and
augment incremental innovative capabilities. This is very remarkable, if we consider
some observations made by Christensen and Overdorf [5], who state “at firms such as
McKinsey & Co. processes and values are become so powerful that it almost does not
matter which people get assigned to which project teams. In addition, an effective
mix of human capital and social capital proportionally strives organizations’ ability to
create radical innovation. Those findings surely underline the importance for each
company to better understand which typology of capital needs to be leveraged the
most in order to create an “ad hoc” contingent mix of those three capital which would
lead to a superior performance.
It is anyway very important to consider that recent studies have observed how,
generally speaking, social capital is by far the strongest predictor of performance
[14], as its correct management may enable the organization to more efficiently use
their knowledge base by leveraging it across the entire organization and therefore
eliminating some system inefficiencies (redundancies, duplications, organizational
costs). In particular, we can state that social capital is the contextual complement of
human capital, as in most instances employees’ ability to leverage their intelligence,
87
education and experience depends in some part on how well, to whom and from
whom they exchange information and knowledge [28]. Therefore, to effectively lev-
erage investments in human capital, it may be imperative for organizations to invest
in the development of social capital, to provide the necessary conduits for their core
knowledge workers to network and share their expertise [26]. But social capital, be-
side being a tool to diffuse and exploit the intellectual capital already present in the
organization, plays a predominant role also in the creation process of intellectual
capital. According to Nahapiet and Ghoshal [18], intellectual capital can be crated by
two processes: combination and exchange. As far as combination is concerned, we
could say that all knowledge creation naturally involves making new combinations,
either by combining elements in new connections and associations or by re-
combining previously associated elements through new kind of combinations. Re-
garding exchange, we must say that it can be considered as a prerequisite for resource
combination and therefore for intellectual capital creation. Relationships and linkages
between different individuals and areas of the same organization could promote a
process of combining the knowledge and the experience of those different parties,
which could decide to exchange their resources in order to create new intellectual
capital. So, as well as exchange contributes to the creation of social capital, social
capital promotes the creation of exchange opportunities, therefore fostering the ability
of individuals to combine knowledge in the creation of new intellectual capital.
Exchange and combination between individuals requires also some pre-conditions,
essential to the creation of new knowledge [17]; first of all there must be an opportu-
nity to make the combination or exchange. Different parties must have some tools to
communicate and share their knowledge in order to create new intellectual capital.
Recent developments in technology and their adoption in many organizations surely
represent an improvement in this direction. Second, the parties must perceive such
combination/exchange to create value and, thirdly, they must be adequately motivated
to share their resources. Psychological contracts play here an essential role again, as
organizations should explicit the importance of this process and its positive valuation
for the whole community. Lastly, the individuals must possess some combination
capabilities in order to make this creation of intellectual capital effectively possible.
Summing up, social capital also facilitates the development of intellectual capital
by affecting the conditions necessary for exchange and combination to occur [18].
1.3 HR and Intellectual Capital
Human Resources Management (HRM) activities as well as other staff functions
(R&D, IT) play also a crucial role in the promotion of intellectual capital. In particu-
lar, intellectual capital can be considered as a mediating construct between Human
Resource (HR) configuration and organizational performance: HR activities do not
directly boost company’s performance, but rather they help the development of the
three types of capital which, in turn, drive organizational performance and strategic
one [14]. In the two authors’ findings, HR configurations could boost either human
capital (through intensive/extensive staffing, competitive pay, intensive/extensive
training programs, promotions), social capital (through broad banding, team structure,
socialization, mentoring) and organizational capital (through soft management system
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to motivate employees to share and record their knowledge and experience and HR
policies that reinforced knowledge capture and access). But HR’s role can not be
limited to setting some self-configurations which lead to an increase of intellectual
capital.
Given the importance of contingency in order to define which is the optimum equi-
librium between the three categories of capital, HR function should also focus on
understanding how to align company’s strategy and intellectual capital configura-
tions.
All actions implemented by the HR function and its representatives need to aim at
aligning company’s strategic path with employees values and behaviours. Different
HR practices can be used in order to elicit from employees behaviours which are
consistent to the company strategy [29]: communication, motivation, remuneration
could all be considered valid drivers.
This also recall the concept of agency theory, where organizations that do a better
job at aligning the interest of the employer (principal) and the employee (agent) will
achieve greater performance [6]. And HRM is one of the main mechanisms by which
managers integrate the actions of individuals to keep them conformant with the inter-
est of the firm [24].
HR system and practices can be unique in their casual ambiguity and synergistic in
how they enhance firm competencies, and thus difficult to reproduce [15]. A system
of HR practices, with all the complementarities and interdependencies among the set
of practices, would be in fact impossible to imitate.
The measurement of intellectual capital has also recently begun an interesting
topic in organizational and strategic literature: it has become necessary to define the
role of the workforce (and its contribution to intellectual capital creation) in the stra-
tegic success of the firm [1]. As intellectual capital is becoming the pre-eminent re-
source for creating economic value, how do we measure it [22]? How are intellectual
capital management and intellectual capital measurement related one to the other?
Are we sure that a poor understanding of intellectual capital metric measures will lead
to a reduced capacity to effectively manage this important asset [4]?.
2 The HR Portal
2.1 Basic Features and History
Portals, blogs, wikis, groupware seem to be very popular words in contemporary
enterprises. The current focus is increasingly moving toward a strategy where com-
munication, collaboration and information exchange are gaining a primary role. For-
ward-looking companies are considering a way to group their global intangible assets
in a unique tool, where people can share their knowledge and experiences in order to
increase the company global intellectual capital stock. To this extent, HR portal can
be considered both a instrument for the creation and development of organizational
capital (is helps the integration of existing formalized knowledge) and a relevant part
itself of a company’s organizational capital, in the way it digitalizes and stores a huge
portion of the company’s intellectual capital.
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The HR portal notion was officially born in 1998, when an American financial in-
stitution, Merril Lynch, used for the first time this word to describe an integrated
access point to its corporate information [11]. In this occasion, Shilakes and Tylman
[23] defined the HR portal as “an application that enables companies to unlock inter-
nally and externally stored information, and provides users with a single gateway to
personalized information needed to make informed business decisions”. This defini-
tion underlines two basic characteristics of the HR portal: the fact that the portal aims
at centralizing information which would otherwise remain dispersed anywhere out-
side and inside the organization, and the fact that it tries to provide the single user
with aggregated personalized information, according to his/her strategic needs for the
organization performance and success.
HR portal development is strictly dependent from the introduction and develop-
ment of Internet and the World Wide Web: TCP/IP protocol, web servers, web
browsers and HTML are the IT prerequisites to the diffusion of such a popular enter-
prise tool. In conclusion, we can imagine an enterprise portal as a web page which
combines access to all significant information on the corporate network into a gate-
way, bringing together the information an employee needs in a single place, thanks to
the use of different software applications.
HR portals are usually organized in four macro areas [21], each containing pre-
cious portions of knowledge for the final user:
- The HOME folder is mainly dedicated to corporate general information: dif-
ferent areas can lead to different information, like some links to most popu-
lar access functions, a search engine to quicker surf in the portal, People
Finder to gain details about colleagues, a Q&A area, where most frequent
questions are answered, a Feedback and Support area.
- The LIFE/WORK folder, where employees have personal and password pro-
tected access. This represents a connection area with the HR function: in-
formation is exchanged and transactions with the company are done here.
- The ORGANIZATION folder is a more content/country specific area. In-
formation about a specific division or country branch is shared. A sur-
vey/poll area is here often included, as well as a bulletin boards.
- The MY@PORTAL folder, which represents the most personalized are of
the whole HR portal. Each individual can customize this part, according to
their interests and needs. This often includes calendar of events and reminder
such as a personal agenda.
All those different areas should include some different functionalities, which are
normally parts of a typical HR portal content, such as:
- Employee self service area (personal details, salary and career history, stock
purchase plan, expertise areas)
- Personnel database (salary planning, performance evaluation area, reports
area)
- Staffing and job posting area
- E-learning area (course enrolment, courses information and contents, virtual
classes access, training history)
- Archive of company press releases, presentations and documents
- Information on company strategies, best practices and knowledge manage-
ment
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2.2 HR Portal Characteristics and Benefits
HR portals are aimed at accomplishing different and important functions, according
to some basic characteristics they have [3]; first of all they represent an information
pool for the user, aggregating data from disparate sources which could be either ex-
ternal or internal. It is a common repository which consolidates information previ-
ously dispersed around the company. This integration process can, through portals, be
more dynamic and adaptive. Contents from different documents can be combined,
changes in data and information captured and knowledge flows monitored. To this
end, it serves as a web directs directory of categories, maintaining those and grouping
content links. The portal also allow the integration of various business applications
and help the employee access to all type of information/programs he/she needs: HR
portals are aimed at lowering barriers during acquisition of information, decision
making and execution of activities. Scalability is in fact a very important HR portal
characteristic: the portal can support various server types and numbers as well as it
can support unlimited application processing servers. Portals are then interactive
instruments, which mean they enable bi-directional exchange flows: they allow users
to question and share information. In this way, they differentiate from the simple
intranet, which previously operated as an electronic board, and was mono-directional
(organization-to-employee). Top down communication is still possible now, but it is
surrounded by many other bilateral transactions and an increased vertical and hori-
zontal interaction. They also allow the user to personalize the use they make of the
portal, tailoring ad hoc information, personalizing view on corporate information, and
adapting the portal interface. This personalization process is extremely important,
because it enables people to set the portal in accordance with their own needs and
wishes. In this way the HR portal really replaces the worktable and becomes an inimi-
table tool for each employee. Therefore, reach-ability of the HR portal has to guaran-
tee: employees (who can be inside or outside the company), customers, distributors,
suppliers and so on must have access to some areas of the portal, according to their
needs and authorisations, and the company too should have access to information of
its business partners via portal. All those data should be directly connected to the
individual and not to the computer, meaning that users can access their data from
anywhere and anytime they wish, with a simple assistance of a username and a pass-
word. Portals have usually also controlled access to specific resources. Limitation of
the access can be used also at the personalization of the access because the intranet
portal can be adjusted to different access levels. This establishes a sort of hierarchy
according to the role within the company. Security is also an issue, when considering
enterprise portals: data and information have to be protected against unauthorised
access, but at the same time the access should be quick and easy. Therefore the portal
have to be integrated with all the existing security schemas and log-in/log-off proce-
dures constantly monitored.
Several benefits can be identified when considering a successful implemented HR
portal within an organization.
First of all we have a general increase in efficiency within the whole organiza-
tion’s knowledge management processes [20].
Employees are now able to save time and effort, as information is now grouped
and aggregate from different sources in a unique pool of data, which will not have the
91
typical different architectures, different ownership and duplicative content that vari-
ous departments’ single databases usually have [27]. The whole organizational capital
can now be explored and exploited through a unique effective tool which organizes
existing information sources: information will be easier to locate and share. Search of
pertinent information will be minimized and there will be an increase of choice of
portal software products. Furthermore, personalization of interface and contents also
helps get the individual user to set up the views for legacy information that are most
valuable for him/her and avoid wading through all the other views and functionalities
of the legacy system. Employees collaboration can also be fostered by implementing
an HR portal: workers will have an efficient and effective instrument to get in contact
more easily, alleviating corporate fragmentation issues.
On the other side, individual employees will now be responsible for uploading
some kind of personal data (e.g. personal information, etc) as well as directly and
autonomously consult some areas of personal interest (e.g. compensations, benefits,
working hours, holidays). This certainly translates into an increased efficiency in
terms of time and costs as well as into a reduced (or eliminated) redundancy of data
(often inconsistent) within the organization, and the possibility of some real time
information flows, making the whole organizational information system more dy-
namic and fast to adapt to new environments. Costs and time wastes related to some
specific processes, before assigned to the HR staff will now be eliminated.
Another benefit given by the introduction of an HR portal is that it leads to a natu-
ral reconfiguration of the HR function and its tasks, which will now really turn into a
more strategic HR function. HRM can be considered strategic when there is a clear
and explicit link between employees and their actions and the strategic objectives of
the firm, in order to improve organizational performance and develop an organiza-
tional culture oriented to innovation and flexibility [10] [16]. This only happens if HR
staff becomes a relevant player when defining organizational strategy and implement-
ing it, and HR’s new role in the implementation of the portal together with its man-
agement, surely gives HR a chance to wear a more strategic role. HR staff will now
be responsible for this critical task: align people to firm’s strategy. They will be ac-
countable for monitoring resources and their development as well as for creating
suitable opportunities to foster this development. The use of a technological instru-
ment like an HR portal finally allows HR staff to differentiate interventions to the
workforce, taking into account individual differences, preferences, capabilities, role
within the organization and future organizational and strategic needs, extracting the
highest value from the human capital. Given this new HR strategic orientation, peo-
ple are now an economic asset, and therefore need metrics and measures to assess
them. They will represent more that a simple cost for the firm and it is HR responsi-
bility to understand their needs and exploit their capabilities, in order to maintain and
develop this strategic intellectual capital they constitute and contribute to. HR func-
tion will also have the possibility to answer employees and organization’s needs
adopting a new business and strategic point of view, trying to effectively measure the
value of intellectual capital.
Technology role, and in particular HR portal role, will now play a fundamental
role in helping HR developing a measurement system aimed at monitoring organiza-
tional performance and individual contribution to that. This is due to the HR portals
ability to serve as a dynamic database, recording all transactions and events in a par-
92
ticular time frame. They would act as a perfect recorder, able to trace the continuous
flow of data generated and to store them into a system, avoiding duplicates and re-
dundancies. A huge quantity of data, both structured and unstructured2, could be
saved and stored, but especially managed, in order to provide a broader and deeper
view of the organization and its intellectual capital. Data can now be multiplied and
assembled in millions of ways and new relationships might emerge: this multiplica-
tive effect is given by the chance to explore new queries and data combinations which
are now affecting a higher amount of data. The organizations could now be perceived
as a continuous flow of facts, each of them monitored, recorded, and used for differ-
ent purposes: they can offer an historical trend, a present picture and a future simula-
tion. The HR portal allows the HR function to aggregate and disaggregate those data
in infinite ways and obtain new insights in the organization development and per-
formance, as well as in its own role. In particular, the HR portal could serve as a
precondition for the development of a Business Intelligence system, which would
help the HR staff to increase its decision making process effectiveness and quality.
An effective Business Intelligence System would allow an advanced management of
data, through some particular functionalities: data mining, for example, would allow
finding logic relations between uncorrelated data. Modelling would help simulating
scenarios, or scorecards would present some static metrics, visualizing them through
graphs.
Individuals can now be tracked in a more efficient and effective way: their data,
besides from being constantly updated by themselves and by the system, will now be
constantly ready for any investigation. There will be the possibility to aggregate them
in various combination and to collect them in a personal folder which will now in-
clude different types of information: administrative (personal data, vacations, wage
track, career track, etc.), task performance related (e.g. tasks, number of projects,
succeeded projects, contribution to firm’s revenues, etc.) and contextual performance
related (e.g. trainings attended, team working, etc.). Employees’ contribution to the
creation of intellectual capital will now be monitored in a more rigorous way, and
will be based on a consistent measurement system.
This HR portal benefit is confirmed by some empirical cases, where the UPIM
case study (www.sas.com) embodies a particular representative one. UPIM imple-
mented a HR-specific data warehouse which is loaded with information extracted
from a variety of specialized systems covering personal records, payroll, timecard,
personnel cost budgeting, management by objectives, skill management, and the
receipt of curricula vitae. "It allows us to map skills and people, pointing out critical
areas, and to monitor key performance indicators through an HR dashboard. We can
see at a glance changes in the company as they occur. Critically, it enables us to spot
talent within the organization, and deploy it where it is required” says De Iaco, Chief
Information Officer at UPIM.
2
Structured data are represented by relational databases, legacy data stores and various report-
ing system. Unstructured data is basically constituted by e-mail, instant messaging, files and
stored documents and systems for documents management.
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3 Propositions and a New Integrative Model
The company’s workforce should always be concentrated at increasing the stock of
intellectual capital, as well as at doing it in a way which is consistent to the company
strategy. An organization’s specific strategic posture substantially influence the im-
pact of HR practices on performance: the relationship between the use of specific HR
practices and organizational performance is posited to be contingent on an organiza-
tion strategy and there is empirical evidence for saying that a tighter fit between hu-
man resource competencies and strategy leads to a superior performance [12]. As far
as HR portals are concerned, HR will be the part of the organization accountable for
their implementation and management; they will be responsible for choosing the
contents and the proper configuration. Which mean they will decide how to distribute
the HOME, LIFE/WORK, ORGANIZATION and MY@PORTAL areas and how to
configure them. They will fix the different components and this configuration will
intrinsically communicate the users, the employees on which dimension of the intel-
lectual capital the company’s strategy relies on the most and which one it is more
appropriate to foster. Different areas in fact have a different impact on the expansion
of human, social or organizational capital; different applications can be declined ac-
cording to their contribution to the development of the different components of intel-
lectual capital.
• …………
*****
• keeping updated on some
branch/divisions issues
• sharing of particular information related
to the specific division
• NEWS AND INFO
***
• express a personal opinion on a
particular topic of common interest
• POLL AREA
ORGANIZATION
• ……………
****
• tracking of personal knowledge
development
• TRAININGS
***
• autonomous update of personal
information
• tracking of administrative and
accounting information
• PERSONAL
ADMINISTRATIVE
FOLDER
MY@PORTAL
•………….
• DOCUMENTS
FINDER
• PEOPLE FINDER
Application
….
**
*
Human
….
***
Social
….
• ……………..
***
• retrieve extra and intra-firm documents
• upload documents
• retrieve people within the company
• retrieve experts within the company
HOME
Organizational
Category of Capital
Developed
Functions that can
be performed
Area of the
portal
• …………
*****
• keeping updated on some
branch/divisions issues
• sharing of particular information related
to the specific division
• NEWS AND INFO
***
• express a personal opinion on a
particular topic of common interest
• POLL AREA
ORGANIZATION
• ……………
****
• tracking of personal knowledge
development
• TRAININGS
***
• autonomous update of personal
information
• tracking of administrative and
accounting information
• PERSONAL
ADMINISTRATIVE
FOLDER
MY@PORTAL
•………….
• DOCUMENTS
FINDER
• PEOPLE FINDER
Application
….
**
*
Human
….
***
Social
….
• ……………..
***
• retrieve extra and intra-firm documents
• upload documents
• retrieve people within the company
• retrieve experts within the company
HOME
Organizational
Category of Capital
Developed
Functions that can
be performed
Area of the
portal
Fig. 1. Example of HR portal configuration and declination according to the different dimen-
sions of intellectual capital.
94
HR staff, through the configuration and management of the HR portal, can com-
municate the importance of different types of intellectual capital to the workforce and
align their contribution to the company strategy.
Preposition 1: The HR portal configuration in respect to the different dimensions of
intellectual capital reflects company’s strategy. Its structure, configured by a strate-
gic HR function, will be an immediate tool to communicate to the workforce the opti-
mal mix of human, social, organizational capital is aligned with the strategy pursued
by the company.
Moreover, a successful implementation of an HR portal within the organization
will help the whole firm to better measure its entire stock of intellectual capital, in
terms of human, social and organizational one. Furthermore, the HR portal constitutes
an instrument for analysing this stock and understanding, by some particular metrics,
the individual contribution to this stock (task and contextual performance). As seen in
the first chapter, task performance is usually pretty easy to identify and evaluate. And
this is a process usually delegated to the management, which judges employees’ per-
formance and report this evaluation to the HR function. The use of an HR portal
would now make the HR staff able to directly monitor and evaluate the employees’
individual contextual performance and their personal contribution to the creation and
maintenance of intellectual capital within the organization. If intellectual capital has
been defined as the core asset for the organization’s success, it is necessary to de-
velop a tool to measure the contribution to this important asset. The HR portal will be
an organizational tool to formalize this individual contribution and to add the em-
ployees’ participation to the creation of intellectual capital to the typical performance-
evaluation-feedback loop.
HR portal would therefore allow the monitoring of the intellectual capital devel-
opment within the firm, focusing on the individuals’ participation to this strategically
fundamental process.
Those collected data and information could now increase the possibility to focus
on some metrics which really capture also the strategic importance of the workforce
(and therefore of the intellectual capital created by the workforce, in terms of human,
social and organizational contribution). With the workforce scorecard concept, we
pointed out that an effective measurement system should be first of all based on the
real ability to collect some data; the HR portal would surely help the company to
improve this data collection process, especially making the collection of some spe-
cific data easier and faster.
HR portal applications could therefore be declined according to its contribution to
the formulation of some HR metrics, both for organizations and individuals, as fol-
lows:
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•…………
Post Course Skill
Enhancement
Skill Gap
Analysis
Skill Gap Trend
Analysis
•Training
Summary
Skill Absence by
Employee
Course Quality
Course Quality
Detail
• Remuneration Index
• Salary Analysis
Possible
measures at
organizational
level
*
***
Organi
zationa
l
Social
***
Human
Category of
Capital
Developed
•……..• …………….• ……………
•Skill Gap by
Employee
Skill Level by
Employee
Skill Improvers
by Employee
Future Training
Summary
Future Training
Courses
• tracking of personal
knowledge development
•TRAININGS
•Employee Search
Form
•Employee Costs
• autonomous update of
personal information
•tracking of
administrative and
accounting information
• PERSONAL
ADMINISTRATIVE
FOLDER
MY@PORTAL
Application
Possible
measures at
individual
level
Functions that
can be performed
Area of the
portal
•…………
Post Course Skill
Enhancement
Skill Gap
Analysis
Skill Gap Trend
Analysis
•Training
Summary
Skill Absence by
Employee
Course Quality
Course Quality
Detail
• Remuneration Index
• Salary Analysis
Possible
measures at
organizational
level
*
***
Organi
zationa
l
Social
***
Human
Category of
Capital
Developed
•……..• …………….• ……………
•Skill Gap by
Employee
Skill Level by
Employee
Skill Improvers
by Employee
Future Training
Summary
Future Training
Courses
• tracking of personal
knowledge development
•TRAININGS
•Employee Search
Form
•Employee Costs
• autonomous update of
personal information
•tracking of
administrative and
accounting information
• PERSONAL
ADMINISTRATIVE
FOLDER
MY@PORTAL
Application
Possible
measures at
individual
level
Functions that
can be performed
Area of the
portal
Fig. 2. An HR portal sub-area, according to its contribution to the creation of intellec-
tual capital in its three forms and to the measurement of some HR metrics.
Proposition 2: A successful implementation of an HR portal will lead to a more effec-
tive measurement of the stock of intellectual capital within the organization, helping
the development of a strategic intellectual capital measurement system.
In particular:
Proposition 2a: It provides some ad hoc metrics in order to monitor the stock and
development of the whole intellectual capital within the organization
Proposition 2b: It measures the individual contribute to the intellectual capital stock
through the creation of personal folders
As described before, HR staff, through the configuration and management of the
HR portal, can communicate on which particular mix of intellectual capital the com-
pany is relying on and the subsequent expected workforce contribution to it. HR por-
tal represents, in this sense, a tool for formalizing psychological contract to employ-
ees. Organizational expectations in terms of involvement in the process of intellectual
capital creation find here a possibility to be made explicit: configuring HR portal in a
particular way, the HR staff automatically communicates and incentives the work-
force to participate this important process.
4 Discussion and Conclusion
The present paper provides an integrative model for intellectual capital and IT, in its
particular form represented by the HR portal. The focus is particularly on the contri-
96
bution that HR portals can offer to the communication of strategy throughout the firm
and to establishment of some HR metrics to measure intellectual capital stock.
HR portals, through their easy access to a substantial amount of data and through
their characteristics of integration, personalization and interaction could be a strategic
tool for HR in order to perform their role in a more effective and efficient way; the
case, through a deep overview of the company’s intellectual capital, as well as of its
HR portal, demonstrated that HR portals, beside being an extremely important tool
for the development of intellectual capital, can:
- provide some effective measures for intellectual capital and its different di-
mensions;
- communicate, through their own configuration, which optimal mix of hu-
man, social and organizational capital best answers the company’s strategy,
and therefore leverage this mix;
- help formalize psychological contract and, by this, align organization and
employees’ expectations about their contribution to intellectual capital crea-
tion and maintenance.
Those findings, together with the previous literature on HR portals, underline the
strategic role of this IT tool and the necessity of its management in order to achieve
superior competitive advantage and performance.
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