“Mayo is well qualified to narrow the gap between human value and the balance sheet and his enthusiasm and considerable personal management nous keep an information-heavy book readable. Gems of management learning scatter the pages.

As a practical business guide to balancing human capital with modern management’s dominating financial focus, The Human Value of the Enterprise offers chief executives, finance directors and human resources professionals a selection of strategic measures that use the principle of “cause and effect chains”. The book is full of examples showing how value-based thinking is transferred into human resource processes and systems, learning and knowledge management and situations such as mergers and acquisitions.

Underlying its specialist approach and focus on the practical and workable is a humanist appreciation of the complexity of the area that makes for a lively read. Mayo’s insights offer a significant contribution to the debate on how to measure a new area of the company’s assets and monitor its performance over time. Mayo is to be applauded for his achievement.”

The Financial Times
Wednesday 5 December 2001

BACK TO TOP

"Draws upon recent research and takes thinking to a new level. It provides a useful synopsis of much modern thinking.

HR professionals who seriously wish to make an impact on business results and play a role at board level would be well advised to read and reflect upon this book."

People Management
6 December 2001

BACK TO TOP

I'd better start by coming clean about a halo effect. I have known Andrew Mayo for many years and hold him in the highest esteem. I still find the book he co-authored some years ago, The Power of Learning, the best book ever written about creating learning environments at work. I also had the privilege of working closely with Andrew when we, together with other colleagues, created the Learning Declaration. At every meeting of the group, Andrew could always be counted on to say sensible things with a straightforward conviction. Then, about a year ago, Andrew sent me an early draft of his new book and, flatteringly, invited my comments.

So, I have been longing to get my hands on this book and have at least warned you to be wary of my unrestrained enthusiasm.

As I reflect on Andrew's book, three words, all starting with C, come to my mind; it is courageous, challenging and compelling. Andrew has a mission to change the mind-set that perceives people as costs walking around on legs and to prove that they are assets with a unique capacity to build value. The word 'prove' is important here. There is nothing remotely fluffy about what Andrew is proposing. He understands full well that managers are conditioned to working with numbers and that nothing has a greater impact on them. In effect, he sets out to meet managers half way - they with their 'measure it to manage it' mentality and he with his 'measure it to value it' mentality. The meeting point is the place where the worth and contribution of people is quantified.

The book explores in detail a simple (but not easy!) model - The Human Capital Monitor. Basically this advocates a blend of process (causal) and results (effect) measures, with the emphasis more on the former than the latter. The model urges us to have measures for a person's capability, their potential, their contribution, their alignment to the organisation's values and for the environmental factors that encourage or restrains their performance.

The book poses seven challenges (they rather remind me of the labours of Hercules) which, in summary, are:
How to give 'cost' numbers and 'value' numbers equal status?
How to recognise and value the human capital each individual lends to the organisation?
How to measure the financial and non-financial value each individual adds?
How to value future potential, not just current performance?
How to place as much emphasis on measuring the drivers of performance as the outcomes?
How to ensure that mergers and restructuring increases value?
How to set up systems that give relevant and reliable data on intangible assets?

Each chapter finishes with a summary of the challenges for action (see what I mean about Hercules?). The whole book is peppered with suggested measures of human capital (for example, the percentage of people with PDPs, the percentage of people who complete their personal development actions, the percentage of favourable press mentions, the percentage of repeat customers, the percentage of sales from new products and services, the percentage of business coming from referrals, the availability of one-stop information sources, the percentage of on-time deliveries, the number of young people given work experience - and so on, and so on).

I can't remember where I got it from, but years ago I was taught that measures should TURN. T is for trackable, U is for understandable, R is for relevant and N is for not negative. The measures Andrew advocates all fit these criteria - though his checklist of characteristics for good measures is, as you might expect, far more comprehensive!

In the introduction Andrew says that the book sets out to answer three questions
1. Why is it essential to have a system of measurement for human assets?
2. How should we go about measurement?
3. How can this make us manage more effectively and create more ultimate value?

I believe his book answers all three admirably. But don't take my word for it, get a copy and see for yourself.

BACK TO TOP

All rights reserved.

© Andrew Mayo, 2001