What is HR analytics and why it matters now
HR analytics — also called people analytics or workforce analytics — is the practice of collecting, organising, and interpreting HR data to improve decisions about people. At its most basic, it means knowing your attrition rate and time-to-hire. At its most advanced, it means predicting which employees are likely to resign three months from now, and intervening before they do.
For most Singapore SMEs, the gap between where they are and where they need to be is not as wide as it sounds. The biggest obstacle is rarely technology. It is the absence of a habit: the discipline of capturing consistent data and reviewing it regularly.
Why does this matter now? Three forces are converging. First, Singapore's tight labour market makes every unnecessary resignation expensive — the cost of replacing a mid-level employee typically runs between 50% and 200% of annual salary when you factor in recruitment, lost productivity, and onboarding. Second, AI tools have dramatically lowered the barrier to analytics work that previously required dedicated data teams. Third, the MOM's emphasis on fair employment practices and the AI Verify framework both signal that workforce decisions are increasingly expected to be evidence-based and auditable.
Key insight: HR analytics is not a technology project. It is a decision-quality project. The technology simply makes better decisions faster. Start with the question, not the tool.
HR teams that embrace analytics gain a seat at the strategy table. Those that do not risk remaining in a support function role — responding to requests rather than shaping the direction of talent in the organisation.
The HR analytics maturity model
The analytics maturity model describes four stages of capability. Most Singapore SMEs sit at Level 1 or early Level 2. The goal of an analytics programme is not to jump straight to Level 4 — it is to move one level at a time, building data infrastructure and analytical habits as you go.
Descriptive Analytics
Answers the question: What happened? Basic reporting on headcount, turnover, absenteeism. Usually done in Excel spreadsheets, manually updated.
Diagnostic Analytics
Answers the question: Why did it happen? Identifying correlations between engagement scores and attrition, or between onboarding quality and 90-day retention.
Predictive Analytics
Answers the question: What will happen? Using historical patterns to forecast attrition risk, skills gaps, or hiring demand 6–12 months ahead.
Prescriptive Analytics
Answers the question: What should we do? AI recommends specific interventions — which employees to place in development programmes, how to adjust compensation to retain key talent.
The practical implication: you do not need a data science team to reach Level 3. What you need is clean, consistent data at Level 1, a habit of asking "why" at Level 2, and access to the right AI tools to help you model patterns at Level 3. The training programmes at Fractional Partners Asia are designed to take HR teams from Level 1 to Level 3 within a structured learning pathway — without requiring any prior technical background.
Singapore context: The IMDA's AI Verify framework recommends that organisations using AI in employment decisions document their data sources and model assumptions. Starting your analytics journey with good data hygiene now positions you to comply with these expectations as they become standard practice.
6 HR metrics every SME should track
There are dozens of HR metrics you could track. The following six give Singapore SMEs the highest return on analytical effort — covering the full talent lifecycle from acquisition through retention, with each metric connected to a real business cost or outcome.
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1
Attrition Rate
The percentage of employees who leave in a given period. Voluntary and involuntary attrition should be tracked separately. Voluntary attrition above industry benchmark is your single biggest warning signal for culture or compensation issues.
Attrition Rate = (Leavers ÷ Average Headcount) × 100 -
2
Time-to-Hire
Days from job opening to accepted offer. High time-to-hire signals sourcing inefficiency or a misaligned candidate experience. In Singapore's competitive market, speed of offer is often the deciding factor between your hire and a competitor's.
Time-to-Hire = Date of Offer Accepted − Date Job Posted -
3
Employee Engagement Score
A composite measure of how committed, motivated, and connected employees feel. Even a simple quarterly pulse survey (5–8 questions) gives you directional data that your attrition numbers cannot. Track trends over time; the score on any single survey matters less than the direction of movement.
Survey-based — use eNPS or a standardised pulse scale -
4
Training ROI
The measurable return generated by your L&D investment. This can be as simple as comparing pre- and post-training performance metrics, or as sophisticated as correlating training completion rates with promotion rates and retention. Many Singapore companies invest in training without ever measuring whether it worked.
Training ROI = (Training Benefit − Training Cost) ÷ Training Cost × 100 -
5
Cost-per-Hire
Total recruitment spend divided by number of hires. Includes agency fees, job board costs, internal recruiter time, and hiring manager time. Most SMEs significantly underestimate this figure because internal time costs go unmeasured. Knowing your true cost-per-hire helps you evaluate whether agency recruitment is justified versus building internal talent pipelines.
Cost-per-Hire = Total Recruitment Costs ÷ Number of Hires -
6
Absenteeism Rate
Unplanned absence as a percentage of scheduled working days. Elevated absenteeism is an early indicator of burnout, disengagement, or team-level culture problems — often appearing months before attrition does. Track it by department to identify where the pressure is concentrated.
Absenteeism = (Days Absent ÷ Scheduled Days) × 100
Starting point: If you are tracking none of these today, begin with attrition rate and time-to-hire. They require minimal data infrastructure and produce immediate insight. Add engagement score in the next quarter. By month six, you will have a meaningful baseline across all six metrics.
AI tools transforming HR analytics
Until recently, meaningful HR analytics required either a specialist data team or expensive enterprise HR platforms. AI has changed this equation significantly. The following categories of AI-powered tools are now accessible to Singapore SMEs at a fraction of the historical cost — and some require no technical expertise at all.
Automated Dashboards
Tools like Power BI with Microsoft Copilot, Tableau Pulse, and Google Looker Studio now allow HR teams to build living dashboards that refresh automatically. AI components can surface anomalies, generate plain-language summaries of what the data shows, and flag metrics that are moving outside normal ranges — without the HR manager needing to run any query themselves.
NLP for Engagement Surveys
Natural language processing tools analyse open-ended survey responses and exit interview transcripts at scale, identifying sentiment themes without manual coding. A tool like Qualtrics XM or even a well-prompted large language model can surface the top five themes from 200 survey comments in minutes — work that previously took an analyst days.
Predictive Attrition Models
Purpose-built tools like Visier and Workday Illuminate analyse patterns in performance data, engagement scores, tenure, and compensation relative to market to generate attrition risk scores by employee. Smaller SMEs can approximate this using structured data in Excel fed into AI models to identify patterns — a capability Fractional Partners Asia teaches in its HR analytics training programme.
AI-Assisted Benchmarking
AI tools connected to market databases can benchmark your HR metrics against Singapore industry norms in real time. MOM's labour market reports, combined with AI-powered benchmarking platforms, let HR managers know not just what their attrition rate is, but whether it is better or worse than comparable organisations in their sector and headcount band.
A critical point: none of these tools eliminates the need for HR judgement. They accelerate the analytical work so that HR professionals can spend less time assembling data and more time interpreting it. The skill being developed is analytical thinking, not technical programming.
PDPA reminder: Any AI tool processing employee personal data must comply with Singapore's Personal Data Protection Act. Before deploying a new HR analytics tool, review what data it collects, where it is stored, and whether your employees have been informed appropriately. This is a governance step, not a technical one.
Building your first HR dashboard: a practical walkthrough
The most effective HR dashboards are not the most technically sophisticated ones. They are the ones that get reviewed weekly and actually change decisions. Here is a practical approach for building your first dashboard with the tools you already have.
Step 1: Define three decisions your dashboard will support
Before choosing a tool, name three specific decisions. For example: (1) When should we open a new headcount request? (2) Which department has the highest attrition risk right now? (3) Is our current training investment improving retention? Your dashboard should be built backwards from these questions, not assembled from every data point you have access to.
Step 2: Identify your data sources
Most SMEs have data living in at least three places: payroll software, a leave management system, and spreadsheets. Before building anything, list every data source and identify the owner, update frequency, and format. Gaps in this audit are gaps in your analytics capability — and they are worth fixing before adding tools.
Step 3: Build a monthly data snapshot
Start with a single-tab Excel or Google Sheets file updated monthly with your six core metrics. This is your baseline dashboard. It is not glamorous, but it creates the data habit that advanced tools later depend on. Consistency over a 90-day period is worth more than any dashboard feature.
Step 4: Add a visualisation layer
Once you have three months of clean data, connect it to a visualisation tool. Google Looker Studio is free. Power BI Desktop is free for the base version. Both can connect to Google Sheets or Excel and generate the charts and trend lines that make patterns visible. At this stage, you have a functional Level 1 dashboard.
Step 5: Enable natural language queries with AI
Power BI's Copilot integration and Google's Gemini in Looker Studio both allow you to ask questions in plain English: "Which department has the highest voluntary attrition in the last six months?" This is the bridge from Level 1 (reporting) to Level 2 (diagnostic). You are now using AI to interrogate your own data without needing to know SQL or advanced spreadsheet functions.
- Define decisions first, data second
- Audit all existing data sources before building
- Start with a simple monthly snapshot file
- Run three months before adding visualisation tools
- Use AI natural language queries to move into diagnostic analytics
- Review your dashboard in a standing monthly HR ops meeting
- Document what decisions were changed by the data
From data to decisions: Singapore SME case examples
The following examples illustrate how analytics capabilities translate to real business decisions in a Singapore context. These are composite scenarios drawn from common patterns in SME HR functions.
Attrition analytics reduces replacement cost by 30%
A retail chain with 120 staff noticed its outlet-level attrition was highly variable: some stores retained staff for 18+ months while others churned through staff every three months. By tracking attrition rate at the store level alongside manager tenure and engagement scores, the HR team identified that stores managed by recently promoted supervisors (less than 12 months in role) had attrition rates 2.4x higher than those managed by experienced team leads.
The intervention was not a new system. It was structured peer coaching for new supervisors in their first six months. Attrition in the high-risk cohort dropped 30% within two quarters.
NLP on exit interviews surfaces culture issue in one team
A Singapore professional services firm was conducting exit interviews manually, producing summaries that consistently attributed departures to "better opportunity elsewhere." When an HR business partner ran the past 18 months of exit interview notes through an AI language model with a structured prompt, a different pattern emerged: 67% of leavers from one practice group mentioned workload unpredictability and lack of visibility into project allocation as factors.
The insight was buried in qualitative language that manual review had consistently coded as "market pull." The AI analysis reframed it as "internal push" — a distinction with very different management implications.
Training ROI tracking justifies L&D investment to board
A Singapore tech startup had been running quarterly training sprints for its product and engineering teams but faced pressure from the board to cut the L&D budget during a slower revenue period. The HR lead pulled together a simple analysis: employees who had completed at least two training modules in the preceding 12 months had a 12-month retention rate of 84%, compared to 61% for those who had not participated. The cost difference in replacement hiring more than offset the training investment.
The analysis required no sophisticated tools — just consistent tracking of training completion against headcount data, with a calculated comparison of retention rates by cohort.
Frequently asked questions
HR analytics (also called people analytics or workforce analytics) is the practice of collecting, analysing, and applying HR data to improve people decisions. It ranges from simple reporting — tracking headcount and attrition rates — to advanced predictive modelling that identifies flight-risk employees before they resign. For most Singapore SMEs, the starting point is getting consistent, reliable data out of disparate spreadsheets and into a single view.
No. Descriptive and diagnostic analytics — which cover 80% of what most SMEs need — can be done with Excel, Google Sheets, or low-code tools like Power BI. AI tools now make it significantly easier to move up the maturity curve without specialist data science skills. The more important investment is in clean data hygiene and in upskilling your HR team to interpret what the numbers mean.
Start with the six core metrics that have the highest signal-to-noise ratio for SMEs: attrition rate, time-to-hire, employee engagement score, training ROI, cost-per-hire, and absenteeism rate. These give you a full picture of where you are losing talent, how efficiently you are acquiring it, and whether your people development investments are working.
AI tools are changing HR analytics in three primary ways: (1) automated dashboards that update in real time instead of requiring manual data pulls; (2) natural language processing applied to engagement surveys and exit interviews, surfacing themes without manual coding; and (3) predictive models that flag attrition risk, skills gaps, or performance dips before they become business problems. For HR teams in Singapore, the most accessible entry point is AI-enhanced dashboards in tools like Microsoft Copilot for HR or Power BI with Copilot.
HR analytics training teaches HR professionals how to collect, clean, analyse, and present workforce data to support business decisions. It is designed for HR managers, HR business partners, and CHROs who want to move from reactive reporting to proactive people strategy. In Singapore, Fractional Partners Asia offers HR analytics training in a half-day or full-day format, tailored to SMEs that are just starting their analytics journey.
Yes. Employee personal data — including performance records, compensation data, health information, and engagement survey responses — is subject to PDPA obligations. HR analytics programmes should include clear data governance policies: what data is collected, how it is stored, who has access, and how long it is retained. Any AI tools processing employee data must comply with Singapore's PDPA framework and, where applicable, the AI Verify principles on fairness and transparency.