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Putting Dignity at the Core of Employee Data Use

When companies manage employee data responsibly, they’re better able to grow trust while gaining insights

By | Dorothy Leidner | Olgerta Tona | Barbara H. Wixom | Ida A. Someh | sloanreview.mit.edu

We suspect that few leaders appreciate the diversity and volume of data about employees that their organizations are amassing from sources ranging from digital collaboration platforms to workforce wearables and mobile devices. Even throughout the pandemic, the scope and nature of employee data has expanded rapidly to include vaccination status, the results from frequent health checks, virtual meeting behaviors, and work-life survey results.

At most large global firms, people and workforce analytics are mainstream initiatives led by HR leaders. But increasingly, employee data is being used in new ways, beyond HR, to produce lucrative results. For example, one organization analyzed employee activity and building characteristics to generate insights about occupancy in its facilities, which ultimately saved the organization millions of dollars in reduced heating and cooling costs.

At the MIT Center for Information Systems Research (CISR), we recently studied how innovative uses of employee data by organizations can both support and threaten the security of employee dignity.1 Particularly in digital transformation contexts, employee behaviors and knowledge are key to understanding how an organization has historically operated. This understanding can expose opportunities for improvement and lead to unanticipated outcomes when the organization decides to radically alter or eradicate certain work tasks. Such uses of the data can cause tensions and be fraught with complex ethical concerns.

Organizations may be tempted to govern employee data by relying on regulations rooted in personal data privacy and protection, such as the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act in the U.S. But such laws fall short when it comes to the ethical oversight of employee data use.

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sloanreview.mit.edu
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