The Future of HR

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The Future of HR For more than a decade, finance and accounting specialists have been pushing for a way to quantify the value of intangibles. Traditional valuation focuses on the bricks and mortar of a company to determine its value. The tangible aspects of a business - buildings, equipment, products, inventory, and pipeline - were given the most weight when determining the value of a company. As the first world has shifted toward a knowledge-based economy, the intangible aspects of a business now represent from 60 to 80 percent of the value of some enterprises. Patents, research and development, brand, and employees are the intangibles that are propelling progress and creating competitive advantage. For accountants, inventory is easy to count and value. It is not so easy to assess the value of intellectual property, especially when it is trapped within the brain trust of the workforce. Some organizations are striving to create a taxonomy of human capital measures that aid accountants in determining the financial value of intangibles. Check out LBTC's Human Resource Management courses.


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