Over the past decade, many companies learned through experience that trying to cobble together best of breed human capital management applications into a single ecosystem can be troublesome. Incompatibilities and integration headaches create barriers to unified data analysis. Disparate user interfaces increase the complexities in user training. Managing many vendor contracts increases the burden on procurement and HR.
The current emphasis on usability is driving even more unification. People want a simple, consumer-grade user experience, and they will avoid any application that isn’t intuitive and easy to use. Employees want to check their leave balances on their mobile devices, but they don’t want to attend training to learn how to check a leave balance. They will just pick up the phone and call someone in HR.
Major software providers, such as Oracle, SAP, and Workday have much more robust applications than they did a few years ago. According to Josh Bersin of Bersin by Deloitte, ERP providers are now “credible, effective providers of comprehensive talent management technologies,” and they are providing a user experience on a par with consumer applications.[1]
Globalization is driving a different type of unification as companies like Nissan replace their disparate regional and local human capital platforms with global implementations.
Globalization in talent management is not new. We were working with multinational enterprises ten years ago in performance and goal management, career management, and succession planning applications, supporting worldwide operations in two dozen languages. Now we find core HR technology going global as companies realize they need a complete unified view of their talent pipelines.
One of the primary drivers of this global HCM movement is the leadership pipeline. Forward-thinking companies want their potential leaders to have global experience, and that means a French employee may transfer to Brazil this year, China next year, and Canada the next. Being required to end the HiPo’s employment in one system and hire them in another every year make a unified view of talent impossible.
When you get all your far-flung locations on the same platform, data integration issues become a lot easier to manage. You eliminate the problems associated with end-of-year data aggregation and the headache of duplicate data entry. And, with the ability to provide local control, companies can achieve a truly “global” experience.
Unified human capital management is not a cure-all. There are several things you need to know of before you make the leap.
From where we sit at the intersection of people and technology, the ongoing merge of human capital management into business and financial operations demands ever more unified technology. That does not mean you must forgo functionality you need. Let your business needs dictate your technology strategy.
References :
1. "Ten Top Disruptive HR Technology-related Trends Highlight a Wave of Innovation Focused on Engaging Employees." Bersin by Deloitte. October 19, 2015.
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