What Kind of Organization Are You?
The Software Innovation Cycle
Have You Established a Governance Framework?
A successful HR software implementation doesn’t end when you flip the switch and start using it, nor is it finished when you create a plan to manage updates.
It ends when you to maximize its value for its entire life cycle beginning with-
A plan to improve how your software delivers value to your people and your business.
In a recent NOW Digital Meetup, Thomas Otter gave us a new perspective on how organizations manage technology and data integration.
We encourage you to view the meetup, but here’s how Otter described organizations :
His perspective is about how organizations like yours handle the innovation cycle.
Established vendors can find it challenging to stay on the leading edge of innovation. Small, nimble companies create new apps at a pace established companies can’t match.
When that happens, established vendors deliver additional features in their platforms in one of three ways;
Otter’s dandelions snap up the new apps right away. Cacti wait for their single source to deliver new features.
But most of us are somewhere in the middle. How we handle technological change and new workforce challenges tell us what kind of organization we have.
Some may say it's a matter of organizational maturity, but we see it as a matter of governance.
Workforce management is no longer a back-office function. It is a collaborative effort.
The top-down structures of the second industrial revolution can’t move fast enough to manage the pace of change.
As a result, businesses are turning to collaborative governance.
Governance frameworks vary, but we can offer a general structure that you may find helpful.
At the top of the workforce, governance is the governance committee of the board of directors.
The committee advises the executive team, which forms the HR governance framework.
Usually, there is a governance council of top executives, advisors, and stakeholders.
Their responsibilities include:
The council executes its responsibilities through steering committees for each workforce management function.
The committees create the processes, procedures, and tools to execute the policies.
This sample framework can give you an idea of how governance works.
Once you have assessed the current state of your organization and formed a framework for governance, you can get down to the details of managing your HR software portfolio.
We recommend you begin by assessing your alignment to the business.
The dominant model for enterprise software is now a service in the cloud.
The purchasing model is software-as-a-service (SaaS), where you pay an annual or monthly maintenance fee.
As a part of the service, vendors deliver periodic updates. Some of the update features may be optional. For those features, you will need to decide whether you need them.
Have your team start exploring the updates immediately when you get a notification that one is coming.
Evaluate whether additional features will be helpful to you and discuss them with your governance team to prepare them and get their buy-in.
Application suites, HRMS, LMS, and other enterprise applications provide a way for you to test them in your staging environment before they go live.
Your vendor will test before they release the updates—but they won’t test your configuration, processes, or data integrations.
Vendors look to customers to know what features they should design and how urgent they are. If you get involved in the community, you will have a voice in the priorities.
Over time, you will have many changes, organization, job structure, and other configurations. Because of that, you will want to have periodic reviews of those settings.
Use your employee sentiment tools, surveys, and feedback to identify areas of dissatisfaction that you can address with configuration changes.
Changes over time can degrade your security. Make a security audit a regular part of your routine.
When workflows develop hiccups or bottlenecks, the natural human tendency is to find a way around it and move on.
Use your collaboration tools to provide a way to report them quickly and easily.
What do your users think? Use your feedback tools to learn what you could do better or what to suggest to your vendor.
Do you have a schedule for regular review of your policy documentation, FAQs, and procedures?
How about your learning content? Is your L&D team doing regular reviews to update or replace outdated content?
With a flexible strategy and a collaboration framework in place, you can adopt new technology when it’s right for your organization.
Phenomecloud is a full-service technology company dedicated to helping clients solve business problems, improve the capability of their people, and achieve better results.