DIGITAL HR: PLATFORMS, PEOPLE, AND WORK:
Ajith Watukara - MBA, BSc - MASCI-Australia - CCMP-USA
Global Supply Chain Leader - Transformation & Operations | Lean Management Experts | Certified Digital Transformation Catalyst | Six Sigma Master Black Belt | Corporate Adviser & Trainer | Recruiter
"HR is being pushed to take on a larger role in helping organizations to be digital (culture is the enabler of digital transformation), not just do digital. The process starts with digital transformation in HR, as HR leaders explore new technologies, platforms, and ways of working".
HR is undergoing rapid and profound change. Once viewed as a support function that delivered employee services, HR is now being asked to help lead the digital transformation sweeping organizations worldwide. We see this change taking place in three areas:
- Digital workforce: How can organizations drive new management practices (which we call “digital DNA” 1), a culture of innovation and sharing, and a set of talent practices that facilitate a new network-based organization?2
- Digital workplace: How can organizations design a working environment that enables productivity; uses modern communication tools (such as Slack, Workplace by Facebook, Microsoft Teams, and many others); and promotes engagement, wellness, and a sense of purpose?
- Digital HR: How can organizations change the HR function itself to operate in a digital way, use digital tools and apps to deliver solutions, and continuously experiment and innovate?
Over the last five years, the HR discipline has undergone a rapid evolution. Three years ago, we wrote about HR’s “race to the cloud,” as companies rushed to replace legacy talent systems with integrated HR platforms. Two years ago, we characterized HR as a function “in need of a makeover,” as companies focused on reskilling HR professionals, integrating the organization, and implementing analytics. This year, as digital management practices and agile organization design become central to business thinking, HR is changing again, focusing on people, work, and platforms. We call the resulting set of HR practices “digital HR.”
Digital HR builds upon years of effort. In the 1960s and 1970s, HR focused on personnel operations, automating transactions, and maintaining a sound employee system of record. In the 1980s, HR was redesigned as a “service organization”; centers of expertise began to manage core talent practices, service centers handled individual needs, and HR business partners began to be embedded in the business. In the 1990s and early 2000s, HR was redesigned again around integrated talent management, often accompanied by the implementation of new systems for recruiting, learning, performance management, and compensation.
Today, HR’s focus has shifted toward building the organization of the future. Companies are hiring young, digitally savvy workers who are comfortable doing things themselves and sharing information in a transparent way. They want an integrated, digital experience at work one designed around teams, productivity, and empowerment, and HR is expected to deliver it.
Rewriting the rules for digital HR:
While none of HR’s prior responsibilities has gone away, HR departments today are under pressure to rewrite the rules by redesigning talent practices, from recruiting to leadership to performance management; by experimenting with digital apps; and by building a compelling employee experience. All this must be done with a focus on redesigning the organization around teams, implementing analytics and organizational network analysis, and driving a global focus on diversity, culture, learning, and careers.
Digital HR is built on innovation and experimentation. As companies become networks and the employee base becomes both older and younger, new approaches are needed in almost every HR domain. Companies often now use hackathons, rapid design groups, and both prototypes and “minimally viable products” to roll out pilot HR programs.
Design thinking has gone mainstream. Rather than deliver HR programs designed around legacy business processes, HR teams now study employee needs across all segments: hourly workers, salaried employees, managers, executives. Instead of traditional career models, HR is offering journey maps and replacing complex processes with local practices based on an integrated platform. (See the Ford case study in the “Employee experience” chapter of this report.)
Digital HR requires digital technology expertise. While cloud-based HR systems brought tremendous value to organizations, they are no longer enough. Today, HR teams are rethinking their solutions in the context of workflow-embedded apps; Royal Bank of Canada, Deutsche Telekom, Ford, and others now have digital design teams within the HR department. This means using the cloud as a “platform” and building on it for company-specific needs.
The vendor market is reinventing itself: A new breed of HR products and solutions is coming to market, many built around mobile apps, AI, and consumer-like experiences. These tools are enabling HR to become near-real time. Companies such as SAP and Reliance Jio now monitor real-time metrics on engagement, recruiting, turnover, and other measures to help business leaders make decisions more quickly. IBM has begun to use AI tools to give leaders regular pulses on how their teams are doing, helping them see patterns that can get in the way of performance or retention and prompting them to proactively address them through coaching, recognition, or community building.
As digital HR takes hold and HR organizations become more platform-based, business partners are becoming more digitally empowered and able to spend more time in the business. Our latest research shows that high-performing HR teams have fewer generalists and more senior HR business partners, forcing many HR departments to reskill their HR staff and give them new roles as senior consultants, leveraging the digital tools in place.
News tools and expanded transparency facilitate digital HR:
The role of AI, cognitive processing, embedded analytics, and mobile technology is changing the way people programs work.
- Wade and Wendy, a chatbot service, brings AI and chatbots to recruitment and career planning. Wade helps employees with their career strategies and shows them career opportunities in the company. Wendy talks with candidates and helps them understand the company’s culture, job opportunities, and hiring process.
- First jobs chatbot Mya can eliminate up to 75 percent of the questions people have during the recruiting process.
- Switch, a new app for recruiting, helps candidates find jobs by giving them a Tinder-like experience for job search and recruitment.
- Software vendor Unitive uses AI to write job descriptions based on actual discussions about the job, and can algorithmically identify gender, race, or generational bias to reduce unconscious bias in recruiting. Another example is SuccessFactors, which now provides similar tools in its enterprise talent management application.
Transparency is becoming a standard in the world of HR and talent. In compensation, Glassdoor’s Know Your Worth and LinkedIn’s Salary were launched this year, joining vendors such as Salary.com and Payscale, which crowdsource compensation data for anyone to see. By collecting anonymous data on tens of thousands to millions of salaries, these tools let workers compare their salary against those for similar jobs by city, tenure, industry, and even company.
Start here:
- Redefine your mission: HR today must define its role as the team that helps managers and employees rapidly transform and adapt to the digital way of thinking. Familiarize yourself with networked organization structures, organizational network analysis, and digital leadership models.
- Upgrade core technology: Replace legacy systems with an integrated cloud platform for a sound digital infrastructure. Upgrade old tools for learning, recruiting, and performance management, and bring in systems that are easy for employees to use.
- Develop a multiyear HR technology strategy: In today’s rapidly changing HR technology world, it’s important to build a multiyear strategy that includes cloud enterprise resource planning (ERP) platforms, apps, analytics, and a range of tools for AI, case management, and other solutions.
- Build a digital HR team: Dedicate teams to explore new vendor solutions and build others, and consider AI solutions to improve service delivery, recruiting, and learning. Companies such as RBC and Deutsche Telekom now have digital design teams in HR that work with IT to design, prototype, and roll out digital apps.
- Organize HR into networks of expertise with strong business partners: Rethink your HR organization model to focus efforts on the employee experience, analytics, culture, and the new world of learning. Make sure these teams communicate well: High-performing HR teams share leading practices and know what the other teams are doing.
- Make innovation a core strategy within HR: Push yourself to reinvent and innovate in every people practice. Many organizations are now using new performance management practices built around design sessions and hackathons. Investigate new innovations in recruiting, including using data to find people who resemble high performers in the company.
- Rotate younger people into the HR profession: Regularly rotate people from the business into and out of HR, use innovation teams to reverse-mentor senior leaders, and recruit new MBAs to bring people with analytics skills into the profession.
- Benchmark: Visit other companies to see what they are doing. HR teams can bring in outside speakers, join research membership programs, and continually look for new ideas to foster innovation. Today’s leading practices come from innovative ideas developed around an organization’s culture and business needs, not a book.