consultantsreview logo

Consultants Review Magazine

HR Functions: Digitize, Become Irrelevant or Die?

By Beth Giglio, SVP - HR, 84.51°

content-image

Beth Giglio, SVP - HR, 84.51°

Beth Giglio brings to the table a broad expertise of human resources, overall business expertise and a successful track record of driving strong cultures, redesigning organizations, and development and retention of key talent.

The number of articles published on Human Resources’ (HR) digi­tal transformation continues to surge. For me, all these articles suggest that the HR function must evolve to meet the needs of its prospec­tive, as well as existing employees by provid­ing a seamless experience.

The cycle of an employee is pretty much the same as it always has been - prospec­tive candidates apply for a position; they are screened and offered the said position; soon the onboarding process proceeds; and then, at some point, leave the organization. However, now prospective candidates and existing employees expect more at each of these steps than ever before, and at the heart is the need for technology to ensure easy navigation, on-demand access to in­formation and insights to help personalize every interaction.

"Technology is a key enabler in making prospective candidates’ lives easier"

So, how have expectations changed and why do companies and HR functions have to invest in technology to attract and retain top talent?

Let’s start with the pre-employment ex­perience. Candidates today will navigate websites and job postings via mobile meth­ods. They also actively search job post­ing sites like Glass Door, Indeed, Vault, and others. to read up on your company before they even apply. For Millennials and Gen Z - if your application process isn’t paperless and mobile-friendly, forget it; and if Glass Door or other review sites are negative, pro­spective candidates will look elsewhere. As an employer, your first digitization efforts must start with first impression areas like posting and creating a positive presence on social media.

Once in your talent pipeline, we see com­panies invest in everything from advanced artificial intelligence for pre-screening and selection to the use of video conferencing, on-demand chat functions, and other tools to enable an anytime, anywhere interview scheduling experience. Technology is a key enabler in making prospective candidates’ lives easier.

Now let’s say you already have great digi­tal solutions for the prospective candidate milestones. What happens after they have accepted? There are platforms that allow new hires to upload much of their info in advance to ensure smooth onboarding. It also includes the ability for a company and new man­agers to quickly engage with a pre-hire to plan his/her first day.

So now that you have new hires, what is their on­boarding e xperience l ike? D o t hey g o t hrough t radi­tional lecture style onboarding or hours of pre-recorded modules or do they have on-demand personalized solu­tions across different media (experiential, simulations, virtual, and others) and Learning Management Solutions (LMS)? We recently implemented Pathgather (recently purchased by degreed) to act as our content aggregator to help build and store seamless, sustainable onboard­ing processes as well as ongoing learning, leveraging a non-LMS platform. Employees today, more than ever, expect instant answers and fun, engaging learning ex­periences. Have you incorporated simulations and gami­fication in y our training t oolkit? F iguring out h ow t o share best in class learning is no longer the job of HR. We must find ways to decentralize and democratize education. The job of HR is to provide the digital plat­forms needed for others to build on top of - so that func­tional learning and learning from great leaders is at everyone’s fingertips.

We know that the average tenure of an employee is 4.6 years which is up from the early 80s when it was only 3.5, according to Forbes. We also know that an em­ployee’s number one cited reason for leaving is feeling under-appreciated and appreciation is a major contribu­tor to employee satisfaction, so that begs the question - how is your company able to give any time/anywhere feedback and recognition to your employees from other employees? T he b est a nd h ighly e ngaged c ompanies have on-demand feedback and recognition solutions which are integrated so that they are easy to use and can be integrated with all other feedback tools.

While I could continue to write about the need for digitization requirements to cover other parts of HR, it would just simply reinforce how I started this article. At the end of the day, we know the demand for criti­cal talent will continue to increase. In Korn Ferry Insti­tute’s latest report, they suggest that by 2030 we will experience a shortage of more than 85 million work­ers worldwide. Anyway you look at it, the expectations for prospective and existing employees will continue to increase, while defining and maximizing the employee experience will be critical to attracting and retaining talent. Your HR function must invest to keep up so that the right digital solutions and the right HR talent are put in place within the cycle of the employee so that we and other business leaders can focus on the high­est value areas  connecting, developing and recogniz­ing employee contributions, not navigating antiquated HR systems.

Current Issue