Posted tagged ‘HR administration’
May 3, 2013

Linda Merritt, HRO Research Analyst, NelsonHall
SaaS systems for HR administration and payroll have opened up the small business market to the benefits of web-based HR systems with self-service and easier implementations. The rapid uptake by clients is testimony that a ‘sweet spot’ has been reached in cost, ease and value.
MoorepayHR
I followed up with Anne Fitzpatrick, Moorepay managing director, for an update on how MoorepayHR, a cloud-based SaaS payroll and HR administration platform with BPO services, is doing one year after its launch in the U.K. small business market.
Moorepay, a NorthgateArinso (NGA) subsidiary, is already “large” in the U.K. small business market with >10,000 clients. However, past success does not guarantee future success. The company saw the need for an integrated HR and payroll platform and wanted to achieve this in its own way by combining new technology with its existing BPO managed payroll and HR services, including on-hand subject-matter experts for guidance on employee issues, into a business process as a service (BPaaS) service.
At first there was some concern if the market was ready for a SaaS multitenant cloud service. Moorepay quickly found that buyers understand the cloud based on their own experiences as consumers and were actually eager for the new service. By the end of April, MoorepayHR had signed its 1,000th customer, and this week the entire company is holding a company-wide celebration!
The client base is 80% new and 20% from existing clients.57% of clients add on payroll, and even more select one or more of the BPO options, led by compliance support for employment law and health and safety advisory.
Moorepay will be adding more offerings to the system, including a newly-released ‘lite’ version. Next for the company is the rolling-out of an advanced version that adds functionality for recruiting, performance management and learning. Targeted at businesses with up to 500 employees, MoorepayHR will be expanded to up to 1,000 employees in the near future.
RUN Powered by ADP
ADP first introduced its RUN system nationally in the U.S. in 2010 for the very small market (1-49 employees). More HR features and payroll functionality have been added to the SaaS cloud-based mobile platform on a regular basis. In addition to ease-of-use, RUN offers a 24×7 help desk with certified HR professionals and an online HR library. RUN added its 200,000th customer in April 2013.
Two Vendors, One Success Story
Both Moorepay and ADP understands that clients of any size have similar needs. As Anish Rajparia, president of ADP’s small business services division, commented: “Small business owners demand flexible tools and resources tailored for them to help manage the risks associated with running their business.”
There are already a variety of options in the market for the small business owner and I am sure we will see many more. One size never fits all, and I am pleased to see that this class of buyer now has HRO choice.
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Categories: HR, HR Administration, HR BPaaS, HR BPO, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, HR SaaS, HR shared Services, HR Systems, HR Technology, hr tools, HRO Growth, HRO providers, hro research, HRO Service Provider, HRO Services, Moorepay, MoorepayHR, Multi-Country Payroll, Multi-Process HR Outsourcing, offshore outsourcing providers, offshore providers, outsourcing, outsourcing research, payroll outsourcing, SaaS
Tags: ADP, bpo, BPO managed payroll, Business, Cloud computing, HR administration, nelsonhall, NorthgateArinso, payroll, payroll outsourcing, SaaS payroll, self-service, software as a service, web-based HR
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December 7, 2012

Linda Merritt, HRO Research Analyst, NelsonHall
Lexy Martin, CedarCrestone’s research and analytics vice president, debuted the 2012-2013 HR Systems Survey at the HR Technology Conference. I always enjoy pouring over this research, particularly now as it is in its 15th year and is full of trends and insights into what is happening with HR technology. The findings are especially interesting this year as we see the emergence of newer technologies come into usage and high expectations for the future growth of HR SaaS HRMS, analytics, social, and mobile technologies.There is a lot of good news for HRO service providers and HR technology vendors. As we know, technology investments have seen some lean years recently. This year, the survey of 1,246 respondents from HR, IT, finance, operations, and executives indicates that 50% of large and medium-sized organizations will be increasing HR technology spend for 2013. Interestingly, the largest increase will be from organizations outside of the U.S. and Europe (59% to 44%).
The top HR technology initiatives for 2012-2013 include:
- Business process improvements and innovations
- Talent management processes and automation
- Service delivery improvements
- Business intelligence/workforce metrics.
While the greatest growth over the next three years is expected for workforce analytics/planning (142%), social media tools (81%), and service delivery (57%), it is important to remember that adoption of the more common technologies is not at 100%. HR administration is highest at 95%, but service delivery applications, which include employee and manager self-service is only at 49%. Check the full report for results by size and industry. For example, large enterprises have higher adoption rates, and industry varies with early adopters seen in high tech, financial services, and retail and late adopters seen in higher education and public administration.
Key Observations
- A shared services delivery model that includes an HR help desk application and self-service delivers the highest level of efficiency to enterprises and saves at least 15% in administration costs
- Basic workforce management technologies including time management self-service, absence management, labor scheduling, and labor budgeting can grow operating income faster
- An integrated HRMS and talent management solution can yield up to 33% higher revenue per employee.
The survey is not about HR outsourcing, but it sure applies. Between the HR technology initiatives, state of adoption of HR technologies, and evidence of results who better to help a client out than your friendly HR service provider!
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Categories: CedarCrestone, HR Systems Survey, hro
Tags: 2012-2013 HR Systems Survey, absence management, Analytics, •Business process improvements, •Service delivery, business intelligence, CedarCrestone, employee and manager self-service, HR administration, HR SaaS HRMS, HR technology, HR Technology Conference, HR technology spend, HRMS, labor budgeting, labor scheduling, Lexy Martin, mobile technologies, social media tools, talent management, time management, workforce analytics, workforce management, workforce metrics
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July 16, 2012

Linda Merritt, HRO Research Analyst, NelsonHall
Logica has long been an HRO service provider in the U.K. and Europe. With much of its HRO revenues from payroll, it has been a bit quiet on the multi-process HRO (MPHRO) front. So I wasn’t sure that I saw the logic in Logica’s increased investment in MPHRO capabilities, especially when there are other major MPHRO players already in the economy-constrained market.
The HRO group at Logica recognized the developing opportunity for MPHRO as some buyers, especially second generation HRO users and multi-country businesses, began to want more than just transactional low-cost contracts. This created space for an HRO partner to help clients transform HR to increase business and workforce agility in responding to rapidly changing market conditions.
Logica is emphasizing its transformational HRO capabilities by:
- Assisting organizations to align their HR objectives and services with those of the wider organization and manage HR against business goals such as increased employee engagement
- Change management and ensuring that change management is both carried out up-front and carried through to a detailed sub-process level using service simulations to promote operational change as necessary
- Composing a common HR process taxonomy to be used as a common language across both outsourced processes and the retained HR processes
- Program management and its real-time PMO tools.
In terms of process design, the company is looking to use a set of standard Logica HR processes for Logica-delivered processes; for client-retained HR processes, it will provide workflow tools. Logica is also looking to encourage innovation beyond minor process improvements by establishing jointly managed innovation funds and innovation groups with its clients.
In technology terms, Logica currently supplements Oracle’s PeopleSoft HCM 9.1 and Oracle’s E-Business Suite with specialist HR applications where necessary. It may also consider SAP-based HRMS implementations downstream.
To date, the investments are starting to pay off. BPO, including HRO, was the fastest growing segment for Logica in FY 2011, up 23.8%. In the last 12 months, Logica has also been awarded several major MPHRO contracts including:
- BAE Systems: a six year contract supporting 33,000 participants in the U.K. with a new single-tenant, hosted Oracle HR platform; payroll services; absence and attendance; employee care; and administration services in support of talent management functions including recruiting and learning
- Ahold, a Dutch headquartered supermarket retailer: a nine year contract supporting ~100,000 participants in the Netherlands, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic with a new Oracle PeopleSoft 9.1 platform; HR administration services; HR service desk; and payroll services, which will be subcontracted to ADP.
Other MPHRO contracts were awarded by a British telecom and a Swedish financial services firm, both for five years.
Logica is well underway working its five year roadmap for services development, which includes strategic new services, increasing its partnership ecosystem, and practical elements like adding more mobile apps. Logica is also a relationship-focused partner, and that trust factor, along with results realization from the new wins, will help it continue to grow in MPHRO. Logical indeed!
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Categories: Logica, MPHRO, multi-process hro, transformational HRO
Tags: absence and attendance, administration services, ADP, Ahold, BAE Systems, change management, employee care, employee engagement, Europe, HR, HR administration, HR process taxonomy, HRO partner, HRO service provider, innovation groups, jointly managed innovation funds, learning, Logica, mobile apps, MPHRO, MPHRO contracts, multi-country businesses, multi-process HR outsourcing, Oracle's E-Business Suite, Oracle's PeopleSoft HCM, outsourced processes, partnership ecosystem, payroll, PMO tools, process design, program management, recruiting, relationship-focused partner, retained HR, SAP-based HRMS, second generation HRO, strategic new services, talent management, transactional low-cost, transform HR, transformation HRO, U.K., workflow tools, workforce agility
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December 16, 2011
As an “emerging market” the Asia Pacific (A/P) has more and more A/P companies become forces in the global marketplace as buyers and as producers – providing growth opportunities for product and service sales for companies headquartered in other regions (usually the West).
Do be aware that the markets for services like HRO already exist and are served by local and regional providers. Hence, new entrants offering unfamiliar brands to A/P buyers will need to assess their competitive value propositions for this vast, yet very localized market with a wide range of languages, price sensitivity, and HRO needs.
One of the largest A/P regional HRO service providers is Talent2, which offers payroll, RPO, traditional recruiting searches, HR administration, learning, talent management, and HR advisory services. Talent2 has services in 31 Asia Pacific and Middle Eastern countries, and its FY 2011 (ended June 30, 2011) revenues were AU$360m, up 26% from FY 2010. In operations since 2003, the company has ~1,700 personnel with offices and service centers spread across the region.
Talent2’s growth over the years had been organic, until 2008 when it added acquisition as a growth strategy and subsequently bought PCA in Japan, a payroll outsourcing and HR consulting provider. In 2010, it acquired Singapore-based Zapper Services with payroll outsourcing and HR administration in 14 A/P countries, adding ~1,000 clients, including multinational corporations (MNCs).
Having an available range of technologies and services is a benefit, especially when there are clients that are expanding their businesses for the first time and need a foundation of basic HR services with a high degree of subject matter expertise. This is also the case for large clients in mature markets looking for top quality and performance at a lower cost. Talent2 has multiple payroll offerings and other services to mix and match to meet the specific needs of clients of many sizes, verticals, with employees in one country to pan-national or global, using a broad range of languages and onshore and nearshore locations.
ADP and NorthgateArinso are two major global players that have been in the region for many years. As the A/P HRO market expands, more players will be looking to gain a foothold. With growth in many areas and services, Talent2 will need to focus its own value proposition and investments to maximize its regional advantages against what will be an even more competitive market. A sign that the company is ready to do just that is the addition of Mary Sue Rogers, one of the leading lights in the HRO community and previously the global leader of HRO for IBM. Rogers recently joined Talent2 as the Global Managing Director of HR services including payroll, HR advisory, and learning services.
No matter where the sun sets, at the end of the day, succeeding in emerging markets is the same as achieving HRO success anywhere: provide high-quality, high-performance subject matter expert services at the optimum price that solves business problems and delivers business results.
Linda Merritt, Research Analyst, HRO, NelsonHall
Interested in reading the latest HRO news from NelsonHall? Subscribe to our newsletter by emailing amy.gurchensky@nelson-hall.com with “HRO Insight” as the subject.
Categories: hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO Activity, HRO contracts, HRO providers, lbpo, learning outsourcing, payroll outsourcing, rpo, RPO providers, Talent Management
Tags: A/P, ADP, Asia Pac, Asia-Pacific, bpo, business process outsourcing, HR administration, HR avisory, HR research, hro, IBM, IBM HRO, Japan, learning, Mary Sue Rogers, mature markets, Middle East, NGA, NorthgateArinso, payroll outsourcing, Payroll research, PCA, Talent2, Zapper Services
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October 11, 2011
Last week, many of us covered announcements from the HR Technology conference. Among the new service news was ADP’s Vantage HCM SaaS and BPO platform, which was formally launched on October 3rd at HR Tech.
Vantage HCM covers HR administration, benefits, payroll, time and attendance, and talent management. It is an enhanced version of ADP’s successful Workforce Now platform, which was launched in October 2009 and already has more than 10,000 clients. ADP is estimated to have invested 18 months and $600m in the new platform. General availability is slated for March 2012 to allow time for full testing of critical high volume HR activities such as annual open enrollment and end-of-year payroll with 12 pilot clients from a variety of industries with 1,200 to 20,000 employees.
I see a bigger story here: ADP has built a business platform to support execution of its strategies. Here are several elements I see in play.
Support the core. ADP is adding new services while protecting and enhancing payroll, its single largest revenue generator. Payroll is built into the core package of each multiple process HR (MPHRO) system.
Serve your main markets. In payroll, ADP supports every size organization. Now, it offers MPHRO platforms for nearly every size organization: Workforce Now provides core HR needs for less than 3,000 employees; Vantage HCM covers more robust HR needs and talent management for up to 20,000 employees; and Global View supports large, multi-country organizations typically with more than 20,000 employees.
Leverage acquisitions. Vantage HCM talent management services include succession planning, performance management, and compensation management as the fruits of collaboration between ADP and Workscape, which was acquired last year.
Reuse development investments. Vantage HCM uses “plug and play” design for fast and easy additions, integration of new modules, or preferred partners, such as Cornerstone for learning. Access will be immediately available from multiple devices including smartphones, another benefit of development reuse.
Roadmap development and growth. Workforce Now and Vantage HCM are U.S. services. Both will be expanded to Canada, with Workforce Now ready in 2012. In the future clients will be able to choose the basic benefits module or Workscape services for more complex benefits needs.
Buy, build, and go. ADP prefers to buy or build for strategic growth services. It chose to build its own proprietary MPHRO systems. It acquires complementary service lines and players in geographies to quickly establish a beachhead with top tier players. Once it identifies a target, it moves fast, integrates new acquisitions and captures synergy savings. (ADP just announced acquisition of The RightThing for RPO. Acting fast indeed!)
Go your own way. Most MPHRO providers offer HR analytic packages as an added cost option. ADP is building in related data views, dashboards, metrics, and integrating workforce analytics use right at the point of need.
Do you have a business platform as broad and consistently used as ADP’s?
Linda Merritt, Research Analyst, HRO, NelsonHall
Interested in reading the latest HRO news from NelsonHall? Subscribe to our newsletter by emailing amy.gurchensky@nelson-hall.com with “HRO Insight” as the subject.
Categories: benefits administration, compensation management, HR Administration, HR analytics, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, multi-process hro, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, performance management, recruitment process outsourcing, Talent Management
Tags: ADP, benefits, compensation management, HR, HR administration, HR Analytic Packages, hr outsourcing, HR Tech, HR Technology Conference, hro, HRO providers, hro research, MPHRO, nelsonhall, payroll, performance management, rpo, talent management, The RightThing, time and attendance, Vantage HC, Workforce Now, Workscape
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August 2, 2011
NelsonHall’s 2011 Targeting Multi-Process HR Outsourcing (MPHRO) report identified four unique market segments that MPHRO buyers fall within and their characteristics. Let’s take a closer look at each.
The first segment, “multi-country standardization,” makes up 15% of the MPHRO market and contains buyers looking to centralize processes within certain geographies. Buyers in this category typically have a presence in more than 20 countries and more than 10k employees. MPHRO services are either deployed regionally for these clients or globally and include HR administration and payroll. Another service often incorporated in this segment is technology to support other HR functions. The main driver for MPHRO within this sector is to centralize processes within geographies and gain consistency. Of the four market segments, this one has the highest growth rate for the next five years.
“Client-specific shared service transformation” is the second market segment and the largest at 48%. Again, buyers in this group have operations in 20+ countries, with an average of 50 countries. Employee headcount is more than 30k and typically averages more than 100k. Services include the entire HR service line (i.e., HR administration, payroll, benefits, training administration, and learning administration) with buyers in this category purchasing MPHRO to make their HR departments more effective by implementing best practices. In the next five years, growth will be modest, but its overall market share will shrink due to decreased total contract values.
The third segment contains buyers looking to focus on their core business. This is the second largest category at 24%. These buyers have operations in one or a small handful of countries and tend to be start-ups or buy-outs. Average employee headcount is 8k, but can be as little as 1k. MPHRO services utilized by this group are HR administration, payroll, and sometimes recruitment or training administration. The main reason MPHRO services are procured by this group is to obtain HR capability quickly so internal focus can be applied somewhere else, as often experienced by organizations experiencing high growth, especially in emerging markets. Growth for this segment will continue to be strong.
Buyers looking for “technology-led HR service enhancement” make up the final segment at 13%. These organizations are usually in just one country with employee headcount ranging from 1k to 50k+. The service scope includes a technology upgrade, HR administration, and payroll. The driver for MPHRO services for this group is to update an antiquated system and improve processes. Like the “core business focus” segment, growth for this segment will steadily continue.
Stay tuned to find out success factors for service providers within each segment.
Amy Gurchensky, Research Analyst, HRO, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration, HR Administration, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, HR Technology, hro, hro research, lbpo, multi-process hro, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, Training
Tags: benefits, HR, HR administration, hr outsourcing, HR technology, hro, learning, MPHRO, multi-country standardization, multi-process hro, nelsonhall, payroll, training
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June 30, 2011
At Aon Hewitt’s first analyst and consultant conference, Aon CEO Greg Case set the tone of the day with his enthusiastic overview about the company’s twofold focus on risk and people. As of 2010, the risk segment makes up 60% of the business, while HR solutions is the remainder with an objective of a 50/50 split.
To achieve the 50/50 split, Bal Dail and Kristi Savacool, co-CEO’s of Aon Hewitt, shared their vision. That is, for Aon Hewitt to be the most trusted partner for clients seeking HR solutions across its consulting, benefits administration, and HR BPO sectors.
Overall, the sectors are quite healthy with consulting leading the way. Of particular interest to me is the HR BPO business since I recently completed the 2011 NelsonHall multi-process HRO (MPHRO) report. HR BPO accounts for 13% of Aon Hewitt’s revenues and positions it as the global leader in the MPHRO space with a little more than 12% of market share.
It has 27 MPHRO clients, most recently adding Bank of America who was previously serviced by Fidelity. The Bank of America contract is for five and a half years, for 290,000 employees, and covers the following services:
- HR administration
- Performance management
- Payroll
- Time keeping
- H&W administration
- Learning
- Recruiting technology.
Most importantly, Aon Hewitt hasn’t lost any HRBPO clients to its competitors. It lost Mervyns and Circuit City in 2009 due to liquidations and it has another client that has downsized to where there is no business case for MPHRO services. Aon Hewitt, however, will still perform benefits administration services for this client. The most immediate challenge in this space is renewing Air Canada and Prudential.
In terms of its standalone offerings, Aon Hewitt is strongly focused on RPO, which is provided as a standalone service as well as part of its HR BPO offering. The company has 500 recruitment professionals, assesses 10m candidates annually, and fills 65,000 positions a year. Current RPO clients include Bank of Montreal, Marriott, and the TSA.
Absence management is another standalone offering that Aon Hewitt is planning to make significant investments in. It currently has 400 employees, 4 global service centers, and 55 clients. Absence management is also offered within the company’s HR BPO portfolio.
One thing was very clear throughout the day, Aon Hewitt is excited and enthusiastic about the current direction it has positioned itself in. But make no mistake, the company won’t sit idle with this strategy even if it is one of the largest HRO and consulting players in the world. It will continue to evolve so it stays on top.
Amy Gurchensky, Research Analyst, HRO, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration, benefits administration outsourcing, hr outsourcing, hro, learning outsourcing, multi-process hro, nelsonhall, performance management, Recruiting Technology
Tags: Air Canada, Aon, Aon Hewitt, Aon Hewitt's Analyst Conference, Bank of America, Bank of Montreal, Circuit City, Consulting, H&W, HR, HR administration, HR BPO, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, HR solutions, hro, Marriott, Mervyns, MPHRO, nelsonhall, payroll, performance management, Prudential, Recruiting Technology, risk segment, time keeping, TSA
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June 9, 2011
As one of NelsonHall’s research analysts, I follow what is happening in the various HRO markets. The simplest method is reading press releases, to which we add our commentary in our tracking service. As a reader, you see a portion of this analysis in our HRO Insight Blog and HRO Insight Newsletter.
On my own time, I like to play basic computer and online games. One of my favorite types is hidden object games where you follow clues to solve puzzles. Occasionally, tracking press releases is a bit like a virtual scavenger hunt for the larger objective.
Let’s take a look at an example with Ceridian’s recent announcement of its acquisition of Versult Group, Inc. Versult Group is a workforce management consulting firm acquired to enhance Ceridian’s implementation, training, and support services for its InView Workforce Management (WFM) solution. It is a straightforward article, easy to cover as is, and then I followed one clue to another and ended up with a richer story. HRO analyst fun!
Back in February 2011, Ceridian announced its partnership with Dayforce to launch InView. The two partners began working together a year earlier to integrate Dayforce’s WFM software suite into Ceridian’s payroll and HR administration services and ready both teams for launch. Ceridian also made an equity investment in Dayforce, which had already raised $20m, including $10m from Bridgescale Partners in July 2010.
Versult was one of seven Dayforce implementation partners and Versult had already performed implementations with Ceridian. As a bonus to Versult’s experience with WFM system implementation, it brings its own mobile access application, Versobile, to Ceridian.
Ceridian intends to further develop this platform for its clients seeking SaaS-based HR services by integrating beyond the current HR administration and payroll services to create an end-to-end offering including: H&W, tax, pay cards, COBRA, recruiting, EAP, tuition reimbursement, performance management, and training.
The payoff so far is that Ceridian’s investments are seeing rapid initial client acceptance. The platform has already grown to 90 Ceridian customers, rapidly escalating from 20 in February 2011.
This is a good, well-thought-out strategic move for Ceridian. It gets to cost effectively expand its SaaS service portfolio, leverage the strengths of its current offerings, increase scope with its client base, and add an experienced implementation team. It also has an equity stake in WFM, an increasingly important service line given employer concerns with cost control and the capability for rapid and effective workforce scaling.
Let’s leave this chapter of the story with a puzzle. How long will Ceridian be satisfied with a partnership with Dayforce, the WFM software source, when it felt the need to acquire Versult, the implementer?
Now for HRO vendors large and small, how are you solving your piece of the HRO SaaS puzzle?
Linda Merritt, Research Director, HRO, NelsonHall
Categories: health and welfare administration, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, performance management, Workforce Management
Tags: Ceridian, COBRA, Dayforce, EAP, H&W, HR, HR administration, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO Insight Blog, HRO Insight Newsletter, HRO providers, InView Workforce Management Solution, nelsonhall, pay cards, payroll, payroll outsourcing, performance management, press releases, recruiting, SaaS, tax, Versobile, Versult, Versult Group, workforce management
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October 28, 2010
HR organizations are largely on the path to improve the use of technology in managing administration, and service delivery and even workforce and talent management are coming along, according to the CedarCrestone 2010-2011 HR Systems Survey. The highest penetration rate is for administration technologies like core HR recordkeeping, payroll and benefits administration, at 90 percent. These are also top areas for HRO. Service delivery (47 percent), workforce management (45 percent) and talent management (43 percent) are not yet quite at the half-way point.
Business intelligence tools like data warehouse and reporting and presentation applications have reached 37 percent. Workforce optimization is lagging at 17 percent for tools that enhance and enable the use of talent analytics, and dynamic workforce planning that helps prepare for and align a workforce with changing business needs and strategies.
Workforce management addresses the here and now, and how many people, where and at what expense has been a big focus throughout the economic downturn. Sadly, the information was largely used (and needed) to determine where to cut costs and ensure the reductions were achieved. But in normal times, workforce data is needed to meet and maintain current and near-term staffing levels.
With workforce management tools and data improving, some organizations are not sure where to go next with the tools or how to fully leverage them. With a vague plan, even at 37 percent penetration rate, business intelligence packages can end up being a pretty, expensive, underutilized investment.
As I wrote about in last week’s blog on building an integrated HR ecosystem, it is the connectivity of a comprehensive set of tools and technologies that can unleash the true strategic power of HR in enabling business growth. The ability to use the system to understand, discover and advise is also needed.
As HR uses greater levels of technology for administration and self-service, HR’s workforce needs are generally reduced. In the case of workforce optimization, leading practice indicates that specialized staffing for workforce reporting and workforce planning increases slightly. Large organizations in the study averaged 5.8 people in workforce planning and 4.8 in reporting, while leading users for workforce optimization tools averaged 7.8 and 5.3, respectively. Oh, and in the leading practice companies HR was viewed as strategic (66 percent), more than in other large organizations (41 percent)!
This is such an important area for HR to truly achieve transformation. It is also important for HRO service providers to be able to move up the value chain and not be relegated to only being useful in building and running the back office administrative systems at lower operating cost – although that will always be a cornerstone of HRO.
Buyers, be sure the vendor you select can not only meet today’s needs but can continue to be your partner as you build out an integrated HR ecosystem. Providers, be ready to demonstrate that you are the partner that can help clients bridge the gap in building and using workforce optimization tools to create business results, including by making them easier to use and understand, and simplifying reporting and providing basic analytical services.
Linda Merritt, Research Director, HRO, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing
Tags: CedarCrestone, data warehousing, HR administration, HR analytics, HR analytics tools, HR business intelligence, hr outsourcing, HR self-service, hro, HRO providers, integrated HR ecosystem, nelsonhall, talent management, workforce management, workforce optimization, workforce optimization tools, workforce planning
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August 19, 2010
As a follow-on to my July 7 blog titled, “SaaS More Than Just Catching On,” let’s today look at what types of HRO SaaS clients are buying, the size of awarded contracts and the industries in which HRO SaaS has had the greatest penetration to date.
The What
By rank order of the most commonly purchased software applications/modules:
• Payroll
• HR administration
• Benefits administration, including benefits planning, health and safety, claims submission, absence management and occupational health
• Employee and manager self-service
• Talent management, including recruiting and learning
• Workforce planning
• Compensation/salary administration
• Employee development for career pathing
• Travel
The reasons behind the rankings, especially at the top of the list, are pretty self-evident. Payroll leads as it is the most visible and frequently used (and arguably, the most important) service. And HR administration really ties into employee and manager self-service, as one of the primary drivers of SaaS implementation is self-service for cost reduction and employee satisfaction.
The Size
As I noted in my July 7 blog, the mid-market is proving to be the ripest for HRO SaaS. Using Netherlands-based HRO provider Raet as an example – and a good one at that, as it in the past six weeks inked seven new SaaS contracts and one renewal – client company size is ranging from 250 to 12,000 employees. This uptake in the mid-market makes perfect sense, particularly on the lower end, as companies in this space need access to HR technology to enhance their operational efficiency but frequently lack the budget to invest their own capital in purchasing it. In terms of contract sizes, we’re seeing a length range from four to seven years, with an average of five years.
The Industries
In looking across all HRO SaaS contracts awarded thus far in 2010, education is the top industry, followed equally by local government and retail. I don’t necessarily believe there’s any secret sauce as to why these are the top three ranking industries, as organizations in virtually all – including healthcare, media, manufacturing and financial services – may be challenged with a preponderance of multiple divisions and locations, and often have several disparate systems for HR and payroll that do not communicate with each other, causing extra administrative work and duplication of effort, etc. Thus, the driver for most existing and upcoming HRO SaaS contracts is the ability to have one singular system for HR and payroll in order to achieve standardization, data accuracy, cost savings, self-service, timely processing and data, and employee satisfaction.
Due to all the inherent advantages, I believe we will continue to see a growing number of HRO SaaS contracts in the mid-market, across all industries. In addition, but to a lesser extent, I believe we will continue to see combined SaaS and outsourcing contracts such as the one announced on August 10 between MidlandHR and Swan Housing Group. Under this contract, Swan Housing will internally host MidlandHR’s iTrent software – which provides a single platform for HR, payroll, talent management and workforce planning. Swan Housing will simply provide the payroll data via iTrent, and MidlandHR will do everything else, from the structuring of pay and deduction calculations, through to payslip printing and distribution. The advantage of these hybrid-type contracts? Economies of SaaS scale coupled with outsourcing of processes for which internal resources and/or knowledge may be lacking.
Gary Bragar, Senior HR Outsourcing Analyst, NelsonHall
Categories: benefits administration outsourcing, health and welfare administration, hr outsourcing, hr outsourcing research, hro, HRO providers, hro research, mid-market HRO, nelsonhall, SaaS
Tags: benefits administration, compensation administration, employee development, employee self-service, HR administration, hr outsourcing, hro, HRO providers, HRO SaaS, manager self-serivce, mid-market HRO, MidlandHR, nelsonhall, payroll outsourcing, Raet, SaaS, talent management, workforce planning
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