A Seven-Step Plan for Selecting Human Resources and Payroll
Management
Software that Meets Your Company’s Needs Now – and in the
Future
The Need for Automation
Automating
workforce management using integrated HR and payroll software is
imperative for companies that want to control costs by increasing
efficiency, reducing the risk associated with errors, and securing their
place in a competitive talent market.
A Roadmap to HRMS Selection Success
Choosing
a HRMS solution that meets your company’s needs now – and in the future
– doesn’t need to be daunting. With a bit of pre-planning and a
methodical approach to due diligence, you can quickly narrow your
choices to create a technology shortlist that is deserving of further
evaluation.
Although there are many variables that go into making
a final decision, this discussion outlines seven key steps to
evaluating HRMS solutions to integrate your critical HR and payroll
processes. By using these seven steps as your initial evaluation
roadmap, you will increase your chances of successfully achieving your
HR and payroll automation goals and selecting the system that provides
the best overall value.
Step #1: Set Realistic Goals for Your Search
Before
researching HRMS solutions, it’s important to set basic goals and
guidelines for your new technology initiative. You should establish a
way to define the initiative as successful. In other words, what do you
hope to achieve with an automated workforce management solution? If you
don’t establish your desired end results, it will be difficult to assess
whether your goals are realized.
Step #2: Map Your HR and Payroll Processes
Process mapping is a great time to create your “wish list” of functionality that will make your job easier and more productive.
When
mapping each process, define what the process does, who it involves and
the steps required to complete the task. Highlight areas of duplicate
effort and note how the process contributes to the overall department
workflow.
Step #3: Define High Level Functionality Needs
Identifying the core functionality needed to automate the processes mapped in Step #2 is next.
Define your needs at a high level. Some examples include:
- Benefits management and administration
- Employee self-service functions
- Compliance reporting
- Attendance tracking
- Comprehensive payroll management, including complex tax calculations, deductions and benefits
- User-based data security with protection of sensitive information
- Audit trails for all entries and transactions
- The ability to move closer to a near-paperless workflow
- Data import and export capabilities
- Comprehensive reporting
Step #4: Establish Reporting Requirements
Look
for a HRMS solution that has a significant number of preformatted
reports (with user-defined sorting and presentation features) that will
meet most of your standard detail and summary reporting requirements. In
addition, make sure that the program has a built-in custom report
writer or is compatible with software such as Crystal Reports® so you
can design the additional reports needed to satisfy your company’s
unique reporting needs.
Step #5: Identify Forward-Looking Technology
If you want this conversion to new HRMS solutions to truly be your
last, align with a solution provider that has documented plans to
continually enhance its products to meet the ever-changing requirements
of today’s business environment. In short, find out what capabilities
are currently in development or planned for the near future.
Step #6: Evaluate the Vendors as Technology Partners
Although
it may be tempting to choose a HRMS based on number of installations or
market share, these factors don’t guarantee success. A large company
with tens of thousands of clients (or more), for example, may have
problems meeting even your most basic customer service requirements.
That’s why you should thoroughly evaluate vendors to determine what kind
of technology partners they will make over time.
Step #7: Determine the Best Overall Value
To
truly define value as it relates to your organization, you need to
identify the key, time-intensive functions within your company’s current
HR and payroll operations that would benefit most by automation. These
functions might include:
- Manually creating reports or enrolling employees in benefits programs
- Frequently reconciling payroll processing errors or manually managing payroll taxes
- Duplicating data entry to keep your time-keeping or 401k systems up-to-date
Once
your key functions are identified, calculate a dollar value associated
with each one. For example, if Key Function #1 takes three hours a day
to complete manually, at a conservative, fully-burdened rate of $27 an
hour, that task is costing over $400 per week.
If, by automating that task, you can save two hours a day or more, then you have measurable return on investment (ROI).
Next Steps
If
you’re diligent about following the steps outlined above, by the time
you complete Step #7 you should have a better understanding of the
integrated HRMS solutions that are on the market and the two or three
products that are best suited to meet your needs.
The demo phase
is when the rubber meets the road, so to speak, and you get to
experience how each shortlist solution would drive your HR and payroll
processes. By fully engaging in the demo process, a clear winner should
emerge.
About the Endeavour Africa
Endeavour Africa offers a
suite of human resource software and online payroll services designed
for medium-size companies. Our HR software and payroll processing
services are easy to set up, use, and are fully backed by friendly
customer support professionals. To read more about selecting a HRMS
solution, visit http://www.endeavourafrica.com/products/hr-solution/hr-master/
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