In Full Bloom

Impressions From HR Technology Conference 2011

Ooooogah! Oooooogah!

Updated 10/11/2011 — join the discussion about getting to great HRM software over at LinkedIn’s HR Technology Group http://www.linkedin.com/groupItem?view=&gid=1772602&type=member&item=74705112&qid=589809af-35c8-492b-b988-49f4c32dd041&trk=group_most_recent_rich-0-b-ttl&goback=%2Egmr_1772602

I’m exhausted but energized, if it’s actually possible to be in both states at once.  I’ll leave it to others to do both the play by play and color commentary, neither of which is my forte.  But I do want to summarize my key learnings in case they’re useful for others. 

I also want to call attention — very positive attention — to the hard work that our impressario Bill Kutik and the entire LRP team put into this production.  While you and I are still recovering from the 2011 show, these folks, along with the vendor community, are already hard at work on #HRTechConf (that’s the approved Twitter hashtag for the three of you who are not yet on Twitter) 2012.

In twitterspeak, the hashtags for my learning topics from this conference (about which I’ve been writing for some time) are:  #social #mobile #consumerization #gamification #global #analytics #embedded intelligence #KSAOCs (did you think I’d really leave this out?) #objects #architecture #socialmarketing #infographics and #ripandreplace.  While I could write a book as could many others on any one of these topics, for now I just want to open up the discussion.  My hope is that, through your comments, we’ll sort out who’s doing what to whom on each of these topics (whose order below is completely random) in the vendor and end-user communities:

Apart from these specific topics, there were a number of big cross-cutting ideas that stood out for me.  They’re not necessarily new ideas, but they are finally getting our collective full attention:

  1. It’s workforce technology, not HR technology, and the whole point is organizational success not just HR success.
  2. Your workforce, all of it, is using multiple devices, so your workforce technology must reach them where they live and support the right devices (as they see them) for the right tasks/processes/etc.
  3. Licensed/on-premise/legacy ERP/HRMS will be with us for a VERY long time, but the momentum is clearly toward next generation, true SaaS core HRMS as well as true SaaS for talent management add-ons to those legacy ERP/HRMSs.  This includes some version of SaaS (true in the case of SAP, more on demand from Oracle) talent management add-ons aimed at holding their installed base as well as a lot of new, so-called SaaS products with VERY dated underpinnings.  Caveat emptor.
  4. We’re all inherently social, and the best business-oriented use cases for social technology leverage/enable our individual and group productivity — increasingly with an element of fun.
  5. Great innovation learns from the past so as not to repeat old mistakes even as it blazes new trails.  This is a polite reminder to both our vendor and end-user colleagues that they would be well-advised to do their homework before declaring their screwed up implementation of something important as being the latest and greatest innovation.
  6. If you don’t know where you’re going, it doesn’t matter how you get there.  Without a strategic plan for HRM and the HRM delivery system which is aligned with and drives business results, you’re playing whack-a-mole with every HR technology-related decision.  BAD mole!

Finally, getting an oogah horn for my “magic carpet” (aka scooter) was the best idea ever.  I will forever associate gamification with coming up behind a crowd in the casino, giving them an “oooogah oooogah,” and watching them jump out of their skins.

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