In Full Bloom

The Future Of HRM Software: Naomi’s Preferred Behaviors

Who Can Forget This Teaching Moment? Susan Boyle Sings Out

Having done the first post in this series, on interrogatory configuration, without even realizing that I wanted to do an entire series, I then did a setup post to launch what I hope will be considerable discussion of the desired architectural characteristics (a.k.a. Naomi’s preferred HRMDS platform behaviors) of great HRM software.  No one HRM software package, or even custom application, may need all of these behaviors or need them to the high standard that I’m setting in these posts.  But “if we shoot for the stars, we’ll at least reach the moon,” one of my Mom’s favorite motivational aphorisms.

Preferred Behaviors

Preferred behaviors are the systemic, object model and/or architecturally-produced application software (i.e. platform) capabilities that:

When I’m asked by end-users and vendors/providers what I look for when I’m exploring software, it’s always that combination of a correct object model (for the relevant domain scope that’s being addressed) and these preferred behaviors along with the relevant features/functions.  Just as human beauty is a shallow thing that whithers with age, application software features/functions are the surface beauty that can show up very well in a demo but which don’t necessarily sustain you as your business needs change, markets mature, etc.  Character, on the other hand, is a much deeper quality that ages very well — and such are great architecture and object models. 

In my Preferred Behaviors “Starter Kit,” I include a lot of behavioral scenarios (where Use Cases are much more formally structured and rigorously presented but address the same topics) to provide examples, further clarifications, relevant business situations, etc. that:

As I write about these preferred behaviors, I’m going to do some companion “killer” scenario posts that provide scenarios you can use to determine how deeply a specific vendor’s architecture addresses the desired behavior as well as, for the vendor community, to provide a basis for determining how deeply you need to do so in order to be competitive.  If you thought I was opinionated before, this series clinches the deal.

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