• Instagram
  • TikTok
  • LinkedIn
  • JGA UK
JGA Recruitment
  • Home
  • Submit a Vacancy
  • Send Us Your Resume
  • Global Payroll
    • JGA Global Payroll
  • HR Technology
    • JGA HR Technology
  • About JGA
    • About JGA
    • Meet The Team
    • Recruitment Solutions
    • Consulting, Coaching & Mentoring
    • Great Place to Work
    • Testimonials
    • Policies & Forms
  • News and Views
    • News and Views
    • Payroll Newsletter Signup
    • HR Newsletter Signup
    • The Payroll Podcast
    • The HR L&D Podcast
    • The Mindful Paths Podcast
    • The Payroll Song
  • Contact
  • Menu Menu

The HR L&D Podcast Ranks 13th on the Talent LMS Best 55 Workplace Podcasts

January 22, 2024/in HR News/by Aaron Herkanaidu

In the ever-evolving landscape of human resources (HR) and learning and development (L&D), staying informed and up-to-date is crucial for professionals seeking to enhance their skills and knowledge. Podcasts have become a popular medium for delivering valuable insights, and JGA Recruitment Group’s HR L&D Podcast has recently earned recognition by securing the 13th spot on Talent LMS‘s prestigious list of the Best 55 Workplace Podcasts from the L&D, HR, and people management space.

The HR L&D Podcast: Hosted by JGA Recruitment Group‘s Nick Day, The HR L&D Podcast has been making waves in the industry by providing engaging and insightful conversations with thought leaders, experts, and professionals in the fields of HR and L&D. The podcast covers a wide range of topics, from talent acquisition and employee engagement to leadership development and organisational culture.

Recognition on Talent LMS’s Best 55 List: Talent LMS, a leading platform in the learning management system space, recently released its annual list of the Best 55 Workplace Podcasts. This list aims to spotlight podcasts that offer valuable content, unique perspectives, and practical insights for professionals working in HR, L&D, and people management. JGA Recruitment Group’s HR L&D Podcast proudly secured the 13th position on this esteemed list.

Key Factors that Set The HR L&D Podcast Apart:

  1. Expert Guests: The podcast features interviews with renowned experts, industry leaders, and influencers in HR and L&D, offering listeners the opportunity to gain insights from the best in the business.
  2. Timely and Relevant Content: The HR L&D Podcast addresses current trends, challenges, and innovations in HR and L&D, ensuring that listeners stay well-informed about the latest developments in the industry.
  3. Engaging Conversations: The hosts of the podcast create a dynamic and engaging atmosphere, making each episode both informative and enjoyable for listeners.
  4. Practical Takeaways: Listeners can expect to gain actionable advice and practical tips that they can apply to their own professional development and workplace strategies.

The Impact of Recognition: Securing the 13th spot on Talent LMS’s Best 55 Workplace Podcasts list is a testament to the quality and impact of The HR L&D Podcast. The recognition not only reflects the podcast’s commitment to excellence but also highlights its contribution to the professional growth of HR and L&D practitioners.

As the workplace landscape continues to evolve, podcasts like The HR L&D Podcast play a crucial role in keeping professionals informed, inspired, and connected. Here’s to continued success in providing valuable content to the HR and L&D community!

Listen to The HR L&D Podcast here or on all major streaming platforms.

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Talent-LMS-Podcast-2.png 600 800 Aaron Herkanaidu https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png Aaron Herkanaidu2024-01-22 11:58:412024-01-22 12:12:21The HR L&D Podcast Ranks 13th on the Talent LMS Best 55 Workplace Podcasts

Why Global Payroll Holds the Key to DEI Success

September 19, 2023/in Blog, HR News, Payroll News/by Aaron Herkanaidu

Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) are more than just buzzwords. These three words are, in fact, vital for a thriving workplace culture. But where does global payroll fit into this picture? Let’s clarify our terms.

Diversity encompasses the variety of characteristics among personnel, such as ethnicity, gender identity, sexuality, culture, and nationality. Equity ensures fair treatment for everyone.

Inclusion creates an environment where diverse individuals feel valued and can contribute fully.

At the Intersection of Global Payroll, DEI

You might still be wondering what role global payroll professionals play regarding DEI. To begin, fair pay is crucial in maintaining employee satisfaction, and the connection between the payroll process and the employee experience has never been closer. Meanwhile, access to improving payroll data provided by more capable payroll solutions emerging in the marketplace is helping businesses maintain and achieve compensation parity across diverse global workforces.

According to a 2020 report by McKinsey, companies with the most diverse executive teams are more likely to outperform peers on profitability by 36%. However, although most employees believe their employer puts an emphasis on DEI, one in five (22%) say there is no one demonstrating its importance through action in the business, according to a 2021 Eagle Hill Consulting Survey. Meanwhile, a study conducted by the Harvard Business Review in February 2019 revealed that 75% of employees claim that the current DEI programs in place at their organization deliver no personal benefits.

We will get to the how shortly but suffice to say, payroll professionals have an opportunity to play a significant role in promoting and improving DEI in the workplace. Now, that’s exciting!

Payroll Holds the Key

Payroll leaders access more employee data than almost any other business function. If harnessed and leveraged correctly, this data can allow payroll professionals to be more active in supporting board-level objectives. A critical organizational goal for businesses is improving workplace culture and boosting corporate DEI. It’s quite possible that the C-suite could soon discover that payroll indeed holds the key to game-changing DEI results.

Payroll Data Can Advance DEI Initiatives

Payroll professionals have access to both the insights and the expertise to support, help, and implement equal pay measures for all. Payroll professionals also have the tools to comprehensively audit an organization’s compensation structure to identify gender, race, or other pay-related disparities. Audits can help identify pay discrepancies that create opportunities for payroll professionals to form alliances with HR to help bridge gender or ethnicity wage gaps.

A Rapid Technological Shift

Implementing DEI initiatives through payroll can be challenging if payroll operations are laden with outdated systems or processes.

Legacy IT systems hinder those yet to update which means they may be left behind in their ability to influence DEI initiatives as the systems may not give them access to the same level of data that newer solutions can provide. In addition, older systems mean more time is spent checking payroll processes leaving less time for payroll managers to focus on more strategic tasks such as DEI analysis. However, the rapid technological shift post pandemic has seen more businesses than ever undergo a software transformation— especially in payroll. These new solutions—due to improved automation—free up time for more strategic analysis and provide payroll managers with access to more data and reporting options to identify trends and potential DEI gaps.

Rapid digital transformation has infiltrated payroll operations to provide even more powerful payroll solutions which, in addition to streamlining processes and automating manual tasks, generates vast amounts of big data.
It is through the analysis of the payroll data that the industry can unlock the doors to DEI success.

Harnessing Payroll Data to Improve Pay Transparency

Closing the gender pay gap is not just fair; it’s smart business, too. Studies show that closing the gender gap could add $13 trillion to the global GDP. Therefore, embracing diversity and fair pay practices is critical for any business keen to identify ways to boost profits and innovation. By accessing payroll data that provides information concerning gender representation and associated pay across all levels of an organisation, payroll can promote greater organisational transparency around pay structures. Studies also show that increased workplace transparency positively impacts talent attraction, retention, and productivity.

Identifying Workforce Inequity

In addition to pay-related information, payroll data can also support diversity audits. Studies have repeatedly shown that businesses with the broadest diversity of perspectives benefit from greater profits, performance, and creativity. Well, payroll holds the key to the data that can highlight the diverse makeup of an organisation. Payroll professionals can analyse and identify diversity representations across all leadership levels of a global workforce. Auditing existing payroll systems may also identify other systemic issues contributing to workforce inequity.
For example, according to Human Resources Today, in 2015, Salesforce became the first U.S. company to conduct an equal pay audit, which led to $3 million (USD) in salary adjustments. Since then, the company has embarked on several DEI initiatives to create a more diverse and inclusive workplace for its employees. In 2020, Salesforce set up a Racial Equality and Justice Task Force led by senior executives and comprised of entry-level employees. The task force aimed to drive systemic change by listening to those affected, setting goals and tracking relevant metrics, and creating new programs and processes as part of the solution.

Creating Alliances for Successful DEI Outcomes

Businesses need to go beyond traditional practices and look to integrate and incorporate DEI initiatives into all daily operations, including payroll. To omit a function that can access such powerful data will only negatively impact the success of any DEI initiative. Hence, more than ever, payroll needs a pivotal seat at the table to foster positive alliances and coalitions with other functions, such as HR, finance, and IT, to maximise DEI impact. The journey toward gender equality is not a solo race. It’s a relay that requires collaboration, teamwork, and a unified commitment to DEI improvement from all business functions.

Achieving Equitable Workplaces for All

Unravelling the complexities of DEI and its relationship with payroll can be confusing. However, DEI awareness has highlighted the importance of fairness in the workplace, and this evolution represents a new opportunity for payroll professionals to broaden their remits (areas or roles officially assigned) and further raise the profile of the profession. A deeper understanding of the interconnectedness between payroll and DEI can result in businesses achieving more equitable workplaces for all. I say this because for employers, pay is not just about numbers—it is also about fairness and transparency.

Similarly, for those reading this, global payroll is not just about paying employees on time but also about enhancing the employee experience. Whereas, for employees, pay, rewards, or benefits do not solely define how happy they feel at work; it also hinges on how valued they feel in their roles – from receiving accurate, timely, and fair pay to being part of a diverse team where everyone has equal growth opportunities. Payroll influences all these considerations.

Integrating DEI into all aspects of the employee payroll cycle is critical if we are committed to cultivating inclusive workplace cultures that support happier employees who stay longer and produce more. If businesses truly wish to unlock the potential of their DEI initiatives, now is the time to engage the payroll keys required for their success.

 

Written by Nick Day, Managing Director at JGA Recruitment Group – the UK’s leading Payroll & HR Recruitment Consultancy and Executive Search Firm.

JGA Recruitment Group| Payroll & HR Recruitment

E-Mail: nick@jgarecruitmentinc.com | Tel: 01727 800 377

Copyright©: JGA Recruitment Group 2023

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Why-Global-Payroll-Holds-the-Key-to-DEI-Success.png 900 1200 Aaron Herkanaidu https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png Aaron Herkanaidu2023-09-19 15:12:162024-04-12 11:35:30Why Global Payroll Holds the Key to DEI Success

Blockchain and cryptocurrency – Do we really understand what these technologies are? Interview with Anita Lettink

July 19, 2023/in HR News/by jga2023

In this exclusive interview, Nick Day, Managing Director at JGA Recruitment Group interviews Anita Lettink, SVP, Strategy & Alliances at NGA HR all about blockchain and cryptocurrency. We discover more about what blockchain and cryptocurrencies are, and more importantly, how these technologies will impact the future of Payroll and HR.

Anita is responsible for Strategy & Alliances globally where she is responsible for ensuring strategic value propositions are developed and brought to market for NGA HR. Anita has written several excellent articles on Blockchain technology, and it was these articles that led me to invite Anita to this interview.

This interview will attempt to demystify blockchain and cryptocurrency. It will endeavour to separate the hype from reality. It will take readers on a journey of understanding concerning how blockchain, crypto and DLT technologies are likely to impact the payroll departments of tomorrow.

Interview

Nick Day: I’ve been fascinated by the articles Anita has published concerning Blockchain technology and its potential impact on the payroll and HR industries.

Blockchain is a huge buzz word out there in the market, and today I want to demystify blockchain and cryptocurrencies to find out how they may impact and be utilised in the payroll departments of tomorrow?

Blockchain is also still a highly experimental technology, and I want to find out if it is advanced enough for any software provider to be able to recommend it for payroll purposes?

However, before we dive deep into these complex subjects, I would like to introduce Anita Lettink to you all! Anita, can you explain your payroll journey to date and why you believe it is so vital that we understand how future technologies might impact upon both payroll and HR industries?

Anita Lettink:  When I joined in 2001, HR and payroll, at that time was focused entirely on ERP. My job was to consider how clients could make the best use of technology so that delivery to employees was as effective and as efficient as it could be.

Throughout the years, HR has been on a journey to engage employees, to make the employee experience better. With the opportunities that came with the cloud, you can bring HR to people who matter most, because it’s people who ultimately create a business and who run a business.

To ensure people get paid on time and are appropriately screened, you must understand new technologies. Subsequently, understanding how businesses can deliver HR and payroll services in the best way to its employees is a big part of my focus.

Nick Day: You said the most significant barrier to clients making the change over to cloud solutions would be fear, so fast forward to 2020, how do you see the future of payroll changing now?

Do you still view fear as being the most significant barrier for these changes taking place?

Anita Lettink:  I think the most significant barrier was risk rather than fear. Consider a payroll owner in a company who has everything running smoothly. Why would they want to consider doing anything that may jeopardise this very stable payroll environment? I think this is still the case because there is no financial business case for migrating a payroll that runs smoothly, from on-prem to the cloud.

That is why there must be more on offer than that. I think you see that right now in the enterprise segment, which is, of course, is a big focus for NGA. For example, if you have 50,000 employees on your payroll and everything runs smoothly, unless there is something big happening in your company, think mergers, acquisitions, etc. Ultimately, you will want to keep everything as stable as you can. However, we also see enterprise clients move to the cloud because of improvements concerning its ability to interface with the employee.

In payroll, clients are also moving over to the cloud, particularly in the mid-market segment, because, for them, it’s critical to keep everything together. So, when HRIS moves, they also move core HR and payroll.

Nick Day: Interesting, so what typically might be some other reasons for a business looking to make a change?

Anita Lettink: When it comes to multi-country businesses, at a certain point, they simply do not want multiple local systems anymore. And so, when they move to the cloud, they have a business case to do so because they’re moving away from, let’s say, 25 or 30 different payroll systems, to one payroll provider. It is usually a hosted payroll in the cloud in some shape or form. That is an important driver.

It is when clients move to a single core HR system, that they realise that they must start establishing interfaces to all these different systems that are across multiple countries. The move doesn’t just affect payroll and HR systems either, which is why this is usually the moment clients decide to move everything to the cloud.

Nick Day: In an age of globalisation, I guess it’s a busy time for suppliers like yourselves for companies looking risk-averse solutions that can deliver a full solution to multiple countries.

It leads me nicely into the blockchain, which is also known as distributive ledger technology, or DLT. Can you just clarify for the readers what blockchain or DLT is?

Anita Lettink: Yes. I’m going to keep it a little bit high level instead of bursting out in a full technology overview. So, on a high level, really what you do is you create a secure ledger of all the transactions, and you copy that ledger on a decentralised infrastructure.

What happens is this. If someone makes a transaction, that transaction is added to the ledger, the ledger is changed, and the change is then broadcast to all parties participating in the network. They then validate it and approve it.

Once that transaction is complete, it’s added to a block. Once the block is full, it’s then added to an existing chain of blocks. That’s why we call it blockchain.

It’s also encrypted, which is very important because that means that the blocks can’t be changed or tampered with, and that is a significant advantage of the blockchain or the DLT infrastructure.

Nick Day:  So now we know a little bit more about what blockchain is in simple terms, how do you think it’s going to impact or change payroll?

Anita Lettink: What I think with blockchain and payroll is that it’s not so much payroll itself that’s going to be changed, but it’s the way we provide data to payroll and the way that we get data out of payroll that will feel the changes of blockchain.

The reason why I say that is because as you know when you set up a payroll, you use PII (personally identifiable information). We must consider GDPR compliance too because people are rightfully worried about who has access to their data and who hasn’t. Subsequently, I think there is a drive for people to own their data to control and understand what happens with it.

At the same time, you also see blockchain applications becoming very strong within the FinTech sector, so it’s financial technology.

Banks are looking at blockchain to secure transactions and to ensure that when transactions do happen, they are encrypted and secure. Everyone must also understand and trust the transaction process because trust is also critical for the evolution of blockchain development.

So, to answer your question, no, I don’t think it will change how businesses process payroll that much, but I do believe it will have a significant effect on payroll processes, pre-payroll and post-payroll.

Nick Day: So, what do you see as being the main benefits of blockchain and are there any reasons why businesses should also be cautious in terms of risk associated with implementing the technology?

Anita Lettink: If you look at the benefits of blockchain, it’s still early days. We’re slowly starting to understand how to use blockchain and discover what the advantages are. We’re also beginning to understand what some of the disadvantages are!

As this technology progresses, what you will see is that different versions will start to emerge. Think about permission blockchains that are used in companies versus permission-less blockchains that are used by cryptocurrencies. Already we have two variations of blockchain developed for two very different purposes. So, it is inevitable that more changes will follow.

This also means that we still are watching, piloting and creating use cases for how blockchain can be applied within both the HR and payroll industries.

I think it’s good to be cautious because there’s significant hype around blockchain, especially around cryptocurrencies and Bitcoins. There’s also a concern about energy consumption, which, although mostly associated with permission-less blockchains, it is still something businesses will need to consider.

Nick Day: Blockchain is undoubtedly becoming a bit of an investors buzz word right now. As you articulated earlier, it has become hard to separate the hype from reality.

For example, in December 2017, a New York’s drinks brand called the “Long Island Iced Tea Company” changed its name to “Long Blockchain Company“. The company stock subsequently rose by 289% on the back of the announcement – and that was despite the fact they had absolutely no blockchain-based products to sell and no concrete plans to develop any blockchain technology whatsoever.

The change of direction failed because NASDAQ removed them from the exchange for misleading investors. However, it does highlight how easy it was to convince investors that they were worth investing in, just based on them adding the word “blockchain” to their company name.

Therefore, I think it is foolish to ignore blockchain and the impact it can have.

However, it is now twelve years since Satoshi Nakamoto proposed the first blockchain. Yet, we’re still not seeing any significant developments that integrate blockchain-based payroll technology into current systems.

We’ve also not witnessed businesses move entire payrolls away from user control-based bases, into blockchain systems.

It is supposedly all relatively new technology, but then Nakamoto developed it twelve years ago.

Why do you think it’s taken so long to get blockchain to where it is now?

Anita Lettink: I think what has happened is that the focus on cryptocurrencies has not done the technology any favours. Especially not when it comes to these initial coin offerings. There’s also significant mistrust around this technology.

For instance, recently, Bloomberg said that over half of these initial coin offerings died within four months after tokens were sold. So, people have lost considerable sums of money!

The other thing is the idea that privacy is dead was a reality for a long time. But recently, enormous data breaches have taught people that security matters. Therefore, we need to encrypt data and ensure no one can access it without permission because we don’t know where it ends up or what people may do with it.

I also think several events and trends are converging to make this technology more interesting. There are already mainstream developments in FinTech, which are now out in the public for everyone to use.

For instance, in the area of international payments, a Spanish bank has introduced an app where everyone can wire money home, and it will arrive the next day against a fraction of the fee that you paid in the past for an international money transaction.

There are also, for instance, shipping companies that use DLTs to make sure that what goes in the containers comes out of the containers at the endpoint and a blockchain ensures that these shipping lists are secure.

I think when you look at DLT, companies are starting to use it. It’s maybe more in the B2B (business to business) sectors than in the B2C (business to consumer) areas right now, but I firmly believe that it will become mainstream in the next couple of years. When it does, people will start to use it, whether they know it or not.

Nick Day:  I haven’t seen it anywhere in the recruitment market space for payroll, but I know in my research that there are many blockchain-based payroll companies which have started to launch.

Also, many companies have been raising their seed capital by using ICOs, which are initial coin offerings, using cryptocurrency-based funding methods to get their ventures off the ground.

It is interesting because a lot of these companies disappear quite quickly as well! Despite companies starting to launch in places like Silicon Valley, we certainly haven’t quite seen it enter the mainstream yet.

However, is did read an article by KPMG, who advised on a £5,000,000 launch of ETCH, a Dublin based service, which claims it is to be “the first innovation in payroll since the industrial revolution“, and they’re employing the Ethereum blockchain to allow employers to pay workers in real-time.

For the larger businesses out there, I can see why they would want to consider the technology, but it sounds like it might take another couple of years before we see it used widely, especially in payroll.

Anita Lettink: I also think that before you might see it in payroll, there are other areas in HR where the use cases are already brought to market.

For instance, several educational institutes all around the world are now publishing certificates and diplomas on blockchains. So that might be a use of blockchain or DLTs, which regular people like you and I will experience far before we see anything in the financials.

Nick Day: Let’s discuss blockchain security, especially the risks concerning its use within payroll-related applications.

We have mentioned GDPR already, and we know that right now, it is more important than ever that personal data is protected. From a data owner perspective, the problem of protecting personal data can be three-fold. There’s often a lack of ownership (because once it’s been entered, a third party can own the personal data). There’s a lack of transparency (because users can’t audit what happens with their data). And of course, there is a risk of security breaches, (because when databases hold personal data, there can be a single point of failure).

Subsequently, how can blockchain help to keep personal data safe, especially from a data controller perspective?

Anita Lettink: In principle, when you give an employer your personal data, they need to promise to keep it safe (and not to sell it to any third parties, for instance). Therefore, there is the trust that you have in this relationship, and hopefully, you trust your employer to do the right thing here.

Also, if an employer outsources a payroll or HR service to a third party, like NGA for instance, then there is legislation in place on what can and cannot be done with that data, and it’s quite restrictive.

Finally, we must remember that we only give employers access to personal data because they need to pay taxes and social security on our behalf. Therefore, it is unavoidable that they, for instance, disclose your name to the HRMC or other relevant authorities that require it for tax purposes.

It is different for the gig economy, however, because all that responsibility flips to the worker. That is because, in a gig economy, the employer pays the worker, who is then responsible for paying their own taxes and social security. Therefore, already some of that responsibility moves away, and this means that less personal data resides with “the employer”.

Ultimately, I think there’s always going to be a level of trust needed between employers and employees. We need to trust that personal data is being handled in the right way.

Sometimes an employer may need to ensure that employee data remains protected when it is disclosed. This data could be preserved by introducing blockchain or a DLT. These technologies would also provide the employee with better visibility regarding who uses that data and when.

With blockchain, you could also have your personal data protected but still provide your employer with permissions to disclose it in specific circumstances.

Nick Day:  It is critical to understand that there are two major strands to how blockchain systems can work. As previously mentioned, you can have private blockchains and permissions, but you can also have permission-less blockchains which can be public and open.

I highlight this because, now, the buzz word everyone is familiar with is Bitcoin. Everyone seems to have heard of Bitcoin. The second biggest is crypto coin is Ethereum.

They’re the two leading blockchains, and they are examples of two permission-less blockchains, that means they are public, and they are not password protected. This has been a significant barrier for many of the banks in adopting technology.

Like the banks, most companies would not want their transactions to be made publicly available to anyone who wants to view them either.

However, we also now know that it is possible also to create private permissioned blockchains, but I understand these have a significant flaw. This flaw is that only a handful of people can update and validate transactions private blockchains.

Inevitably, as single points of control, these individuals become potentially unique points of failure. This leads me to three vital questions.

  1. So, could this make them an easy target for hackers?
  2. If hackers identified these individuals, could they gain control of the entire blockchain by attacking only a small number of computers?
  3. In terms of risk, security, and transparency, do you think these risks will make blockchain technology prohibitive in terms of businesses taking advantage of blockchain applications, or not?

Anita Lettink: I think it’s all about trust and what level of trust clients are prepared to accept. Comparable to banks, you store your money with a bank that you trust. You hope that they do the right thing with your money and that you don’t lose it.

Also, keep in mind that blockchain is encrypted whether it’s permission-less or permissioned. So even if you have access to the blockchain, it does not mean right away that you have access to the data that is stored in the blockchains.

But let’s talk a little bit about permission-less versus permission blockchain or private blockchain because that is important. It’s also essential to understand the differences.

Most of these cryptocurrencies are permission-less blockchains. It means that they allow anyone, you and me, to create an address and to start interacting with the network. We can run a node, and we can participate in the verifications of the transactions.

It means that in a cryptocurrency transaction we compete for payments because the one that verifies the block (and all the other parties) will each get a little bit of cryptocurrency, as a thank you, for creating the block. That is also why these are so popular. You can even earn money by joining a permission-less blockchain.

Now, when you look at a permissioned blockchain, that’s a closed ecosystem. Usually, it’s created by a consortium of companies who need to do business with each other, or for some other reason, are in business. The purpose of those blockchains is to create a way to exchange information and record transactions efficiently.

For enterprises, this can be a way to instil trust and transparency. For example, the Hyperledger Foundation is an example of an open-source initiative for these types of blockchains. With these types of blockchains, enterprises (and people like you and I) can choose who is running that network. Whereas in a permission-less blockchain we have no idea who is running the network because anyone can join.

In a permission blockchain, once you have verified the parties that are participating in that network, you can augment the level of trust so that people like you and I know it’s secure. We can then have the confidence and trust that these businesses will operate the blockchain smartly and effectively.

Therefore, when we’re talking about trust, permissions models will probably be a better fit for payroll or business-related purposes.

Nick Day:  It doesn’t necessarily take away the potential for there being a single point of failure, but the reality is you only enter in with an understanding of the risks before you join, once trust is already established.

However, there are more risks I want to highlight. I think it is essential we all understand what blockchain is and blockchain isn’t.

For example, I believe a risk within blockchain technology is for it to function as intended; the code behind the smart contract needs to be free from bugs. I’m not a software expert, but if blockchain technology was being used to make a payroll payment (using a smart contract), could a bug potentially allow the receiver of a payroll payment to request that payment multiple times? In fact, couldn’t there be a risk of these payments repeating for some time before the blockchain system has a chance to update itself?

I know, of course, all software, including professional enterprise-level software, will contain bugs. Still, smart contract payments are irreversible with blockchain, so if this happened concerning a payroll payment, there would be no chance for a company or a payroll manager to get that money back if a bug like that existed and was exploited.

I highlight this because there is an example of such exploitation which took place in 2017 when nearly $55,000,000 worth of Ethereum was stolen because of an exploitable bug within the Ethereum source code.

It became one of the most prominent back doors in hacking history, and it came down, quite simply to the capital T in line 666 of the code. Had that been a small T, it would have completely prevented the hack. It’s quite unbelievable that such a little thing can result in a £55,000,000 worth of stolen crypto.

I’m making the point because, in publicly released code, even Microsoft says they have about 10 to 20 bugs per thousand lines, and they confirmed that only a very tiny proportion of code is ever technically perfect.

Therefore, do you think in terms of utilising blockchains for processing payroll payments, that it will be too difficult for it to be developed as an effective and risk-free payroll solution?

Also, from a payroll solution perspective, do you think that attaining satisfactory code perfection levels will make it too tricky for payroll software companies to develop suitable solutions on a mass scale?

Anita Lettink: No, I don’t think so. I did say that I believe that the first application will be in pre and post payroll, but I also think you can create a payroll that runs on blockchain.

Of course, no software is free from bugs. However, this hasn’t prevented businesses from trusting software to run our energy infrastructure, to run our ATMs, to run payrolls for millions of employees and to run everything that we rely on in our lives.

We trust software to run the internet and bugs happen, but they’re usually not in the multitude of the example that you just gave.

However, could it happen? Absolutely! No software is bug-free, but it could also occur today with the current payroll and payment software that we are using!

With the smart contract, the idea is that once you enter into it, several obligations need to be fulfilled before the money transaction happens.

You need to make sure there is not an indefinite repeat of these transactions or these conditions. If you do this, then the payment will not repeatedly happen because once the requirements are satisfied and the payment has been made, the smart contract ends.

So, could that be exploited? I’m pretty sure there must be someone in the world who will, but I do not think it will be a regular event. As with everything, payroll is very regulated. When you run payroll, you already know upfront what your payroll will look like from a financial point of view. Businesses plan for all these types of expenditures, especially payroll, as it involves such significant sums of money.

With these smart contracts, it will probably be smaller payments, but there are still financial departments somewhere in your business that is keeping track of monetary payments. Therefore, someone will notice after it starts to happen that you keep paying the same person the same amount repeatedly. It might be too late in that specific situation, but I don’t believe that it will be able to happen indefinitely.

I also don’t think the amount on the smart contracts will be anywhere near the 55,000,000 of the Ethereum. If it is, I am in the wrong job!

Nick Day: Let me explain then what a smart contract is.

A smart contract is essentially a set of promises written out in code which works using statements like, “if this then that“. So once set in motion, it is designed to be entirely dependent on its code, and it is irreversible.

Subsequently, a smart contract between a company and a contractor that dictated a certain number of hours of work had been completed, would require a smart contract, which automatically pays the contractor. It is achieved by deploying a piece of remotely executable code, linked to an instruction from the employers’ bank account to the contractors’ bank account.

The beauty of this set-up is that we would no longer need to contact banks on a monthly payment run along with all the payroll processing time it entails because you just deal directly with one another. With a smart contract, there’s a guarantee that the work is completed too.

In addition, my intention with the £55,000,000 example wasn’t to scaremonger; it was to highlight whatever solution businesses move forward with, if it is blockchain, we shouldn’t fear it. We need to recognise that there are risks associated with all software used. For businesses using ERP software right now, there are still risks. There are still hacking attacks, phishing issues and security risks.

However, these stories often don’t make the mainstream news. In contrast, blockchain is so mainstream, that any slight error or a problem occurring within any application of the technology is highlighted exponentially, so everyone hears about it.

What we need to understand is that blockchain technology coming and there are risks, but hopefully, NGA and other service providers are going to try and minimise and mitigate these risks as much as possible. Why?

Ultimately, software evolves to help improve efficiency and improve the way that we do things.

One of the significant advantages of blockchain is speed. It’s incredibly fast, but there is a cost for this speed! The cost can be found in the fact that blockchain transactions tend to use up considerable energy consumption, and computing power because they’re verified using very sophisticated algorithms. As the size of the blockchain grows, which is every time there’s a transaction, it grows and grows and continues to grow! Subsequently, the requirements for storage, bandwidth and computing power is going to increase.

So, will scalability be a potential barrier to blockchain implementation in the long term?

Anita Lettink: It’s an interesting question because on the one hand side you have technology that can help you establish trust and transparency, and on the other hand side because of this trust and openness there is a lot of energy consumption, which is a concern.

If you look at the public blockchain, remember that I mentioned earlier that anyone could be a user or run a node. That means, the more nodes that exist, the more computers, the larger the network becomes, and the more computers there is, new transactions need to be replicated to, and that is one of the primary reasons behind this energy consumption.

When you are looking at permission blockchain, you can control the number of nodes in the infrastructure. Therefore, the energy consumption is much lower.

Energy consumption is a concern, but it all depends on the application, and I also know that within the industry, there’s a significant focus on thinking up smart ways to reduce these energy needs.

Nick Day: So, by the time we potentially see blockchain in the mainstream, do you believe there is going to be a significant reduction in the way that energy consumption is used to power it?

Anita Lettink: Yes. Power consumption needs to reduce for the technology to be truly scalable, especially for large transactions.

Nick Day:  So how do you see the blockchain technology road map evolving concerning payroll over the coming months or years?

Anita Lettink: What will happen is that many companies like ours are experimenting with use cases and are starting to understand what works and what doesn’t and where it adds value and where it doesn’t.

These educational certificate and diplomas are an excellent example because once you’ve put those on the blockchain, the information is there, it’s secure, it’s encrypted, and no one can tamper with it. It’s almost a guarantee to the employee that yes, they completed that study and gained that qualification. It also says to the employer that yes, this person went through this institute and got a diploma or certification. In these cases, it almost becomes a straightforward application.

The same will happen in payroll. For example, you could imagine that as an employee, you start to work for a company, and you give that company access to your personal data to run payroll, but then you withdraw that permission the moment that you exit the business.

Right now, if you left your current employer, you may be unsure whether your information is removed.

There’s always some legislation involved with that because as an employee, you cannot wholly withdraw your personal data from and employers record for legislative purposes. But still, it gives you more control over what someone does, not only your employer but with your data.

Ultimately, I think that we are only scratching the surface of what is possible. However, I also believe we will come to a point in the next few years where we understand where it’s instrumental and where we just shouldn’t bother.

Nick Day: Are there any blockchain innovations that you’re involved in right now, that NGA is fully engaged with testing that you’re able to share?

Anita Lettink: Yes. We are fully involved in testing, and we will start to publish about that a little bit later in the year, so here I’m going to ask for your patience, and I hope for your curiosity!

Nick Day: Now, I must ask this question because before I started my research into blockchain, which takes a little bit to get your head around, I thought it was all about Bitcoin.

Everyone has been talking about Bitcoin and cryptocurrency. We have seen in the news, that people have made significant fortunes on the back of it too.

However, we haven’t spoken about cryptocurrency yet, which is crucial as it is vital that we separate blockchain from cryptocurrency.

After all, cryptocurrencies have very little to do with the benefits of blockchain applications. Hopefully, by reading this far, you have got a good feel for that already!

There is no denying that there is considerable hype around cryptocurrencies right now. So, it would appear to be a natural evolution of the workplace that businesses will eventually start paying employees in cryptocurrencies.

Some companies are doing this already. They are predominantly companies already in the FinTech space. Still, an example would be Japan’s GMO Internet, which announced they would allow workers to take up to $890 a month in Bitcoin.

However, cryptocurrency is also extremely volatile for those that follow the markets. It’s not unknown for the price of Bitcoin, Ethereum or any of the other better-known crypto coins to increase or decrease by ten or even 20% in value in a single day.

With this volatility in mind, do you think there will ever be a wide-scale company adoption of the idea of payrolling its employees in cryptocurrency?

Anita Lettink: I think it all has to do with our acceptance of cryptocurrency. This is not so much about payroll. First, we need to see cryptocurrencies are stabilise because they are indeed extremely volatile. Cryptocurrencies can lose 10% or 20% of their value one day to the next.

Whereas, right now if you are being paid in pounds, euros, or dollars, you are relatively sure that what you buy today you can buy tomorrow, assuming inflation is not running at an all-time high.

The reasons why we want to be paid in pounds, euros, or dollars is because when we go to a shop or when we shop online, other people trust us to pay them in that currency. It’s not enormously costly for us to do so either and currently the whole infrastructure relies on these currencies already in use.

As soon as the mainstream starts to trust cryptocurrency, I think it’s very feasible we begin to get paid in cryptocurrency. Of course, that is provided its volatility stabilises, and everyone else accepts it.

However, why would anyone want to be paid in cryptocurrency while we have access to a stable currency?

Ultimately, we will see one or two cryptocurrencies becoming mainstream, but it will take a while. It’s still too much hype.

Nick Day: I agree. It is worth mentioning that there are additional tax implications as well for being paid in Bitcoin, or any cryptocurrency. Especially if, as an employee, you convert the Bitcoin back to Sterling.

HRMC terms them “Crypto assets”, and as new technology is leading to new crypto assets being created in a wide range of forms and for different uses, they have warned traders, investors and holders, that they will need to pay capital gains tax on any profits made.

Just by the HMRC making that statement, it suggests that they are starting to take cryptocurrency more seriously, which is interesting.

Currently, the HMRC terms crypto-assets as “cryptographically secured digital representations of value or contractual rights that can be transferred, stored or traded electronically.”

All crypto assets use some form of blockchain but, as I hope this eBook has already highlighted, not all applications of blockchain involve crypto assets.

For clarity, the HMRC does not consider crypto assets to be currency or money. Instead, as outlined in the Crypto asset Taskforce report, the HMRC have identified three types of crypto assets which are exchange tokens, utility tokens and security tokens.

The critical observation here is to reinforce Anita’s earlier point – why would employers want to pay employees in cryptocurrency when at present, we already have a very stable mainstream currency?

In the UK, Sterling already does the job well enough, and it is much easier to spend on the open market too.

Anita Lettink:  It is an interesting development by the HMRC and by the regulators in general. A few years ago, they just wouldn’t touch it. Therefore, it is an exciting development to see regulators looking at cryptocurrencies and getting more involved, creating opinions and bringing us warnings or updates about what people who hold them should do with them.

You also see many financial institutions now investing in cryptocurrencies. The whole establishment is beginning to understand that yes, this is something that they need to get engaged in because otherwise, this will be a development that runs away from them that people will want to use. After all, it offers them a more natural way to move money across the world.

However, I can imagine that regulators want to understand how that money flows across geographical borders and what they need to do to, for example, to protect people from laundering money through these types of currencies.

It will come. Right now, the people that do want to get paid in cryptocurrencies do so because they believe that the value of these cryptocurrencies will rise astronomically. Hence, it’s more of an investment vehicle than a payment vehicle. When Bitcoin dropped in value, some of the transactions cost more than the intrinsic value of the purchase!

Nick Day: That’s unbelievable!

Anita Lettink: Also, I don’t think that running around with your crypto coin wallet and paying for a full tank of gas is one of the applications that we will all be doing next year. It will become more mainstream, and as it becomes mainstream, it’s logical that regulators became involved.

The fact that they are now involved is a signal to many people that it is becoming more mainstream because it is becoming regulated.

Nick Day: That’s a great point. Besides, international or cross border payments appears to be one of the key advantages that companies can benefit from utilising blockchain-based solutions.

Payroll operations are now responsible for paying increasingly growing global workforces. Blockchain promises faster cross border payments, at less expense with reduced errors.

On this basis, blockchain could potentially solve one of the most significant costs involved in payroll, which is the cost of making a cross-border payment. Fewer errors and faster payments would mean fewer disputes between a company and its workers.

Therefore, for companies with international workers applying themselves to projects across the globe, it seems that blockchain-based payroll systems could work exceptionally well.

Anita Lettink: Absolutely! International payment is an area where you see lots of initiatives for blockchain applications. Also, some companies are actively using this to speed up their transactions against fewer costs. There is, therefore, an excellent business case to move to the blockchain when it comes to transferring money across borders.

Nick Day: My last question is this. If you were a payroll manager right now, what is the best way to get to grips with blockchain technology?

Anita Lettink: I would recommend either watching a video or reading some blogs, ideally your blogs or my blogs which go into significant detail about all areas of blockchain. I would undoubtedly recommend undertaking additional research because you need to understand where this is headed. Even if it doesn’t mean that your full process will be running on a blockchain, if you’re using an external provider for some parts of it, you will probably see blockchain start to pop up in their service offerings, and that means that you need to understand what they are doing.

I would also recommend that you ask your external provider to give you an update or presentation on how they apply it and the use cases with which they are experimenting.

However, I wouldn’t yet recommend going as far as diving deep into the technology because it is complex, and you need to have an excellent grasp of technology to be able to comprehend it fully.

There are more than enough blockchain 101s out there to get you comfortable with at least the basic principles.

Nick Day: I hope that Anita and I have, through the content in this eBook, helped provide you with a good foundation for understanding how blockchain is going to impact the payroll industry. We must prepare ourselves for the evolution of payroll as early as possible so that we can prepare for it.

Anita Lettink: I agree; it is essential that people pay attention to what is happening in the industry, especially around new technology innovations. Not only about blockchain, but also about artificial intelligence, AI, chatbots, because it’s going a lot faster than most of us think.

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/blockchain-and-crypto-fe.jpg 364 906 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232023-07-19 10:28:022023-07-19 10:50:07Blockchain and cryptocurrency – Do we really understand what these technologies are? Interview with Anita Lettink

Is your corporate vision just a fairy-tale or can your business live happily ever after?

July 19, 2023/in HR News/by jga2023

We finally launch our business idea but then what happens? Often, the fairy-tale vision we set out to achieve has remained exactly that, a fairy-tale. We sit with our heads in our hands, demoralised and wonder what we could have or should have done differently. You may have a profitable enterprise, but it just isn’t the business you dreamed off. Instead, your dream remains a one-man-band operation. Perhaps you haven’t taken risks or invested in people. Maybe you were afraid others wouldn’t share your vision or maybe you struggled to delegate because, frankly, you believed others wouldn’t work as hard or as competently as you do. Sound familiar?

Never let a door close in your mind if there is no need to close it. Instead, open doors by inspiring others to get behind your vision with a great story. This is what maverick leaders do, and it is never too late to start developing yours. Storytelling is a passion close to my heart. I studied political theatre as an MA and during this time, I immersed myself for years in political stories of hardship, anguish, diversity, enlightenment, community and philosophy. The retelling of these stories through books, plays and performances has profoundly impacted those that have experienced them. However, stories should not be confined to books or the theatre. They can be a powerful tool for achieving business success too.

Are you unique? Yes. Does this mean others cannot share your vision or outperform your own standards? No. It is through community, collaboration and the evolution of diverse ideas, practices and processes that we can continually be surprised and inspired by others. However, to empower others to action, often you need a great story. For thousands of years, people have been inspired by fantastic tales of risk-taking, struggle, love and community, which is why entrepreneurs and maverick leaders know they need to utilise this powerful tool if they wish to achieve the fairy tale ending.

Historically, storytelling had the purpose of creating communities. The first examples date back to the Chauvet cave in France, where representations of storytelling date back over 36,000 years. For our ancestors, storytelling was a practice used to help create communities, share ideas and create unity. Stories also help provide a sense of culture, history, and identity.

Subsequently, the importance of storytelling in business should never be underestimated. When implemented effectively, stories can help transform your business identity, boost profits, inspire teams and help reach new customers.

Stories provide customers with context to understand why your business is worth investing in. Real-life stories help consumers to connect with you and your brand. If your story is relatable, then customers and employees may even see themselves as a character within it. Storytelling is an emotional pastime that can help you to significantly distinguish your business from your competitors. At the very least, your story should be an essential part of your internal and external marketing strategy, and it should relate to the values and behaviours that form your culture and vision.

The power of storytelling was highlighted by significantobjects.com, a literary and anthropological experiment devised by Rob Walker and Joshua Glenn, which auctioned off insignificant objects on eBay alongside heartfelt short stories. The objects, purchased for $1.25 each on average, sold for nearly $8,000.00 in total. This shows how a smart storytelling approach can increase the perceived value of something and generate significant ROI.

Storytelling has also proven to increase employee engagement. We know that at the heart of all the best businesses are its employees, and therefore, a company only succeeds when its employees do. So why not start cultivating the right attitudes within your business with a compelling story?

When it comes to understanding your story, don’t just share a vision. Instead, share your struggles, values, motivations, aspirations and everything else that contributes to providing your employees and customers with a greater sense of purpose by being part of it. If you want to revolutionise the world, share the “what, how and why” of your story. It is already what the fastest growing businesses in the world are doing, and that is because people like to connect with stories and place themselves within them. People also want to remember stories and then share them, which drives action and results. Stories provide meaning, create context and they evoke a sense of purpose.

So, if you are a leader or business owner who is closing more doors than they are opening, I recommend you take some time to analyse what your story is. If you don’t, you may find your business dreams and aspirations remain a far-off fairy tale. However, if you adopt a storytelling mentality and take the time to understand and develop your own profound story, then you never know what your business might achieve.

As a risk-taking maverick entrepreneur, you can have your “happily ever after”, but first, sit down and answer this question: What is your story?

 

Written by Nick Day, Managing Director at JGA Recruitment Group – the UK’s leading Payroll & HR Recruitment Consultancy and Executive Search Firm.

JGA Recruitment Group| Payroll & HR Recruitment

E-Mail: nick@jgarecruitmentinc.com | Tel: 01727 800 377

Copyright©: JGA Recruitment Group 2023

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/corporate-vision-fe.jpg 364 906 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232023-07-19 08:46:262023-11-24 14:10:55Is your corporate vision just a fairy-tale or can your business live happily ever after?

“Outdream Yourself” – Womenomics, Role Models and Boardroom Politics

July 18, 2023/in HR News/by jga2023

Glass Ceilings

Women in business have traditionally experienced considerable challenges progressing beyond a certain level. The glass ceiling is a well-known and discussed phenomenon where women are understood to face invisible barriers that make it difficult for them to advance beyond a certain point in their careers. While women represent 50% of the workforce at lower levels, at boardroom level, it is unusual to find many women in the top seats at the table (in fact, at the time of writing this, there are just six female Chief Executives in the FTSE 100).

The Gender Pay Gap

The recent gender pay gap legislation has brought issues related to pay to the forefront of business, and rightly so, as the median aggregate gap for full-time workers is still 13.7%. There are many reasons for this, namely unequal caring responsibilities, a divided labour market, men taking up most senior roles and of course, we still have outright discrimination in the workplace.

Womenomics Defined

Now, I appreciate, as a man, I cannot ever fully comprehend or comment on how it feels to be a woman in the workplace. Neither, do I pretend to. However, I am married to an inspirational female entrepreneur and, together, we both want to live in a world where opportunities for our children (we have a daughter and a son) are never limited by gender. Subsequently, when my wife and I came across the concept of ‘Womenomics in business’, I wanted to investigate it a little further, particularly as three female role models I discuss in this article, have all had a profound impact on my life. Womenomics It is a concept that Claire Shipman and Katty Kay termed for what they see as an upcoming paradigm shift in the way individuals and companies approach work, due to an increase in the value of women in the workforce. Primarily, their research highlights the rise in value that female management brings to companies.

Is the value of women in boardrooms improving?

So, the question is, are things changing or improving? I believe they are *but slowly). Companies are finally realising the significant value women offer at boardroom level. The 2017 appointment of Emma Walmsley as CEO at GSK, the world’s seventh-largest pharmaceutical company is an excellent example of how the tables are beginning to turn at the highest echelons of business. This traction coincides with increased levels of female participation within firms across the spectrum. In some countries, such as Norway, legal quotas for the numbers of women required in the boardroom have been set, and companies are obliged to find ways to achieve these. The law states that public companies must have a minimum of 40% female non-executive directors. However, while some successes have been made, there is still a lack of female role models, which is believed to be discouraging to women. Businesses are subsequently affected because insufficient female numbers in the boardroom have proven to significantly reduce new female applications, which drastically reduces the talent pool for that company.

MBA Challenges

One of the challenges has been getting women into business schools to take MBAs or executive MBA programmes. A study by the Financial Times on Executive MBA rankings discovered that in the top EMBA courses, women only accounted for 28% of participants. This is a problem not just for women, but also for MBA programmes, which need diversity in classrooms to inspire critical thought. Business schools believe that one barrier is a lack of female role models at senior levels, and to overcome this, they feature women heavily in their marketing.

Lack of Women studying Stem subjects

To attract the growing female market, schools are also starting to design programmes that fit better around the needs of women. However, I think these changes need to happen right at the grassroots level. For example, there are significantly fewer women studying Stem subjects compared to men, which has resulted in women accounting for only 14.4% of all people working in Stem in the UK (well short of the country’s goal of 30%).

Appropriate Role Models

Again, one way to encourage a higher uptake is to use more appropriate role models that tackle Stem male stereotypes. As much as I love Brian Cox (and I really do love his work), we need to expose our children to female pioneers that inspire our children to dream bigger, at an earlier age, so uptake in stem related subjects can improve. For example, how many young girls are taught about women such as Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM, Barbara McClintock, Geneticist or Roberta Bondar, Astronaut Neurologist? Ginni joined IBM as a system engineer and progressed to CEO, leading IBM into cloud computing, analytics, and the commercialisation of IBM Watson along the way. Barbara is the only woman to have received, by herself, a Nobel Prize for Medicine and Roberta was Canada’s first female astronaut and the world’s first astronaut-neurologist.

Fewer Women studying Economics or Politics

The problems are not just confounded to stem related subjects either. One of the first autobiographies I ever read was “Until Death Do Us Part: My Struggle to Reclaim Colombia (2002).” by Ingrid Betancourt, a female Colombian politician who wrote about her experiences in the impeachment process against Colombian President E. Samper. Her book, coupled with the performance work and writings of female Cuban-American interdisciplinary artist, Coco Fusco, inspired me to study an MA in South American Politics and Performance Art. Both these women are role models who inspired me to study politics, so I have no doubt they could also be role models for others too. I highlight these examples because when it comes to economics and politics, again, there are fewer women than men enrolling on these courses. The FT cited in an article in April 2018 titled “Where are all the female economists?” that only a third of undergraduate economics students in the UK are women, despite 57 per cent of total undergraduates being female. The article suggests this is likely due to an image problem. For example, Elinor Ostrom (1933-2012) remains the only woman awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics, but how many of our children at school know about her work?

University Political Pay Gaps

Meanwhile, the Economist recently featured a poll that found the gender pay gap among British adults with a university degree, and an interest in politics, to be a whopping 37 per cent. (The Economist, July 2019). The interest gap in politics and economics seems to start in childhood, and then widen with age and education. Subsequently, we need more female role models to be highlighted and studied at an earlier stage, to inspire and encourage women to follow a path into economics or political studies.

The Good News

The good news is that many organisations are springing up to help women advance in business. For example, ‘Women in Marketing’ aims to empower women in this field. Other similar organisations focused on developing the next generation of female talent and advancing the role of women in leadership include ‘ShesBack’ which helps organisations access the potential of women returning to work after a career break, ‘PowerWomen’ and the ‘Women in Business Network’ (among many others). These organisations seek to help women gain new business opportunities by helping them to build stronger networks. This also helps increase the exposure of younger generations of women to suitable role models that will inspire them on their journey.

Brands Promoting Women in Leadership

The North Face is one International retailer who is taking significant strides forward in terms of inspiring generations of young women. One of its recent campaigns specifically focused on encouraging more women to get into outdoor adventuring. The campaign, titled “She Moves Mountains”, was explicitly aimed to inspire young female explorers. This was achieved by focusing on female role models that have reached the pinnacle in the adventure industry – such as rock climbers and ultra-marathon runners. One of the aims has been to ensure that the brand includes women more effectively than in the past.

Moreover, The North Face brand understands that women are consumers who want to spend money on outdoor kit too, and are subsequently focusing more on design for women than they ever have in the past. Also, the campaign supported women directors with $25,000 grants to help elevate more women into the film directing profession. As such, the whole focus of the brand is morphing to become more inclusive, while simultaneously recognising that females are also significant consumers. By inspiring more women with female role models, the North Face brand knows they will secure increased female consumer spending on its products.

A Strategic Business Imperative
The North Face is committed to promoting women in leadership as being a strategic and visible business imperative, and these are just some examples of how “Womenomics” is affecting the way firms are starting to change their approach to business. However, companies still need to push further for real transformation.

The Female CEO

Currently, we have just six female CEOs in the FTSE 100, and those six earn only 4.2% of the total pay awarded to FTSE 100 CEOs – highlighting that there is still a gender pay gap, even at the top levels of business. When we compare this to the Fortune 500, only 6.4% of Fortune 500 corporations have female CEOs. The good news is that we are starting to see a steady increase in these percentages. In the past eight years, 32 women have been named CEO of a Fortune 500 company, that’s over 50% of the total number since 1972 when Katherine Graham was the first female to be named CEO for a Fortune 500 company at the Washington Post. This positive movement shows that the theory of Womenomics in business is, at least, improving, but still far too slowly in my opinion.

My Womenomics Conclusion

There is no doubt that there is a long way to go until we achieve real equality in the workplace, but all the signs that genuine transformation is starting to take place are there (albeit slowly). In education, in boardrooms, and as consumers, we need to see the value women bring to the workplace highlighted more frequently. Female role models need to be more visible too. After all, these role models are not just empowering to women, but also men! One of my inspirations is Chrissy Wellington, a four-time Ironman World Champion and yet when I mention her, very few people know who she is. And yet, if I say the name, Alistair Brownlee, well, you get my point. The fact is, businesses who embrace Womenomics will benefit from extraordinary changes that can have a significant impact on overall performance. A report in the Journal of Corporate Finance supports this by highlighting that companies with women in their boardrooms performed better than those without.

Outdream Yourself

There are likely many elements to a discussion such as this that I have missed in this post. However, for those unfamiliar with the term ‘Womenomics’, I hope it is now a term that will become more prominent. Businesses need to appreciate the benefits associated with diversifying its boardrooms, but also understand that the word “talent” is genderless. I want my children to be uninhibited in life by the goals they set themselves – whatever they may be. I hope that when my daughter is old enough to take her first steps into the unknown world of business, that she feels she can achieve whatever she wants to achieve, without limits.

As my wife regularly says to my daughter “Outdream yourself”.

What do you think? What women have had a profound impact on your life? I would love to know.

 

Written by Nick Day, Managing Director at JGA Recruitment Group – the UK’s leading Payroll & HR Recruitment Consultancy and Executive Search Firm.

JGA Recruitment Group| Payroll & HR Recruitment

E-Mail: nick@jgarecruitmentinc.com | Tel: 01727 800 377

Copyright©: JGA Recruitment Group 2023

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/women-in-action-fe-1.jpg 364 906 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232023-07-18 15:46:242024-03-11 16:32:55“Outdream Yourself” – Womenomics, Role Models and Boardroom Politics

*Guest Article* Understanding Generation Z – Alex Atherton

May 19, 2023/in HR News, Payroll News/by jga2023

Gen Z is the most important generational shift so far, but their experiences and outlook are not understood well enough by those who have come before them. Gen Z has huge, yet mostly untapped, potential to meet the challenges of today.

It is a significant topic for me. Gen Z is the generation which attended the secondary schools I led from 2006 to 2018. Their years of birth are from 1995 to 2009.

By 2025 Gen Z will form over a quarter of the UK workforce. The older ones are already in management positions in large companies or ripping up the rulebook on their own. Their importance in the workplace will grow with every passing year.

Key characteristics of Gen Z include:

  • Diligent – their academic outcomes are significantly higher than any which have come before. No generation has worked harder at school or university.
  • Prudent – they have inherited poor economic circumstances. Their education was affected by austerity and as soon as they got to the workplace there was a pandemic.
  • Patient – key life milestones such as buying property and retiring will either happen much later on average should they happen at all. This has an impact on their attitudes towards working life.

Too often the literature, and media reporting, around Generation Z is glass half-empty material or outright negative. References to ‘snowflakes’ have become a trope.

There can also be a real reluctance amongst the older generations to see the world through Gen Z’s eyes. Attempts to make them ‘more like us’ and help them to get their ‘heads around the real world’ are not helpful and will only backfire.

There is a need to take some time to understand.

Researching the key characteristics of Generation Z reveals a whole host of challenges for leaders and their organisations. The key ones will come as no surprise. They are recruitment, retention, motivation, engagement and training.

So how to overcome these challenges? A number of solutions are recommended below.

Be clear, be thorough

There are significant challenges in attracting Gen Z candidates for any organisation. It is easier than it has ever been to set up your own, or several times if you so choose.

Trust in traditional organisations is not what it used to be. This includes employers, many of whom had a ‘last in, first out’ approach when cuts were made around the pandemic.

I advise organisations to spell out the specifics of the role they wish to recruit for in more detail than they might ever consider reasonable. Your documentation needs to be crystal clear and therefore go for maximum transparency.

Not only does this avoid surprises down the line, but it also inspires confidence that you have thought it all through. This gives the impression you are more likely to survive when the next economic crisis or pandemic hits.

Be who you say you are

Authenticity is everything to a generation who have lived with clickbait throughout their formative years. Gen Z has highly developed filtering skills. The fact that something is said in black and white neither means it is true, nor that it was even put together by a human in the first place.

Text is not enough in this day and age. Video has become the expectation. There are good reasons why TikTok has become the search engine of choice amongst Gen Z, rather than Google. Videos are harder to fake and allows your potential applicants to make an informed choice.

It is also not enough to state your key values and principles on your website, and once at the start of employment or a recruitment process. Gen Z is very used to the repetition of messages, and if they stop hearing something it may make them wonder why.

Regular feedback on performance

Part of the reason for the stellar academic outcomes of Gen Z is that they are used to having granular feedback on their performance.

I am often told by employers that their younger staff do not want to hear ‘bad news’ about their work. My experience is very different. Gen Z absolutely does want to know how well they are doing, but platitudes do not help them.

They have come to expect not only a breakdown of how they are doing aspect by aspect, but also to be directed to resources which can help them with each of them. If they are shown how to improve their A level and degree results they will make the most of it more than any previous generation.

Make Professional Development Personal

This aspect has two meanings. The first is personal in the sense of ‘bespoke’. For example, induction to your organisation may have some core features but also some optional elements according to specialism and interest.

The second aspect refers to Gen Z’s development as young adults. As schools have become increasingly focused on examination outcomes over time, there has not been a commensurate increase in the focus on personal development. Work experience has not been a common feature of their education.

Consequently, there is gap between the quality of their qualifications and the wider skills needed for success in the workplace. Savvy employers ensure their new employees have to the opportunity to fill the gaps.

Finally, the fact that it has become harder to recruit and retain has led some employers to adopt a ‘we need to take what we can get’ approach. Gen Z did not work as hard as they did to work for an employer with that level of ambition. It is absolutely possible to recruit and retain the best of this generation with a shift in mindset and a new approach.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alex Atherton is a leadership coach and team coach. He is also a former secondary school headteacher who worked with Gen Z in their formative years. He blogs, vlogs, talks and consults on how organisations can recruit, retain, engage and motivate them.

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Understanding-Generation-Z-Article-800-x-600-2.png 600 800 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232023-05-19 11:15:222024-03-11 16:32:36*Guest Article* Understanding Generation Z – Alex Atherton

*Guest Article* How To Beat Imposter Syndrome When Applying For Jobs

April 18, 2023/in HR News/by jga2023

If you suffer from Imposter Syndrome, you are dealing with a persistent inability to realistically assess your suitability for a role. You’re not alone – it takes up head space in a large number of people (estimated at around 70% of the population – with Albert Einstein, Serena Williams, Tom Hanks, and Lady Gaga among celebrity sufferers), but that doesn’t help when applying for jobs, and especially during job interviews, when it is important to be (and to be seen to be) confident in your competence and skills.

 

You may think you’re unaffected, but we can suffer from Imposter Syndrome when operating outside our comfort zone or in a competitive arena. And that’s a frequent scenario for job applicants when it’s easy to only see the success and confidence of others.

 

Symptoms of Imposter Syndrome include:

  • Thinking that your peers are more capable than you are
  • Fear of being seen as a failure
  • Feeling unworthy of attention
  • Downplaying your accomplishments
  • Crediting luck for any success you may have
  • Holding back from reaching goals you should be able to reach

 

But Imposter Syndrome exists only in the mind, and we often fail to acknowledge that other people feel exactly the same as we do. Social Media doesn’t help. Very few of us present an honest warts-and-all picture of ourselves. Our accounts are carefully polished; our recycling bins are rammed with images we will never show friends and family, never mind post online. But it rarely clicks that everyone else is doing the same thing. And feeling the same way. You are far from being the only one suffering from Imposter Syndrome. And it is something you can mitigate with a few Imposter Syndrome coping strategies:

 

Don’t be fooled by comparing yourself to others

It is easy to overestimate how skilful or successful other people are. The reality is that everyone else probably feels just as insecure as you do. They are likely looking at you and wishing they were as calm, confident and successful as you. Don’t compare yourself to others – they could be faking it much more than you are.

 

Note your accomplishments

Create a list that reminds you of how great you are, and that other people think you’re great too, and refer to this list when you have moments of doubt. This helps reframe your mind and evaporate less helpful thoughts.

 

Celebrate successes

Celebrating success helps dispel thoughts that we’re undeserving and gives us confidence in our abilities. Be sure to celebrate small wins as well as large ones. Imposter Syndrome sufferers tend to move on too quickly and treat wins with relief rather than taking pride in an achievement and properly marking it.

 

Share failures

We see other people’s successes, but we don’t always notice their flops, whereas we always see our own failures. This gives us a poor perspective and makes us think of ourselves as being less capable in comparison. Opening up with others can help demonstrate that you’re no different and that everyone has the same issues as you do. It can often be easier to speak to strangers than those who know you well.

 

Samuel Beckett once said, ‘Ever tried, ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better’. Failure is not a sign of being awful. Failure is a sign that you’re trying to achieve something. You should give yourself credit for this. One thing is certain, if you never try, you’ll never fail, but you’ll also never become successful.

 

Talk about it

Don’t be afraid to share your feelings about Imposter Syndrome with others – you may find they’re experiencing the same issues as you. This can give you more confidence and help you see that your thoughts are irrational – particularly when you talk to someone you believe has a good opinion of you.

 

Reframe your position

Fear can often be the prevailing emotion when it comes to Imposter Syndrome, but you need to look at situations through a different lens. Instead of thinking that any moment everyone will discover that you don’t know what you’re doing, shift things in your head. You may not know all the answers, for now, but you’re smart enough to figure them out – this is a far more empowering way of looking at your situation.

 

Stop chasing perfection

Being 99% good at something is not a failure. Appreciate that other people may only be capable of doing the same job to 70%. 80% will be good enough, and 90% will be better than most. Don’t think of this as lowering the bar – it’s simply reframing how well you’ve done and what you’ve achieved. Also, many jobs don’t need to be done to 100%. Perfectionists will spend time getting a job from 80% to 100%, but a smarter strategy may be to use that time to do a second task to 80% and get much more done.

 

Grasp life 

Success in anything only exists outside your comfort zone, so you need to take action – feel the fear and do it anyway, even if your head is awash with self-doubt. As your comfort zone expands, have confidence in the fact that your levels of anxiety will reduce automatically.

 

There’s a great quote by the ladies’ fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg, who said: You always look at the woman across the room. And you think, ‘The woman across the room is so confident, so poised and so put together, and so on.’ But that woman is looking at YOU. And for her, YOU are the woman across the room. Everybody’s the same. It’s just a big waste of time to be insecure.

 

Hopefully, there are a few tips in that lot that will help if you’re suffering from Imposter Syndrome (and let’s face it, there’s a fair chance that you are, statistically speaking). Too often, Imposter Syndrome holds people back from achieving their full potential, but recognising it for what it is, is a huge step towards fixing it.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ian Child is a former corporate leader, co-founder of the training company propertyCEO (propertyceo.co.uk) and the author of ‘Your Own Personal Time Machine’, a guide to getting your life back, available exclusively from amazon.co.uk. in paperback and e-book.

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/How-To-Beat-Imposter-Syndrome-When-Applying-For-Jobs-Article-800-x-600-1.png 600 800 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232023-04-18 09:40:132024-03-11 16:33:17*Guest Article* How To Beat Imposter Syndrome When Applying For Jobs

7 Innovative Approaches to Improve Your HR and Talent Management in the Digital Era

March 2, 2020/in HR News/by jga2023

Digital transformation is a priority in recent times. Today, talent is making a rapid shift towards becoming digital natives. Employees expect to be a part of a flexible, collaborative, energetic and inclusive workplace. In fact, companies that have succeeded in getting digital leadership right, have displayed better performance with higher engagement levels for employees.

However, the introduction of a brand-new management standpoint at par with the paradigm shift of digitization is not enough to improve talent management. The lack of dedication can be a severe hindrance to this transformation. Thus, an overall change in the approach to HR recruitment is essential to ensure that all stakeholders place their trust in this new program.

Human Resources (HR) has a crucial role to play in digital transformation, with employee onboarding and engagement being vital aspects of the process. The company culture of a digital organization must center around a customer-centric mindset that leads to a transparent and agile process.

HR professionals hired through an HR recruitment agency must ensure that the change occurs throughout the company, while confirming that employees are onboard with the current values and purpose of the organization.

Approaches to Improve HR and Talent Management

The constant fight to retain an empowered worker in this digital age is no secret. High performers today have a clear understanding of their value and it is easy for recruiters and competitors to screen and discover them.

Digital labor platforms have paved the way for competitors to pick the best people from their companies and help employees declare their presence to the world in unimagined ways. Here is a list of approaches that can be taken to enhance your HR and talent management in the digital era:

1. Onboarding and Training

Labour platforms today help you develop a personalized, comprehensive and quick onboarding experience to make sure that new HRs rapidly generate greater value. In fact, creating an onboarding agenda enabled Google to improve the productivity of its new employees to over 15%.

In a business arena with swiftly evolving technology, providing one-time training might not suffice. Enterprises in knowledge-oriented industries require virtual learning, self-directed and ongoing support mechanisms. In this context, efficient online learning programs and in-house training sessions can be of great help.

2. Measure Your Success Rates

Apart from areas of competence and innovative skills, HR must deal with the challenge of proposing relevant metrics. These metrics related to optimum performance in combination with other digital objectives put in place by the company.

Achievable goals need to be broken into proper KPIs and linked ROI, which define success at various levels of the transformation. Talent management data need to be incorporated with business intelligent data and vice versa for effective planning and monitoring.

3. Transform the Management

Though opposition to change begins from the lower tiers, the prime aim of any digital HR strategy is to support the Management and drive leadership during this shift towards a customer-oriented approach. Thus, both the training and acquisition processes of a human resources recruitment agency must revolve around creation of the means for a workable approach.

A change in Management is mainly a change in mentality. However, HR agencies must educate and create digital leaders who believe in deriving results from true innovation. An HR must back an infrastructure that lets the Management define steps to real outcomes with clarity. Companies that succeed in creating an environment for development, knowledge transfer and performance management reach the heights of digital competence.

4. Clear Communication

For efficient talent management, a balance must exist between the means and frequency of communication among the HR and individual teams. It is important to establish transparency regarding time-sensitive topics as well as long-term goals during team meetings. Try sharing the podium so that the discussion does not appear to be a one-way street.

Getting your team to put away their cell phones during the meeting can greatly help you improve employee engagement. The use of mobile technology can be extremely distracting in meetings. You can also appoint a different individual to carry out the meetings each week. This will give them the accountability to capture crucial points, thereby ensuring a productive meeting. Lastly, HR management must include the creation of a robust sense of connect and collaboration within the team by establishing social media communities.

5. Use Multi-Channel Activities

Digital HR processes capture mobile, social and cloud technologies to collect and study data while overseeing the employee experience. HR managers need to build a concrete plan inclusive of platforms and multi-channel activities to handle the complete integrated programs at various levels of the digital transformation procedure.

Thus, the HR needs to work towards a seamless integration of various processes and systems across multiple applications, from performance management, collaboration, staff training to communication tools. Systematic integrations pave the way for more informed decision-making practices and improved productivity.

6. Cross-Functional Collaboration

Human resource in an era of digital interference are intertwined with the company’s infrastructure. An HR needs to have a strong collaboration with IT to recruit talent and create a platform for the easy flow of information and centralized intelligence. However, in case of a customer-centric approach, customer journey mirrors the employee experience.

A huge challenge faced by an HR recruitment agency in the recent digital encouraging HRs to establish strong co-dependencies with other units in the organization. If done successfully, this helps a company take the needs and requirements of a workforce into account and move towards long-term goals.

7. Collaborate for Success

An HR is backed by endless options accessible to assist a team. Thus, it is essential that every human resource recruitment agency looks for individuals motivated in building an association aimed at success and effective talent management. You can make use of social media platforms to improve your network connections and strengthen your community at work. Apps can also be used as great on-the-job resources to enhance employee engagement.

Try promoting innovation through organized brainstorming sessions, design thinking, as well as advocating diversity of backgrounds and perspectives within the groups. Employees consider their leader to be the main guide who makes the best decisions for their personal and professional development. Therefore, as an HR, it is imperative that you try and partner with employees for success by mentoring them to exploit their strengths to the fullest.

Nevertheless, executive alignment and technology are not enough to propel an organization’s digital transformation. At the end of it all, a company’s most asset is its employees. Working towards their engagement and motivation gives rise to a culture of innovation that is essential for a company’s success in this digital age.

HR experiences that are strictly derived from client-grade digital practices and focus greatly on an employee’s professional and personal well-being help bring out the best. At the end of the day, it is a purpose which drives people, and people who drive a company’s growth.

Article originally published in ‘My Story’ here: https://yourstory.com/mystory/innovative-approaches-improve-hr-talent-digital

Written by Nick Day, Founder of the award-winning recruitment agency, JGA Recruitment Group.

If you need help with a Payroll, HR or Marketing Recruitment problem, please get in touch.

Nick@jgarecruitmentinc.com

01727800377

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Approache-to-Improve-HR-and-Talent-Management-1580102434166.png 511 668 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232020-03-02 17:09:462024-03-11 16:34:037 Innovative Approaches to Improve Your HR and Talent Management in the Digital Era
Marketing Blog

7 Tech Trends in HR and Payroll that are set to continue…

June 29, 2017/in HR News, Payroll News/by jga2023

New technologies continue to enrich the ease of providing HR and Payroll services to employees, and we predict the following trends will carry on in the months and years ahead.

1. Cloud-Based Payroll & Payroll Services
The Cloud is becoming increasingly integral to almost everyone in everyday life, and this is the same within the workplace. Businesses have become increasingly dependent on big data storage that remains accessible on the move. We have witnessed the cloud revolutionise the way information is stored and accessed within the workplace. Cloud-based apps are providing cost-efficient, real-time flexibility and convenience and with data analytics becoming an ever more important aspect of the modern payroll and HR professional, we can only see Cloud usage increasing. Data tracking analytics from tracking employee hours, managing payroll, monitoring absence, benchmarking data or even making amendments – whatever the requirement, cloud data can be accessed in real time anywhere and at any time. Cloud services provide ultimate convenience and efficiency savings for payroll and HR departments alike, and as such we anticipate this trend will continue as upgrades continue to make it even more efficient.

2. A Growing Focus on Data Security
As businesses usage of cloud-based payroll & HR services increases, one primary concern that often accompanies its usage is security. Confidential employee data information must be protected, and this has led the way for third-party service providers to offer new security systems which are being taken up by HR and payroll departments to ensure they are adequately protected. Fraud, identity theft and corporate hacking is on the increase so protecting employee HR and payroll data has never been more important. Added security provides more assurance that personal employee information stays protected. This investment in HR & Payroll data security is a trend that will continue as hackers become more sophisticated with the way they access and utilise stolen data.

3. Customisation of Payroll & HR Software and Partnering with Multiple Vendors.
Most companies employ a wide-range of employees, from part-time hourly, salaried, and freelance to expats, inpats and globally based staff. More and more businesses are now recruiting an increasingly global workforce. These differences all require a custom approach to ensure that systems can output accurate employee data and payment calculations. The payroll & HR legislation is often complex across different global locations, and no solution can cover all parameters and possibilities across all countries. Subsequently, we are seeing more and more Payroll & HR Systems being customised to cope with unique company employee requirements. More and more businesses are now partnering with multiple vendors in order to ensure that they can accurately deliver sophisticated services to these diverse workforces. The one-system-fits-all approach is outdated. Suppliers are responding by specialising in niches where they can guarantee excellent levels of service and businesses are responding by being more demanding of current providers. Partnering with multiple service providers and customising internal systems is a trend we believe will continue. Employee retention metrics have been linked heavily with a business’s ability to offer accurate, accessible and efficient HR and Payroll services to its employees. Unique, bespoke and customised systems and engaging with multiple partners makes this possible.

4. Focusing on the Team, Not the Individual.
HR departments are focusing more on collaboration and integration now than ever before. Employees are assessed, and recruitment decisions are made based on cultural and behavioural profiling as opposed to just skills based assessments. This is a trend we have seen increase because employers are competing to be the brand of choice in their specialist markets to attract and retain staff. Businesses are subsequently recruiting talent based on team fit and by assessing how an individual may impact on overall team performance rather than just on individual performance alone. Skills based assessments are on the decline, but behavioural assessments are on the rise. With company growth and profits intrinsically linked to team performance, we see this trend continuing.

5. Embracing Data-driven Decisions
Data-driven decision making is a strategic practice within organisations reaching new levels of analysis and deployment. By utilising data, employers can make employment decisions regarding where and how existing employees should be managed and assigned. Based on the interests, personalities and skills of the employee, data-driven decisions can be made on a massive scale that has been proven to improve employee productivity and retention levels. By assigning roles to employees based on interests and personality profiling allows businesses to utilise its workforce more efficiently.

6. Employees Evaluations to Optimise Productivity
Employee evaluations are moving away from score-based systems towards various feedback routes from multiple sources. These are designed to focus more on continual performance, providing employees with specific feedback to help facilitate improvement. Offering frequent feedback fosters an environment which has been proven to increase employee productivity. Higher productivity results in increased profits for businesses so this is one optimisation process we see continuing as competing companies strive to be the brand of choice in their chosen markets.

7. Payroll & HR Robotic Process Automation and Predictive Analytics
Robotic Process Automation (RPA) is being utilised by businesses in increasingly smarter ways thanks to the cost savings automating processes can deliver. Many payroll processes can now be automated and virtual assistants and artificial intelligence is being applied to numerous payroll processes. Software is also being developed in a constant stream by developers to help HR & Payroll professionals analyse data in cleverer ways. Businesses are still discovering how best to use these RPA and analytics tools now at their disposal, and this has resulted in a new breed of payroll and HR professional emerging whose sole purpose is to effectively extrapolate, analyse and recommend (based on results) changes that can impact the bottom line.

Predictive analytics, in particular, are being incorporated to examine new and creative trends to help maximise profits. Information gained during payroll analysis can spot things such a fraud, overtime, sick days, and trends in the hours worked. When utilised effectively, the results can allow for HR and Payroll managers to implement significant cost-saving initiatives or spot costly fraudulent activities. The possibilities for how predictive analytics can benefit companies are endless so we see this trending for some time as HR and Payroll departments become smarter with how they can be incorporated and developed to improve efficiency. An increase in the need to hire skilled HR or Payroll Analytic Specialists is likely to follow.

This is by no means an exhaustive list. The HR & Payroll tech landscape changes extremely quickly and it is clear that if these trends are set to stay then payroll & HR professionals need to prepare for a more accessible, cloud-based, robotic and data driven future

I would welcome your views on how you see the market, what you see changing and which trends you think are here to stay (for now)…

Thanks for reading.

Please share and comment – I will try to interact with as many as possible!
This article was written by Nick Day, Managing Director at JGA Recruitment – the leading Global Payroll and HR Recruitment Specialist Employment Agency.

If you are looking for expert talent in the fields of Payroll, HR or Reward, then please reach out for a 15 minute ignition call and I would be delighted to discuss how we can help.
Nick Day
Managing Director

JGA Payroll & HR Recruitment
Email: nick@jgarecruitmentinc.com
Tel: 01727 800 377

https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/new-technologies.png 400 600 jga2023 https://jgarecruitmentinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/jgainc-logo.png jga20232017-06-29 10:25:112023-07-27 09:03:537 Tech Trends in HR and Payroll that are set to continue…
Page 5 of 512345

More News From JGA

  • Have You Reviewed Your Employee Value Proposition Recently?December 11, 2024 - 9:41 am
  • Have You Addressed The Gender Pay Gap & Staff Turnover For 2025?December 11, 2024 - 9:36 am
  • Are You Conducting Interviews Effectively?December 4, 2024 - 5:01 pm
  • Is Your Business Prepared to Navigate Payroll Compliance Without Mistakes?December 2, 2024 - 3:57 pm
  • Using Data to Drive Hiring DecisionsNovember 25, 2024 - 3:50 pm
  • Time and Attendance ManagementNovember 25, 2024 - 3:39 pm
  • Measuring Payroll Efficiency with Key Metrics and KPIsNovember 18, 2024 - 3:29 pm
  • Employee Self-Service: Empowering Your WorkforceNovember 11, 2024 - 11:04 am
  • The Global Payroll Disruptors Digest: Will Payroll Singularity Change Everything? Let’s Venture Into The Future!October 28, 2024 - 10:36 am
  • Following Up After Interviews – A Key to SuccessOctober 21, 2024 - 11:03 am
  • The Role of Big Data in Payroll: Insights and AnalyticsOctober 21, 2024 - 9:32 am
  • Payroll Outsourcing: Is It Right for Your Business?October 15, 2024 - 3:48 pm
  • Cloud-Based Payroll: Benefits and Best PracticesOctober 11, 2024 - 3:44 pm
  • Patience and Persistence: Keys to a Successful Job SearchOctober 4, 2024 - 3:12 pm
  • The No-Code Revolution: Transforming Payroll as We Know It – Unveiling Innovations: The Global Payroll Disruptors Digest – Edition 4September 30, 2024 - 12:01 pm
  • Practice Makes Perfect – Mastering the InterviewSeptember 25, 2024 - 11:19 am
James Gray Associates Ltd

Suite 4, 1 Lea Business Park
Lower Luton Road
Harpenden
Hertfordshire
AL5 5EQ

JGA Recruitment, Inc.

8 The Green, STE B
Dover,
Delaware, 19901
USA

Tel: +1 302 857 0446 | Email: info@jgarecruitment.com | Click to add send us a vacancy | Click to send us your resume

© Copyright 2025 - JGA Recruitment | Website Design by Lemongrass Media
  • Instagram
  • Telegram
  • Tiktok
Scroll to top