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Guide to rolling out self-service HR systems: Cascade HR (October 2009)    
Self-service systems will help HR departments empower line managers and employees. For example, typical functionality that HR might roll out to self-service users at employee level could be: request holidays (with authorisation route); request bank changes (with authorisation route); online payslips (typically read only); online timesheets (with authorisation); absence (typically read only); review personal planner; benefits; personal details; training and development; dependents; next of kin; online appraisals and review; and CPD. Typical functionality that HR might roll out to self-service users at manager level could be: authorise holidays; add absences; authorise online timesheets; manage employee requests; manage departmental training and development; review team planner; create departmental reports; run departmental reports; perform group actions; and online appraisals and review.
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HR – making a difference in the credit crunch: HR Access Solutions (Sep 2009)    
The world has changed. In a few short weeks in late 2008 the ‘credit crunch’, as the media styled it, descended and turned our economic and business world on its head. It created a chaos not witnessed in a generation, or even since 1929, and much of what we all knew with certainty to be permanent and bullet-proof was suddenly swept away. A little two-word phrase not known or uttered a year before was soon on everyone’s lips and carved into their brains. ‘Sub-prime’, the root cause of this debacle, entered our vocabulary and thundered through our world, evaporating credit, draining confidence and diluting wealth as it went. In rapid consequence, sales and profits plummeted and unemployment soared. In every sector and geography, buyers and sellers battened down the hatches for what by the dawn of 2009 was clear would be a very long and dark economic winter – that ultimate nightmare: a full-on, global recession. In no time at all, the strategies of businesses were torn apart, either placed in sharp reverse or put on hold for an indeterminable length of time. Survival became the single strategic priority.
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Succession planning: the future of your organisation: HR Access (September 2009)    
As organisations compete to attract, retain and engage good people, the ability to demonstrate career paths that excite employees is critical. If employees show their ability to achieve in the workplace, management teams must offer opportunities in order to retain talented individuals. After all, employees will always retain the option to choose to work for competitors or branch out on their own. Creating a roadmap of future leaders for the organisation, all of whom have the potential to manage the business and the challenges and needs it may face in the future, is a way of ensuring ongoing competitiveness and productivity. Succession planning is a focused look at how organisations – large or small – identify employees who can be developed to take on bigger and more demanding roles within the business. For many organisations it is about identifying as early as possible the next generation of potential leaders and talent. Succession planning is a stark reality for all organisations that need to attract and retain employees with the right skills and experience to drive the business forward in the future.
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10 things you need to know about HR system selection: CIBER(April 2009)    
Getting the most out of your people has never been so important to the success of your business. The current economic uncertainty may pose a challenge to HR investment, with budgetary expenditure kept to a minimum. However, now is actually a good time to investigate HR solutions, in that the benefits provided by such integrated systems can lead to better, more informed decision making, which ultimately will benefit the bottom line and improve the retention of key personnel. 1. Build a sound business case, not just for the HR department, but for the business. To give your recommendations for an integrated HR solution the best chance of being approved, HR needs to consider both the benefits it directly realises from HR system improvements and those that the business derives from having automated and integrated processes. Therefore it is essential to emphasise efficiency gains in addition to the strategic advantages such systems can deliver.
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Making flexible working work for your business: Carval Computing (March 2009)    
The topic of flexible working has been the subject of hot debate in recent months. Currently the only employees who have any legal right to request flexible working are those with a child under six or a disabled child under 18, or 6.8 million people in the UK who care for a sick, disabled or elderly person. However following the Walsh Review, a government-commissioned consultation undertaken by Sainsbury’s HR director Imelda Walsh, this is set to change. Walsh has recommended that the right to request flexible working is extended from parents of children under six to the 4.5 million parents with children up to 16, news which received a rapturous response from working family groups and trade unions alike. And potentially opens the floodgates for flexible working requests. This paper examines the types of flexible working schemes you might wish to consider, their reported benefits and how to avoid the potential pitfalls using sound management techniques and the latest technology.
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Integrated talent management: Oracle (July 2008)    
Although the need for talent management is critical, many organisations flounder when it comes to effectively leveraging a state-of-the-art technology solution. The primary difficulty lies in sharply diminished business benefits when organisations fail to take advantage of talent solutions that integrate fully with the core HR system of record and with each other. As a result, organisations often miss a decided competitive advantage when it comes to areas such as user adoption, the optimal use of technology and employee development, which is so critical in the talent shortage. Often this failure stems from poor strategic planning and – as statistics show – selecting niche or siloed solutions a-la-carte. An integrated approach is ideal for the forward-thinking organisation expanding its talent management scope or for an organisation exploring talent management for the first time. Real-time integration that optimises all aspects of talent management can best be achieved with a solution from the same vendor that provides the core HR system.
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Recruitment technology: going global: Bond (April 2008)    
IT recruitment technology must respond to the needs of the modern global economy and help organisations leverage the opportunities which exist from expanding into foreign territories and utilising the skilled international workforce. Indeed, the globalisation of the business world provides both opportunities and threats to the recruitment sector. Ensuring suitable capacity, solution scalability and the ability to recognise and manage CVs in foreign languages are all technology challenges which large organisations need to address and overcome if they are to expand globally. This paper explains how recruitment technology is adapting to meet the needs of global expansion and developing to satisfy the requirements of businesses worldwide. When an organisation seeks to deploy a globalised recruitment system, it faces three immediate challenges.
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The role of HR in managing workforce CO2 emissions: Vizual (April 2007)    
There is hardly a boardroom in the country that hasn’t at least discussed reducing its CO2 emissions in the last year. But relatively few companies are able to measure and manage their environmental impact successfully. Here we examine the issues and reveal how HR has a role to play in managing your business’ carbon footprint. Scarcely a day goes by when we fail to be bombarded in the media by news of climate change. Indeed the impact of CO2 emissions on our environment, weather patterns, biodiversity and on humanitarian issues is already tangible. It is, however, sometimes quite difficult to see how this relates to individual choices we make in our lifestyles and, for our businesses, what corporate strategies and business management processes we should follow to reduce and manage our CO2 emissions. This paper examines why businesses cannot afford not to appraise and manage their CO2 emissions. Ignoring the stark warning of the climate change these emissions bring poses a serious threat to commerce in both the short term – from loss of company market share and business value – and in the longer term – from loss of overall market.
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