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Eye of Riyadh
Business & Money | Wednesday 9 March, 2022 10:32 am |
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Five trends making room for HR and payroll professionals at the decision-making table

In a world of rising complexity, the HR and Payroll profession demands a seat at the decision-making table

By Yolandi Esterhuizen , Registered Tax Practitioner & Director: Product Compliance, Sage Africa & Middle East

 

Over the past decade, human resources (HR) and payroll professionals have seen the complexity of their roles compounded. The shift towards digital technology, the arrival of new generations in the workplace, and an increasingly complicated legal and tax environment have all contributed to this ever-evolving landscape.

 

Moreso, with the rapid rise of remote working models and the fallout from the pandemic, HR and payroll professionals have even more challenges to face. This all unfolds at a time when businesses recognise that strategically focused HR and payroll departments have a pivotal role to play in building a workforce that provides a competitive edge.

 

As one of the most significant strategic concerns for Middle Eastern businesses, here are five trends shaping the HR and Payroll profession: 

 

  1. Compliance complexity 

The HR and payroll function is becoming increasingly complex, particularly in terms of compliance. At a time when HR professionals need to focus on strategic concerns such as talent recruitment, development, engagement and retention, they are spending a growing portion of their time on compliance instead. 

 

Getting a handle on remote work

 

Every part of the business has needed to adjust to new remote working models over the past 20 months, including HR. For many organisations, remote or hybrid working models appear to be here to stay. Forward-thinking organisations are now beginning to look more carefully at using cloud-based systems for HR management to drive performance.

 

New generations equal new workplace expectations 

 

HR departments are wrestling with how work is changing as a new generation moves into the workplace and millennials move up the ranks in management. 

 

Furthermore, younger generations such as Generation Z expect more from employers regarding ethics, social responsibility, and social issues. These digital natives have very different expectations of work and how and where they do it. Importantly, they are beginning their careers at a time when ‘work’ as we know it is evolving. This places the HR and payroll functions in an advantageous position to structure their cultures and ways of working to attract the best young talent. They collaborate and use technology differently from older employees because they grew up in a world of digital saturation. They also have new expectations in terms of work/life balance.

 

COVID-19 aftershocks

COVID-19 isn’t over, but we are hopefully getting better at managing it through a mixture of vaccination and non-pharmaceutical interventions. This has employees worried about job security in a down economy, and those with scarce skills come with new demands and expectations, especially around remote work. 

 

HR departments need to manage these expectations through a delicate balancing act. But, they are overwhelmed after a difficult year and a half. Processes such as recruitment, retention, onboarding and offboarding have become more complex in this landscape, and HR professionals in our survey reported they are generally less confident dealing with the impact of COVID-19. 

 

Tied up in manual red tape 

 

Even though HR and payroll automation solutions have been available for decades, many HR professionals report spending a staggeringly high percentage of their time on manual work. Sage research shows more than a third (35%) said they spend 30% or more of their daily time on payroll preparation and processing, while 83% agreed HR and payroll involve many repetitive tasks. This heavy reliance on manual processes not only drains time but also opens businesses to compliance and security risks. 

 

Getting complexity under control

 

For HR professionals to step up and take a more strategic role in the business, they need to tame the current challenges they face in administration and compliance. This is where forward-looking HR and payroll departments see technology playing an increasingly vital role in their future. Those with accessible, integrated cloud-based platforms are already reaping the rewards. Such systems streamline and automate their processes and provide real-time employee and organisational data needed for better reporting and analytics to inform strategy and planning. This equips them with the real-time insight they need to make substantial contributions at boardroom-level discussions about strategy, data security to improve compliance, and a streamlined payroll process to reduce errors, cut costs, and increase employee satisfaction. In turn, this helps the organisation harness its talent more effectively as a competitive advantage. 

 

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