|
|
| Name: |
McData
Corporation |
| Location: |
Broomfield,
Colorado |
| Business: |
Data
storage and networking solutions provider |
| Employees: |
1,000 |
|
n two years, McData tripled its number of employees, from fewer than 300 to
more than 1,000. As a result, the HR team had to re-evaluate the processes they
used to manage employee data and find ways to do more with less, says Deb
Morton, director of business systems. "We needed to drive non-essential costs
out of the business so we could be more efficient."
The company’s HR processes depended heavily on spreadsheets and paper
records. Résumés and employee files were maintained in hard copy, and the
employee roster and workers’ compensation information were tracked on
spreadsheets. Employee paperwork was frequently lost, and data inaccuracy led to
payroll going to the wrong departments and employees appearing in the wrong cost
centers. The company didn’t want to add more people to the HR department, but
the existing team of three HR reps, two administrators, two trainers, and a vice
president was overwhelmed by the work, and errors in employee data were
widespread.
It was not uncommon for employees to have three different social security
numbers recorded in three different databases, Morton says, and because of the
legacy system’s limited reporting capability, managers could not track
changes. "Because the information had to be entered manually into each
separate system, there was incorrect and inconsistent data all over the place."
The need to combine greater accuracy with less effort led them to the idea of
employee self-service. "It just makes sense for employees to enter their own
data directly," Morton says.
Already a client of Oracle, they implemented the software vendor’s HR
self-service application and immediately saw improvements in their processes.
Once all of the HR documents had been moved online, routing time for document
approval shrank dramatically. Instead of paperwork being sent through
inter-office mail to be approved by managers who are often out of town for days
at a time, now it is e-mailed so anyone can sign off on documents from anywhere
there is Internet access, she says. That means that approval of employee
documents, such as a promotion or a salary change, which used to take two to
three weeks to complete, now takes two days.
And because the data is entered directly online by employees, the amount of
paperwork handled by Morton’s team has been reduced by 80 percent, allowing
her to avoid hiring six new people to manage the growing workload. Accuracy has
also improved significantly now that fewer people handle the data.
Along with saving money, the self-service system has given management a
better overview of its resources, allowing them to act more tactically, she
adds. They now have up-to-the-minute employee data on such things as head count,
training, and employee review details. "Having access to this kind of
information enables them to make more effective decisions for the company."
For the most part, employees supported the transition to self-service. Morton’s
group marketed the switch through e-mails and the newsletter but offered little
training. The only push-back they received was from a few engineering folks
concerned about privacy, she says. "They were afraid that someone could use
the refresh button on the browser-based application to access their personal
data," she says. The fear was unfounded. Once data is taken off a screen, it
can’t be refreshed, she says. "Once we put their minds to rest, they
accepted the technology."
Selling managers on self-service, which will be rolled out by early 2003, has
been tougher than winning the support of employees, she adds. "In the past it
was easy to blame HR when information got lost or was incorrect. We were the
convenient scapegoats." Now managers will be expected to complete such tasks
as online performance appraisals, status changes, promotions, and hiring and
firing documentation.
Managers have been reluctant to undertake this responsibility, but Morton and
her team have met with them on several occasions to help ease the transition. In
staff meetings, lunch-and-learns, and computer-based training sessions, they’ve
introduced the managers to the new system, answered their questions, and
impressed upon them how cost-effective self-service can be. "Everyone here is
very cost-conscious," she says. "As we point out the benefit self-service
brings to the organization, the managers begin to accept it."