Your company has decided to invest in its workforce and a talent management system to help
manage employee performance reviews, feedback and coaching, internal communications and a variety of
administrative, time-consuming HR tasks. From top to bottom, your company will enjoy saving time and
money while increasing return on equity and employee retention, just for starters.
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How to choose a talent management system for your company
1. How to Choose a Talent ManagementSystem
for Your Company
2. The good news:
Your company has decided to invest in its workforce and a talent management system to help
manage employee performance reviews, feedback and coaching, internal communications and a variety of
administrative, time-consuming HR tasks. From top to bottom, your company will enjoy saving time and
money while increasing return on equity and employee retention, just for starters.
The challenge:
Finding the perfect talent management system to suit your companyâs speciïŹc needs.
The road to success:
Take the time to study your options before choosing a talent management system. Determine your
speciïŹc goals and needs and then ensure that the talent management system you adopt is ïŹexible,
intelligent and ideally suited to those speciïŹc goals and needs.
The best time to start the selection process:
Now! The sooner you begin, the sooner you will enjoy and beneïŹt from the myriad beneïŹts talent
management will bring to your business.
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3. Where should we start?
Before you start to review and assess various talent management system options
for your company, make sure that you can comfortably answer the following ïŹve
questions:
1. Do you have support from your senior executives?
And more broadly, is your companyâs culture as a whole likely to support this effort?
If youâre still unsure on this end, make sure you discuss the potential beneïŹts for your business in
terms of employee retention and satisfaction, administrative time saved and improved internal
communication. If you notice resistance from one or two key stakeholders, address the issue with
them directly.
2. Do you have a budget for this (and what is it)?
As far as costs, the main items are the cost of talent management software, implementation and
internal administrative costs. Most business owners/HR teams are pleased to learn that talent
management systems often cost far less than they would have estimated.
3. Do you have time allotted for implementing and training on talent management?
Budget in time for research and selection, demos and questions, implementation and training with the
idea that all of this would happen several months prior to your annual employee performance reviews.
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4. 4. Why do you want to incorporate talent management into your company?
Examine the reasons that youâve reached this point and make sure that you can articulate them.
5. What beneïŹts do you speciïŹcally hope to reap from talent management?
Rather than a generic list of âsave timeâ or âless hassleâ (both good reasons), try to get as speciïŹc
as you can: âImprove employee retention by 10 percentâ or âreduce time spend on annual
performance reviews by 25 percent and dedicate it to creating a healthier workplace,â for example.
Prior to launching talent management ,
it is critically important that both your executive and HR teams are on board and can readily express
the beneïŹts of such a system. Likewise, even though most talent management systems are relatively
simple to implement, you should ensure that you have allotted time for this shift and that you have a
clear idea of what you would like to change, add or enhance with the addition of a talent management
system in your company.
The more clear and organized you are from the start, the easier it
will be to work with and select the ideal vendor for your business.
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5. What talent management options
should we research?
As you consider your options for adding a talent management system, weigh the pros
and cons and then make a list of your decisions related to the following factors:
âą Best of breed vs. suite:
When making this decision, you will select between a company focused on offering the best in talent
management software (best of breed) or one that provides software for a variety of general functions,
including talent management (suite). Unless you are looking to overhaul your entire IT function and
adopt one vendor to redo your companyâs complete technology platform, best of breed will typically
give you the talent management expertise that youâre seeking.
âą SaaS vs. onsite software:
Software-as-a-service or SaaS is the newer, more affordable, maintenance-free option in the world of
talent management. With a shared platform, the SaaS option makes implementing, maintaining and
upgrade simpler than the onsite software model, and, on the whole SaaS is generally ideal for most
companies, but itâs important to examine your culture and current needs.
âą Level of customization:
Resist the temptation to over-complicate your talent management process, since this can lead to
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6. signiïŹcant customization of the software. Instead, use this time to simplify or improve your process.
That will save lots of time and headaches down the road.
âą Budget:
If you havenât done so already, schedule a meeting with your CFO to discuss your companyâs budget
for talent management.
âą Timeline:
When does your annual employee review process typically take place? Aim to have your new talent
management system in place at least two or three months ahead of annual performance reviews to
allow time for familiarization.
âą Other X factors:
Again, if there is anything speciïŹc to your company that needs to be considered in terms of talent
management, take the time to examine your needs and your best options.
Once you have a list of the factors important to your business needs and culture, it will be easier to assess
and choose the ideal talent management system for your company.
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7. Checklist for evaluating vendors
When you launch into discussions with talent management system vendors, you can
use the following checklist to again ensure that you are getting exactly what your business
needs:
1. Does the vendor meet your functional requirements?
2. Is the vendor a good company/culture ïŹt with your business?
3. What does the vendorâs pricing structure look like? Are there any extras or hidden fees?
4. Is the contract monthly or long term? (Try to avoid long-term contracts for talent management tools.)
5. How long will it take to implement your new talent management system?
6. Can you export your companyâs data whenever you want?
7. Where is the help/support team located? (Many companies outsource support internationally, which
isnât always beneïŹcial to customers.)
8. Along those lines, who will your point-person be and when will they be available to talk to you? What
options for escalation are available?
9. Is the software technology new and up-to-date? (Try to avoid companies that still use Flash or any
elements of client-server software, or companies that havenât updated their product in the last 12
months.)
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8. 10. Will
you need to buy any other systems to get your talent management system to work? (Some
vendors, for instance, might require you to purchase a reporting tool separately.)
11. Didyour vendor offer best practice ideas for improvement that make sense to you and your
business?
While you might be tempted to a do a request for proposal or RFP, they donât generally add value for the
buyer or the seller in talent management. Rather, come up with a list of questions youâd like your vendors to
answer and then schedule a demo. At that time, itâs completely acceptable to ask for a free trial of the
system with your data loaded in, so youâre not just using demo data, rather you are using your companyâs
real information. This will give you the perfect opportunity to try the talent management system out and
determine how well you like it.
Also, if you are representing a smaller business, make sure that vendors can support your
business and that their business model isnât just set up for big companies. Ask for
references from several satisïŹed small business customers.
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9. Vendor Donâts
While youâre checking off boxes and getting organized during your research process,
there are several things that you DONâT want to do when selecting a vendor.
Donât:
âą Review more than three to ïŹve vendors. If you do, you will likely get overwhelmed by all of the
information and data, so try to do a little research ahead of time and narrow down your list to the few
that meet your criteria.
âą Bring your entire executive or management team with you to the demo; instead, one to three key
people who will use the talent management system day in and day out should attend and report back
with the ïŹndings.
âą Create a long RFP that takes a lot of time to develop, complete and assess; instead, focus your
questions during the interview and demo process. Share your requirements and expectations with
vendors ahead of your meeting, so they are fully prepared to answer your questions.
âą Try to ïŹt a very complex process into your system. Most talent management software tools have best
practices built in. Itâs generally a good idea to understand what the best practice is, and how you can
use it to avoid customizing the software (which is always expensive and complicated).
âą Withhold information from vendors during your process. The more you share, the better data you
are going to get back. For example, many buyers instinctually keep important information from
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10. vendors (like target budget and other competitors) where sharing that information would actually lead
to a better outcome. Remember that vendors are experts in their own systems and in the
industry in general!
âą Select a vendor that you donât like at the beginning. It simply wonât get any better, and ideally, youâre
going to be working with this company for a long time, so make sure itâs a good ïŹt in terms of
customer service, communications and overall connection.
âą Be a challenging customer. Remember to pay your bills on time, provide information as needed and
even serve as a reference, if you are happy with the service that you are receiving. Vendors need
good customers to grow and always appreciate feedback.
And remember, talent management should feel like a partnership â you and your selected vendor will
work together for mutual success and gain. Make sure that regular communication is part of this selecting
and launching process. And if the vendor does a great job for you, tell others and spread the word. You will
both beneïŹt in the long run!
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11. A Successful Talent Management
System
Whether you are looking to automate a variety of administrative procedures
(performance reviews in particular), improve internal communication, organize learning and development, or
create succession plans for your business, a successful talent management system can help you address
all of this and more. Some companies choose to use every possible aspect of talent management while
others prefer to focus on annual performance reviews; you can customize talent management to your
companyâs needs and interests.
Kapta Systems offers a proven and effective talent management system that includes
access to a variety of features with a small price tag. The SaaS-based, low-cost talent
management system is recognized for âno hassles and no surprisesâ and provides an
easy-to-use and easy-to-implement interface.
Take the time to ïŹnd the vendor that will best meet and serve your companyâs needs and culture so that you
can reap the beneïŹts of talent management for decades to come.
For a list of Talent Management System vendors, please see http://www.kaptasystems.com/blog/entry/
talent-management-system-vendors-the-complete-list
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