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HR Technology Conference 2011 – You had me at Swirl

by Michael Krupa on November 19, 2011

Letterhead_cmyk

It’s that time of year again when all of us in the HR Technology business book our airline and hotel reservations and congregate in Chicago for the annual HR Technology Conference and Expo. Wait, did I say Chicago? Sorry, this year the conference was in sunny Las Vegas Baby! Anyway, this post is way late (and probably a dollar short) as the conference was over weeks and weeks ago. I have a good excuse or ten for being tardy on my post but I won’t bore you with the details. In my prior blogs posts about the 2009 and the 2010 conferences, I waxed on about the conference being about connecting with my social media network (especially my Twitter buddies – AKA my Tweeps). Making connections with the Tweeps was still an important aspect of this year’s conference. The Social Media factor at the conference continues to grow each year and I think we might have finally reached a tipping point. This year so many people were using the #HRTechConf hash tag on Twitter that the tweets were streaming into TweetDeck faster than I could read them. Information overload. So kudos to the conference organizers and all of my HR Tech Twitter buddies who helped promote the Social Media aspect of the conference. On the good news/bad news front the sponsored Wi-Fi was very spotty especially in some of the conference rooms that were more out of the way. In the larger sessions when everyone powered on their tweeting devices the Wi-Fi came to a standstill. What’s the good news in this? If the Wi-Fi had been 100% rock solid the tweet stream would have been OUT OF CONTROL.

What I Learned This Year

The expo floor as always abounded with a zillion vendors hawking their wares. I was having a conversation with one of the vendors who mentioned that in general the vendors were unhappy with Vegas/Mandalay Place in comparison to McCormick Place because the attendees were not a captive audience. At McCormick Place there was nothing around the conference center to do or see so most attendees with any free time would stroll through the expo floor. At Mandalay Bay, the attendees often used any free time to stroll over to the casino floor instead of the expo floor. Speaking of vendors, there were a ton of announcements at the conference and I do mean a ton. I’m too lazy to track them all down so here is a great summary of the announcements from Marketwatch.

Mobile was a huge topic at the conference this year but let’s first talk about the attendees mobile devices. The news reports indicate that the iPad has decimated the Netbook market and I can tell you first hand that this rang true at the conference. The iPad ruled and I could have counted on one hand the number of Netbooks being used. In a slight twist to last year, I witnessed a strong showing of people using physical keyboards with their iPads. In another nod to the strong growth of Apple, the MacBook Air also had a very strong showing among the attendees. Sorry Microsoft, the traditional laptop seemed pushed out this year. Hope you have big plans for Windows 8 to stem the market share loss.

Unlike mobile which has been brewing for a couple of years, gamification seemed to blast out of the woodwork from seemingly obscurity at the conference this year. For vendors and for companies the message this year is that if you want adoption of your application you need give workers a reason to use the app. Enter gamification which uses games design techniques applied to HR applications to encourage people to use (or adopt) the software. Gamification is no longer just badges but now includes awarding and redeeming points, achievement, challenges and recognition. There were many vendors showing applications with gamification built to the core or at least gamification techniques applied to bits and pieces. I’ll be curious to see in future surveys if gamification does indeed make a difference in adoption.

Just like mobile, analytics is HOT HOT HOT this year. The good news is there are now solutions that cover the spectrum of needs. Vendors are adding transactional analytics into their applications at a minimum and strategic analytic solutions are coming on strong. I encourage customers to take the long view when implementing disparate HR systems that each have their own transactional analytics to think about the impact of providing too many disconnected metric reports to their end users. While it might make sense to dip your toe into analytics by starting with built-in transactional metrics, only rollout the metrics that make the most sense and determine your long term analytics goals up front. Maybe an enterprise wide HR Analytics/BI system should be in you HR Technology Roadmap.

SaaS continues its steady march to replace on-premise HR applications. Nearly all vendors with on-premise solutions are re-architecting, re-coding or at least re-marketing their apps to say they are SaaS compliant. Don’t believe the marketing message however. Customers will need to dig deep and ask tons of pointed questions to determine exactly what flavor of SaaS the vendor is supporting. From the Talent Management panel the big take away was SaaS is really Saa (Software as a…). Service is still missing from many SaaS vendors. Customers are having to redo their contracts with SaaS vendors at renewal time and substantially beefing up the SLA and Service agreements.

The Awesome New Technologies for HR session was a hit again this year with the instant responses from the Twitter peanut gallery providing lots of colorful commentary. The Twitter users at the conference are pretty savvy HR Technology users so hopefully the vendors participating in the session captured the tweets (both good and bad) for future consideration. The iPad demo’s from Workday and Peoplefluent seems to garner the most interest and praise from the crowd and the tweets. Workday’s iPad app interface with the Swirl pretty much stole the show. By the way, for any session presenters reading this post don’t say “San Fran” when you mean “San Francisco”. You know who you are.

The Challenge For Next Year

The market for HR Technology applications has exploded the last couple of years. Core HR systems are hot again, suites continue to be rolled out, Analytics are front and center, Social Media is being embedded and everything is mobile, mobile, mobile. I found myself this year really feeling like I missed out on way too much. Trying to find time for all the great sessions, the expo floor, vendor briefings and hallway conversations with the attendees was impossible. The challenge for next year is to find a way to make more time available for all these things. Longer Expo hours, repeated sessions or maybe an additional day added to the conference might do the trick. Kudos to Bill Kutik and LRP for another great HR Technology Conference.

Most Important Takeaways

  • Dwane Lay and Paul Smith make an awesome Penn and Teller combo.
  • You know you have spent too much time in the elevators at Mandalay Bay when you can lip sync the Hubert Keller “Fleur” video.
  • More men use moisturizing cream around their eyes than you probably realize.
  • Ron Wallace is in amazing shape having to keep up with Naomi Bloom on her scooter.
  • Bill Kutik needs a smart phone adviser the next time he gets a new cell phone.
  • Naomi Bloom can operate an iPhone but not an iPad. Go figure.

No good conference is complete without some sort of video so I leave you with this awesome swag video by my good pals Dwane Lay and Paul Smith.

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Tuesday Tech Tips-BlackBerry Edition

by Michael Krupa on November 30, 2010

My partner in HR Technology crime, Steve Boese, harassed nicely asked me recently to do an all BlackBerry Tech Tips. I took pity on him and his iPhone wanna-be BlackBerry Storm and so here we are.  I scoured high and low for some awesome BlackBerry Tech Tips. Okay okay I scoured the CrackBerry.com and TUAW.com sites but hey I found some great information to share with you.

Apparently some BlackBerry’s have touch screens (who knew) and if you have to touch you might as well use shortcuts. Read on about BlackBerry touch shortcuts otherwise known as Touchcuts.

So RIM has this iPad challenger in development called the BlackBerry Playbook. If web surfing speed is the most important feature of a tablet device for you then you might want to see this video of the Playbook versus the iPad.

Just in case you didn’t know, Twitter has their own official Twitter app for the BlackBerry so go right here, right now to get instructions on how to download, install, configure and start using the BlackBerry Twitter app.

I have seen more than a few tweets out there from loyal BlackBerry users about having to yank the battery out of the device and reinsert to get the dang phone to work again.  CrackBerry.com has a great post on when and how to do a battery pull, hard reset, soft reset and some wacky thing called a DOUBLE-SOFT reset. Oh BlackBerry you make me laugh.

Do you have BlackBerry OS 6?  You are in luck then because OS 6 comes with a brand spanking new WebKit-based Browser that competes pretty well with the iPhone Safari browser. As part of their BlackBerry 101 series, CrackBerry.com walks you through the features of this OS 6 browser.

And finally I leave you with the design of the next BlackBerry. Okay maybe not the next BlackBerry but a concept design of a pointy BlackBerry called the Empathy.  I’m not sure what is more interesting, the pointy phone or the thumb ring on the person holding the phone.

Touchcuts – Using shortcuts on your touchscreen BlackBerry

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Tuesday Tech Tips

by Michael Krupa on September 13, 2010

Step right up for this week’s Tuesday Tech Tips.  I did a random grab of tech news from my Instapaper archive so I’m guessing I will please no one with these tips.  I joke, I joke.  Anyhoo, on with the tips.

Do you have an iPad and an iPhone or maybe 2 iPads or perhaps 4 iPhones?  If yes, then Engadget has a review of the overachieving iPADock.

I know a bunch of you tried out the new Google Voice integration in Gmail. Now the good folks over at Google have written up some handy features of Google Voice in Gmail.

Calling all iPhone or iPod Touch runners!!  There is a new Nike+ App that throws away the little Nike+ sensor and instead uses the accelerometer of your iOS device.  Whats not to like about that?

With all the Tweetups going on all over the world, you are going to need a way to keep in video touch with all your new tweeps.  Skype 5.0 Beta to the rescue with 10 way video calling.

I love me some full screen browser windows all the time.  Google took that one step further and created Fullscreen mode in Google Reader.  Life is pretty good now.

I know all you iPhone owners out there have been waiting for iOS 4.1 (especially iPhone 3G users waiting for the performance tweaks in iOS4 to make their iPhones usable again). Head on over to the TiPb blog for an iOS4 walkthrough.

I’m not sure what took so long but TiVo finally produced a remote with a built-in keyboard.  Good grief TiVo, your product lifecycles are longer than even Microsoft’s.  If you are not sure the new TiVo Slide Remote is for you, read the Engadget review here and the Zatz Not Funny review here.

The controversial new Twitter app for iPad built by Loren Brichter and his team (who developed the Tweetie app) is out.  If you have an iPad you probably already have the new Twitter app but you might want to take a peek at the TUAW Blog review anyway.

And finally (he says while trying to keep from giggling in that nerdy sort of way)…who wouldn’t want an Atom-powered PC in “an exact replica” of the original beige Commodore C64 chassis.  Christmas is just around the corner.

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Tuesday Tech Tips

by Michael Krupa on July 6, 2010

Happy post 4th of July.  Hope you all had a lovely extended weekend and enjoyed some fireworks (from a safe distance of course).  It’s back to work time and that means it’s also time for some more Tuesday Tech Tips:

Do you have a Mac desktop or laptop and an iPad?  Well then, don’t let that iPad go to waste as you can use the iPad as a secondary display.  The TIPb blog has an app review for Air Display for iPad.

Are you a Google Chrome user?  Read on as the Google Chromium Blog gives you a preview of some user interface changes coming down the line for the toolbar.

Did you ever think you sent an SMS/MMS message on your iPhone and then later (days later) discover that the message failed to send?  Apple has corrected this in iOS4 by placing an exclamation point right on the Messages icon.

Looks like Google is finally bringing the same product access to both Google Apps accounts and regular Google accounts.  Lifehacker has the details on Google Apps vs. Google Accounts Parity Coming.

It’s back to work time for me so see you next week for another dramatic installment of Tuesday Tech Tips.

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Tuesday Tech Tips

June 29, 2010

Hey!  It’s that day of the week again.  I’m sure you all checked your email or RSS feed this morning for your Tuesday Tech Tips, saw a big blank hole of information and wondered how you would make it through the day.  Don’t worry my little pets, I am a bit distracted this week due [...]

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Tuesday Tech Tips

June 22, 2010

Holy cow, it’s Tuesday again!  Last week I decided to share some general technology tips with you and with any luck I hope to do this every Tuesday. So without further adieu here are today’s tech tips: Thinking about using Google Apps for your business email?  Those lovely people at the Googleplex have put together [...]

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HRevolution 2010 – Dirty Martinis and iPads

June 2, 2010

I’m currently sitting on a plane heading from Portland to Denver. The person in front of me has reclined their seat leaving me no room to use my laptop.  Being a good tech guy, I pulled out the iPad I won at HRevolution and am typing this out using the iPad WordPress App. Okay, Okay, [...]

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