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I've Moved...

Effective today, March 26, 2007, The Human Capitalist is moving to a new URL, www.humancapitalist.com.  I hope you like the new site.  I will be winding down this site and shutting it down over the next few weeks.  For those of you subscribed to my email or RSS feed, you should be automatically re-directed to the new site.  For those that would like to added my RSS feed, you can cut and paste either of the the URLs below into your respective reader...

http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheHumanCapitalist

http://humancapitalist.com/?feed=rss2

As always, I would love to hear your thoughts, comments and suggestions on the new site.

The New and Improved Human Capitalist Coming Monday

You have probably been thinking, "the blog posts on Corsello's site have been light lately, I wonder if he's giving up on this blog thing".  Quite the opposite.  Keep your eyes peeled for the new and improved blog, set to launch on Monday.  Since I tell many of the vendors in the market to "keep it simple", I'm trying to eat my own dog food with the new blog.  I've got about a dozen half-baked posts that will be published on the new site based on recent travels and many engaging discussions throughout the industry over the past month.  Any suggestions, comments, or recommendations for the new site are always welcome.

Watching Stuff Blow Up...

No...this is not a jab at any software vendor but what I actually did earlier this week...

Date - 3/13/2007
Time - 2:30AM
Place - Las Vegas
Setting - Stardust Hotel

At Least Peopleclick is Confident About Their Future...

...because no one else seems to be very bullish on them.  ERE Media has an interesting article about them today regarding their recent challenges and prospects for the future.  The truth behind the fiction has a number of warning signs that should be concerning to any prospect or customer...

  • Warning Sign #1 - The management team has completely flipped in recent months.  A complete management overhaul is never a good sign...period.
  • Warning Sign #2 - I would sure love to know who the 170 new customers are because my market intelligence suggests very few new customer wins in the past 12 months for their ATS.  OFCCP saved them for a quarter in 2006, but not anymore.
  • Warning Sign #3 - One of their large marquee customers is due to end the relationship because of far-reaching technical and support issues.
  • Warning Sign #4 - Heard they recently had a meeting scheduled where the just didn't even show up (it wasn't me but that is one of my biggest pet peeves).
  • Warning Sign #5 - Every observer that knows the market is quite aware that they have been shopped quite aggressively over the past nine months (and even beyond).  To say, "that's not our focus" is misleading and any banker or corporate development executive in the space would confirm that statement is wrong.
  • Warning Sign #6 - Even board members came out last year in this article, critical of the company and questioning why they have yet to see their exit event.
  • Warning Sign #7 - Stand-alone ATS will soon be a thing of the past.  All of the other major vendors, including Taleo, Vurv, Kenexa and Stepstone are all pursuing integrated talent management strategies.  Peopleclick has no expressed intentions to become a true talent management vendor.

Viability should be a grave concern right now.

Where Have You Been?

My apologies for the lack of blog posts over the past 2 weeks.  What have I been up to???

  • Did a panel earlier this week at Lawson's CUE conference
  • Continuing my due diligence, demos, and customer interviews for my upcoming talent management suite report (starting to shape up nicely)
  • Working on a new design for the blog, due out in the next few days
  • Preparing for 2 upcoming speaking engagements
  • Enjoying the nice weather of San Diego (nice to be in some warm weather for a change)
  • Leading a thought piece around the impact of enterprise consumerization...more to come on that

Look for the new blog and some exciting blog posts shortly.

Why JetBlue is Different

The challenges with JetBlue over the past week have been well documented especially here in the Northeast.  A company prided on customer service blew it.  IT has also received much of the blame.  So how did they respond?  The company immediately created a customer bill of rights, they took out a full page ads in some of the nation's largest newspapers to apologize, they emailed their frequent flyer members to say sorry, and the CEO, in typical web 2.0 fashion, posted a very humbling YouTube video.

Many companies respond very differently in difficult circumstances.  Blame on employees, deflection to unruly customers, finger-pointing to partners and contractors...the list goes on.  It's how they persevere that really matters and what truly differentiates those unique companies.  I think JetBlue actually turned a negative into a positive.  I actually heard one story on the radio where a couple of JetBlue pilots took a $300+ taxi ride to upstate NY to retrieve a idle airplane and get it back into service.  JetBlue could teach the rest of the airline industry a lesson!  (Actually, I think they are...unfortunately the rest of the industry isn't listening.)

Interesting 7 Days for HR Vendors...

I Love Taleo But...

The Motley Fool published an article earlier this week with the title, "I Love Taleo".  Although their were some glaring errors in the story (Taleo does not have performance or succession today), the article suggests Taleo is operating quite nicely under the radar. 

I would agree.  The company had a nice quarter and solid year.  Q4 included 23 new enterprise customers, 129 new business edition customers, 8 new customers over $250K and a nice HRO channel (approximately 15% of bookings for the year).  I am convinced in their product strategy, roadmap and focus on usability (usability is the game-changer). 

My only concerns with Taleo are 1) they are showing up late to the broader talent management party and 2) talent management "suite" buyers today are not "beach-heading" in recruitment.  Buying recruitment + performance simply isn't happening in the market right now.  They are buying performance and compensation and performance + learning + succession.  They are not buying recruitment and performance.  Maybe its because the silver bullet solution isn't available today (I don't think that is necessarily the case though).  The challenge is that recruiter users aren't, nor do they think of themsleves as HR.  They think they are sales people who's sole focus is to close the ideal candidate not identify and develop talent.  Taleo does have the mindshare with the senior executive in HR but these issues could pose a challenge to Taleo until recruitment becomes more entwined into the talent lifecycle.

Quote of the Day by American Airlines

"None of these airlines are going to buy that Google software!"

- American Airlines representative response when trying to book an awards ticket and me complaining about the online experience

Salary.com to Become Publicly-Traded Company Tomorrow

The initial public offering of Salary.com is set to price tonight.  As I have stated in the past, many HCM vendors will be tuning in quite closely to see the market response of their public offering.

The company will be traded under the ticker symbol SLRY.

When Saying Alot is Actually Saying Nothing at All

Today, I received 9 briefing requests, 12 news releases, 5 client inquiries, 4 media requests, and this is in addition to the real work (scheduling demos and customer interviews) for my upcoming talent management report.

Why do I tell you all of this?  Somehow an analyst "newsletter" made its way to my attention today. The company was IFS, a vendor I am vaguely familiar and have no knowledge of their customers or products.  Lots of the same old stuff in the newsletter..."solid growth", "strengthened joint initiatives" and "bottom line results".  Naturally since I don't know a whole lot about the company I gravitated to the company summary.  Here is what it said...

"IFS (OMXS: IFS), the global enterprise applications company, provides solutions that enable organizations to respond quickly to market changes, allowing resources to be used in a more agile way to achieve better business performance and competitive advantage. IFS pioneered component-based enterprise resources planning (ERP) software with IFS Applications, now in its seventh generation. IFS' component architecture provides solutions that are easier to implement, run, and upgrade."

Now that I know exactly what they do, I can go on with my day.

The Rise of the Enterprise Mashups

I have been spending a lot of time over the past month thinking about the potential impact of mashups, gadgets, widgets, add-ons, or whatever you want to call them, on the enterprise.  Just this past week, Yahoo announced Yahoo Pipes, Microsoft launched Connected Services Sandbox, and just yesterday I saw the first preview of Teqlo's approach (Mark Crofton has a good write-up here). The pace of mashups and the varying approaches to creating mashups continues to accelerate.

So what is a mashup or widget and what is the difference between the two?  The best description was recently provided by Phil Wainewright (who, by the way, rights one of the best SaaS blogs out there).  Essentially, mashups combine public domain web information with SOA-based components utilizing open APIs in most cases. ProgrammableWeb suggests there are currently over 1,500 mashups today (although nearly half of those are map-based mashups).

Needless to say, I think mashups have a huge potential for enterprises and application vendors alike. I plan on writing more about mashups over the next few months.  For HCM, that mashup future could combine relevant, public data sources such as Jobster, LinkedIn (although they do not currently publish their APIs), Payscale, Skype, and even Google Maps with SaaS applications such as SuccessFactors, Taleo, CornerStone OnDemand, and Salesforce.com and delivering the mashups and micro-applications tailored to the users "webtop" or homepage of choice such as Google.  Look for some upcoming research in the next month that will start to shape this impending revolution in enterprise applications.

Another HCM Vendor Files To Go Public (Sort Of)

Hireright HireRight, one of the leading employment screening vendors, has filed to go public.  The S-1 can be viewed here.  I have heard this rumor for a number of months now.  This now makes two HCM vendors that have filed to go public over the past few months (the other being Salary.com).  Three interesting things to note from the S-1 filing.  First, they are attempting to raise about $86 million which is a significant amount of capital in this market.  Second, Hewitt owns approximately 6.7% of the company.  Third, the company is healthy and quite profitable. 

I am a big fan of HireRight.  Not only have they built a strong business, including robust channels in talent management and HRO, they are also good guys.  HireRight has marketed themselves in the S-1 as an on-demand/SaaS vendor and it will be interesting if this positioning warrants a premium similar to other publicly-traded SaaS vendors (Salesforce.com withstanding).  The stock is targeted to trade under the symbol HIRE.

Guest Post: Phil Fersht - "HR Transformation": A Well-Worn and Oversold Buzzword or Actually Starting To Become a Reality?

We've had that phrase "transformation" done to death for years now, and suppliers have repeatedly been accused of packaging HR services under a "transformation" wrapper that was really....well... a lot of that lift-n'-shift stuff that didn't really come up to snuff.

However, recent HRO deals are beginning to show signs of proving this stereotype wrong.  Many of the recent deals have major HR transformation components built in that actually negate any really significant cost-savings, and the driver behind HRO is clearly one of driving shock into a company, effecting quick change, and offering companies the chance to actually do things differently.  Operating in a globalized environment is necessitating companies to change, look at alternative sourcing models, and - in effect - transform their business.  That involves people, process and technology right across the board.

2006 - as predicted - was a transition year for the HRO industry, as suppliers and buyers invested increased time and resources to understand how to develop workable solutions to run HR function within a global outsourced environment.  Whereas 2005 saw dramatic growth of 37% in deals signed, with a total of 39 multi-process HRO contracts, 2006 saw a small decline, but still saw an impressive 34 deals reaching closure."  Despite this slow-down in new deals, annualized contract value in the multi-process HRO market increased a further 18% to reach $2.6bn.  The large global deals, for example Unilever and DuPont, have helped drive expenditure higher, largely as a result of the incremental investment going into the transformation efforts.  The fact that more focus is now on buyers adopting transformational approaches to HRO, as opposed to the classic "lift and shift" model, has slowed-down the HRO market.  The change in delivery model has signified a rapid maturing of the HRO industry, which is necessary for workable HRO solutions to exist in the future, and todays' suppliers to invest in the global resources and infrastructure necessary to delivery HRO in an operationally-successful and economically-feasible fashion. 

When we look at the recent wave of deals, it is clearly apparent that these "new" HRO buyers are not going into HRO with the prime incentive of simply making some modest administrative cost savings.  Recent deals have included HR transformation costs that, in some cases, are driving more than 100% of existing costs for year 1.  To quote a recent buyer who signed an major HRO deal recently:  "If you think we did this to make the savings we ended up negotiating, you're very wrong".

Net-net, HRO in 2007 will be largely focused on broader business transformation initiatives with the bill footed by cost-arbitrage.  Many buyers simply cannot experiment with alternative sourcing options like shared services or captives due to high costs, structural/political issues and poor technology, so outsourcing is the optimum way to drive shock and change into the organization quickly and effectively.

Phil Fersht is a Vice President of Everest Research Institute and recognized industry expert in business process outsourcing.  He can be reached at pfersht@everestgrp.com.

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