Self-Service IS Coming!!!

One of the majorgoals of this HR Direct implementation is to equip UMass employees and managers with self-service tools to manage much of their Human Resource activities. While these tools won’t be available to all right away, we do intend to rollout additional features in the future.

Employee Self Service:
ByJune 2009, all non-student employees will have the ability to login to HR Direct using their campus email username & password.Some personal and job datainformation will be available during this first phase of the rollout as will the ability to view the bi-weeklypay advice.See the Employee Self-Service fact sheet for more details.

As additional testing is completed andappropriate business practices developed, there will be new self-service features introduced. These willallow employees more direct access to maintain personal and jobdata such as home address, phone numbers; and tax withholding.

Beginning in May, Lowellwill be pilotingemployeeself-service for time reporting. During this pilot approximately 40employees will be reporting their weekly time viaself-servicewith NO PAPER timesheets. Theseonline timesheets will electronically route to their manager for their electronicapproval– no need for a timekeeper to reenter this data. Upon successful completion of this pilot, the campus will seek to expand thisto moreand more users with a goal of eliminating the paper timesheet!

Manager Self-Service
Also in the spring, we will pilot some of the Manager Self-Service functionality which allows for managers to

  • view the employees reporting to them and
  • initiate some human resource transactions without need for a paper trail

We will expand the number of manager self-service users once this pilot has been successfully tested and stabilized.

Please share any questions, comments, or suggestions you have.

Is UML ready for the Upgrade?

If all goes according to plan we will be upgrading to the new HR environmentin earlyApril. We haven’t yet figured when all timekeepers and our Pilot Manager and Time Reporing users will be allowed into this new enviornment, but more details will be coming. And more broadly, we still need to figure when we will open the systemup to all UMass Lowell employees. While it sounds neat to let everyone in on day #1, the reality is that we have limited campus support resources so we need to stagger roll-on to best postiion our selves to be successful. I think we’d all agree that producing pay checks is the first priority so we are likley to limit who has access to HRDirect that first week. Exact rollout details are still being planned, but the concept is to crawl first before we try to walk and run.

Over the next couple weeks the campus and UMass project teams will be working together to ensure we are ‘ready’ to go live. This readiness process will have all participants evaluating any risks associated with going live. The goal is to identify any risk and then reacting to those risks with apprporiate strategies to mitigate them and ensure overall ‘readiness’ to go live.

As always, if you have questions please let me know.

-Rich

Campus Project Management Update

This has been an extremely busy week for the campus Human Resource office. They have been engaged in User Acceptace Testing (UAT) throughout the last few days. UAT is an overall 4 week effort for the UMass campuses to get into the upgraded software and test to see that data is migrated well from our older HR system and that they can use the new software to do their key tasks — hiring, enrolling in benefits, entering time, and processing pay checks. Within each of those broad areas there are many more specific tasks which are part of the testing process. This testing is primarily being done by Human Resource staff andwe are doing some testing using the security roles that a timekeeper or employee will have when we go live.

Testing is a frustrating task in any project as unfortunately you find things that don’t work. This week has been no exception as we had a lot of issues tied to security, some with hardware and connectivity, and others with some application issues. The campus and central project teams will work to resolve these issues quickly and they will be retested before we exit this testing phase. And while there were a fair volume of issues identified, there have not been any ‘show stoppers’ which should keep us from going-live with the system in April.

This week we also had some planning sessions for the training delivery that will be occuring. Jose Guerrero from Information Technology Training is currently developing the schedule of classes. More information with be forthcoming in the weeks ahead as all of the training will occur in March and into April.

If you have particular questions or concerns please let me know.

Regards,

Richard Conley
Campus Project Manager

YES — There will be training available

Whether you are an everyday user of the current HR system or just do occational time reporting, there will be different training tools available to prepare you for the new software.

With this new release there will even be some employee self-service which doesn’t require training, but we will still offer some presentation sessions to show you around.

See the following for some general overview of the training tools:

Introduction to HRDirect

You Matter: A Focus on People, Process, and Change

We are all familiar with our local HR department and use their support and guidance for many activities. Employees and managers are the key customers of HR. Their needs are the drivers of our processes and programs.

For example, let’s take a look at Payroll. Employees must receive paychecks on Fridays. In order to ensure this, efficient and timely processes must be in place for entering data for a new employee in the HR application, entering and approving time, setting up direct deposit, and pay distribution.

Our challenge is to streamline and improve these services for our customers in the new, upgraded environment. New functionality such as viewing pay advices online will help us accomplish this.

As we add improvements, we will need to ensure that we:

Provide accurate data and information

Are timely and efficient

Meet government and state regulations

Incorporate Human Resources Leading Practices that were identified at the onset of the project.

So how do we ensure that the people, process, and technology are all incorporated into developing an application? By working together as a team and identifying how the technology and processes support and improve the daily operations of our employees.

Get Ready for Direct Access to Human Resources

What is the HR Direct Project?

The HR Direct Project is working on a major University initiative to advance the Human Resource Management System (HRMS) to the most current release of the application.

Why Upgrade?

Here are the top reasons to upgrade to the latest HR Application:

1. Plans to introduce three new human resource components:

Commitment Accounting

Employee Self Service’three great features!

Enterprise Learning

2. Offers a new look and functionality with several added human resource components:

Core HR functionality

Base Benefits

Payroll

Talent Acquisition

3. Pilots of some exciting HR component possibilities:

Manager Self Service

Time & Labor Employee and Manager Self Service

4. Provides assistance in ensuring compliance with tax updates and other federal and state reporting changes.

New Look for the HR Application

If you’re familiar with the current HRMS system, you know that it is a panel-based system. With the next release, comes a whole new look for the HR application. It is now web-based!

The application still allows for the same flexibility. You can securely open a new window in the application without leaving the task you are working on. The major difference is it has the look and feel of a website.

A Sneak Peek at Self Service

The HR organization provides you and over 20,000 other employees across the University with numerous services, including the printed pay advice you receive on a bi-weekly basis. We are preparing to bring HR to the next level in providing excellence in customer service.

In our daily lives, we have so many self service options: pump your own gas, check out at the grocery store, etc. It just makes sense to have direct access to review your personal information and pay advices at anytime. Instead of going to the office, placing a phone call or sending an email to your HR representative, the plan is to have you directly connect to the information you need.

Our goal is provide employees with direct access to personal information through an HR Self Service center. With such a large and diverse employee population, the project is seeking to minimize risk and hence will gradually roll out self-service features to the University.

We are currently focusing on a few basic employee self service features. The project anticipates initial release of the following self service functionality to employees:

Ability to maintain your emergency contact details

Ability to view your personal data summary

Ability to view your pay advice.

Future Self Service Possibilities

As we advance in the self service area, we want to make sure the functionality provided best serves the University. The best way to do this is to allow actual employee and manager user groups to test the functionality.

The plan is to release the following components to pilot groups:

A Manager Self Service pilot group will have the opportunity to complete a select number of functions.

A Time & Labor Employee Self Service pilot group will have the ability to input their time into the HR application.

A Time & Labor Manager Self Service pilot group will be able to approve submitted time in the HR application.

We plan to collect feedback from the pilot groups to ensure the success of future rollouts.

Who is the Project Team?

Members of your campus HR office are key stakeholders and are working on the team along with the President’s Office and University Information Technology Services (UITS). Each project member has substantial knowledge of the business or technical processes involved in the daily operations using the current HR version 7.6 application.Theresa McDonald and Melissa Sullivan have been the Lowell subject matter experts participating in the project.

Project Approach

The project has a phased approach: Planning, Design, Development, Training, Testing, Deployment, and Stabilization.

Project Status

In Fall 2007, we completed the Planning phase. Subject Matter Experts from each campus participated in detailed discussions about existing business processes and functionality offered in the current version. These sessions helped determine what functionality to upgrade or implement (project scope) and the activities that must be completed to make the project a success (deliverables).

We began the Design Phase in 2008, which focuses on defining business requirements and designing the application both functionally and technically.

We are currently wrapping up the Testing Phase of the project and are starting some of the Training aspects, although end user training won’t occur until March 2009.

Continue to come back and read more about this project. We expect to post new information a few times per week.