Talent management system

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A talent management system (TMS) is an integrated software suite that addresses the "four pillars" of talent management: recruitment; performance management; learning and development; and compensation management.[1]

Purpose

Whereas traditional HRMS and enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems focus primarily on transaction processing and the administration of basic human resources processes such as personnel administration, payroll, time management, etc., talent management systems focus on providing strategic assistance to organizations in the accomplishment of long-term enterprise goals with respect to talent, or human capital. Talent management systems may also be referred to as or paired with an applicant tracking system (ATS) in either standalone application or as a suite of products. According to Bersin, talent management may be defined as the implementation of integrated strategies or systems designed to improve processes for recruiting, developing, and retaining people with the required skills and aptitude to meet current and future organizational needs.[2]

Functional modules and their market worth

TMS solutions typically offer one or many disparate or integrated modules which provide business functionality in areas of human capital management / human resources typically referred to as "strategic".

The role of

performance management has increased many folds compared to learning management systems
in the talent management market. Many companies which were earlier working on only one of these domains have moved to developing integrated talent management systems.

Delivery methods

Many organizations struggle with HR data silos, disconnected technologies, and manual processes, the future of talent management is embodied in solutions designed from the ground up to provide business-centric functionality on a unified talent management platform. Talent management system recently have been at the forefront of growth in the software as a service (SaaS) delivery market following earlier iterations in the standard HR systems space via application service provider (ASP) delivery models. Traditional delivery via on-premises license sales still exist, but are much less prevalent in the competitive space.[1]

Enterprise systems integration

Vendors of TMS software (Levensaler & Laurano 2009) typically claim varying degrees of integration with other enterprise software vendors, and in particular with leading vendors of HRMS systems. The accuracy of these claims is often a question of interpretation, as the degree to which each vendor integrates with 3rd party systems varies considerably depending on circumstances and both the vendor and the third party solution. In some cases, third party vendors offer certification for such scenarios, in order to offer some basis of comparison.

Competitive market

The so-called

Ceridian, Kronos (UKG), Oracle, and Talentsoft.[5][6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Talent management: Software highlights stars and slackers". Financial Times. (subscription required)
  2. ^ Karen O' Leonard (2009). "2009 Talent Management Factbook: Best Practices and Benchmarks in Talent Management". Bersin. Archived from the original on 9 August 2011.
  3. ^ "Magic Quadrant for Talent Management Suites". Gartner Group. Retrieved 2021-03-05.
  4. ^ "Gartner Retires 'Magic Quadrant for Talent Management Suites'". Gartner. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  5. ^ "Magic Quadrant for Cloud HCM Suites for 1,000+ Employee Enterprises". Gartner. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  6. ^ "Magic Quadrant for Cloud HCM Suites for 1,000+ Employee Enterprises". Gartner. Retrieved 2022-04-14.

References