INSIGHT: The changing face of HR, and the HR tech systems making it right today

To mark International HR Day on the 20th May, Helen Armstrong, Silver Cloud Founder and CEO considers the the changing role of HR and the technology shaping the function today and explains why the future of HR depends on balancing AI with human judgement. If there was one key theme from the recent Hr NETWORK Conference & Exhibition, which took place at Murrayfield Stadium on Wednesday 13th May, the critical balance between technology and human interaction was uppermost in almost all the keynote sessions on the dat, discussed through the theme of ‘Transformation Through People & Technology’.
HR has changed dramatically over the years. What was once a largely administrative function has been reinvented and grown into something far more complex, strategic, and critical to business success. And as we mark International HR Day 2026, that transformation has never felt more urgent or consequential. Where there was once personnel teams who focused on contracts, compliance, and payroll, now stands strategic HR departments who stand as crucial cogs in the business success machine.  The question is no longer whether HR has a seat at the table. It’s whether the HR leaders occupying that seat have the technology, data, and commercial fluency to deserve it. Modern HR leaders are now expected to influence business growth, navigate complex regulation, oversee workforce planning, shape organisational culture, and support board level decision making. In many organisations, HR has become a strategic driver of commercial performance rather than the operational department it once was.

History of HR

The 90s was a real tipping point for HR. With globalisation, early HR systems and the rise of workplace unions, HR teams became even more important for businesses. Further to this, the Equality Act 2010 meant that companies needed larger teams to make sure that they were carrying out employment practices correctly, which saw HR teams grow as well as influence across the business landscape. The 2000’s brought further complexity: the introduction of GDPR in 2018 transformed how HR teams were required to handle employee data, and the emergence of people analytics as a discipline in the 2010s fundamentally changed what the function could deliver. For the first time, HR leaders could move from gut instinct to evidence, presenting workforce data to boards with the same rigour as financial reporting. As talent became more competitive, and organisations started to recognise that attracting and retaining the right people could set them apart. HR teams found themselves in a new landscape where they weren’t just managing people but actively competing for them. Employer brand, candidate experience, and retention strategies moved to the forefront. HR was no longer just inward-looking; it became part of how organisations presented themselves to the outside world. Then COVID hit, accelerating change at a pace no one could have predicted. Almost overnight, HR became responsible for navigating remote work, employee wellbeing, business continuity, and rapidly evolving expectations. It pushed organisations to rethink not just policies, but the very nature of work. Flexibility, trust, and communication became central, and HR was right at the heart of it all.

 

What HR Teams are striving for now

Today, HR teams are under pressure to deliver real, measurable impact. It’s no longer enough to run processes efficiently. They’re being asked bigger, more strategic questions. There’s a clear shift towards driving strategic value, especially when it comes to retention and workforce planning. Organisations want a deeper understanding of the entire employee lifecycle so they can spot trends early and act sooner. Wise business moves now look at talent retention, the cost of hire, and skills gaps that HR teams can fix. In the UK specifically, this pressure has intensified considerably. The Employment Rights Act 2025 – the most significant overhaul of UK employment law in a generation – has placed new obligations on employers around guaranteed hours, day-one rights, and fair work practices. Meanwhile, tightening immigration rules and rising employer National Insurance contributions have made workforce planning decisions both more consequential and harder to get right. HR leaders who operate from instinct rather than data are increasingly exposed. The pace of legislative and economic change in the UK right now is unlike anything I’ve seen in 20 years of working in this field, HR leaders who are still operating from spreadsheets and annual surveys simply don’t have the visibility they need to advise their boards with confidence. The organisations that are getting this right are the ones that have invested in technology that gives them a real-time picture of their workforce – and the commercial language to act on it. As well as working for the business on a strategic level, HR is expected to maintain a strong employee experience. Ask any jobseeker now what questions they ask potential employers at interviews and “What’s your benefit package and culture like?” will surely be on the list. Making sure people feel engaged, supported, and able to perform at their best is not only a by-product of a happy team but a competitive edge against other employers.

Improving HR for businesses and their people 

To operate strategically, HR needs solid foundations and increasingly, that comes down to technology. Modern HR systems are no longer just digital filing cabinets for employee records. They are becoming decision-making tools that help organisations identify workforce risks, improve employee experience, and scale with greater consistency. Platforms such as HiBob, for example, now use predictive analytics to help HR teams identify employees at risk of leaving based on engagement and performance trends, allowing organisations to act proactively on retention. Other systems, such as Dayforce, provide real-time workforce and payroll data through a single rules engine, helping businesses improve compliance, reduce manual errors, and make faster operational decisions. For organisations managing international teams or a mixed workforce of employees and contractors, platforms like Deel have removed much of the compliance friction that once made global hiring so daunting – handling payroll, tax, and right-to-work obligations across 150 countries from a single dashboard. And tools like Cascade are helping HR leaders connect people strategy to business strategy in a way that is visible and measurable at board level, turning workforce planning from an HR exercise into a commercial one. The impact is particularly visible in areas like onboarding and payroll. Automated onboarding workflows reduce the risk of missed compliance steps and create a more consistent employee experience, while integrated payroll systems remove duplication and significantly reduce the risk associated with manual processing. With the UK’s Employment Rights Act 2025 now requiring employers to provide new hires with written information about their right to join a trade union from October 2026, the compliance burden on onboarding processes is only increasing – and digital systems are the only scalable way to manage it consistently.

On payroll, the stakes are equally high: research suggests that nearly 40% of all payroll errors stem from manual data entry, and that one in four employees would start looking for a new job after a single payroll mistake. For HR leaders, that makes robust, integrated payroll infrastructure not just an operational priority but a retention one. We see it time and again with our clients at Silver Cloud. Businesses that have invested in the right HR technology aren’t just saving time – they’re making better decisions, retaining more people, and presenting a more credible people strategy to their leadership teams. The technology has become the foundation everything else is built on.

The future of HR and beyond

Ultimately, the role of HR today looks very different from what it did even a decade ago. What was once viewed primarily as an administrative function has become a strategic driver of business performance, employee experience, and organisational growth, and technology has played a major role in enabling that shift. As the adoption of AI in HR accelerates 92% of CHROs now anticipate further AI integration into their workforce this year, according to SHRM the function is becoming more data-driven and insight-led than ever. AI is already being used in HR to screen candidates, predict attrition risk, automate payroll compliance, surface skills gaps, and support benefits enrolment at scale. Governance matters too: the UK’s Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 and incoming ICO guidance on automated decision-making mean that HR leaders need to understand not just what their AI tools can do, but how to deploy them responsibly and transparently. What’s important as this increases though, is for HR not to lose the human side of its job.  The best HR teams will combine intelligent HR tech with human experience and emotion to position themselves for strategic success, now and in the future.

The HR leaders who will define the next decade are those who treat technology not as a replacement for human judgement, but as the infrastructure that makes better human judgement possible.

Data tells you what is happening in your workforce. It takes an experienced HR professional to know what to do about it.

About the author: Helen Armstrong is the Founder and CEO of Silver Cloud, a leading HR and payroll technology consultancy. With over 15 years of experience in HR and HRIS, she is a Chartered member of the CIPD and a recognised thought leader in HR digital transformation, automation and change management.