Title: Aviva and Oracle HRMS
1Aviva and Oracle HRMS
Achieving Successful Human Resources
Management Jean Timms, Head of UK HR Systems
2Agenda
- Who is Aviva?
- HR Policy
- HR Systems Strategic Approach
- Strategic use of Oracle e-business suite
- Extracting value from Oracle HRMS applications
- How we started
- Where we are today
- Future Directions
- And how are we doing it ...
3Who is Aviva?
- Launched in July 2002 as the new name for CGNU,
the group created by the merger of CGU and
Norwich Union in May 2000 - Worlds seventh-largest insurance group and the
biggest in the UK - The group has 59,000 employees and 25 million
customers worldwide - Aviva operates in around 30 countries
- 90 of our business comes from Europe
- 52 comes from the UK
- 28 billion premium income and investment sales
from continuing operations and more than 200
billion of assets under management
4HR Policy
- The Group aims to have in place competitive and
fair reward policies in the countries in which it
operates. HR departments will lead in setting
policy and practice which they believe will
allow them to attract, retain and motivate the
level of talent necessary to deliver their
business plans successfully. They will also take
account of their businesses ability to meet the
costs of proposed reward policies. - We believe our people are a source of competitive
advantage. The company will invest in its
employees training and development, building
their capabilities to meet the business plans and
provide internal management succession.
5The UK HR Systems Strategic Approach
- HR should deliver its core operational processes
through common, technology driven solutions - Staff should manage and own their personal data
on line - Relevant training and development should be
delivered through commonly developed technology
based training - Transactional processing will be automated
wherever possible to reduce HRs administration
role - We should be creating business insights through
the effective reporting and analysis of data on
our human capital - Our HR Systems development plan should deliver
functionality and capability to the business as
it can be absorbed
6Key Operational Requirements
- We must support the legal and regulatory
requirements of the business. - Our solutions must be scaleable, so that growth
in our user base can be readily accommodated. - Our activities and the way the team behaves must
support our values and behaviours, particularly
those of team work, progressiveness and
outperformance. - We should aim to keep our solutions simple, which
means packages will be implemented with minimal
customisation. -
7Use of Oracle e-business suite
- Our first and preferred solution to a systems
problem should be found within the Oracle suite
of products - If the Oracle solution does not meet our
requirements, then any alternative technology
solution adopted should be UK wide in application
and Oracle compatible
8How we started HR Records and Payroll
- Went live October 2001
- New installation
- 35,000 staff and 4,500 pensioners
- 9 payrolls, 329 pay elements
- 40 interfaces to and from other systems
- data conversion of 2001 data
- automated letters / contracts
- workflow
- effective MI
9Where we are today Oracle Self Service
- Direct Access rollout started Jan 2003
- Manager and Employee update
- Personal details, online payslips,
- MI for managers
- Leavers
- Cost centre changes
- Absence recording
- Discoverer/ Business Intelligence
- Everyone has now logged on and the general
feedback is that the system is very good and user
friendly. A few problems arose with some people
not having a hierarchy but this was quickly fixed
by the helpdesk who were very efficient
10Where we are today Oracle Training
Administration
- Due to go live October 2003 to Training
Administrators - Replacing legacy training systems and MANY
spreadsheets - Opportunity for consolidated training MI for all
Business Units - Will be linked by Skills and Competencies to HR
- To be rolled out to all staff in the UK as part
of Oracle Self Service
11Future directions i-learning
- 2004
- training modules in support of
- key business initiatives
- product training
- procedural/ systems training
- linked back to skills and competencies
12Future directions Oracle i-recruitment
- 2004
- e-recruitment effectiveness proven through hosted
pilot - Drivers
- to reduce costs
- enhance brand management
- standardisation of procedures
- looking to link internal and external hires
seamlessly to core HR
13And how are we doing it ...
BU HR
Ownership of minor enhancements
Testing System Changes
UK-wide project teams
HR System requests
Group HR
HR Systems Central Team
Consultancy, Impact Analysis, testing, training
coordination Non-strategic projects / Minor
enhancements
Support Help Desk open 8.00-5.30 tracking of
all change requests and user problems training
Strategic Projects
NUCS IT
Support team (ITD) - NUCS
IT Development team (ITD) - NUCS Mandatory
projects /minor enhancements/ Strategic projects
IT Infrastructure team
14