Why self-service portals fail
HR departments invest in self-service portals expecting to reduce admin workload. Six months later, employees still email HR for leave balances, payslip downloads, and tax declarations. The portal has 15% usage. The reason is almost always the same: the portal is harder to use than the alternative.
What drives adoption
- Mobile-first design — 80% of employee portal usage happens on phones, not desktops
- Single sign-on — no separate credentials to remember or manage
- Complete functionality — if employees still need to email HR for anything, adoption drops
- Fast response — pages load in under 2 seconds or employees give up
- Notifications — push notifications for approvals, announcements, and pending actions
- Language support — portal in the employee's preferred language
What employees actually want
Leave balance and application. Payslip download. Attendance regularisation. Reimbursement claims. Tax declaration. Holiday calendar. Team directory. These seven features cover 95% of employee self-service needs. Get these right, and adoption follows. Add complexity later, not upfront.
The best self-service portal is one that makes the employee feel like HR is always available, even when no one is at the desk.