A knowledge hub for HR, finance, and people-ops professionals making sense of the workforce-tech landscape. Platform deep-dives, comparison frameworks, and field notes from someone who watches the space full-time. No vendor pitches. No platitudes.
The space is full of acronyms and overlapping categories that vendors use interchangeably to keep buyers confused. Here's the plain-English version, so the rest of this site reads cleanly.
An integrated platform covering payroll, benefits, time & attendance, talent management, and reporting in one stack. Examples: ADP WorkforceNow, Paycom, Paylocity, UKG Ready, Workday, isolved, Ceridian Dayforce.
Core employee data + records + HR workflows. Often used interchangeably with HCM, but technically narrower — employee data is the center, payroll attaches as a module. Most modern systems blur the line.
Older term used roughly synonymously with HRIS. If a vendor's collateral still leans on "HRMS", it usually signals a platform generation that predates the modern HCM era.
Co-employment model — the PEO becomes a legal employer-of-record alongside you, taking on benefits/compliance/comp/EPLI risk and running payroll. Examples: Insperity, TriNet, ADP TotalSource, Justworks.
Like a PEO without the co-employment piece. They handle the back-office admin (payroll processing, benefits enrollment, compliance support) while you remain the sole employer. Less risk transfer; more autonomy retained.
Used for international hires — the EOR legally employs the worker in their country so you don't have to set up a foreign entity. Adjacent to but distinct from a PEO. Examples: Deel, Remote, Velocity Global, Oyster.
The big HCM platforms have polished landing pages. The buyers don't have a level playing field. This site is where I share what I see — pattern-recognition from across the workforce-tech space, structured the way HR + finance professionals actually think about it.
What each platform actually does well — and where the rep's pitch deck overstates it. Side-by-side capability comparisons across the major mid-market HCM/HRIS systems.
Field notes on what goes wrong when teams switch platforms. The parallel-run sequencing, the data-cleanup checklist, the comms patterns that work — drawn from watching a lot of migrations land.
How HCM platforms handle (and don't handle) multi-state payroll, ACA, EEO-1, OSHA, and the audit-readiness questions finance teams care about most. Plus regulatory shifts as they happen.
When co-employment makes sense and when it doesn't. The honest tradeoffs around risk transfer, autonomy, and team size that most articles paper over with marketing speak.
The mid-market HCM space is loud. Every vendor has a polished pitch. Every analyst report is sponsored. Every comparison blog is affiliated. People who actually run HR or finance at 150-1,000 employee companies don't have a quiet place to read straight talk on the platforms, the patterns, and the trade-offs.
This site is that place. No vendor sponsorships. No affiliate links. No "request a quote" funnels. Just notes from the trenches, written for the people doing the work.
Multi-state professional services hit different HCM problems than single-site manufacturers. Coverage on this site is organized around the verticals where mid-market workforce-tech pain shows up most — and where the platforms either fit the workflow or fight it.
Law, consulting, engineering. Multi-state, hourly + salary mix, partner comp.
Certified payroll, prevailing wage, multi-state crews, union compliance.
Shift differentials, on-call, credentialing, ACA tracking under variable schedules.
Grant-funded compensation, membership-based teams, board reporting.
Time & attendance, multi-shift, OSHA tracking, union locals.
Remote-first multi-state, equity admin, fast headcount changes.
Audit-grade reporting, regulator-friendly comp histories, tight controls.
Tip credit, multi-location, high-turnover onboarding.
The HCM/HRIS space is full of paid placements dressed as analysis. These four rules are how this site stays different — and the pact you can hold me to.
No vendor pays for coverage, ranking, sponsorship, or favorable framing. If a platform shows up well in something I write, it's because it earned it.
Comparison-content sites usually run on referral fees — that's why the same 3 vendors keep "winning." This site has zero affiliate revenue.
If an article wouldn't be useful to someone running HR or finance at a real mid-market company, it doesn't ship. No high-level vendor-marketing speak.
I work in the HCM space day-to-day. Where my work introduces a conflict on a specific topic, it's stated up front in that article — not hidden in a footer.
Why does this exist, who's it for, and what's the model? Honest answers below.
The content is anchored on companies in the 150 to 1,000 employee range. SMB resources (Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, HR-as-an-afterthought) skip the multi-state, multi-entity, and compliance complexity that hits at this size. Enterprise content (Workday whitepapers, McKinsey HR reports) over-engineers the answer for a 200-person company.
Mid-market has its own playbook. That's what gets covered here.
I work day-to-day in the HCM space and have professional exposure to several of the platforms covered. Where my work introduces a conflict on a specific topic, it's stated up front in that article — not buried in a footer.
The site itself takes zero vendor sponsorship, runs no affiliate links, and doesn't earn referral fees on anything. The point is to publish the comparison content most "comparison" sites can't honestly publish.
HR generalists, HR business partners, VPs of People, CFOs, controllers, and ops leaders at mid-market companies who are either evaluating a platform change or trying to get more out of the one they have. Founders running HR themselves in growing teams. Anyone in finance who has had to wait 5 days for a custom payroll report.
No. The newsletter is free. The Q&A community is free and open. There's no premium tier, gated content, or "schedule a call to unlock the full report" lead-gen funnel.
If something on the site eventually becomes paid, that change will be obvious and the existing free content will stay free.
Roughly 1–2 articles a month, sometimes less. Articles ship when they're worth shipping. Volume is not a goal here — there's enough HCM content noise already.
Please. Three ways:
Because most mid-market HR tech conversations start at payroll — that's the entry point most teams already have. "Beyond" is the editorial direction: payroll is table stakes, the interesting decisions are everything else. Benefits admin, talent, compliance, reporting, integrations.
I work full-time in the workforce-tech space — which means I see the platforms, the pitches, and the migrations from up close every day. This site is where I share what I learn for the people on the buying side: HR managers, finance leaders, and operators who'd benefit from a less-marketed view of the landscape.
I welcome questions, corrections, and counter-examples from people who do this work — drop a note via LinkedIn or email if something I've written doesn't match your experience.
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Just an email — no company, no headcount, no sales call. If you'd rather just send a question, email AJ directly.