🎤 Let’s go on the Eras tour of HR.
Probably less exciting than the Taylor Swift Eras tour but just as informative and possibly enlightening as her tour was!!!
You never knowwww.
Era 1: The birth of HR
In the early 1900s, the first "personnel departments" were born.
The job was simple: hire people, keep records, make sure the workplaces didn't burn down. Nobody was asking personnel to weigh in on culture strategy or lead the AI transformation. The personnel department was mostly just trying to make sure workers showed up and got paid.
Scope level: manageable. Vibes: fine.
Era 2: Time for some laws
Fast forward a few decades and things started shifting. The 1960s and 70s arrived and suddenly the bar was higher than just "did the workers show up."
✍🏽 Civil rights legislation, equal pay laws, workplace safety regulations were changing the focus. Corporations had a lot of leeway before this era in the decisions they were making but legislation started catching up.
The first pivot! HR started to shift from recordkeeping to compliance function. The people function had to know the law, enforce the law, and still continue to do recordkeeping and being the “face” of the company.
Scope level: getting heavier. Vibes: manageable but starting to push it.
Era 3: Let’s be strategic too
Then came the 80s and 90s.
🧠 HR started to get positioned as a value-adding strategic partner and advisor to leadership. Which sounds great! And it was, in theory. Fun fact: you can thank Dave Ulrich for pioneering the HR push into more strategic work.
Here’s what that looked like in practice: HR was now expected to do the administrative stuff AND the strategic stuff. Not instead of thought, in addition to. So um, more work. Impactful work but still more.
Scope level: a lot. Vibes: starting to get overwhelmed
Era 4: Everything, everywhere all at once
By 2019, HR was already carrying a lot.
Administrative. Legal. Strategic. Cultural. Engagement. Change management. All of it, all at once.
✨And then March 2020 happened.✨
OVERNIGHT, and I mean that literally, HR became the function responsible for figuring out how an entire global workforce was going to keep working during a pandemic. All while also experiencing a pandemic.
Remote work policies. Safety protocols. Mental health resources. Furloughs. Layoffs. Return-to-office plans. Vaccine mandates. Then no mandates. Grief. Burnout. The Great Resignation. The Talent Wars. Quiet quitting.
Every single one of those landed on HR's desk!!!!! ACK.
While HR was also, by the way, experiencing all of it personally. And if I have to hear that phrase put on your oxygen mask before helping any one else, I will SCREAM. That advice makes sense but it’s so patronizing to say that to someone juggling an impossible load.
⚖️ IMO, 2020 was the tipping point. Not because the pandemic created the scope problem, it didn't.
The scope had been creeping for a hundred years.
2020 ripped off the bandaid and showed everyone, finally, just how much HR was actually carrying!!!!
But instead of using that moment to resource the function properly most orgs just... kept adding to the pile.
And that, folks, is how we got here. Where some HR folks do “hate it” here and constantly feel stressed by the workload.
Scope level: TOO MUCH. Vibes: this is fine. 🔥