Has the HR Profession Gone From Undervalued to Overwhelming?

BY Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza | April 18, 2023

In just three years, HR leaders have gone from aspiring to be where the action is to rarely getting a break from it. The professionals once regarded as paper pushers and corporate law officers are now charged with an increasingly long list of duties: developing the future workforce, protecting employees’ mental health, maintaining equity, preventing attrition, and lots more. 

For many if not most HR professionals, the result is burnout. Just as one crisis eases, another springs up, with HR often the first responders. In a recent surreal turn reported by Bloomberg, some HR leaders have now been tasked with laying off their peers when even the HR department starts getting the axe. 

Many leaders in HR have celebrated the expansion of HR into so many business operations, but has the department taken on too much too quickly? Is the job overwhelming? According to a recent poll by business software company Sage, 95% of HR leaders and C-suite executives say that HR role is too much work.

Tamara Jolivette-Smith, the director of HR at health care provider Houston Methodist agrees. “In day-to-day operations, the work never stops,” she said in an email to From Day One. “New and unexpected issues continue to arise, with mental health issues becoming more and more prevalent with employees.”

To handle the department’s growing responsibilities, Jolivette-Smith added three new positions to her team: two new hires for employee relations and one for recruiting–the duties that consume most of her team’s time. She’s ready to add more if that’s what it takes. “Burnout is real and I want to ensure the integrity of the team,” she added. 

Indeed it is: Few HR practitioners need reminding how exhausting the work can be. According to the Sage poll, 81% of HR leaders said they are personally burnt out, and 62% said they’re considering leaving the field.

The department has spent three years battling challenge after challenge, Christopher Shryock, SVP and chief people officer at Sam’s Club, told From Day One. First there was Covid, then the Great Resignation and the need for rapid hiring, and now they’re managing fallout from massive layoffs, specifically in the tech industry. That’s just the new stuff.

Shryock said everyone is feeling the burn, not just the HR department. The difference is that HR has an obligation to put on its proverbial oxygen mask first. 

Shryock believes that a burnt-out HR department is an ineffective one, and the messages that HR department sends about well-being have to be applied to the HR team first. “We talk a lot about how our team isn’t going to be very helpful to the organization if we don’t have our own oxygen masks,” he said. “We have to take some of our own medicine in terms of what we are saying, what we are articulating, and what we are encouraging the rest of the organization to do.”

One reason for the significant burnout in the HR function may be its demographic makeup. HR departments are predominantly staffed by women, and women bear the brunt of unpaid work. “You’ve got 34% of women today saying they’re burned out, vs. 26% of men,” said Shryock, citing a 2021 Gallup poll. “That’s a delta of eight percentage points. If you just go back three years, that delta was three percentage points.”

Despite the weight of the work, HR leaders are remarkably resilient and optimistic. The Sage poll found that 91% of HR leaders are excited about the future of HR, and 86% consider themselves speedy and agile. “I love HR and people, and I love working through the challenges,” Jolivette-Smith said. 

So, what does HR need to succeed? According to the poll, the department needs to upskill its team with a focus on tech specialization, invest in well-being initiatives, and develop stronger peer-to-peer networks within HR. 

Jolivette-Smith said that she’s taking team lunches and making time for off-site activities so her HR team can give back to the community together; she has added morning huddles to field team questions and guide her staff through what’s on deck for the day.  

At Sam’s Club, Shryock has been automating and digitizing as much as possible. His team has invested in consolidating data across fewer tech tools and apps, automating processes, making process approvals easier, and in opening learning opportunities “so the HR team can be out of the minutiae and can be more focused on value-add and engaging work.” He said digital products and tech teams in the company are great partners. 

If the HR team can take care of its own well-being first, they can use that energy to pour into the rest of the organization. Shryock cited a favorite quote: “It’s chaos, be kind,” attributed to late author Michelle McNamara. “I think if we take that mentality, not only of the business functions and the associates and the employees we’re supporting, but we take that mentality with each other, I think that can actually unlock a lot for us.”

Emily McCrary-Ruiz-Esparza is a freelance reporter and From Day One contributing editor who writes about the future of work, HR, recruiting, DEI, and women's experiences in the workplace. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post, Fast Company, Quartz at Work, Digiday’s Worklife, and Food Technology, among others.

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