How to Digitalize HR Without Losing the Human Touch
When people talk about digitalizing HR, most think of efficiency, automation… and perhaps a little bit of fear. The fear that technology will depersonalize our work. That HR will lose its human touch. That onboarding will become just a series of clicks in a system, and candidates will never meet a real person.
But let’s be honest: how many non-digitalized processes truly feel human? How many times have you experienced an onboarding that wasn’t about culture, but about six Excel spreadsheets, ten online training modules, and a health and safety presentation that left you feeling mostly tired?
The reality is that humanity isn’t lost through digitalization. Humanity is lost when we forget why we have these processes in the first place.
And that’s precisely why digitalization doesn’t have to be a threat. It can be an opportunity. It frees us from routine and finally allows us to dedicate our time where technology can never replace a person: to culture, relationships, and caring for people.
Technology Isn’t the Enemy of Culture
At first glance, it might seem that way. Culture is about people, emotions, and relationships. Technology is about processes, data, and efficiency. On one hand, something warm and living; on the other, something that feels cold and mechanical.
But this is a false dichotomy. Technology and culture aren’t in opposition; they can complement each other perfectly.
- Without culture, even the most modern tool becomes just another to-do system that people use because they have to, not because it helps them. And they do so with the fear that something like this will eventually replace them, or with the feeling that their work no longer makes any sense.
- Without technology, culture often remains just a poster on the wall—beautiful words, but in practice, stuck in six spreadsheets, endless emails, and chaotic processes.
Technology is meant to lighten HR’s load, not dehumanize it. Its purpose is to create space for us to have more time for the real things—for conversations with people, for supporting managers, for developing relationships. This, however, requires a lot of work from HR and management.
When onboarding happens through a modern tool, it doesn’t mean a newcomer won’t get personal support. It means they don’t have to sign ten pieces of paper, and we can spend time with them where it truly matters: introducing them to the team, explaining company values, or giving them a chance to share their expectations.
That’s why I say: technology isn’t a substitute for culture. It’s an amplifier.
How to Start: 5 Rules for Digitalizing HR
If I were to summarize the basic principles that companies should follow, they would be these:
- Start with a strategy, not a tool.
Digitalization must be part of the HR strategy and support long-term business goals. It’s not about implementing software because everyone else is doing it, but about what will help us fulfill the company’s vision. Without a vision, people won’t buy into it; they need to know clearly why and where digitalization or automation is heading. - Have a clear HR vision.
If HR itself doesn’t know where it’s going, digitalization will turn into a series of random steps. The vision must define how we want to appear to candidates, what tone of voice we use in employer branding, and who we want to attract. If we say we are a relationship-based company and care about having a “people touch” from the very first moment, then having an AI interview candidates for us is probably not the ideal choice. - Involve people from the start.
Digitalization must not be “something HR launches and then emails out.” Employees and managers need to understand the benefits and, most importantly, have a say in how digitalization will shape their work. - Filter through your values.
Every new process or tool should pass this test: “How does this help us live our company values more fully? Does it contradict them?” - Communicate what work is being freed up.
The biggest fears arise when people feel that digitalization is “taking their jobs.” Explain that it’s only taking away the routine, freeing up their hands for what is more important and meaningful.
Filter Through Values
One of the biggest traps of digitalization is focusing solely on efficiency. But HR isn’t logistics—how we do things matters just as much as how quickly we do them.
That’s why I believe it’s essential to filter every step of digitalization through company values. At Easy, we do this by asking these questions for every tool or process we want to digitalize or automate:
- Responsible Freedom – Does this digitalization support people in having more autonomy while being able to take responsibility? Or is it just another control mechanism?
- Easy Fellowship – Does this tool bring us closer to being partners, not just “colleagues”? Does it enable sharing, communication, and strengthening relationships?
- Next Level – Does digitalization open up space for growth and advancement? For example, allowing HR or managers to focus on people development instead of paperwork?
- Order & Harmony – Does the process bring more structure and clarity? Or does it add more chaos to an already complex workflow?
- Easy Cares – Does digitalization make people feel that the company cares for them, that the process makes their lives easier? Or do they feel it’s mainly about cutting costs?
These questions are universal; any company can ask them, even if they don’t share the same values. The important thing is to have your own filter to ensure that digitalization doesn’t conflict with who the company truly is.
Therefore, I recommend:
- Start by defining your values in practice – not as slogans on a website, but as concrete principles.
- Use them in decision-making – for every new tool, do a check: does this support our values, or does it go against them?
- Share this with your team – explain to people why you chose something. Not because it’s the “cheapest on the market,” but because it fits with how you operate.
Involving Teams: The Key to Successful Digitalization
Digitalization will never be successful if HR or management “mandates it from above.” Technology that doesn’t simplify work but instead complicates it will end up forgotten.
That’s why at Easy, we chose a path that has proven effective: we started digitalization with the teams, not apart from them.
AI Canvas Workshops
Each team went through what we call an AI Canvas Workshop:
- Dream Big: If you were like Harry Potter and could magically simplify your work, what area would it be?
- Map the Reality: We described the daily workflows they deal with.
- Prioritize Impact: We selected what would have the greatest effect. This is why I emphasized the need for a vision and strategy at the beginning of the article. Without them, we can’t prioritize.
- Create Use Cases: Concrete assignments were then passed on for implementation.
This made people feel that digitalization stemmed from their own needs, not from someone else’s decision. They designed it themselves.
Ambassadors, Not “Enthusiasts”
Every team should have its own ambassador—someone who truly understands their colleagues’ work and can explain what digitalization will bring. Not a generic “AI enthusiast,” but a respected person from within the team.
Communicating the Benefits
The language we use to explain digitalization also makes a huge difference. Not “we’re automating to save time,” but:
- “This will get you out of the routine.”
- “You’ll have space for the work you enjoy.”
- “You won’t have to spend hours in Excel; you can focus on people.”
This kind of communication helps people see that digitalization is not a threat, but an opportunity.
The Most Common Mistakes in HR Digitalization
- Digitalization without a strategy: The tool is there, but no one knows why.
- Ignoring values: The processes go against the company’s culture.
- HR decides alone: Without involving managers and employees.
- Weak communication: People don’t understand what digitalization will bring them.
3 Tips You Can Implement Right Away
- Ask yourself: How will this tool help strengthen relationships and trust?
- Involve your team: Hold a mini-workshop and ask people what would save them the most time.
- Start with a small step: Like digital signatures or automating one simple process. It’s crucial for people to see an immediate benefit or a completed automation/digitalization at the beginning to build trust.
Digitalization Doesn’t Mean Dehumanization
Digitalizing HR isn’t about speed at all costs. It’s about how we can use technology to strengthen the culture, values, and relationships within the company.
If we build it on strategy, values, and people’s involvement, then technology is not a threat, but a partner. It helps us get rid of routine and focus on what is truly important in HR: the people.