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ADP award blog header, including best place to work and women impact tech 100

We are Proud to Design and Create a Workplace for Everyone

April 13, 2022/in Career Advice & Insights, Career Development, Career Journey, Diversity & Inclusion, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Engineering, Giving Back, Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Voice of Our People, Volunteerism Brazil, Home Highlight, innovation, New York, NYC, women in tech /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

We are Proud to Design and Create a Workplace for Everyone


Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

ADP award blog header, including best place to work and women impact tech 100

ADP will continue to strive to be the best place to work, creating a workplace for diverse talents. 

We are Proud to Design and Create a Workplace for Everyone 

At ADP, we’re constantly working to provide the best possible experience for our clients and associates. We’re proud to announce that we’ve been recognized with various awards! Whether providing outstanding service or creating a great place to work, we always strive to be the best.  

Business Resource Group (iWIN)

iWIN – Business Resource Group

Women Impact Tech 100 

When it comes to gender equity in the technology industry, ADP is leading by example. Our technologists are dedicated to developing inclusive products and services, providing a path forward for all our teams.  

Women Impact Tech, an organization focused on improving opportunities for women in STEM, has named ADP one of the top 100 Women Impact Tech companies. The recognition criteria measure employee feedback on workplace culture for women, benefits, diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. 

We are excited to see that our work is reshaping the tech space.  

“These top 100 companies are doing the right things that make a difference in women’s ability to have meaningful careers, offering a culture for women to thrive,” said Paula Ratliff, the President of Women Impact Tech.  

The good news doesn’t end here! We have also earned recognition from Top 50 Employer by Woman Engineering Magazine, Top 50 Best Workplaces for Women in India, and the AnitaB.org 2021 Top Large Company for Women Technologists for the second consecutive year.  

“As a leader, I want to create an environment of empowerment with a diversity of thought and perspectives,” said Laurie Liszewski, VP of Product Development at ADP.  

Opportunities across ADP include participation in our Women’s Leadership Development Program, Grace Hopper Celebration with AnitaB.org, and our Business Resource Groups such as iWIN (International Women’s Inclusion Network). 

“There’s a lot here to be excited about. We’re all working together, and we’re going to be stronger in the long run,” said Amber Abreu, Senior Manager of User Experience (UX) research at ADP.  

We can’t wait to see what’s next! 

Fast Company - Award, next big thing in tech

Next Big Things in Tech 

ADP DataCloud has been named on Fast Company’s first-ever list of the Next Big Things in Tech list, honoring the technology breakthroughs that promise to shape the future. We have earned this recognition for our powerful people analytics solution, ADP DataCloud, which leverages our vast workforce data to address the most significant challenges businesses face today, including employee retention, pay equity, diversity, equity, and inclusion shift economic policy. Read the press release here.  

In addition to this award, ADP DataCloud has also earned a Stratus Award, the Top HR Product of the Year, and the Data Analytics Innovation of the Year.   

We are proud of the product enhancements our teams developed:   

  • The new Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Dashboard allow companies to see the makeup of their workforce and address underrepresentation.  
  • Organizational Benchmarks taps ADP’s workforce data to help companies decide how best to deploy workers.  
  • When paired with ADP DataCloud’s Pay Equity Storyboard, clients can generate a personalized planner and budget to help them close gaps and measure maturity against peers.  

This award further validates our clients and prospects of what’s to come and why they need us. Congratulations to everyone who has been a part of the development! 

ADP 2022 Built In Best Places to Work  

We are the proudest of our valuable people and the culture here. Built In, a top industry source for tech candidates to research and review companies, has named ADP with seven awards, including 2022 Best Places to Work in LA and New York City, Best Large Companies to Work & Best Benefits in both cities.

“Now more than ever, we’re proud to offer an engaging workplace with a dynamic culture that empowers our associates to foster innovation and develop innovative ideas with limitless possibilities,” said Aaron S., Senior Vice President of Product Development at ADP. “We are thrilled to be recognized in New York City and will continue our relentless focus on growing our technology from the energy of our associates.” 

“Our highly engaged associates know we’re committed to providing each person with opportunities to use their diverse expertise to develop great products and technology that help deliver amazing client experiences,” said Leonard K., Senior Vice President of Product Development. “Built In LA’s recognition is an honor and a direct reflection of the innovation and dedication of our associates. 

Built In’s Best Places to Work program rates companies based on their compensation, benefits, and culture. This year’s list highlights those employers who have created a culture that supports employees in-office and virtually that is diverse, equitable, and inclusive. 

Great Place to Work® 

Great Place to Work® (GPTW), a global authority on workplace culture, named ADP Brazil Labs and ADP India one of the best companies to work for 2021. GPTW has a mission to build a better world by helping organizations become a great place to work for all. 

Here are the award nominations.  

ADP India

ADP India

ADP India

  • India’s Best Workplaces for Women 2021 
  • India’s Best Workplaces™ in IT & IT-BPM 2021 
  • India’s Best Companies to Work For 2021 
  • Commitment to Being a Great Place to Work
ADP Brazil Labs

ADP Brazil Labs

ADP Brazil Labs 

  • One of the Best Companies in the Rio Grande do Sul.  
  • Women Impact Tech 2022 Honoree 

The awards recognize ADP India and ADP Brazil Labs not only for their talented associates but also for an environment of technological culture and innovation applied in the workspace.  

Our clients, associates, and tech recruiting teams remain focused on cultivating valuable relationships in the challenging times of pandemics. We will continue to strive to be the best place to work, creating a workplace for diverse talents. 

Thank you, and Congratulations to all our associates who make ADP one of the best places to work! 

Interested in a tech career at ADP?           

Click here to search for your next move and visit Who We Hire. 

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Driving Innovation with an Ethnography of AI

April 7, 2022/in Career Advice & Insights, Career Journey, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Voice of Our People, Women in STEM business anthropologist, Home Highlight, innovation, New York, NYC, research, voice of our people, women in tech /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Driving Innovation with an Ethnography of AI 


Women in STEM, Anthropology, Innovation 

Ethnography Blackboard Photo

How might ethnography help advance our understanding of human and machine relationships?

Driving Innovation with an Ethnography of AI

By Martha Bird, Chief Business Anthropologist at ADP

Headshot of Martha

Humans are typically curious by nature, but there’s a deep resource around human behavior that can be tremendously valuable as we design our strategies in business and life in general.

Cultural anthropologists combine curiosity and empirical science to deliver sustained value. We’re trained to interpret and translate why people do the things they do and how unconscious and overlapping motivations influence their actions, their attitudes, their approaches to the myriad people, products, politics, and places of everyday life. We do this by spending time in the places where people make meaning, a method of inquiry known as ethnography. It’s what gets us excited, and it’s where we impact academia and industry.

Part of our work focuses on challenging the things we take for granted and, in so doing, encouraging new ways of looking at ideas, interactions, and people we may have overlooked in the forgetfulness of the routine. Curiosity is our “rocket fuel.

My colleague, Jay Hasbrouck, captures the spirit of the anthropological mindset when he writes, “When used as more than a research tool to expose consumer needs, ethnographic thinking helps companies and organizations build on the cultural meanings and contexts of their offerings, develop the flexibility to embrace cultural change, focus their strategies at critical cultural phenomena, and test and develop business model changes.”1

Where Ethnography Comes In

For those of us in the tech sector, in particular, our focus is quite aggressively on questions around data biases, including how algorithms are constructed and, ultimately, who they advantage and who they don’t. It’s a much bigger issue than simply feeding the machine and imagining that the outputs are somehow free of judgment. They’re not.

But who should be responsible for exploring the roots of these biases that pre-exist machine learning — biases that are already deeply embedded in culture. We hear a lot of blaming in the popular press about this or that platform creating unfair advantages. Nevertheless, should we leave it to data analysts and computer scientists to untangle these social inequalities? It seems a more appropriate area of investigation for those of us who study culture and the power flows that animate it.

So, we begin to ask questions. What’s fair in a data-mediated world? What role does empathy play in communicating evidence and big data? What constitutes evidence in a global context, among others?

Placing blame on flawed algorithms and the companies on which data-driven services depend is really missing the critical point. We need to look outside tech and start to get serious about the very non-technical realities that contribute to an unequal present and, consequently, an inevitably unequal future.

I’ve been giving a lot of thought to the admittedly broad subject of AI viewed from an anthropological perspective. My main goal in doing so is to further challenge the cultural category of AI (big and small), while also exploring how ethnographic methodology (direct observation/active listening) might help advance our understanding of the human and machine relationships forming here and now and tomorrow.

Specifically, I’m thinking about two main question areas. First, a definitional focus: How might we begin to articulate an ethnography of AI, what role might AI technologies play in the service of ethnographic practice, and how might (and does) ethnographic inquiry inform AI technologies? Second, a philosophical focus: Who is responsible for bias in data, algorithms, and outcomes to include discussion around how work related to AI is currently organized within tech companies today?

As companies become increasingly reliant on data-driven insights to build their offerings, market their products, and guide the scope for future projects, we need to get serious about the reality that data isn’t raw or clean — but rather deeply reflective of the social and political circumstances from which they are pulled and to which they contribute. It’s an exciting time to be an anthropologist working in technology where the human is deeply enmeshed with the machine.

Get more insights from Martha Bird by reading Storytelling in Business: Capturing Organizational Wisdom.

 

Interested in a tech career at ADP?   

Learn more about what it’s like working for ADP here and our current openings. 

–

The ADP Research Institute is the global thought leader for Labor Market and People and Performance research. Don’t miss the latest data-driven insights from the ADP Research Institute; sign up to get alerts in your inbox.

1 Ethnographic Thinking: From Method to Mindset (Anthropology & Business) 1st Edition, Routledge, 2018

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Team APIs: What They Are and Why They Matter to Teamwork

March 24, 2022/in Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Leadership, Voice of Our People Home Highlight, innovation, Roseland, Voice Highlight /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Team APIs: What They Are and Why They Matter to Teamwork


Voice of Our People, Innovation, Future of Work

Chuck's Portrait Header

Team APIs could vary depending on team context and needs. One universal value is to listen to your people and act on what they vocalize.

Team APIs: What They Are and Why They Matter to Teamwork  

Charles L., Senior Director of Application Development, shares team topologies and how you can use the concept of APIs to better manage teams. In this blog, Charles explores various team management methodologies, including four different team types and three interacting models.  

We live in a world where people are always looking for the next best thing. When it comes to leadership, we know that if you’re not engaged with your team, they won’t be engaged either, which translates into a lack of passion and excitement in the products they are creating! One way to create more cohesiveness and get everyone on board is to use Team APIs. These team communication interfaces have become the backbone of modern tech companies.  

What is a Team API?  

In the case of software development, an API (Application Programming Interface) is a set of instructions that tells a computer how to interact with another piece of software. We can use the same idea to create instructions for interacting with our team. 

I first read about the Team APIs in Team Topologies, a book by Matthew Skeleton and Manual Pais that talks about creating effective teamwork and helps businesses choose the right pattern of interactions for their organizations. The authors also teach you how to keep software healthy while optimizing value streams. 

Let’s Begin: Build an API 

A critical first step to creating a communications API for your team is to establish a contact point. This can be a team lead, business analyst, or product owner. All communication will flow through that person from outside the team. This keeps the work visible and consolidates the Works in Progress (WIP) under one contact.  

Chuck and his son

Charles and his son

Tool Recommendations 

If you are looking for a tool to assist in this process, consider products such as Asana, Basecamp, or Jira to streamline communication within your company. The tools can help you manage projects, tasks, and meetings efficiently while also providing an environment where everyone can work together harmoniously.  

My prioritization and goal-setting approach have changed over time, influenced by Allen Hollub and Domenic DeGrandis. When running a software team, the two hardest things are working together and ensuring each person’s work is meaningful and making sure each team player produces quality results without feeling overwhelmed or undervalued by their organizations. This is when these tools come into play and help us stay organized, while creating an easy developer experience.  

Easy Developer Experience 

While prioritization comes down to leveraging and optimizing the flow, it’s also important to create an easy developer experience. This translates into spending time improving our team’s development process every quarter to make code more efficient and ready for production. It’s essential to optimize and align goals between business and development processes.  

Developer experience is so important because developers should focus on building software that solves business problems. Developers should not be burdened with non-business value add work like dealing with infrastructure, deployments, firewalls, domains, provisioning, procurement, or networking etc. A good developer experience makes it so easy for a developer to do their work, so they can focus on building and experimenting with features that enable our clients to do more.   

Introducing Team Topologies  

According to Team Topologies, the authors introduced different team types and interaction modes.  

Four Types of Teams 

  • Stream-Aligned: A team that is uniquely positioned to drive business change and opportunity, with an alignment of core values, skills mix tailored towards delivering value on their own. 
  • Platform: A team that helps to reduce cognitive load by providing everything in one place.  
  • Enabling: A team dedicated to helping other teams with the adoption and modification of software, as part of their transition period. 
  • Complicated Sub-system: A team with the mission to help other teams transition as they jump from old software and processes into something more modern. 

Three Interaction Modes 

  • Collaboration: Two teams work together to solve a shared goal, particularly when it comes down to finding new technology or approaches. 
  • X-As-A-Service: One team consumes APIs, tools, or full software products from another team. 
  • Facilitating: An enabling team facilitates the other team learning or adopting new approaches. 

The bread-and-butter of team types is Stream-Aligned. This team type has everything it needs to deploy software to production independently. The most common interaction model is a collaboration where two teams work closely together, for example, X-AS-A-Service, meaning one team uses another team API.  

Why APIs Matter in DevOps 

APIs are a crucial component of software development. They provide greater insight into how applications work and allow for faster integration, easier consumption across the lifecycle – all things that DevOps teams want in their task lists!  

More companies have started to build core platforms, accelerating and scaling development. The state of DevOps conducted based on DORA metrics by Google points to an increase in large enterprises adopting cloud and high-performing software companies in 2021. Good documentation is key to implementing development capabilities and positive team culture to mitigate burnout risks. There is another DevOps report by Puppet Labs that focuses on team topologies. These are all evidence where Team APIs makes a positive impact on DevOps. 

Team Success: Prioritize the Developer Experience 

An effective team values the Developer Experience (DX), meaning the overall experience developers experience in working on your product. DX is essential for a company’s core product and development. Large enterprises learn to react quicker to market changes when they remove friction in the development process, which leads to revised change management practices and more frequent deployments. Shortly, I see this happening. Companies will modernize their change management processes to accelerate their software delivery. When teams prioritize the DX, their success is inevitable. 

Chuck and his family

Charles and his family

Teamwork: Care for Your People 

Another consideration in team building is the lag, meaning time spent waiting on someone or something to happen. Grouping people by functions like Dev, QA, or Ops, or Product creates a lag in your team’s flow. What happens when people must wait? They get bored and work on something else. Once a developer works on two things at once, the chance of introducing a defect rises. 

Grouping people into functional tribes also creates unwanted behaviors. One of the most important things to understand in DevOps is the people; they are your teammates. Since everyone is on the same scrum teams, instead of calling each other by roles such as OPS or QA, use ‘my teammate’ and recognize ‘my teammate needs help on this item.’ Your mindset changes when you apply the rule in day-to-day life. You’d want to help and contribute more to the team. 

What You Should Know: As a Leader in DevOps 

How do you know that you are doing a fantastic job as a leader? The answer can be found in the feedback loop. Making the workplace a more comfortable and enjoyable place can help associates flourish. A positive feedback loop achieves that by listening to the voices and using the comments to improve organizational structures.  

I recommend The DevOps Handbook for any technology leader looking to improve their organization’s culture and innovation levels. The book includes three DevOps principles: Flow, Feedback, Continuous Experimentation & Learning. To improve any system, you need feedback loops, and the faster the feedback, the better. It is important to improve any system, especially in delivering software to production. Not having suitable feedback loops can lead to poor outcomes. 

For example, my team uses ADP’s Standout app, a high-performing tool that helps identify each individual team member’s strengths through a series of surveys that are designed for different types of companies with various needs, including software developers. You’ll find out exactly where tasks need improvement on both individual levels and group discussions, ensuring everyone has an opportunity to share their opinions about what works best within these parameters. 

Our community: ADP’s Transformation  

I’ve seen such a great technological leap forward over the last decade. I love the direction ADP is going. We didn’t have all these avenues for connection when I founded the ADP Developer Community back in 2013. Coordinating inner sourced projects was more difficult. Since then, the openness and sharing within GPT have been incredible. I feel encouraged hearing our leader, Don Weinstein, celebrate innovations such as CI/CD. What we do at ADP is incredible, especially the annual GPT Connect developer’s conference that shows sharing technology across teams is a high priority.  

Team APIs could vary depending on team context and needs. One universal value is to listen to your people and act on what they vocalize. Prove to the team you hear them and do something about their proposed ideas. I believe a high-performing team will be open and honest with each other. It’s a group effort for the team members to use feedback to improve while receiving support and help from their leader.  

 

Interested in DevOPs or Application Development positions at ADP? We’re hiring!   

Click here to search for your next move and visit Who We Hire. 

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Steve R., Major Incident Manager, Leads Through Changing Technology

January 11, 2022/in Career Advice & Insights, Career Development, Career Journey, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Voice of Our People innovation, voice of our people /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Steve R., Major Incident Manager, Leads Through Changing Technology  


Innovation, Voice of Our People, Career Insights

Steve's Header

ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library) is a framework created around standardization, focusing on best practices in planning, delivery, maintenance, and the IT services lifecycle.

Steve R., Major Incident Manager, Leads Through Changing Technology  

By Steve R., Lead Major Incident Manager 

Coming to ADP  

ADP Trip to Paris 2019

ADP Trip to Paris 2019

As a Lead Major Incident Manager at ADP, I have more than ten years of experience in critical incident management and application-based troubleshooting, following Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) and Agile ideology. July 2021 marked my nineteenth year of service at ADP, and I took the opportunity to reflect on my career journey.  

My first position was with an inbound call team at the beginning of ADP’s fiscal year 2004. Our team label has changed throughout the years, and I was a member of what was known as “E-Tech.” We worked directly with clients who had challenges with payroll deadlines throughout the day. Although we supported only a single product out of the hundreds ADP offers, it was apparent from the start that the company had countless potential growth avenues. I was incredibly grateful for different development programs and resources; one of them was ADP’s substantial employee referral program, which helped me land a role in the lead position. I loved my team and learned from the strongest performers, shadowing good leadership. 

Speaking of the culture here, I’m happy to share this is a place where everyone cares about the clients and their experiences. I am proud to be a part of the organization where the leaders encourage us to learn, improve, explore new skills, and challenge ourselves. As technologies evolve, I see growth opportunities both in and outside the organization.   

Growing Opportunities: ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library) 

As our product and customer scope grew, my team became the second-tier escalation group in the larger, global corporate organization. There was no global incident management standard during the mid-2000s, so product teams like mine handled their outage recovery and communications. That’s when I joined a global Incident Management team.  

ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library) is a framework created around standardization, focusing on best practices in planning, delivery, maintenance, and the IT services lifecycle. We built the initial foundation and framework using the ITIL methodology, ideal from the Incident Management perspective. The methodology accommodated our needs, including managing events and resolving procedures. We collaborated with stakeholders within each segmented step of an initiative using Agile project management. We were proud to achieve genuine process improvement by considering client feedback and ensuring that any changes would lead to the desired outcomes. Using Agile methodology with an ITIL foundation, the hybrid model is in place today and continues to evolve. While it is effective in today’s ADP climate, we are open and ready to adjust as clients face changes.   

Steve and his family

Steve and his family

The Beginning: Incident Management Group   

Not everyone on my team was a part of the new Incident Management group. While each E-Tech individual was highly skilled as an individual contributor, the desire to shift focus to Incident Management was not widespread. I was proud to manage the situations when outage events occurred with the products. Most of our team thrived in a “hands-on,” very technically minded role, and others became outstanding product experts. Both were vital to support our hosted applications and maintain a positive Client experience. The incident management group allowed me to collaborate with people I wouldn’t have met otherwise. Each incident event was different, challenging, and fast-paced. 

I was with the application team for nine years and I am in my 10th year of incident management. My specialties include written communication, conversational command & control, and documentation. These problem-solving skills have brought me a sense of achievement and fulfillment. I’d also like to credit a leadership team member for recognizing my strengths. He assured me I was going in the right direction and inspired me to become a better leader myself. I’ve thrived in my new role, and I am grateful for his mentorship.    

The Future: Continuous Growth   

Steve and His Son at Football Game

Steve and his son at football game

There will always be challenges when we grow and expand our knowledge in technology. The most important quality to develop is empathy, especially for all global readers. It is the foundation to understand and to communicate – an ability to empathize, show the big picture, and overcome roadblocks as a team. I am grateful for ADP’s leadership teams, celebrating user-first values, our mission, and a passion toward transformation.  

A positive working environment inspires associates to work on their career advancement. As ADP continues to evolve in a rapid industry change, I, the CIRT Lead Incident Manager, am on the leadership path. I encourage associates looking to do the same to reach out since the support I received at ADP has been crucial to my career success.  

Both personal growth and further learning opportunities are essential. Successful leaders share their methods, providing examples and guidance. I’m grateful for ADP’s mentorship program, which pairs associates with seasoned leaders to exchange perspectives and knowledge. It’s perfect for associates who are looking for professional connections! I constantly remind myself a great leader prepares his people with the right resources and helps them obtain the tools to navigate challenges. As the future unfolds, I look forward to becoming an integral part of ADP’s leadership community, supporting other associates in their learning and career success.    

Interested in an Incident Management career?        

Click here to search for your next move and visit Who We Hire.   

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Why Employees Are Dedefining What Work Will Look Like in 2022

December 27, 2021/in Career Advice & Insights, Career Journey, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Leadership, Tech Trends Alpharetta, innovation, tech trends, voice of our people /by achiu

Why employees are redefining what work will look like in 2022

As the wants and needs of workers evolve, employers will need to keep up next year.
By: Aaron Smith | December 15, 2021
Topics: 2022 preview | Career Development | Company culture | Coronavirus | Diversity and Inclusion | Employee Benefits | Engagement | HR Technology | Learning and Development | Recognition | Recruiting | Retention | Talent Management | Top Stories | Top Stories

Over the past nearly two years, there have been tremendous changes in how and where work gets done, along with a rising digital transformation accelerated amid the global pandemic—both of which fueled businesses to streamline workflows, empower and engage teams, and optimize for future growth. This pace of change is now quickly becoming the norm, as innovation builds further momentum. As we continue to see such significant change, what will the world of work look like in 2022?

Aaron Smith, ADP

Author Aaron Smith

The answer to that depends upon the fact that the global workforce itself stands changed as well. In fact, ADP Research Institute found that 64% of the global workforce was negatively impacted by COVID-19, including 28% who lost a job, were furloughed or were temporarily laid off, and 23% who took a pay cut. These labor market shifts have led workers to reprioritize their needs, further redefining how and where work gets done and adding pressure for employers to meet their emerging demands.

As we head into 2022, employees are driving work’s transformation. Leveraging ADP’s data into the workforce, here are four key trends shaping the evolution:

 

Employee visibility will be redefined

According to ADP Research Institute’s People at Work: A Global Workforce View study, in just one year, three-quarters (75%) of the global workforce made changes or plans to change how or where they live, with that trend even greater (85%) among Generation Z. Additionally, ADP surveyed small and mid-sized U.S. employers and found that 66% already have a hybrid work model in place, helping to account for this shift.

Related: What ADP Research indicates is fueling the Great Resignation

With workers no longer sharing one central location and many businesses currently operating across a mix of hybrid, on-site and remote locations, businesses will need new opportunities to increase employee visibility. To better understand the needs of a dispersed workforce, managers will use people data to gain insight into how teams are performing. This data provides employers with the real-time insights they need to drive employee engagement and performance.

People and purpose will drive workplace culture

As changing work models shift workplace culture, employers will look for new ways to build connections. ADP Research Institute found that U.S. workers who feel they are “strongly connected” to their employer are 75 times more likely to be “fully engaged” than those who do not feel connected. With connection driving engagement, employers will need to refocus squarely on their people and center initiatives around the larger purpose that unites the workforce.

To build a workplace where everyone can thrive, employers will embrace people-centered initiatives. This includes maximizing workforce flexibility through working arrangements, benefits programs and policies, and giving workers the tools they need to be successful. As businesses look to foster connection, the focus on diversity, equity and inclusion will continue to evolve, broadening perspectives and driving true, measurable progress.

Reliable data and expertise will power resiliency

The already-complex regulatory environment will see additional operational and compliance considerations in 2022, as employees continue in their remote and hybrid work arrangements. ADP’s HR Survey Series with HR Outsourcing found that nearly 20% of U.S. companies with 25-99 employees concede they are currently facing challenges with compliance and regulatory issues. That percentage could increase as regulations change.

See also: Want real change? Look to data and analytics

Leaders will need to rely more heavily on real-time data to guide decision-making and stay ahead of compliance mandates. Timely, quality data will enable businesses to act on important decisions with confidence. For example, to better manage return-to-the-workplace policies including vaccination tracking and testing, employers are using people data.

Greater innovation will accelerate growth

As business models evolve amid global shifts, organizations will turn to technology to help drive efficiency and expand capabilities by eliminating task work and refocusing efforts on strategic growth initiatives. This evolution points to the rising trend of adopting technologies that create efficiencies while enhancing the employee experience.

We’ll additionally see a surge in skills-based hiring as roles continue to evolve amid a digital transformation and the pandemic’s impact on the labor market. ADP Research Institute found that more than one in four workers (28%) report having taken on a new or changing role due to pandemic-driven labor market shifts; for Gen Z workers, the number jumps to 36%. Since the pandemic began, many workers were required to learn new skills and take on additional or alternate duties beyond their usual jobs to adjust to new work models, many of which have become permanent operational changes.

Workers understand that these new skills make them even more attractive in a tight job market, and they will continue to pursue new opportunities—internal and external—where they can apply their unique strengths. Businesses wanting to retain valuable employees and accelerate employee performance will need to make sure they are providing opportunities to develop newfound skills or embark on a new career trajectory within the organization with more potential for growth. Additionally, employers will also rely on technologies, such as machine learning, to identify workers with the right skills in unique places, such as former applicants who may have previously applied for alternate roles.

Looking forward

As the dynamics of work continue to shift in the year ahead, employees will play a large role in how businesses adapt. To drive business performance and growth, people are the key to success. Without people who feel connected to the work they’re doing and empowered by their employers to succeed, growth is but a goal. Only when working in tandem can businesses and their people achieve their fullest potential.

Aaron Smith is senior vice president of Product Development at ADP.

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Future of Conversational AI: Here’s What You Should Know

December 23, 2021/in Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Leadership, Voice of Our People artificial intelligence, innovation, NYC, tech trends, voice of our people /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Future of Conversational AI: Here’s What You Should Know


Voice of Our People, Innovation, Career Insights

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The more we understand what drives our situational awareness, consciousness, and creativity, the more we will evolve conversational AI and sentiment analysis with more robust outcomes.

Future of Conversational AI: Here’s What You Should Know   

By Azfar Rizvi, Conversational Designer 

“I’ll be back.”  

We first heard this iconic line in the 1984 Hollywood blockbuster The Terminator, and it’s become a part of our collective consciousness ever since. It was mainstream media’s first attempt in depicting a fictional artificially intelligent system (Skynet), thus catapulting the concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI).   

Then the depiction of AI went downhill. At least for a while.   

People started to fear AI taking over the world through sentient neural networks. There are entire television series dedicated to playing on our fears about how antagonistic AI can be. And rightly so – drama and destruction sell more headlines. That’s the realist ex-journalist in me, LOL! As AI continues to fascinate humanity, our understanding of its limits and potential is evolving, and within it, there lies hope.   

Azfar Framing in Action

Azfar Framing in Action

This year, we finally transitioned from fearing robot overlords to cheering for sentient non-playable characters (NPC). The most recent Hollywood movie, Free Guy with Ryan Renolds, is a step in this direction. The story starts when an NPC develops self-awareness and strays from its programming. The NPC interacts with elements around itself in the game – it starts to think and feel. While this is interesting to posit, NPCs can’t develop sentience and act beyond their programming without human interventions.   

The juxtaposition of the extremes has challenged us to think about the boundaries in AI. Corollary, these strides have been a significant force behind the digital transformation of businesses and entrepreneurship. We managed to bootstrap humanity’s collective learning with these recent advancements in AI and deep learning, manifesting the true meaning of the term global village. We’re truly connected and have transitioned from merely if/then/else chatbots to contextual ‘Conversational AI.’

ADP: Leading Digital Transformation 

We provide payroll solutions for over 38 million workers worldwide. That means one in six US workers interfaces directly or indirectly with our universe. From a chatbot/conversational AI perspective, it means even more people will potentially interact with A.V.A., ADP’s virtual assistant. That’s where someone like me comes in and introduces Conversational Design (CxD).  

Azfar Rizvi, UX Designer

Azfar Rizvi, UX Designer

ADP’s Service Technology leadership makes enormous strides to invest in the right infrastructure and create the right teams, producing trustworthy conversational AI platforms. We’re reimagining AVA to ensure our CxD is inclusive. Our persona aims to be innovative and empathetic, allowing intelligent responses to meet user expectations. Unlike conventional chatbots, ADP’s conversational AI understands the context of conversations and answers scenario-specific questions for users.

ADP provides our clients with the best payroll and HR experience, reflecting our processes and outcomes. Our teams work with internal and external stakeholders to ensure the AVA experience has enough context and intelligence to solve our customers’ problems and help us learn for future iterations of our products. As a CxD and Persona evangelist, I relish the opportunity to collaborate with colleagues and industry leaders, envisioning what AVA could represent to the workforce. For many employees, AVA is their first touchpoint with ADP. I write, design, advocate, and build an empathetic experience for this reason. We want to set the tone right for a great experience from the beginning. 

The Future of Conversational AI  

In one of his letters, Ernest Hemingway wrote: “A man’s got to take a lot of punishment to write a really funny book.”   

That quote summarizes the journey in conversational AI – with chatbots starting ambitiously and, as time passed, aligning more with market expectations. The CxD universe that was first created by telling jokes during the formative years of chatbots has now segued into more transactional experiences. We are iterating rapidly at ADP, and the learning allows us to create better, more empathetic conversational AI experience with higher engagement levels. While I may have transitioned from narrative film production and journalism, not a day goes by when I don’t think about the quintessential role storytelling plays in  creating  holistic  CxD.    

The chatbot market is projected to grow from USD 2.6 billion in 2019 to USD 9.4 billion by 2024 – with an overwhelming 80% of businesses expected to have some chatbot automation by the end of 2021. According to insights on MarketWatch, “The chatbot market is driven by factors, such as advancement in technology coupled with rising customer demands for self-service and 24*7 customer assistance at lower operational costs. However, lack of awareness about the outcomes of the use of chatbot technology with various applications to restrict the growth of the chatbot market.” 

Azfar Visiting School

Azfar Visiting School

Good news: ADP is ready for the challenge! We’re working to humanize AVA, our conversational AI. We will continue to create more empathetic, accessible experiences as we build from the number of experiential and transactional use cases every year. Whether enhancing value around payroll or helping to create workforce management automation through AVA, we are determined to harness AI as a tool to boost productivity and enable even better support to our clients!

A significant part of these #ADPTech enhancements depends on our ability to incorporate sentiment analysis and predictive analytics to intelligently understand our users’ conversations and the intents behind those queries. These enhancements allow us to deliver a more robust solution to standard enterprise functions such as employee onboarding, HR-related questions, and global help desk.    

All this gives me hope for the future of AI AVA’s global footprint allows us to continue innovating and designing more holistic experiences. As one of the pioneers in Conversational AI, ADP is constantly evolving at a pace limited only by our understanding of how the human brain works. The more we understand what drives our situational awareness, consciousness, and creativity, the more we will evolve conversational AI and sentiment analysis with more robust outcomes. As a storyteller who fell in love with AI, I remain enamored by the possibilities of our collective AI future.

In the weeks to come, let’s talk more about the opportunities around AI storytelling, leadership, and mentorship at ADP. I’ll be back! 🙂

Interested in a Conversation Design career at ADP?        

We are hiring! Click here to see what we have available. 

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Alberto

Brazil Lab’s Alberto Boa Vista, Principal Technology Architect, Wins ADP’s 2021 President CSR Award

December 16, 2021/in Career Advice & Insights, Career Development, Career Journey, Diversity & Inclusion, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Engineering, Giving Back, Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Voice of Our People, Volunteerism Brazil, Home Highlight, innovation /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Brazil Lab’s Alberto Boa Vista, Principal Technology Architect, Wins ADP’s 2021 President CSR Award


Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

Alberto

Alberto’s Full Stack Social program focused on web development and behavioral skills, tackling the massive gap of the technology workforce by empowering socially vulnerable youngsters. 

Brazil Lab’s Alberto Boa Vista, Principal Technology Architect, Wins ADP’s 2021 President CSR Award  

Social responsibility is one of ADP’s core values and is integral to our brand. We recognize two associates each year by presenting the Corporate Social Responsibility Award, acknowledging associates whose commitment to social responsibility has a positive, measurable impact on the communities where we live and work.

President’s Corporate Social Responsibility Award

President’s Corporate Social Responsibility Award

Bob Lockett, Chief Diversity & Talent Officer, presented the 2021 President’s Award to Alberto Boa Vista, Principal Technology Architect, GPT. “Alberto played a critical role in organizing a course called Full Stack Social, a 14-month theoretical and practical training program to help socially vulnerable children enter the labor market,” Bob said. “He continued to engage other volunteers and presented the project to ADP’s Brazil Lab. The goal of the project is to alleviate poverty by giving software development skills to young people that otherwise would probably never have access to it.” 

Alberto (right) with ADP Associates at Award Ceremony

Alberto (right) with ADP Associates at Award Ceremony

Alberto’s Full Stack Social program focused on web development and behavioral skills, tackling the massive gap of the technology workforce by empowering socially vulnerable youngsters. It is conducted by Marist Social Center (CESMAR), a philanthropic and nonprofit institution with more than 20 years of history dedicated to social responsibility. The center is strategically located in Porto Alegre, Brazil, one of the lowest Human Development Index regions. 

Alberto playing the electric guitar

Alberto playing the electric guitar

“I play a role in organizing the course’s curriculum, engaging other volunteers, and presenting the project to potential sponsors. I’ve been doing it for almost a year now, and I’m sure it’s just the beginning of this relationship,” Alberto said. “I also believe the market of digital products contribute to this generation’s social and commercial goals.” By volunteering his time and giving back, Alberto feels grateful for every opportunity he gets to share knowledge, collecting beautiful stories from people around him.

Alberto with his family

Alberto with his family

The recognition was accompanied by a donation, which went to CESMAR, a social center with professionals who focus on education and health. Alberto is confident their well-organized program will continue to transform many more lives. He views the award as a reaffirmation for many people who chose to dedicate their lives to social responsibility. “It’s not easy, and I know it builds on the long history of this institution,” he said. “Thank you, ADP. The donation will surely bring positive changes to the communities.”  

Alberto also shared the solid internal communication and a network of contacts he received. “I had no words to describe how proud I am. I received tremendous support from ADP throughout the project. It is inspiring to see people embrace and spread the ideas,” Alberto said. “Every contact I spoke to contributed to actions with inclusion and diversity.”  

Congratulations, Alberto! 

Thank you for contributing and giving back. 

Interested in a tech career at ADP?     

Click here to search for your next move and visit Who We Hire.      

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Inside DataCloud: How ADP Shapes the Future of Work

December 9, 2021/in Engineering, Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Leadership, Voice of Our People innovation, Roseland, voice of our people /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Inside DataCloud: How ADP Shapes the Future of Work  


Innovation, What We Do, Future of Work

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ADP continues to play a crucial role in shaping the future of work, impacting people’s lives.

Inside DataCloud: How ADP Shapes the Future of Work 

By Amin Venjara, General Manager, Data Solutions, ADP DataCloud 

Over the past two decades, fields like marketing and finance have seen an explosion in data-driven decision-making. Data informs everything from measuring performance to the microtargeted ads we see in our social media feeds. Data and analytics have even reshaped the world of professional sports as a “Moneyball” approach to building and deploying teams are now deeply integrated into most management teams and coaching staff.

In a similar vein, a data-driven approach to HR and talent decisions, known as people analytics, has grown rapidly over the past decade. As one of the largest providers of human capital management offerings, ADP has the data assets to lead in the people analytics space. Last year, we processed 69M W2s and moved over $2.3T—that’s over 10% of US GDP. With over 920K clients, we pay more than 38M workers worldwide, and just in the US alone, we reach nearly 20% of the private US workforce.

This rich data foundation explains why our monthly National Employment Report is considered a key indicator for the state of the US economy. It is also why economists from the Federal Reserve and leading universities are using ADP data to create more real-time measures on the state of the workforce. In a 2019 speech, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell described the Fed’s partnership with ADP: “We began to collaborate with ADP to construct a measure of payroll employment from their data set, which covers about 20 percent of the nation’s private workforce…. We believe that the new measure may help us better understand job market conditions in real-time.”

Our Data Solutions business unit and the DataCloud product team aim to amplify ADP’s data value, creating a more meaningful work experience for all employees. As one example, organizations are always looking to find and keep their best talent. Similarly, workers are looking for opportunities that best leverage their strengths and create opportunities to grow and thrive.

Taking a data-driven approach to these connections, we built ADP's Skills Graph, a proprietary data structure based on more than 30 million employee records, 50 million resumes, and 5 million job postings across more than 20 industries and 500 geographic areas.

Skills Graph extracts, aligns, and normalizes key information such as skills, job titles and levels, education, and qualifications from non-structured data and infers missing skills and qualifications from context. Skills Graph powers ADP’s Candidate Profile Relevancy tool to help score, assess, and predict candidates who are the best fit for a job opening. While the model is not an algorithm that tells someone which candidate to pick, it helps identify those who are not the right fit, speeding up the application review process. This way, recruiters and hiring managers can focus more time on the human side of recruiting, having deeper, better conversations with candidates.

We have also used our data and analytics capabilities to help organizations address diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) questions. From the earliest days of our analytics journey, we have included metrics that help organizations quantify and baseline their DEI. We have previously won the HR industry’s top technology award with our Pay Equity Explorer, which helps organizations understand pay equity gaps based on gender and race. Over the past year, we have continued to grow our DEI toolset, adding a question-based DEI Dashboard that helps organizations create and maintain turn-key answers to question like “How diverse is your workforce?”, “Which areas of my organization are not diverse?” and “How diverse is my organization’s leadership distribution?” from their HCM systems.

And what’s more – our focus on DEI with our clients has driven real outcomes. We’ve seen over 50% of our DEI solution’s active users act and realize a positive impact on their DEI measures. Active clients have seen pay equity gaps decrease by an average of 25% or more than $700K per client, making this a real investment for our clients based on our insights to enable equal pay for equal work.

The power of our data also extends beyond the world of HR. It is a powerful, real-time signal on the state of consumer demand, demographics, and the broader economy. Using our anonymized and aggregated data, we can construct views of migration patterns at the county level. For example, we found that before the pandemic, less than 3% of San Francisco and New York high earners making $100K or more moved out of the cities during the 12 months that ended in January 2020. After the pandemic, that number leaped to 14%. Those high-wage employees moved to the surrounding suburbs with a manageable commute to job centers. Large retailers and state governments use this data to shape their demand forecasting and to optimize their organizational agility in this rapidly changing world.

By putting our clients first and applying one of the richest data sets in the world to some of the most pressing societal and business issues of our day, our teams make a real impact every day at work. The client-obsessed and data-savvy product managers, engineers, UX designers, and data scientists that fuel our teams are constantly pushing the boundaries of technology to solve problems for our clients. At ADP, we are always designing for people, and in DataCloud and the broader Data Solutions team, data is the beating heart of everything we do.

Interested in a tech career at ADP?        

Click here to search for your next move and visit Who We Hire.

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Jack Berkowitz of ADP on using AWS to enable workforce insights

AWS re:Invent 2021 – ADP Uses AWS to Enable Workforce Insights

December 7, 2021/in Home Highlight, innovation, machine learning, research, tech trends /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

AWS re:Invent 2021 – ADP Uses AWS to Enable Workforce Insights



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Video: AWS

Video: AWS

[JACK] Having spent more than 30 years in the tech industry working on analytics in the cloud,

[JACK] I was drawn to ADP because of its mission.

[JACK] It’s a mission that’s aligned to my core values.

[JACK] Those values about helping people improve their lives by unlocking the power of data.

[JACK] But before I tell you how we do that, we need to start at the beginning.

[JACK] ADP started in 1949 in New Jersey, helping businesses pay their employees.

[JACK] From its early days, the company has always been focused on invention and innovation.

[JACK] We’ve had a proud history of a lot of great products and great firsts, fast forward to today, we’re the largest provider of human resource software and services.

[JACK] So, what does that mean in terms of the size and scale of our business?

[JACK] Well, those numbers are pretty impressive. We have over 920,000 clients doing business in over 140 countries.

[JACK] Our technology powers, payroll processing, tax payments, job applications, timesheets.

[JACK] That means a lot of data, and a lot of money is moving through our systems on a daily basis.

[JACK] In fact, we move over $2.3 trillion a year.

[JACK] This is the money that’s used to pay you, pay me, and to submit our taxes, and to put money into our retirement funds.

[JACK] Now, the issue with $2.3 trillion is a massive number.

[JACK] And for me, it’s a hard number to understand.

[JACK] So, I thought about it a little bit, and I said, how can I conceive of that?

[JACK] Well, what if it was GDP?

[JACK] It’s not GDP. But if it was GDP, how big would that number be?

[JACK] So, we kind of took a look at it.

[GRAPH] Comparison charts of GDPs in other countries.

[JACK] Here’s the top ten GDPs.

And if that $2.3 trillion was a GDP, ADP would land somewhere between France and Italy.

[JACK] So, all of that data, all of this information gives us a unique perspective on the world of work.

[JACK] In fact, every month we issue a report in the public interest called The National Employment Report, came out just this morning.

[JACK] And so, as you can see, we deal with all this data,

[JACK] It takes a special ability for us to be able to scale and manage it.

[JACK] We started our journey to the AWS cloud for this data in mid 2019, and we did it for three important reasons.

[JACK] One, so that we could tap the new capabilities.

[JACK] Second, so that we could get elasticity in the cloud.

[JACK] And third, it really has helped us create a data driven culture, so that we are more reactive, more understanding about what’s going on in the world.

[JACK] Today, we’re processing over two and a half petabytes of data with over 25 billion individual data points represented, and that’s boiling down to 312 trillion decisions a month being taken by our analytics and machine learning processes.

[JACK] Our team is at the very heart of that treasure trove of data.

[JACK] We build data analytics products, including the ADP DataCloud, which provides people analytics and HR benchmarking to help companies measure, compare, predict, and understand their workforce and support them.

[JACK] This allows them to see trends, allows them to see if the programs and policies that they’ve put in place are effective.

[JACK] Everything you’re seeing here is calculated on AWS using a full range of data analytics and machine learning capabilities.

[JACK] We use Amazon Sage Maker for our machine learning, Amazon EMR, Amazon DynamoDB, Amazon Redshift, and Amazon Neptune to perform aspects of our overall data processing.

[JACK] These capabilities have enabled us to keep innovating on behalf of our clients, and one way we’re doing this is to help them with some pressing needs in terms of diversity, equity and inclusion across their workforce.

[JACK] That’s why my team developed the new Diversity Equity Inclusion dashboards that we launched earlier this year.

[JACK] It helps a company baseline and understand their diversity program and not only internally, but for the first time in the industry, to be able to compare themselves to other companies, not just other companies in their location, but also other companies in their industry, and by company size.

[JACK] And this baseline information allows them to see whether or not their programs are having a positive and beneficial impact on the diversity programs that they’ve put in place.

[JACK] We still have issues, though, to address in terms of pay equity, but before we get into that, let’s step back and take a look at what’s happened in the US employment market over the past 20 months.

[JACK] What I’m showing you here is data from ADP that shows you what happened in the total US employment over those past 20 months.

[JACK] You can see when the COVID crisis began.

[GRAPH] Total US Employment Rate Change

[JACK] Unfortunately, there were differences in terms of the types and genders of people losing work.

[JACK] In fact, what you can see is, yes, a lot of people lost their jobs. Those jobs are coming back, but men actually fared a lot better than women during the pandemic.

[JACK] Certain industries were affected a lot more as well, hospitality, manufacturing, retail; areas that have not yet made full recoveries.

[JACK] If we look at pay, you can see, though, that the gap between men’s pay and women’s pay is not where we all want it to be, but it seems to be level over time.

[JACK] However, these numbers are a little bit misleading, because if we add back in those jobs that women lost at a larger extent in those industries from hospitality, transportation, the pay gap is actually getting worse.

[JACK] In fact, my associates at the ADP Research Institute tell me that 20 years of progress for women have been lost in terms of pay equity gaps over the pandemic.

[JACK] But collectively, we have an opportunity to improve that.

[JACK] So how do we do that?

[JACK] Well, our team has also recently built and launched a new capability called The Pay Equity Storyboard.

[TEXT] Pay Equity Storyboard

[JACK] It’s a set of insights and tools and explanations and visualizations that allow companies to understand the pay equity issues that they have and to do plans and to make changes proactively, taking insights straight to action to correct pay gaps.

[JACK] Now we released this just a few months ago at the beginning of the summer.

[JACK] So, on just a few months of data, we’re starting to see some pretty incredible reactions.

[JACK] About 1000 clients have started to use the pay equity storyboard, 65% of them showing pay equity improvement.

[TEXT] Improving Pay Equity

1,000+ clients using the storyboard

65% showing improvements in pay equity

$1.1 M average impact

$728 M returned to communities

[JACK] On average, per client, they’ve made a $1.1 million impact, that’s over $720,000,000 returned to communities.

[JACK] This is about people, individual people, and for an individual person that’s equated to about three $500 for 210,000 people and for workers whose industries are hit hardest by the pandemic.

[JACK] This is meaningful money.

[JACK] This could mean making a need of car repair. It could mean enabling children to participate in extracurricular activities, or simply saving money for a rainy day.

[JACK] At ADP, we’re always designing for people and data informs how we do that.

[JACK] At the end of the day, all of our data and everything we do starts with them and you and I, and tens and hundreds and thousands of people.

[JACK] Now is the time to use data to help people, to understand what actions we can take, to create a more diverse, more equitable and a more inclusive work environment and to build the future we all want to create.

[LOGO] ADP, Always Designing for People.

[JACK] Thank you.

ADP helps more than 900,000 businesses manage their people and processes payroll for nearly 70 million workers, generating a massive amount of data in the process. Jack Berkowitz, Chief Data Officer, presents how ADP uses AWS to enable workforce insights and raises awareness of payroll equity by using data measurement, analytics, and machine learning capabilities.

“Now is the time to use data to help people,” Jack said. “Together, we create a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive work environment.” ADP continues to help companies measure, compare, predict, and apply futuristic knowledge to their workspace. Watch the full presentation now.

More from our tech blog:

Great Stories: From LEGO® Bricks to Data By Jack Berkowitz, Chief Data Officer.

Interested in a tech career at ADP?        

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ADP Celebrates National STEM/STEAM Day

Celebrate with ADP: National STEM/STEAM Day

November 8, 2021/in Campus & Early Talent, Diversity & Inclusion, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Giving Back, Impact, Impact & Innovation, Innovation, Leadership, Voice of Our People, Women in STEM innovation, women in tech /by achiu

Tech & Innovation Blog

Celebrate with ADP: National STEM/STEAM Day


Impact, Culture, How We Work

ADP Celebrates National STEM/STEAM Day

Consider volunteering, joining mentorship programs, and giving back to the communities!

Celebrate with ADP: National STEM/STEAM Day  

November 8th is National STEM/STEAM Day! Celebrate with ADP and learn how we participated in various events, supporting technologists across the globe.  

ADP Associates at Grace Hopper Celebration

ADP associates at Grace Hopper Celebration

Supporting Young Talents & Women in Tech 

ADP associates from New York and New Jersey volunteered at HackJA, a 24-hour hackathon with more than 100 high school students participating during the last school year. Our associates helped with students’ projects and reviewed the final submissions. The students were assigned challenges related to computer science and information technology. It was an excellent opportunity for young talents to participate in workshops and meet mentors from diverse backgrounds. 

“I liked the different activities we could do. I had fun using VR and learning more about Python,” says Jane, a 9th-grade student. “I applied my previous knowledge at the event. I also learned how to be a group leader and split work up evenly,” says Kush, an 11th-grade student.  

To encourage women in pursing tech careers, ADP sponsored three scholarships through the Women in Tech (WIT) organization, promoting STEM opportunities. We provide annual scholarships for female leaders who devote their careers to advancing technology. 

“At ADP, we are passionate about nurturing and fostering female talents. We believe this is the key in moving our workplace forward,” says Melanie Shook, Vice President at ADP and executive sponsor for WIT on behalf of ADP. “These scholarship investments, through our partnership with WIT, are one way we look to advance technology talents forward.” 

ADP sponsored three $5,000 WIT Campus scholarships this year, with ADP’s GPT business unit representatives attending the check award ceremony. “I am extremely thankful to have been chosen as one of the scholarship recipients by ADP and WIT Campus. This money allows me to continue my education at Georgia Gwinnett College and pay off my student loans. It also allows me to connect with many amazing women who were there to support me,” says Briana Hickson, one of the ADP Scholarship winners. Watch the full award recognition video here.  

ADP continues sponsoring conferences such as the Grace Hopper Celebration by AnitaB.org and virtual AfroTech Conference happening the week of November 8th, supporting the future generation of technologists.

AfroTech Conference Sponsored by ADP

AfroTech Conference Sponsored by ADP

Get Inspired: Mentorship Program & The Future 

We encourage our associates to keep learning and discovering. ADP started the Inspire Business Resource Group, a community mission to imagine, question, and empower. The global group has more than 3,000 associates from 30 countries who actively develop innovative ideas in conversations. The group hosts creative activities such as speaker series, inspired challenges, and innovative discussions. New members are always welcome!  

ADP launched the Women in Technology Leadership (WiTL) mentoring program in 2020, providing development opportunities for women technologists. The program pairs Global Product & Tech (GPT) women from different leadership levels with three goals in mind. One goal is to advance diversity and inclusion. Another goal is to increase, retain, and develop top, diverse talents. The third goal is to create a talent pipeline for future leadership roles. 

“The program provided a fantastic opportunity for women in leadership to connect and share their experiences. I found it rewarding and inspiring,” one attendee shared. “I gained valuable insights on how I handle challenges in my job. The experience brings confidence and broadens my network.” 

Initiatives such as WiTL have helped ADP earn recognition from different organizations. We are named the 2020 and 2021 Top Companies for Women Technologists Winner in the Large Technical Workforce category from AnitaB.org. Readers of Woman Engineer Magazine chose ADP as one of the Top 50 US companies they would like to work for and believe it provides a positive working environment for women engineers.
 

Communities: Giving Back 

It is about sharing knowledge and giving back to our communities. ADP’s UX team from Pasadena provided mentorship and training support to STEAM:CODERS, a California-based non-profit organization with a mission to inspire underrepresented students and their families through STEAM. Our associates invited the participants to our office before the pandemic and provided user experience research and design training as a part of the Design Thinking course. 

NJIT Women Hackathon

NJIT Women Hackathon

During the pandemic, ADP sponsored a first all-female 48-hour hackathon in partnership with Major League Hacking, a 24-hour hackathon with New Jersey Institute of Technology Girl Hacks, and a national non-profit organization, Girls Who Code, supporting girls and women in the tech community. 

Celebrate National STEM Day with us! Consider volunteering, joining mentorship programs, and giving back to the communities.

Don’t forget to subscribe to our tech blog! #ADPTech  

Learn more about what it’s like working for ADP here and our current openings.   

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Equal Employment Opportunity

At ADP, we believe that our diversity fuels innovation and benefits our associates, clients, and communities. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to age, race, creed, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, marital status, affectional or sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, or protected veteran status and will not be discriminated against on the basis of disability.

ADP, the ADP logo, and Always Designing for People are trademarks of ADP, Inc. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. Copyright © 2022 ADP, Inc. All rights reserved.

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