
About V-Mart
The Chairman of V-Mart had described his vision, “We are already in 160 cities and operate mainly in the Tier II, Tier III and even Tier IV cities. 4G is still a dream in many of these places. But I would want that we provide each one of our employees a better way to manage their experience at work, irrespective and in spite of these issues. All our people should have control over their experience at work and access to their own data. Technology should remove the barriers of grade, location, seniority by providing ease of use. When someone wants to know how much they have earned in a month, why should he/she need someone in HR to tell her that?”
HR-Tech Business Case
Anjali Goel, the CHRO explained another peculiarity of the retail environment.
The biggest challenge in HR-Tech implementations

Product Stickiness Metric
The result is in the Product Stickiness Metric. Simply put, it is the number of people who use the app every day compared to the employees who use it every month. In case of V-Mart 90% employees use it every day. And only 3% employees use it once a month. In fact, within weeks of the launch, almost 90% of the people had not only downloaded the app but were using it to connect and collaborate. The best thing was that most of them were first-time smartphone users.
Intuitive UI design

Employee satisfaction
He also explains that when employees get access to a Do-It-Yourself system, the experience automatically improves. When the employee can manage 60% of his work related transactions without going to HR, we see a 50% improvement in the employee-satisfaction rate.When they went live on 1st August 2018, the Chairman told the employees,
“Your mindset must change along with the new technology that we have implemented.”
Then he told his HR team to join the PeopleStrong team in some of the V-Mart stores and watch how easy it was for the employees in the stores to use it. The feedback from the users would be collated every day and the Chairman would take a decision to say if a change in the software was warranted.It was on this kind of feedback that the PeopleStrong team redesigned the pages for the most frequently accessed processes like leave and attendance to load quickly in cities where internet speed was limited. The messenger app was designed to be such that employees could easily share videos or photos among themselves. That in turn drove up employee engagement.
Lessons I learned from the V-Mart implementation:
- Technology is a tool to solve the business vision. Start by asking why you are doing this. If the discussion is about features and costs, then the project is about cost saving and not employee experience. Ask yourself what are you trying to achieve. Why are you doing this. Having that clarity within the sponsor team or CEO/CHRO is a good sign.
- Have a clear project charter that is owned by the decision-maker. The Chairman took quick decisions. There was one person giving the specs – not a committee. A sponsor at the highest level makes it faster.
- In case of V-Mart, the Chairman paid upfront for three years. The usual model is for the client to pay an upfront fee for the design and then pay a monthly fee. By paying for three years upfront, the client got a good deal. They also had a skin in the game and were keen on sticking to the agreed project plan. Most organizations keep asking for constant tweaks and lose sight of the overall vision why they wanted to do this in the first place.


