Major French retail player

Uncovering the Real Performance of Payroll

Diagnosing the payroll value chain end to end to uncover hidden costs, operational frictions, risks, and future-state scenarios.

   

by Fabien Vial
Paris

Mission

In any large organization, payroll is a critical process — and rarely as simple as it appears. It touches employee trust, social compliance, HR data quality, operations, tools, vendors, and finance.

Yet its real performance is often difficult to assess. The visible cost of payroll does not tell the whole story. Manual rework, redundant controls, poor input data, dependency on a small number of key experts, gaps between formal processes and actual practices, and hidden costs carried by managers and HR teams can all weigh heavily on the model.

This is the central lesson of the mission: payroll performance cannot be read in the payslip alone. It lies in the full chain that feeds it, produces it, corrects it, controls it, and secures it.

For this major French retail player, the Payroll Department wanted to secure and improve its model around three priorities: strengthen the management of its relationship with its software provider, optimize payroll controls by identifying opportunities for automation and AI, and clarify the economic and organizational evolution of its payroll shared services model.

The mission entrusted to Adviso: provide an independent, fact-based, decision-oriented view — one able to assess what works, qualify operational frictions and risks, distinguish quick wins from more structural initiatives, and give leadership the evidence needed to make informed decisions.

Solution

Adviso brought together senior capabilities across payroll, HRIS, organization, vendor management, automation, change management, and decision support.

Our conviction: a useful payroll diagnostic cannot be purely technical. It must connect the operational reality of the teams, the robustness of the tools, the quality of the data, visible and hidden costs, human impacts, and future-state scenarios.

The work was structured around three dimensions.

The first focused on the software provider relationship. At a critical moment of contract renewal, the objective was to review commitments, pain points, real-life usage, and service levels in order to identify room for maneuver, prepare negotiation levers, and strengthen the client’s position with its partner.

The second focused on payroll controls. The aim was to map manual steps, time-consuming tasks, process breaks, and risk points in order to distinguish what could be simplified, better tooled, or automated. AI was not treated as a generic promise, but as an option to be assessed in the client’s real operating context: where could it create value, reduce workload, make controls more reliable, or accelerate analysis?

The third focused on the payroll shared services model. The objective was to assess real costs, volumes, critical thresholds, risks of organizational imbalance, the conditions for extending the model to new entities, and the related human impacts. Several scenarios could then be explored: optimizing the current model, evolving responsibilities, introducing automation, moving toward a hybrid model, or making more targeted use of outsourcing.

The value of the approach lies in its ability to turn a subject often perceived as technical into a true decision agenda. Which levers should be activated quickly? Which risks need to be secured? Which investments should be prioritized? Which evolutions should be launched — under what conditions, and with what impact on teams, managers, tools, and vendors?

At the end of the mission, the Payroll Department has a structured decision base: prioritized levers, identified risks, future-state scenarios, conditions for success, and a focused action plan.

In an environment where HR leaders must balance reliability, productivity, cost control, and automation, payroll can no longer be managed as a simple back-office function. It becomes a field of operational performance, risk control, and transformation.

Fabien Vial

Paris

Fabien is the CEO and founder of Adviso. His innovative, people-centric approach has helped numerous organizations achieve success in navigating complex changes.

  

 

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