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HR Tech Glossary

A helpful glossary of key HR technology terms, covering job architecture, job families, skills, job descriptions, workforce data, pay transparency, and talent management.
AI-powered job descriptions

AI-powered job descriptions generate inclusive, and market-aligned job content. The technology helps to ensure that descriptions are clear, unbiased, and optimised for talent attraction while supporting diversity and workforce planning.

This streamlines job design, reduces bias, and helps organisations hire the right skills for current and future needs.

Career mapping

Career mapping is the process of outlining potential career paths and progression opportunities for employees within an organisation. It helps individuals understand how they can advance, develop new skills, and move into different roles, supporting engagement, retention, and alignment between employee aspirations and business needs.

Career Paths

Career pathing is a structured process designed to guide employees through their career progression within an organisation. It offers a defined roadmap that highlights potential career moves, the skills required, and relevant development opportunities. 

At its heart, career pathing helps employees understand the opportunities available to them and how they can progress across different roles. It also aligns workforce planning and talent priorities with individual aspirations, supporting engagement and productivity. 

The process may involve mapping an employee’s potential career direction across vertical, lateral, and cross-functional roles, based on their skills, interests, and career goals. 

This approach also strengthens succession planning and talent development while providing a foundation for learning and development initiatives that meet both current and future business needs.

Data transformation

From an HR perspective, data transformation is the process of converting raw data, such as job data, from various sources into a consistent, structured, and usable format.

This enables accurate analysis, reporting, and insights to support decision-making in areas like workforce planning, talent management, diversity, and employee engagement.

EU pay transparency directive

The EU Pay Transparency Directive is legislation aimed at ensuring equal pay for equal work by increasing transparency around pay structures. It requires employers to provide salary information, report gender pay gaps, and disclose pay levels, helping to identify and address pay inequalities and support fair, inclusive workplaces.

It affects any company with a certain number of employees based in EU member states, and is due to come into effect in 2026.

HR analytics

HR analytics, also known as people analytics, is the use of data and analytical techniques to measure, understand, and improve workforce performance and HR processes. It helps organisations make data-driven decisions on talent management, employee engagement, retention, diversity, and workforce planning to drive better business outcomes.

HR digital transformation?

HR digital transformation is the process of integrating digital technologies into HR functions to improve efficiency, employee experience, and decision-making. It involves automating processes, using data-driven insights, and adopting tools like AI, HR platforms, and analytics to modernise recruitment, onboarding, learning, performance management, and workforce planning.

Inclusive hiring practices

Inclusive hiring practices are strategies and actions designed to attract, assess, and hire diverse talent while minimising bias and barriers. They include using inclusive job descriptions, diverse interview panels, structured assessments, accessible processes, and fair evaluation criteria to ensure equal opportunities and support diversity, equity, and inclusion goals.

Inclusive recruitment

Inclusive recruitment is the practice of designing recruitment processes that attract, engage, and hire diverse talent by removing bias and barriers. It focuses on fair job design, accessible hiring practices, and unbiased assessment to ensure equal opportunities for all candidates, supporting diversity, equity, and inclusion goals.

Job architecture

A job architecture forms the building blocks of an organisation. It provides a framework for defining and aligning jobs based on the type of work performed. In its simplest form, a job architecture provides you with a mechanism to consolidate all your job titles into a consistent format that provides clarity and transparency on career levels and pay.

Job descriptions

Job descriptions are an important tool in the talent recruitment process. They are documents that outline the key responsibilities, duties, qualifications and requirements for a specific job or position within a company.

They serve as a detailed overview of what the job entails and what is expected from the person filling that role – as well as providing a comprehensive overview of the business.

Job evaluation

Job evaluation is a structured process used to assess the relative value or worth of a job within an organisation. It helps determine fair and consistent pay by comparing factors such as responsibilities, skills, effort, and working conditions. This supports internal equity, pay transparency, and effective reward structures.

Job families

A job family is a group of related jobs within an organisation that share similar skill sets, nature of work and career paths. The essential nature of the activities and the basic skills used will be similar for all roles within a job family, although the level of responsibility, the skills required to do the work and the scope of the role may be different.  

The job titles for each role within a job family should be chosen to reflect these differences in scope and responsibility, whilst still utilising a common job titling language to make it clear which job family a job sits within.

Job levelling

Job levelling is the process of defining and categorising jobs within an organisation based on factors like responsibilities, skills, experience, and impact. It creates a clear structure of job levels or grades, supporting fair pay, career progression, talent management, and consistency across roles and departments.

Job position hierarchy

A job position hierarchy is the structured ranking of roles within an organisation based on levels of responsibility, authority, and seniority. It defines reporting lines, career progression paths, and organisational structure, helping clarify roles, support workforce planning, and ensure consistency in job levels and compensation.

Job profile

A job profile is a summary of a role within an organisation, outlining key responsibilities, required skills, qualifications, and competencies. A job profile provides a broad, generic overview of a role for organisational planning and reward strategies, while a job description offers a more tailored outline of a role for hiring, performance management, and day-to-day guidance for employees.

Pay transparency

Pay transparency refers to the practice of openly sharing salary information within an organisation or to the public. This may include posting salary ranges in job adverts to disclosing the pay scales of current employees.

It’s also about explaining why compensation decisions are made, and ensuring that pay policies are equitable and consistent.

Pay equity

Pay equity is the practice of ensuring fair and equal pay for employees performing comparable work, regardless of gender, ethnicity, or other protected characteristics. It involves analysing and addressing wage gaps, promoting transparency, and aligning compensation with skills, experience, and job responsibilities to support fairness and compliance with regulations.

Skills-based organisation

A skills-based organisation prioritises the skills and capabilities employees bring to the table over traditional qualifications or years of experience. 

Skills-based practices help companies to bridge talent gaps, hire more effectively, encourage continuous learning, and respond more quickly to external challenges.

Skills framework

A skills framework is a structured model that defines the skills, competencies, and proficiency levels required for roles across an organisation. It helps standardise skill expectations, support talent development, guide career progression, and align workforce capabilities with business objectives, enabling more effective hiring, training, and performance management.

Skills gap analysis

A skill gap analysis is the process of identifying the difference between the skills employees currently have and the skills needed to meet business goals. It helps organisations pinpoint skill shortages, inform training and development plans, and support workforce planning and future talent strategies.

Skills inference

Skills inference is the process of identifying or predicting an individual’s skills based on available data, such as job titles, work experience, qualifications, or project history. Often powered by AI, it helps organisations build accurate skills profiles, enabling better talent management, workforce planning, and skills-based decision-making.

Skills mapping

Skills mapping is the process of identifying, visualising, and analysing the skills within a workforce. It helps organisations understand current capabilities, spot skill gaps, and align talent with business needs. 

This supports workforce planning, career development, and targeted learning strategies to build future-ready teams.

Skills taxonomy

A skills taxonomy is an organised classification of skills, grouped into categories and subcategories based on relationships or similarities. It provides a common language for identifying, assessing, and managing skills across the workforce, supporting skills mapping, talent development, workforce planning, and aligning skills with business needs.

Workforce planning

Workforce planning is a strategic process that ensures an organisation has the right people, with the right skills, in the right roles, at the right time. It involves analysing current and future workforce needs, identifying skill gaps, and developing plans to support business goals and long-term talent requirements.

The first step to gaining control of your jobs is ‘getting your house in order’

RoleMapper's AI-driven, modular solution will ease the pain of creating, managing and updating your job architecture and job catalogue.

Access to millions of jobs and skills across multiple industries
Automate the end-to-end creation and management of your jobs and job architecture as your organisation evolves
Intelligent job content creation powered by proprietary Machine Learning
Real-time job intelligence to power compliant workforce planning

Book a demo to learn more about how RoleMapper can help clean up & harmonise your job architecture & job descriptions.

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