Short answer
HCM software treats employees as capital, not just records. On top of HRMS modules (payroll, performance, recruitment), HCM adds strategic planning — workforce modelling, succession, total-rewards design, compensation benchmarking, and people analytics. For a Myanmar company under 500 employees, the value usually does not justify the price; an HRMS like QHRM is the right tool.
What to look for in HCM software
- Workforce planning — model headcount and cost forward 12–36 months.
- Succession and 9-box — pipeline view by role and performance.
- Compensation management — benchmarking, banding, equity simulations.
- People analytics — predictive attrition, engagement trends.
- Global payroll abstraction — single platform, multiple country engines.
- Integration depth — finance, ERP, BI tooling.
How QHRM compares to enterprise HCM
| Capability | QHRM (HRMS) | Spreadsheet / manual | Enterprise HCM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Myanmar payroll | Native | Manual | Custom dev |
| Performance & 9-box | Yes (mid-pack) | No | Deep |
| Workforce planning | Basic | No | Strong |
| Compensation modelling | Basic | No | Strong |
| Annual cost (50 staff) | MMK 600k–1.5M | ~Free | USD 30k+ |
Cost and implementation
- Enterprise HCM: typically USD 30,000+ annual, 6–12 month implementation.
- HRMS like QHRM: MMK 200,000–1,500,000/year, 4-day implementation.
- Training: HRMS — included; HCM — paid services engagement.
- Support: HCM regional hub English; QHRM Yangon-time Burmese + English.
Employer takeaway
HCM is enterprise-tier. Most Myanmar companies do not need it until they cross several hundred employees and operate across multiple countries. Until then, an HRMS that handles PIT and SSB correctly delivers more value per kyat. Budget MMK 200,000–1,500,000/year and 4-day implementation for a Myanmar HRMS.
Common evaluation mistakes
- Over-buying — paying enterprise HCM prices for an SME-sized workforce.
- Buying HCM that lacks Myanmar PIT and SSB localisation.
- Underestimating change-management cost for HCM rollout.
- Ignoring local support hours when committing to a global vendor.
Implementation realities for Myanmar SMEs
Buying the software is roughly 30% of the work. The other 70% sits in adoption — getting HR, line managers, and employees to trust the new workflow enough to abandon the spreadsheets and paper forms they have been using for years. The pattern below holds across factories, retail, hospitality, BPO, and SaaS employers in Yangon and Mandalay.
Stakeholders who must be on board
- Founder or managing director — sponsor, decides the cutover date and signs first live payroll.
- HR lead — owns master data, payroll close, and employee communication.
- Finance — reconciles payroll output against cost budget and IRD remittance.
- IT or external admin — handles user access, biometric devices, and printer setup.
- Line managers — approve attendance, leave, and review forms inside the new product.
- Employees — adopt self-service for payslip, leave, and personal-data updates.
Worked cost scenario — 50-person Yangon services company
| Cost item | QHRM | Spreadsheet status quo |
|---|---|---|
| Annual licence | ~MMK 1,000,000 | ~MMK 0 |
| HR labour on payroll close (12 cycles) | ~48 hours/year | ~288 hours/year |
| Annual UTL bracket rebuild | None | ~16 hours |
| Audit / inspection response | Hours | Days |
| Burmese payslip rework | None | ~12 hours/year |
The 240 saved HR hours per year are the headline number; less obvious is the audit-readiness uplift, which only matters until it really matters. A single labour-office or IRD inspection on a manual stack can absorb a week of finance and HR time and still produce questions on retention or wage-records gaps.
Risk and mitigation checklist
- Data quality at import — clean NRC, dependants, and salary fields before cutover.
- Cutover month — avoid Thingyan, December bonus payouts, and FY-end (March).
- Parallel cycle — run one full payroll in QHRM while the spreadsheet remains the source of truth.
- User access discipline — set role-based access on day 1, not later.
- Backup of legacy data retained at least 7 years for audit response under the Income Tax Law.
- Burmese-language training material for shop-floor and front-line adoption.
What a 30-day Myanmar pilot looks like
The shortest reliable path to confidence is a 30-day pilot using one full payroll cycle. Week 1 imports the existing employee master data from spreadsheets and confirms PIT, SSB, and basic pay logic against the previous month's payslip. Week 2 runs attendance and leave on the new system in parallel with the legacy process. Week 3 closes the live payroll inside the new platform while finance reconciles against the legacy spreadsheet, line by line. Week 4 issues Burmese payslips, files the IRD remittance and SSB return, and locks the cutover. The pilot answers the only question that matters: does the software produce the same payroll the company has always trusted, plus the audit trail it has never had?
Three Myanmar-specific failure modes to avoid
- Treating the IRD remittance file as optional — it is the document that anchors PIT compliance every month. The product must produce it without manual reformatting.
- Skipping the township SSB return format — each township office has its accepted layout. A product that produces a generic SSB report often results in rejected submissions and re-keying by HR.
- Ignoring Burmese-script print testing — payslips that look fine on screen can still print as boxes. Always validate the printer output, not just the PDF preview.
Related: What is HCM (Human Capital Management), What is HRMS, What is QHRM.
We publish practical, legally-grounded HR guidance for Myanmar employers. Each piece is reviewed by our compliance team against current MLIP and Labor Law requirements.