5 pillars of HR strategy: Building a strong foundation for success

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The pillars of HR strategy look a lot different today. Today’s leaders aren’t just managing policies — they’re shaping behavior, culture, and business results. And with so many HR challenges in play, it’s easy for the foundations to get lost in the mix.

To build a strategy that holds up under pressure, you need a solid base. One that aligns your people practices with business goals and gives you the tools to see what’s working.

So, what are the pillars of HR strategy that today’s teams need to get right? Let’s dive in.

5 key pillars of a successful HR strategy

Every strong HR strategy rests on a few core pillars — foundational elements that help you meet today’s demands while preparing for what’s next. Get these right, and you create the conditions for your people (and your business) to thrive.

Let’s take a closer look at the five key pillars of HR strategy and why each one matters.

Key pillars of a successful HR strategy

1. Legal requirements

Getting the employee onboarding process right starts with covering your legal bases. It’s not just about avoiding fines or ticking compliance boxes — it’s about protecting your people and your business from day one. When you meet legal requirements, you’re creating a workplace that’s fair, safe, and built on trust.

It also shows employees that you take their rights seriously and that your company walks the talk when it comes to doing things ethically. Plus, staying compliant helps everything run more smoothly — no last-minute surprises, no reputation risk, just a solid foundation to build on.

Examples of legal requirements around the world

Below is a list of key legal requirements for onboarding, including the U.S., U.K., Canada, Singapore, and Australia:

U.S. legal requirements

  • W-4 form: This form is used by employees to indicate their tax situation.
  • I-9 form: This form verifies the identity and employment authorization of individuals hired for employment in the United States.
  • Workers’ compensation: Mandatory for all businesses, ensuring that employees receive medical care and compensation for work-related injuries and illnesses.
  • Directors and officers insurance: Protects the personal assets of directors and officers in the event they are personally sued for wrongful acts.
  • General liability insurance: Provides coverage for legal issues due to accidents, injuries, and claims of negligence.

UK legal requirements

  • Employment contract: Employers must provide a written statement of employment particulars within two months of the employee’s start date.
  • P45 form: Given to employees when they leave a job, detailing the amount of tax paid during the tax year.
  • P60 form: End-of-year certificate showing the total pay and tax deductions.
  • Right to work check: Employers must check that job applicants are allowed to work in the UK before they start work.
  • Health and safety: Compliance with the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, ensuring a safe working environment.

Canadian legal requirements

  • Social Insurance Number (SIN): Employees must provide their SIN for tax and employment purposes.
  • Employment contract: Must include details such as job description, salary, work hours, and other terms of employment.
  • Canada Pension Plan (CPP) and Employment Insurance (EI): Employers must make contributions to CPP and EI on behalf of their employees.
  • Provincial health and safety regulations: Compliance with health and safety regulations, which vary by province but generally ensure a safe working environment.
  • Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System (WHMIS): Employers must provide training and information about hazardous materials in the workplace.
  • Workers’ compensation: Employees must be compensated for work-related injuries and illnesses.

Singapore legal requirements

  • Employment Pass (EP): Necessary for foreign professionals, managers, and executives to work in Singapore.
  • CPF contributions: Central Provident Fund contributions for Singaporean citizens and permanent residents.
  • Employment contract: Must include key employment terms such as salary, working hours, and job responsibilities.
  • Workplace Safety and Health Act (WSH): Ensures that employees have a safe and healthy work environment.

Australian legal requirements

  • Fair work information statement: Must be provided to all new employees, detailing their rights and conditions of employment.
  • Tax File Number (TFN) declaration: New employees must provide their TFN to their employer for tax purposes.
  • Superannuation: Employers must make regular superannuation contributions to their employees’ retirement funds.
  • Work Health and Safety (WHS) Act: Ensures that workplaces adhere to health and safety regulations.

2. Employee engagement

Engagement isn’t about keeping people happy — it’s about keeping them connected. When employees feel valued, supported, and in sync with their work, they don’t just do more, they care more. And that care shows up in performance, loyalty, and the kind of energy you can’t fake.

How to build real engagement:

  • Gamification: A little competition can go a long way. Badges, points, and peer recognition turn routine tasks into something people want to win at.
  • Rewards: Whether it’s a bonus or a well-timed “thank you,” rewards help reinforce what good looks like — and why it matters.
  • Recognition: Regular recognition makes a bigger impact than you think. It tells people, “We see you. You matter.” Simple, but powerful.
  • Employee surveys: People want to feel heard — not just surveyed. Use modern employee feedback tools to drive real change, not just another spreadsheet.

3. Career advancement programs

People aren’t just working for a paycheck; they’re working toward something. If employees don’t see a path forward, they’ll find one somewhere else. Development isn’t an add-on. It’s part of why people stay, grow, and give their best.

Smart ways to support employee development and growth:

  • Mentorship: Pair employees with someone who’s been there and can help them avoid the usual landmines. A good mentor doesn’t just share advice; they accelerate growth, expand networks, and build confidence that sticks.
  • Leadership training: Give rising talent more than a title. Practical training builds the skills — and self-awareness — that future leaders need to guide teams, navigate conflict, and make smart calls under pressure.
  • Skill-building: Today’s skills won’t solve tomorrow’s challenges. Offer workshops, certifications, or stretch projects that keep your people learning and your business evolving.
  • Cross-training: When employees understand how different teams operate, collaboration improves and silos shrink. Plus, it keeps things interesting and helps you build a more agile workforce.
  • Succession planning: Having a plan isn’t pessimistic — it’s smart. Identifying and preparing future leaders before you need them prevents scramble mode and protects business continuity.
  • Tuition support: Education is expensive, but employee turnover costs more. Helping employees grow their capabilities builds loyalty and signals that you’re serious about long-term development.
  • Career pathing: Growth shouldn’t be a guessing game. Make advancement pathways clear, visible, and supported so employees can aim higher — and know how to get there.

4. Corporate image

Top talent isn’t just looking for a job; they’re sizing you up. And they’ll pass on companies that talk a good game but don’t live it. A strong corporate image isn’t built in a campaign — it’s built in the culture, and HR plays a big role in shaping both.

Where to focus:

  • Brand and culture alignment: If your brand champions innovation, make sure your workplace isn’t stuck in 2008.
  • Tech that walks the talk: Don’t promise progress while your people wrestle with outdated tools. Equip them to do great work with software integrations that streamline every part of the onboarding process and beyond.
  • Social presence: Candidates will check your socials, and probably your external reviews. Make sure what they see reflects who you really are.

5. Performance management system

Without a solid performance system, even the best goals fall flat. It’s hard to stay motivated when you’re not sure what success looks like or how to measure it. A smart system brings clarity, keeps momentum going, and helps everyone row in the same direction.

Why it matters:

  • Clarity and focus: Check-ins aren’t just about progress — they’re a chance to reinforce priorities, course-correct, and keep goals from getting lost in the day-to-day.
  • Alignment: When employees see how their work connects to larger business objectives, they’re more likely to stay engaged and deliver impact that matters.
  • Fair evaluations: A structured approach reduces guesswork and bias, turning performance reviews into conversations grounded in real behavior and outcomes.
  • Development in motion: Ongoing feedback helps surface not just gaps, but growth. It gives people the direction they need to level up — and the confidence to go for it.
  • Smarter decisions: With the right data, you can move from gut feel to real insight — spotting recognition trends, addressing issues early, and shaping strategy with confidence.

Bring your HR strategy to life

A solid HR strategy doesn’t just look good on paper — it shows up in the systems you build, the culture you shape, and the experience your people have every day. The strongest ones rest on five key pillars: compliance, engagement, career growth, a strong employer brand, and performance systems that actually drive results.

Achievers helps HR teams put those pillars into practice. We make it easy to recognize and reinforce the behaviors that move your culture forward. To gather feedback that sparks real change. To deliver rewards that feel meaningful, not one-size-fits-all. And to give every employee a clearer sense of belonging, progress, and purpose.

It’s how strategy becomes action — and how action turns into business impact.

Rebecca Mattina

Written by

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