Why Administrator Enablement Is a Strategic Lever—Not an Operational Detail
SuccessFactors is a living platform. Semesterly releases, evolving business needs, and organizational change require constant system stewardship.
Without properly enabled administrators:
- Configurations drift from original business intent
- Processes become inefficient or inconsistent
- Innovation from releases is underutilized
- Dependency on external support increases
- Value realization stalls
Administrator enablement is therefore not just about knowledge—it is about sustaining transformation outcomes.
A More Mature Approach: From Training to a Competence Model
A key insight from recent expert discussions is the need to move beyond traditional enablement into a Customer Competence Center model, supported by a maturity framework and accreditation-driven capability building.
This introduces a more structured concept:
Administrator enablement as a capability system—not a training event.
At the core of this approach is ensuring that:
- Organizations have sufficient expert coverage across all SuccessFactors modules
- Each expert is backed by formal accreditation aligned to their domain
- Capabilities are distributed to support the end-to-end employee lifecycle
This creates a true operational safety net, ensuring that no critical area of the solution is unmanaged or under-skilled.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Leading organizations are shifting toward a Competence Center of Expertise (CoE) model, where internal teams act as the custodians of the platform.
In practice, this means:
- Defining domain ownership (e.g., Recruiting, Onboarding, Employee Central, Performance, Compensation)
- Expertise: Ensuring at least one accredited expert per domain, with depth in both process and configuration
- Building redundancy and collaboration across roles to avoid single points of failure
- Establishing the CoE as the central authority for governance, changes, and optimization
For example, in organizations already live with modules such as Recruiting, Onboarding, and Employee Central, a minimum baseline would include:
- Certified expertise in Candidate Experience, Recruiter Experience, and Onboarding
- Dedicated ownership of core HR (Employee Central)
- Capability to expand into People Analytics and Talent Intelligence
This is not about over-resourcing—it is about ensuring coverage and continuity.
From Safety Net to Self-Sustaining System
When done correctly, this model creates what can be described as a “virtuous cycle”:
- Internal expertise increases
- Dependency on external support decreases
- Issues are resolved faster and more effectively
- Adoption of new capabilities improves
- Strategic conversations replace operational escalations
Organizations that adopt this approach consistently show:
- Greater platform stability
- Stronger stakeholder confidence
- More strategic engagement with SAP
- Higher long-term ROI from SuccessFactors
In short, the system becomes self-sustaining rather than reactive.
Organizations that recognize this move from maintaining systems to sustaining business value at scale.



