A conversation inspired this article with Lila Nazef, VP of Customer Success at Neocase, who was featured on the podcast “You Should Know.” In this episode, Lila shares sharp, field-tested insights on why onboarding often fails, how HR can reclaim its strategic role, and what’s holding back digital transformation.
Too operational. Too soft. Too reactive.
We’ve all heard it. Worse, some HR professionals have internalized it. But that perception — and the self-doubt it triggers — is wildly outdated.
“HR isn’t the department of no. It’s the department of how. It just needs the power and the platform to lead.”
The truth? HR is uniquely positioned to drive strategy, shape culture, and navigate complexity. But to get there, we need to talk about leadership — not just tools.
In many organizations, HR is seen as a cost center. A back-office function. A rule enforcer.
But that image is often the result of underinvestment, not underperformance.
➡️You can’t lead change if you’re buried in manual admin.
➡️You can’t champion culture if your tech stack is siloed and slow.
➡️You can’t act strategically if you lack data, insight, and autonomy.
And yet — this is exactly where many HR teams find themselves today.
“No one will hand you a seat at the table. You take it — by showing you can orchestrate outcomes across the business.”
Leadership in HR starts with clarity: what do we want to improve? What are we accountable for? And what do we need to own end-to-end?
The rest is execution.
Neocase supports this shift by giving HR teams the means to:
Empowerment isn’t a slogan. It’s infrastructure.
When HR owns its workflows, service levels, and data, it gains the leverage it needs to:
And that’s when HR stops being an internal vendor — and becomes a strategic force.
Listen to the episode
🎧 “Is HR Dead Weight or Your Secret Weapon?”
with Lila Nazef (Neocase)
→ Listen the full episode here