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API Integrations- Breaking Down the Walls: Why Open APIs & Integrations Are the Future of HR Tech

HBHR

Editor

The Future of HR Tech:

Modern HR doesn’t live in a single system. It lives in the flow of information between your payroll
platform, your recruitment pipeline, your learning management system, your finance team’s ERP,
and the dozens of everyday tools your people already use to get their work done. The organisations that get HR right are the ones whose technology reflects that reality, and that only happens when the software they rely on is genuinely open.
At HBHR, we built our platform around a simple belief: an HR system should work with the rest of
your business, not against it. That belief shapes everything from our architecture to the partners we integrate with and it’s why our open API sits at the heart of our product.

The real cost of closed systems

For years, HR teams have quietly paid the price for software that refuses to play nicely with anything else. Payroll runs get delayed because data must be exported, reformatted, and re-imported. New starters are onboarded three separate times, once in the HRIS, once in the ERP, and once in the learning platform. Managers chase approvals across four different tools. Reporting means wrestling spreadsheets together from systems that were never designed to speak to one another.
The result is predictable: duplicated effort, inconsistent data, compliance risk, and a workforce that
loses faith in the tools meant to support them. Every hour spent rekeying information into a second system is an hour not spent on the work that matters, such as hiring well, developing people and shaping culture.
Open APIs solve this problem at the root. Rather than treating your HR platform as a walled garden, an open API treats it as a hub, a system that can send and receive the right information, to and from the right place, at the right time, with no human copying and pasting in between.

What “Open API” actually means at HBHR

There’s a lot of marketing language around APIs, so it’s worth being precise. When we say HBHR is
built on an open API, we mean that our endpoints are documented, versioned, and accessible to our customers and their partners, rather than being hidden behind bespoke engagements or gated
enterprise tiers. Data flows both ways, so your existing systems can write into HBHR and read from
it. Authentication is handled through modern, secure standards including OAuth and SSO via Azure and Okta. And where real-time connectivity matters, whether that’s Microsoft Teams notifications, hybrid-working status, or onboarding triggers, we support webhooks and Microsoft Graph API
integration out of the box.

In practical terms, this means our customers are never stuck. If you have a niche tool that matters to your business, it can connect. If you want to build an internal dashboard that pulls people data alongside finance data, you can. If your IT team wants to automate joiner- mover- leaver workflows across a dozen systems, they have everything they need to do it.

Built-In integrations across every category

Alongside our open API, HBHR ships with a growing library of pre-built integrations covering the
systems HR, finance, IT and operations teams use day to day. A snapshot of where we connect
today is set out below.

Because of our open API, this list is a floor rather than a ceiling. If you rely on a tool that isn’t here,
our team can almost always get it connected, and in many cases our customers build those
connections themselves.

What This Means for Your Team

The practical benefit of a platform built this way isn’t a longer feature list. It’s a quieter one: fewer
errors, less manual work, faster onboarding, cleaner data, stronger compliance, and an HR function
that can finally spend its energy on strategy rather than admin.
It also means your technology estate is protected for the future. Tools will change. You’ll switch
Payroll providers, adopt a new BI stack, or bring in a new LMS, and when you do, an open platform
bends to fit, rather than forcing you into another rip-and-replace project

Why HBHR

HR technology has spent too long asking people to adapt to software. The next generation, the one we’re building, is software that adapts to people, to process, and to the rest of the business ecosystem it operates within.


An open API isn’t a nice-to-have feature buried on a spec sheet. It’s the difference between a
platform that locks you in and a platform that sets you free.