Business profile:
Agro-industrial sector
Company position:
Human Resources Inspector
Company size:
101-500 employees

Digitalizing HR processes in a distributed team: the experience of TIMAC AGRO and Vchasno.Kadry

TIMAC AGRO Ukraine is a subsidiary of Groupe Roullier, offering farmers innovative and customized technological solutions for efficient and sustainable agricultural production. In Ukraine, the team consists of around 150 employees who are constantly on the move; every year, hundreds of vacations and business trips are processed. At the same time, all HR operations are handled by a single specialist who must ensure full compliance with legislation and maintain control over documents without delays or errors.

In practice, this means the company operates within a distributed system where each document passes through multiple stages across different locations in the country. Any delay or loss creates not just inconvenience, but direct operational and legal risks.

For a long time, these processes relied on paper and physical document delivery. Formally, this allowed operations to continue. However, as the workload and team scale grew, this model began to fail in ways that could no longer be compensated by organizational efforts.

At that point, the company decided to rethink its approach to HR processes and transition to an electronic document workflow using Vchasno.Kadry.

Nadiya Lukash
HR inspector

Results of implementing Vchasno.Kadry

After switching to electronic HR document management, the company experienced several tangible improvements.

The most noticeable change was the speed of vacation processing. Previously, the process could take from several days to several weeks or even up to a month. Now, the full cycle—from request creation to signing by all parties—takes up to one working day.

At the same time, typical issues of paper-based workflows disappeared. Documents are no longer lost, returned for corrections, or require re-signing. All stages are completed sequentially, without errors and without manual control over every step.

The company fully eliminated paper for short-term storage documents and gained constant access to the real-time status of each document, including approval and signing history.

Importantly, results were achieved without reducing workload, but under consistently high volumes of HR operations: around 400–450 vacations per year, now processed within one day, and about 450 business trips that no longer depend on document delivery.

As a result, the company moved from a model where process speed depended on logistics to one where all HR tasks are completed within predictable timelines without creating operational risks.

What the situation was before the transition

Before digitalization, HR processes were essentially built around the physical movement of documents. Employees in regions received documents by mail, signed them, and sent them back. Some documents were transferred through managers, others were accumulated and sent in batches.

In this model, the same problems occurred systematically: documents could be lost or damaged during delivery, returned with errors requiring re-signing, or in some cases did not reach the responsible person on time.

Why the company switched to a digital format

The need for digitalization did not arise as a strategic initiative, but as a response to a specific operational issue: the existing document workflow model no longer обеспечувала control and predictability.

At some point, it became clear that the problem was not isolated failures, but the model itself—it did not scale and did not meet the requirements for accuracy, speed, and control.

The solution was transitioning to Vchasno.Kadry. Since the company was already using Vchasno.EDM, the new service integrated into existing processes without requiring a complete change in the overall approach to document management.

During the selection process, an important factor was not only how the system works, but whether it could be trusted with HR documents without risks of loss or errors. There were also concerns about how the team would accept the new format, how complicated it would be to obtain QES, and whether it would become an additional burden for employees working in the field.

However, these concerns were resolved quite quickly during implementation. The process turned out to be simpler than expected, and the team adapted to the new format without major difficulties.

How the implementation went

  • 1
    The company did not try to change everything at once. First, a pilot group of employees was selected, and all key scenarios were tested with them to understand how the system works in real daily operations.
  • 2
    At the same time, the company established internal rules for working with electronic documents to standardize processes and create a unified approach for the entire team.
  • 3
    Then came the most important stage—scaling. This was not just a formal rollout, but hands-on work with people: each team received separate online and offline sessions, support with registration and verification, assistance in obtaining QES, and guidance on how to work in the new format.

A key role in this process was played by HR specialist Nadiia Lukash. She managed the entire process, answered questions, supported employees at every stage, and effectively guided the company through the transition—from the first test to full-scale system use.

Despite initial concerns, implementation was much smoother than expected. The entire transition took about two months and was completed without delays, which is a significant result for a distributed team of this scale.

Challenges encountered

The main difficulties arose during team onboarding. Some employees had trouble completing authorization or obtaining QES due to technical limitations or missing documents. There were also occasional delays during photo identification through Diia.

At the start, there were concerns that these issues could become widespread and affect implementation timelines. In reality, difficulties affected only about 10–15% of employees and were quickly resolved during onboarding.

After the first weeks, these issues stopped affecting the overall process.

How HR processes changed

After implementation, not only the document format changed—the entire workflow logic changed. HR processes moved fully into a digital format: vacations, hiring, termination, transfers, business trips, and other HR documents no longer depend on physical document movement.

The vacation process now follows a clear sequence:

  • the employee submits a request
  • the manager approves it
  • the system generates the document
  • signing takes place

This process takes up to one working day and does not depend on the participants’ location—whether they are in different cities or traveling.

An important role is played by the universal document feature, which allows handling non-standard HR cases without additional tools. This ensures the company is not limited to predefined scenarios and can resolve any task within a single system.

What changed for the team

  • First of all, the HR specialist no longer needs to keep dozens of parallel processes in mind, track document delivery, check statuses, or remind each participant about signing. Work became systematic: instead of manual control, there is a clear sequence of actions and a transparent status for each document.
  • For managers, the change is reflected in simplicity. Approvals are no longer tied to location or physical documents—they can make decisions when needed, without extra steps.
  • For employees, the process became significantly easier and clearer. There is no longer a need to print documents, send them by mail, or wait for their return. All actions are performed within one system, and everyone can see what is happening with their document.

As a result, not only speed improved, but also the overall experience—each person understands their role and can influence the process.

Employee feedback

The transition was received much more positively than expected. Most questions arose before starting—mainly about data security and technical onboarding.

There were almost no “paper-only” supporters, since constant tasks like finding an A4 sheet to write a request or urgently printing and signing documents were not exactly motivating.

Out of more than 130 active employees at the time of implementation, only one refused to obtain a QES, which is a high adoption rate for a distributed team of this scale.

After the first weeks, initial doubts quickly disappeared. Once employees saw how the process works in practice, it stopped feeling complex or unusual and became a standard working tool.

The strongest proof came during peak workload periods. When a large number of vacations are processed simultaneously, unsystematic processes typically fail. In this case, all requests were handled on time without delays, proving the system works reliably not only in basic scenarios but also under real workload.

Impact on business and processes

  • A clear and reliable control system emerged: at any moment, it is clear where a document is, what stage it is at, and whether any action is required—without additional checks or manual tracking.
  • Timelines became predictable. Once a process is initiated, it reaches completion without delays and does not depend on physical document movement.
  • The number of small time-consuming actions—reminders, checks, clarifications—decreased significantly, which reduced workload.
  • As a result, HR processes became stable even with the same workload, without the need to expand the team or add extra control.
  • Most importantly, dependence on paper as a failure point disappeared.

Future plans

The next step is integrating Vchasno.Kadry with the company’s internal ERP system. This will automate data exchange between systems and eliminate duplicate actions while maintaining a unified workflow logic.

Conclusion

This case clearly shows that HR digitalization is not just about implementing a tool—it is about changing how processes work.

HR tasks become faster and more predictable, regardless of the number of employees or their location. What used to take hours or days now fits into a single working cycle.

And this is only the first level of transformation.

When combined with the full Vchasno ecosystem, companies gain much more than just electronic documents. Data is no longer fragmented across systems, duplicated, or lost. It moves seamlessly between processes—from document creation to signing, accounting, and storage.

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