HR
How do we design a workflow that pauses for information and then resumes cleanly?
Combine clear questions, ticket threading, and explicit resume behavior so pauses feel predictable to employees and HR.
- workflows
- best-practices
Good pause / resume design reduces duplicate tickets and “is anything happening?” confusion.
Write one question at a time
- Ask for missing facts in small chunks (dates, IDs, approvals) instead of ten questions at once.
- Say who should answer (“Please reply on this ticket with…”) and by when if you have SLAs.
Choose the right wait mechanism
- If the assignee is in the ticket thread, a ticket reply wait is natural.
- If you need a manager approval before Harriet sends email or updates a system, use an approval step instead of a plain message.
Keep context in the ticket
- When the workflow resumes, Harriet should see the full thread—avoid parallel email chains that the workflow cannot read.
Example
Step 1: Ask the employee for a relocation start date on the ticket and wait for reply.
Step 2: Draft the notification to IT; pause for approval from HRBP.
Step 3: After approval, send the message and post a summary back on the ticket.
Guardrails
- If sensitive details should not be visible to the employee, use internal notes where your process allows and train agents accordingly.
- Test the full loop in a pilot inbox before enabling on company-wide triggers.
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