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Last updated: July 2026
If you work with an HR consultant, ask them honestly how much of their time goes to payroll troubleshooting versus the strategic work you actually hired them for. For a lot of small and mid-size businesses, the answer is uncomfortable. A consultant brought in to build out performance management, fix turnover, or professionalize hiring ends up spending hours a week chasing down a missing timesheet, explaining a paycheck discrepancy, or reconciling a benefits deduction that never synced correctly.
That’s not a knock on the consultant. It’s what happens when the payroll system underneath them can’t be trusted to just work.
Why HR Consultants Spend So Much Time on Payroll Problems
According to SHRM, the average in-house HR professional costs a business more than $75,000 a year in salary alone, before benefits, tools, and overhead. Business owners bring in an outside consultant instead, expecting expertise at a fraction of that cost. What often happens is the consultant’s time gets absorbed by exactly the kind of operational firefighting an in-house hire would have done anyway: a manager asking why an hourly employee’s overtime looks wrong, an employee asking why their deduction changed, a new hire who didn’t get set up correctly before their first pay period.
None of that is strategy. It’s the downstream cost of a payroll system that requires a person to catch its mistakes before an employee does.
What Changes When Payroll Actually Works
Netchex payroll is built so the numbers are right the first time: tax calculations, overtime rules, and deduction syncing all run through one system instead of a patchwork of spreadsheets and manual entry. When that foundation holds, the questions an HR consultant fields stop being about broken paychecks and start being about the business itself.
A consultant who isn’t reconciling payroll errors can actually use the data payroll produces. Labor cost by department, overtime trends by location, turnover patterns tied to specific managers or shifts, all of it becomes usable the moment nobody has to double-check whether the underlying numbers are accurate.
I can manage employee information securely and running payroll is very easy. It makes these tasks feel straightforward and well organized, having payroll and payroll taxes managed in one system is very helpful.
— Verified Reviewer, G2
The Strategic Work an HR Consultant Can Take On Instead
Once payroll stops generating fire drills, a consultant’s time shifts toward the work that actually moves a business forward: building a compensation structure that holds up as you scale, designing an onboarding process that gets new hires productive faster, setting up performance review cycles that managers actually follow, and diagnosing why a specific location has higher turnover than the rest of the company. This is the work business owners think they’re paying for when they hire a consultant in the first place.
It also changes the relationship. A consultant spending their hours on strategy rather than payroll cleanup can operate more like a fractional HR director and less like an outsourced help desk.
How to Evaluate Payroll With Your HR Consultant
Before your next planning session with your HR consultant, ask them to track, for two pay cycles, how many hours go to payroll-related troubleshooting versus strategic projects. That ratio tells you whether your payroll system is helping your consultant do their job or quietly taking up the budget you set aside for something else.
Frequently Asked Questions
Not as a primary use of their time. HR consultants are typically hired for strategic work like compensation design, performance management, and hiring. Frequent payroll troubleshooting is usually a sign of an underlying payroll system problem, not a normal part of the consulting relationship.
It varies by business, but consultants routinely report multiple hours per pay cycle spent on payroll discrepancies. At a typical consulting rate, that adds up to a meaningful portion of the budget going toward problems accurate payroll software would prevent.
Ask them to track how much time they spend on payroll troubleshooting versus strategic projects over one or two pay cycles. A high ratio of troubleshooting time signals it’s worth evaluating your payroll provider.
Yes. Many HR consultants partner directly with payroll providers because they see firsthand which systems create fewer errors and require less manual oversight. Their perspective on day-to-day reliability is often more useful than a features checklist alone.
Ready to Give Your HR Consultant a Payroll System That Works?
See how Netchex removes payroll troubleshooting so your consultant can focus on strategy.
This article is for general informational purposes and is not a substitute for advice from a qualified HR consultant regarding your specific business needs.
Disclaimer: Any product roadmap or future plans provided herein are for informational purposes only. They do not represent a commitment to deliver any material, code, feature, or functionality. Plans may change without notification. The development, release and timing of any features or functionality described remain at the sole discretion of Netchex, its affiliates, and partners. Netchex does not give legal, tax, or accounting advice. You are responsible for ensuring your use of Netchex product meets your individual business and compliance requirements.
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