Naomi Bloom

Looking Back, Looking Forward, Part 2

This is the second in a series of posts examining where HR interoperability standards have been and where they are headed. In the first post, I explained that it is as important for a standards organization to have a maturity plan as it is for any company with a maturing commercial product. In this post, I cover some of the "looking back" part, by giving some background on the origins of HR standards and their development through the years. If you are not a history buff, you can jump straight to the point.

Prior Work: 1999

My background (my first career?) was in new product development for information publishers, including BNA and Thomson. I focused on the HR market and gained experience with XML's precursor, something called SGML. With the publication of the XML 1.0 specification in Feb. 1998, I began to put together a few drafts of a markup language for HR. By the spring and summer of 1999, I had begun working with a loosely organized online community on a markup language for job postings and resumes. An archive (.zip) of this prior work is still available still available from the Cover Pages. Some of this prior work also was mentioned in Futurize Your Enterprise, a web strategy book published that year. If you bother cracking the archive to look at the DTD, you'll see that even before the Consortium was started, this work was offered as freely distributable and provided for anyone to use for any purpose.

Syndicate content