SOA Helps Hire a Hero Give Returning Veterans a Fighting Chance to Find Work

A nonprofit organization uses SOA to knit together resources from SaaS vendors and XAware to match military veterans with employment opportunities.

By Ron Miller
Tue, July 29, 2008

CIO — Hire a Hero is a small company with a big mission. It aims to help service members leaving the military make a smooth transition to civilian life by connecting them with potential employers using Web 2.0 social networking tools. After some fits and starts, the company found that a solution built on service-oriented architecture (SOA) enabled it to achieve its goals at a low cost. What's more, because of its nonprofit status, in some cases, the vendors donated the services for free.

When Hire a Hero started a couple of years ago, it had visions of building its own system, but after burning through a couple of hundred grand, Brac Selph, executive director, says he knew that if his company was going to survive, it needed to find a new plan that involved working with existing services, rather than trying to build its own solution.

Developing a New Strategy

The new approach began to develop last January when Selph realized he needed to find a less-expensive technology strategy. Throughout the winter and spring of this year, he cobbled together a solution that involved three companies: two software-as-a-service (SaaS) vendors and a data integration tool to act as a bridge between the two systems.

The first piece was Salesforce.com, a customer relationship management tool built on the SaaS model. Hire a Hero had been using Salesforce with its original homegrown system to organize information about employees and potential employers. Salesforce also helped automate many processes by building in business logic normally used for a sales channel. For instance, if members didn't send a résumé, they got an automatic reminder e-mail message. If they hadn't set up an interview, they got a message about connecting them with someone who could help. In addition, Salesforce donated the service at no cost to Hire a Hero.

The next piece was a front-end Web tool, which would enable employers and employees to enter information about themselves into the system and provide social networking functionality. Selph found a company called YourMembership.com, which is also a SaaS vendor. He says that he couldn't believe he could find a tool with 80 percent of the functionality he wanted for just $500 a month. It also enabled him to get rid of expensive technical staff, saving his company $200,000 a year.

The final and most important piece was finding data integration company XAware to provide a way to get data from YourMembership into Salesforce.

Bringing the Data Together

Selph admits he knew little or nothing about SOA when he started down this road. He only knew he wanted to take advantage of services to save his company money, that he had two systems—and he wanted them to communicate with one another. "I've got to be real frank; I wasn't even aware of the term [SOA], but it certainly fits really well with what we are doing, particularly the idea of connecting various systems to accomplish what we want to accomplish," Selph says.

Soon after going live with YourMembership.com, he ran into problems moving data into Salesforce. "We realized [quickly] that we were doing everything by hand between YourMembership.com and Salesforce.com. It may not sound like much, but it took about an hour a day to download files from YourMembership and upload them to Salesforce," Selph says. In addition, he says, something inevitably went wrong with the transfer, such as incomplete data, wrong dates and records duplication. "There was just a huge potential for error," Selph says. As frustration with the process grew, he began looking for a solution to automate the data exchange.

With only a vague idea of what he wanted to do, Selph began exploring the Salesforce.com App Exchange, looking for a data integration solution. What he found was XAware and a couple of other vendors, but it quickly became apparent that XAware fitted both technologically and culturally. XAware offered an open-source solution that would solve Hire a Hero's technology problem. With a fellow ex-Marine as CEO, XAware also had what Selph calls "an affinity for people in the military." And when he asked about a special nonprofit price, he was pleased to find they would provide the entire solution for free.

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