When an organization needs external support in human resources, three formulas often come up: HR consulting, interim HR and HR outsourcing. They are easy to confuse, yet they meet different needs. Telling them apart helps you avoid paying for more than you need, or choosing a solution that is too light for the challenge. Here is how each one works and how to decide.
HR consulting means engaging a specialist for a project or advisory mandate with a defined scope: an audit of practices, structuring policies, supporting a reorganization or putting a process in place. You bring in focused expertise for a specific deliverable, over a limited period. It is the formula to favour when the need is clear and well defined, and you are mainly after a concrete result. For a complete overview, see our complete guide to HR consulting.
Interim HR meets a different need: temporarily holding a position to keep operations running. A professional joins the team and takes on the role during an absence, a transition or a peak period. It is the solution when a parental leave, an illness or a departure leaves a seat vacant that must be filled without disruption. Interim can also take the form of a part-time HR role in an organization whose size does not justify a permanent position.
HR outsourcing goes further: you durably entrust a complete HR function to an external partner, on an ongoing basis, rather than managing it in-house. It is a structural choice, often made by organizations that prefer to focus their energy on their core business while ensuring professional HR management. Unlike a consulting mandate, outsourcing is built to last and covers a broader scope.
The right choice depends on the nature of the need, its duration and the level of continuity required.
A few concrete examples make this clearer. A temporary workload surge or the reinforcement of a project team call for consulting. A context of rapid growth or a hiring freeze can justify interim, the time it takes to stabilize the organization. An SME that cannot afford a full HR department may, for its part, opt for a form of outsourcing.
Before choosing, clarify a few points:
These answers almost always point to the right formula.
In practice, these approaches are not airtight. A consulting mandate can lead to interim, the time it takes to stabilize a team. An organization can outsource certain activities while keeping a core HR team in-house and calling on consulting for one-off projects. What matters is to start from the real need rather than the label.
Whatever the formula, the quality of the partner makes the difference. An experienced firm will first help you name your need, then choose the most fitting approach, without selling you more than necessary. Discover our HR consulting and interim services or talk with an expert to see things clearly.
Consulting focuses on a project or advisory mandate with a defined scope and a specific deliverable. Interim means temporarily holding a role to ensure continuity, for example during an absence or a transition.
Yes. An SME that does not justify a full HR department can entrust its HR function, in whole or in part, to an external partner, for professional management without a permanent position.
Absolutely. Many organizations alternate based on their needs: consulting for projects, interim for continuity, outsourcing for functions handed over durably.
By clarifying the nature of the need (project or ongoing role), its duration and the level of continuity required. An HR firm can help you determine the most suitable formula.