Employee recognition software: what it does, and what it leaves on HR's desk
Employee recognition software gives HR a platform to run recognition. The Mojo Moment Programme removes the running entirely. This page compares the software route with a fully managed recognition service, so you can choose the model that fits: a tool your team operates, or a programme that operates for your team. Available in 190+ countries.
What recognition software does well
Let's be fair. Employee recognition software earns its place in a specific setting. When a company of 5,000 people wants peer-to-peer shout-outs flowing every day, a platform with points, badges, and feeds handles that volume well. Gallup's research links frequent recognition to engagement, and software makes frequency cheap.
The best recognition software also gives HR a record. Every award is logged, every redemption is tracked, and the analytics look impressive in a quarterly review. If your culture already recognises people constantly and you only need the plumbing, software is a reasonable purchase.
So the question is not whether the software works. The question is who does the work. With every platform on the market, the answer is the same: your managers, your HR team, and your admin calendar.
What recognition software leaves for HR to manage
Buying employee recognition software is not the end of the project. It is the start of a permanent job. Three parts of that job never go away.
The adoption push
Software only recognises people when managers log in and act. Every HR team that runs a platform spends real hours nudging, training, and re-launching it. When a manager is heads-down in a hard quarter, recognition is the first thing dropped, and the software does nothing about it.
The points economy
Points budgets, redemption catalogues, expiry policies, currency conversions, tax questions from Finance. Someone in HR owns all of it, forever. The platform gives you the controls. It does not push the buttons for you.
The moment still misses
An automated badge on a feed is a transaction. A five-year anniversary deserves more than a notification between two meetings. Software can log the milestone. It cannot make the person feel seen. That part still lands on a human, and no licence fee covers it.
When each model is the right call
A genuine comparison names the cases where the other side wins. Here they are.
Choose recognition software when
You have 5,000+ employees and want daily peer-to-peer recognition at high volume. You have a dedicated programme manager to own adoption and administration. Points, badges, and social feeds fit how your culture already communicates. Your workforce sits mostly in one or two countries with strong catalogue coverage.
Choose the managed programme when
You have 50 to 2,000 employees and no appetite for another tool to manage. Milestones matter more than volume: anniversaries, promotions, long service. Your team spans several countries and Finance asks hard compliance questions. You want recognition guaranteed to land even in the busiest quarter.
What makes Mojo Gift different from every other corporate gifting platform
Six capabilities no other recognition product can match — built in, not bolted on.
The receiver decides everything
Alone, or with up to 4 people
Any product, delivered to their door
No expiry. Ever.
Price never shown to the recipient
190 countries. The world is the catalogue.
Frequently asked questions about employee recognition software
What is employee recognition software?
Employee recognition software is a platform HR teams use to run recognition in-house: managers log in, award points or badges, and employees redeem them in a portal. It works well for high-frequency peer recognition. HR still owns the setup, the adoption push, and the admin. A managed programme is the alternative when HR wants recognition handled, not hosted.
What is the alternative to employee recognition software?
A managed recognition programme. Instead of licensing a platform for HR to run, a provider tracks milestones, prepares each gift, and delivers it personally. The Mojo Moment Programme is one example: the Occasions Engine tracks occasions, a concierge team delivers every card, and HR reviews a dashboard instead of managing a tool.
Do small and mid-size companies need recognition software?
Usually not. Software pricing is per seat, so a 50 to 2,000 person company pays for licences whether recognition happens or not, and adoption depends on busy managers. At that size, a pay-per-gift managed programme covers every milestone without a platform to run, from $100 per gift plus a 10% service fee.
See how a managed programme fits your team.
Book a 20-minute call. We map your team size, milestones, and countries, then show you exactly what the managed model replaces, including the licence you would never need to buy.
Book a 20-minute call