PeopleSoft customers and partners don’t just need product updates—they need a reliable source to track product roadmap progression,  support policy direction, and the practical “how it works” details that help teams plan with confidence. That’s exactly the value of the official PeopleSoft blogs: timely guidance straight from Oracle, written in a way that helps customers connect near-term actions – upgrades, tooling choices, UX improvements, with long-term strategy – support direction, platform modernization, and AI-enabled experiences.

If you haven’t made the PeopleSoft blog part of your regular cadence, NOW is a great time to start. Below are five standout posts of 2025 that are worth bookmarking and sharing across your IT, HR, Finance, and Campus teams.

Recommended PeopleSoft blog posts from 2025

1) Oracle extends support for PeopleSoft, maintains 10-Year rolling support

Why it’s valuable: This is the post to share with executives, PMOs, and risk/compliance stakeholders. A clear support direction strengthens long-term planning and helps organizations continue investing in PeopleSoft with confidence.

Who should read it: CIO/CTO leadership, enterprise architects, program managers, Information Security/compliance leads, application owners.

Link: https://blogs.oracle.com/peoplesoft/peoplesoft-support-2036

2) Transforming the PeopleSoft Experience: The New PeopleSoft Landing Page

Why it’s valuable: User Experience improvements matter—especially for broad user populations across HR and  Finance systems. This post highlights how PeopleSoft is evolving the first-touch user experience and supports adoption initiatives focused on usability and productivity.

Who should read it: Functional leads, UX/product owners, change management teams, HR/Finance admins, and support desks.

Link: https://blogs.oracle.com/peoplesoft/transforming-peoplesoft-experience-the-new-peoplesoft-landing-page

3) Natural Language Assistant in PeopleSoft

Why it’s valuable: AI in enterprise apps should be purposeful: reducing friction, improving search and task completion, and helping users navigate complex flows. This post is a strong entry point for teams evaluating where a natural language experience can remove pain points and improve self-service.

Who should read it: Application owners, functional SMEs, innovation teams, IT leadership, service desk managers.

Link: https://blogs.oracle.com/peoplesoft/natural-language-assistant-in-peoplesoft

4) PeopleTools 8.62 is available for on-premise installation

Why it’s valuable: Tools releases are core to platform health—security posture, performance, admin capabilities, developer productivity, and future compatibility. This post is particularly important for customers running on-premises who want to stay current with PeopleTools while aligning upgrade windows and testing cycles.

Who should read it: System admins, developers, infrastructure teams, release managers, technical architects.

Link: https://blogs.oracle.com/peoplesoft/peopletools-862-is-available-for-onpremise-installation

5) Transition to the New My Oracle Support Portal

Why it’s valuable: Support portal transitions can impact everything from incident management to patching workflows. This post helps teams prepare proactively—updating internal documentation, training analysts, and minimizing disruption to support operations.

Who should read it: Support managers System admins, patching/maintenance teams, operations leads, Information Technology Service Management process owners.

Link: https://blogs.oracle.com/peoplesoft/transition-to-the-new-my-oracle-support-portal

Why PeopleSoft blogs matter

1) Clarity for planning and governance

Enterprise systems live on multi-year timelines. The PeopleSoft blog is a practical input to roadmap discussions—helping teams make defensible decisions about upgrades, staffing, and modernization initiatives.

2) Faster adoption of new capabilities

When new UX patterns, assistant capabilities, and platform updates arrive, blog posts often provide the context and “what this means for you” framing that speeds up internal alignment.

3) Confidence in support and lifecycle direction

Support policy and platform transitions affect risk, cost, and continuity. Oracle’s official blog updates are a dependable source to keep stakeholders informed and reduce uncertainty.