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2.1 Functions & evolution of human resource management

Introduction

  • Human resource management (HRM): strategic approach to the effective management of an organization’s workers so that they help the business achieve its objectives and gain a competitive advantage.

Human resource planning

  • Human resource or workforce planning: analyzing and forecasting the numbers of workers and the skills of those workers that will be required by the organization to achieve its objectives.

  • Workforce audit: check on the skills and qualifications of all existing employees.

  • Human resource planning involves two main stages:

    1. Forecasting the number of employees required

    2. Forecasting the skills required

Labor turnover

  • Labor turnover measures the rate at which employees are leaving an organization. It is measured by:

Changes in labor mobility

  • Occupational mobility of labour: extent to which workers are willing and able to move to different jobs requiring different skills.

  • Geographical mobility of labor: extent to which workers are willing and able to move geographical region to take up new jobs.

Recruitment

  • Recruitment: process of identifying the need for a new employee, defining the job to be filled and the type of person needed to fill it, attracting suitable candidates for the job and selecting the best one.

    • Steps:

      1. Establish the exact nature of the job vacancy and draw up a job description (= detailed list of the key points about the job to be filled, stating all the key tasks and responsibilities of it)

      2. Draw up a person specification (= detailed list of the qualities, skills and qualifications that a successful applicant will need to have)

      3. Prepare a job advertisement reflecting the requirements of the job and the personal qualities looked for

      4. Draw up a shortlist of applicants

      5. Conduct interviews

Training

  • Training: work-related education to increase workforce skills and efficiency.

  • Types of training:

    • On-the-job training: instruction at the place of work on how a job should be carried out.

      • Induction training: introductory training program to familiarize new recruits with the systems used in the business and the layout of the business site; this form of training is usually on-the-job.

    • Off-the-job training: all training undertaken away from the business, e.g. work-related college courses.

    • Cognitive training: exercises designed to improve a person’s ability to understand and learn information.

    • Behavioral skills training is designed to improve an individual's ability to communicate and interact with others both inside and external to the organization.

Appraisal of employees

  • Employee appraisal: process of assessing the effectiveness of an employee judged against preset objectives.

  • Types of appraisal

    • Formative appraisal is based on a range of formal and informal assessment methods employed by supervisors not only to monitor an employee’s progress, but also to support and provide guidance for improvement.

      • It typically involves qualitative feedback (rather than scores or grades for achievement) that focuses on the details of performance and ways of improving it.

      • Goal: gathering feedback that can be used by the instructor/supervisors and the employees to guide improvements in the ongoing work being undertaken by the workers.

    • Summative appraisal

      • Goal: measuring the level of an employee’s success or proficiency in meeting predetermined benchmarks.

    • 360-degree feedback

      • Not using a supervisor as the sole means of providing appraisal feedback, but using many people who come into contact with the employee as sources of appraisal feedback information.

    • Self-appraisal

      • Employee self-appraisal, within a performance management or annual performance review system, involves asking the employee to self-evaluate his/her job performance.

    Dismissal of employees

    • Contract of employment: legal document that sets out the terms and conditions governing a worker’s job.

    • Dismissal: being removed or “sacked” from a job due to incompetence or breach of discipline.

    • Unfair dismissal: ending a worker’s employment contract for a reason that the law regards as being unfair.

    • Redundancy: when a job is no longer required so the employee doing this job becomes redundant through no fault of his/her own.

Employment patterns and practices

  • Teleworking: staff working from home but keeping contact with the office by means of modern IT communications.

  • Portfolio working: working pattern of following several simultaneous employments at any one time.

  • Outsourcing: using another business (a “third party”) to undertake a part of the production process rather than doing it within the business using the firm's own employees.

  • Flexi-time contract: employment contract that allows staff to be called in at times most convenient to employers and employees, e.g. at busy times of day.

  • Temporary employment contract: employment contract that lasts for a fixed time period, e.g. six months.

  • Part-time employment contract: employment contract that is for less than the normal full working week of, say, 40 hours, e.g. eight hours per week.

Outsourcing, offshoring and re-shoring as HR strategies

  • Offshoring: relocation of a business process done in one country to the same or another company in another country.

  • Re-shoring (in-shoring): reversal of offshoring; the transfer of a business process or operation back to its country of origin.

How innovation, ethical considerations and cultural differences influence human resource practices and strategies

  • Innovation in HRM

    • Higher productivity

    • Higher labour retention

    • Attraction of high-quality employees

    • Greater contribution from employees to problem solving at work and the generation of new ideas

  • Innovation through HRM

    • Matrix organizational structure that allows for project teams to work through major developments

    • Delegation to junior managers to give them the authority to show initiative and take important decisions

    • Extensive and continuous training programs

    • Regular appraisals to identify training needs and career plans

    • Entrepreneurial culture that encourages risk-taking and does not penalize failure but rewards success well

  • Ethical considerations

    • Lack of cultural awareness

    • Bribery

    • Pay

  • Cultural differences

    • Culture of the organization

      • Hard HRM: approach to managing staff that focuses on cutting costs, e.g. using temporary and part-time employment contracts, offering maximum flexibility but with minimum training costs.

      • Soft HRM: approach to managing staff that focuses on developing staff so that they reach self-fulfillment and are motivated to work hard and stay with the business.

    • National cultures

2.1 Functions & evolution of human resource management

Introduction

  • Human resource management (HRM): strategic approach to the effective management of an organization’s workers so that they help the business achieve its objectives and gain a competitive advantage.

Human resource planning

  • Human resource or workforce planning: analyzing and forecasting the numbers of workers and the skills of those workers that will be required by the organization to achieve its objectives.

  • Workforce audit: check on the skills and qualifications of all existing employees.

  • Human resource planning involves two main stages:

    1. Forecasting the number of employees required

    2. Forecasting the skills required

Labor turnover

  • Labor turnover measures the rate at which employees are leaving an organization. It is measured by:

Changes in labor mobility

  • Occupational mobility of labour: extent to which workers are willing and able to move to different jobs requiring different skills.

  • Geographical mobility of labor: extent to which workers are willing and able to move geographical region to take up new jobs.

Recruitment

  • Recruitment: process of identifying the need for a new employee, defining the job to be filled and the type of person needed to fill it, attracting suitable candidates for the job and selecting the best one.

    • Steps:

      1. Establish the exact nature of the job vacancy and draw up a job description (= detailed list of the key points about the job to be filled, stating all the key tasks and responsibilities of it)

      2. Draw up a person specification (= detailed list of the qualities, skills and qualifications that a successful applicant will need to have)

      3. Prepare a job advertisement reflecting the requirements of the job and the personal qualities looked for

      4. Draw up a shortlist of applicants

      5. Conduct interviews

Training

  • Training: work-related education to increase workforce skills and efficiency.

  • Types of training:

    • On-the-job training: instruction at the place of work on how a job should be carried out.

      • Induction training: introductory training program to familiarize new recruits with the systems used in the business and the layout of the business site; this form of training is usually on-the-job.

    • Off-the-job training: all training undertaken away from the business, e.g. work-related college courses.

    • Cognitive training: exercises designed to improve a person’s ability to understand and learn information.

    • Behavioral skills training is designed to improve an individual's ability to communicate and interact with others both inside and external to the organization.

Appraisal of employees

  • Employee appraisal: process of assessing the effectiveness of an employee judged against preset objectives.

  • Types of appraisal

    • Formative appraisal is based on a range of formal and informal assessment methods employed by supervisors not only to monitor an employee’s progress, but also to support and provide guidance for improvement.

      • It typically involves qualitative feedback (rather than scores or grades for achievement) that focuses on the details of performance and ways of improving it.

      • Goal: gathering feedback that can be used by the instructor/supervisors and the employees to guide improvements in the ongoing work being undertaken by the workers.

    • Summative appraisal

      • Goal: measuring the level of an employee’s success or proficiency in meeting predetermined benchmarks.

    • 360-degree feedback

      • Not using a supervisor as the sole means of providing appraisal feedback, but using many people who come into contact with the employee as sources of appraisal feedback information.

    • Self-appraisal

      • Employee self-appraisal, within a performance management or annual performance review system, involves asking the employee to self-evaluate his/her job performance.

    Dismissal of employees

    • Contract of employment: legal document that sets out the terms and conditions governing a worker’s job.

    • Dismissal: being removed or “sacked” from a job due to incompetence or breach of discipline.

    • Unfair dismissal: ending a worker’s employment contract for a reason that the law regards as being unfair.

    • Redundancy: when a job is no longer required so the employee doing this job becomes redundant through no fault of his/her own.

Employment patterns and practices

  • Teleworking: staff working from home but keeping contact with the office by means of modern IT communications.

  • Portfolio working: working pattern of following several simultaneous employments at any one time.

  • Outsourcing: using another business (a “third party”) to undertake a part of the production process rather than doing it within the business using the firm's own employees.

  • Flexi-time contract: employment contract that allows staff to be called in at times most convenient to employers and employees, e.g. at busy times of day.

  • Temporary employment contract: employment contract that lasts for a fixed time period, e.g. six months.

  • Part-time employment contract: employment contract that is for less than the normal full working week of, say, 40 hours, e.g. eight hours per week.

Outsourcing, offshoring and re-shoring as HR strategies

  • Offshoring: relocation of a business process done in one country to the same or another company in another country.

  • Re-shoring (in-shoring): reversal of offshoring; the transfer of a business process or operation back to its country of origin.

How innovation, ethical considerations and cultural differences influence human resource practices and strategies

  • Innovation in HRM

    • Higher productivity

    • Higher labour retention

    • Attraction of high-quality employees

    • Greater contribution from employees to problem solving at work and the generation of new ideas

  • Innovation through HRM

    • Matrix organizational structure that allows for project teams to work through major developments

    • Delegation to junior managers to give them the authority to show initiative and take important decisions

    • Extensive and continuous training programs

    • Regular appraisals to identify training needs and career plans

    • Entrepreneurial culture that encourages risk-taking and does not penalize failure but rewards success well

  • Ethical considerations

    • Lack of cultural awareness

    • Bribery

    • Pay

  • Cultural differences

    • Culture of the organization

      • Hard HRM: approach to managing staff that focuses on cutting costs, e.g. using temporary and part-time employment contracts, offering maximum flexibility but with minimum training costs.

      • Soft HRM: approach to managing staff that focuses on developing staff so that they reach self-fulfillment and are motivated to work hard and stay with the business.

    • National cultures

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