2.1 Functions & evolution of human resource management
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 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:
Forecasting the number of employees required
Forecasting the skills required
Labor turnover measures the rate at which employees are leaving an organization. It is measured by:
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: 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:
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)
Draw up a person specification (= detailed list of the qualities, skills and qualifications that a successful applicant will need to have)
Prepare a job advertisement reflecting the requirements of the job and the personal qualities looked for
Draw up a shortlist of applicants
Conduct interviews
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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 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:
Forecasting the number of employees required
Forecasting the skills required
Labor turnover measures the rate at which employees are leaving an organization. It is measured by:
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: 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:
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)
Draw up a person specification (= detailed list of the qualities, skills and qualifications that a successful applicant will need to have)
Prepare a job advertisement reflecting the requirements of the job and the personal qualities looked for
Draw up a shortlist of applicants
Conduct interviews
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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