Showing posts with label Human resource management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Human resource management. Show all posts

Human Resource Management - Review Articles

Human Resource Management Revision Articles Series

Review articles are mainly based on the textbook:
Human Resource Management: An Experiential Approach (SIE), 4/e
Copyright year: 2007

H. John Bernardin, Florida Atlantic University

Google books page for the book. Preview and search facility are available

http://books.google.co.in/books?id=0Vb-lyIy5aMC

Table of Contents and Revision Articles

Human Resource Management Revision Articles for Chapters



PART I - Human Resource Management and the Environment

Strategic Human Resource Management in a Changing Environment
The Role of Globalization in HR Policy and Practice - Review notes updated 10.1.2012
The Legal Environment of HRM: Equal Employment Opportunity - Review Notes

PART II - Acquiring Human Resource Capability

Work Analysis and Design - Review Notes
Human Resource Planning and Recruitment - Review Notes
Personnel Selection - Review Notes

PART III - Developing Human Resource Capability

Performance Management and Appraisal - Review Notes
Training and Development - Review Notes
Career Development - Review Notes

PART IV - Compensating and Managing Human Resources

Compensation: Base Pay and Fringe Benefits - Review Notes
Pay for Performance - Review Notes
Managing the Employment Relationship - Review Notes
Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining - Review Notes
Employee Health and Safety - Review Notes

Full Chapters of the Book Human Resource Management Online Book by Laura Dias

Updated 6.1.2012

Human Resource Management - Introduction - A Revision Article

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series

The human resources of an organization consist of all people who perform its activities.

Human resource management (HRM) is concerned with the personnel policies and managerial practices and systems that influence the workforce. In broader terms, all decisions that affect the workforce of the organization concern the HRM function.

_________________________________________________

Summary of Chapter 1. Strategic Human Resource Management in a Changing Environment in

H John Bernardin, Human Resource Management, Fourth Edition, McGraw Hill, 2007

Introduction




The human resources of an organization consist of all people who perform its activities.

Human resource management (HRM) is concerned with the personnel policies and managerial practices and systems that influence the workforce. In broader terms, all decisions that affect the workforce of the organization concern the HRM function.


The activities involved in HRM function are pervasive throughout the organization. Line managers, typically spend more than 50 percent of their time for human resource activities such hiring, evaluating, disciplining, and scheduling employees. Human resource management specialists in the HRM department help organizations with all activities related to staffing and maintaining an effective workforce. Major HRM responsibilities include work design and job analysis, training and development, recruiting, compensation, team-building, performance management and appraisal, worker health and safety issues, as well as identifying or developing valid methods for selecting staff. HRM department provides the tools, data and processes that are used by line managers in their human resource management component of their job.

What is the focus of HRM department?




“The HRM focus should always be maintaining and, ideally, expanding the customer base while maintaining, and ideally, maximizing profit. HRM has a whole lot to do with this focus regardless of the size of the business, or the products or services you are trying to sell.” (Dr. James Spina, former head of Executive Development at the Tribune Company). HRM is involved in managing the human resources with a focus on expanding customer base that gives profit to the company. The bottom line of the company is the focus of the HRM department as well as the function.

Contributing to the Bottom-line of the Company through HR Top-line Activities




A growing body research shows that progressive HRM practices have a significant effect on corporate bottom-line and middle-line performance. The positive effect on financial performance, productivity, product and service quality, and cost control are documented by researchers.


High-performance work systems (HPWS) is a term used to describe a collection of HR practices or characteristics of HR systems designed to enhance employees’ competencies so that employees can be a reliable source of competitive advantage. A summary of the research on HPWS indicated that a one standard deviation of improved assessment on a HPWS measurement tool increased sales per employee in excess of $15,000 per employee, an 8 percent gain in labor productivity.

The Activities of Human Resources Management




The activities performed by HRM professionals fall under five major domains:


(1) Organizational design,

(2) Staffing,

(3) Performance Management and Appraisal,

(4) Employee and Organizational Development, and

(5) Reward Systems, Benefits and Compliance


Acquiring human resource capability should begin with organizational design and analysis. Organizational design involves the arrangement of work tasks based on the interaction of people, technology and the tasks to be performed in the context of the objectives, goals and the strategic plan of the organization. HRM activities such as human resources planning, job and work analysis, organizational restructuring, job design, team building, computerization, and worker-machine interfaces fall under this domain.


Recruitment, employee orientation, selection, promotion, and termination are among the activities that fit into the staffing domain. The performance management domain includes assessments of individuals and teams to measure, and to improve work performance. Employee training and development programs are concerned with establishing, fostering, and maintaining employee skills base don organizational and employee needs.


Reward systems, benefits and compliance have to do with any type of reward or benefit that may be available to employees. Labor law, health and safety issues and unemployment policy fall under compliance component.

Major Trends Affecting HRM




The following trends have an effect on human resource management function and department. The importance of HRM increases due to some of them and the practices of HRM are affected to some extent due to some of them.


1. Increased globalization of the economy.

2. Technological changes and environmental changes.

3. The need to be flexible in response to business changes.

4. Increase in litigation related to HRM.

5. Changing characteristics of the workforce.

The Importance of HRM Measurement


Many HRM systems and activities are not subjected to systematic measurement. Many organizations do not assess either the short- or long-term consequences of their HRM programs or activities. A recurring theme of the book is that measurement and accountability are key components to organizational effectiveness and competitive advantage. Good measurement, allied with business strategies, will help organizations select and improve all of their HRM activities and provide a much stronger connection between HRM activities and organizational effectiveness.


Stanford University professor Jeffrey Pfeffer considers measurement to be one of the keys to competitive advantage. His book Competitive Advantage Through People cites measurement as one of the 16 HRM practices that contribute the most to competitive advantage.


A new book entitled The Workforce Scorecard by Professors Mark Huselid, Brian Becker, and Dick Beatty extends research on the "balanced scorecard" to a comprehensive management and measurement system to maximize workforce potential.

Competitive Advantage and HRM




Competitive Advantage refers to the ability of an organization to formulate strategies that place it at favorable position relative to other companies in the industry. Two major principles, namely customer value and uniqueness, are relevant for gaining competitive advantage.


Competitive advantage occurs if customers perceive that they receive more value form their transaction or relationship with an organization than from its competitors. HRM needs to make efforts to ensure that all employees are focused on understanding customer needs and expectations.


The second principle of competitive advantage derives from offering a product or service that your competitor cannot easily imitate or copy.



The status of HRM is improving relative to other potential sources of competitive advantage for an organization. Professor Pfeffer notes that "traditional sources of success (e.g., speed to market, financial, technological) can still provide competitive leverage, but to a lesser degree now than in the past, leaving organizational culture and capabilities, derived from how people are managed, as comparatively more vital."

For success in 21st century, HRM activities must be (1) responsive to a highly competitive marketplace and global business structures, (2) closely linked to business strategic plans, (3) jointly conceived and implemented by line and HR managers, and (4) focused on quality, customer service, productivity, employee involvement, teamwork, and workforce flexibility.

Importance of Study of HRM for Students Specializing in Other Functional Areas of Management




Even as line managers in any functional department, management students are likely to manage people at some point in their career. Research shows that the manner in which one conducts the human resource responsibilities of the management job will be the key for effectiveness and growth in one’s career.

Reference



H John Bernardin, Human Resource Management, Fourth Edition, McGraw Hill, 2007

Review notes  for all chapters of the book

 http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/search/label/Human%20resource%20management

Full Chapters of the Book Human Resource Management by Laura Dias


Originally posted at
http://knol.google.com/k/human-resource-management-introduction-a-revision-article#

The Role of Globalization in HR Policy and Practice - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series


More and more large companies, as well as companies that account for a significant amount of business in the world or in any single country are globalizing. Hence the demand for employees, leaders and managers with global skills is increasing. HR managers are on one side expected to find staff with global skills, train them for global skills and do all other HR activities with focus on globalization and regional and national cultural and economic differences and also they themselves need to have global skills as HR managers.


1. Describe the different ways companies may engage in international commerce.

Exports
Licensing
Franchising
Contract manufacturing
Management contracts
Foreign direct investment
- Joint ventures
- Strategic alliance
- Sole ownership





Approaches to International HRM - A Paper


http://www.utas.edu.au/mgmt/wps/wps_files/99_01pap.pdf


Paper by Dr. Hilary Harris
http://www.global-excellence.com/getfile.php?g=49


The different IHRM strategies.

Four general internationa human resource strategies are identified.

1. Ethnocentric appoach

Parent-country nationals (PCNs) are sent for top and middle level management positions. Rank-and-file workers are often locals. Pay for the locals will tend to be based on the local market place. Pay for the PCNs will tend to be related to the home country.

2. Polycentric philosophy

In this approach, during the early stages host-country nationals (HCNs) tend to fill middle- and lower-level positions in management. As time progresses, key management positions are also filled by HCNs. This approach believes the foreign subsidiaries are best managed by locals having successful track record in local markets.

3. Geocentric approach

In this approach, organizations begin considering themselves as having global workforce that can be deployed throughout the world based on the requirement of skill sets. Talent is identified and ranked and nationality is not an issue in talent identification for any post or job, role or position in these organizations. The compensation is also based on a global policy and the contribution of the individual to the organization on a global basis.

4. Regiocentric approach

In this approach, regions are emphasized and workforce is considered as region workforce that can be deployed within that region irrespective of the nationality of the person in the region. The compensation patters differ from region to region.


Global Mindset and Skills of Global Managers

One expert describes three key skills: Integration that can take care of country and cultural differences. Ability to influence locals to accept world standards and commonalities in work practices. Cross-fertilization ability to recognize the best from various places and adapt it at other places.

Another description is: Global managers have an in-depth understanding world markets (demand side). They master all elements of the global supply chain and distribution channels (supply side). Third they skillfully embrace cultural diversity.

Global mindset

Global mindset has requires knowledge about the demand side and supply side of the market and strategies to create a successful and profitable business out of them. It also needs cross cultural mindset that respects and understands other cultures. It requires willingness to learn some foreign languages, nonverbal communication symbols of other cultures, and a spirit of generosity, magnanimity and tolerance to give the opportunity to others to proceed and define own directions in the context of their cultural background.
(Reference: Jean-Pierret Jeannet, Managing with a Global Mindset (London: Pearson Education, 2000))

___________________________________________________________________________

Chapter Learning Objectives


After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Describe the different ways companies may engage in international commerce.


Explain the different international business strategies.


Explain how international human resource management (IHRM) differs from traditional, domestic HRM.


Understand the different IHRM strategies.


Describe the trends relating to international job assignments.


Understand the issues and trends relating to the development of globally competent business leaders.

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073381438/student_view0/chapter2/


__________________

How to become global organization




2010 video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4C2mcaSQbQs

__________________

Updated 10.1.2012

The Legal Environment of HRM - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series



There are a plethora federal, state, and local laws and regulations related to workers' compensation, unemploymenet compensation, wages, health and safety in workplace,, whistleblower's protection, retirement, employee benefits, right of privacy, and protection against unjust dismissal.

Most Americans work under the employment-at-will doctrine that stiputes that both employer and employee can terminate a working relationship at any time and for any reason other than those characteristics or situations explicitly stipulated by law.

HR managers and persons intending to be HR managers should realize that the practice of human resources is a litigous minefield with more "mines" being planted in the form of new laws or regulations and the judicial acceptance of new legal theories of unfair or injurious employment practice.


Equal Employment Opportunity Law

What is employment discrimination?

Employment discrimination can be broadly decisions or working conditions that are advantageous (disadvantageous) to members of one group compared to members of another group. These advantages or disadvantages can be in the areas of personnel selection, admission to training programs, promotions, work assignments, transfers, compensation, layoffs, punishments, and dismissals.

All claims of discrimination must be filed with EEOC (http://http://www.eeoc.gov/ ). The most frequently used sources for filing discrimination violations are Title VII of the 1964 U.S. Civil Rights Act (CRA), the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA), and the Americans with Disability Act of 1990 (ADA).

Sexual harassment cases are also filed under Title VII. According to guidelines, sexual harassment is defined as "unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature constitute sexual harassment when (1) submission to such conduct is made either explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of an individual's employment. (2) submission to or rejection of such conduct by an individual is used as the basis for employment decisions affecting such individual , or (3) such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual's work performance or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment.

Presentation slides

http://www.lcsc.edu/jbowen/HRM/PPTs/HRM03.pdf



http://www.andrews.edu/~schwab/670law2.pdf


Bernardin's HRM book



______________________________________________________________


Chapter Learning Objectives

After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Explain the legal issues affecting HRM activity and the various laws related to equal employment opportunity and employment discrimination.


Identify potential problems in HRM policy and practice as related to equal employment opportunity laws.


Know the importance of judicial interpretation in EEO law.


Understand the implications of EEO law in the international context.


Describe the future trends related to EEO law and their implications for practice.

References
http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073381438/student_view0/chapter3/


Related Chapters

Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining

Employee Health and Safety


Video Lectures and Presentations on Employment Law

__________________


__________________

Work Analysis and Design -Bernardin HRM Chapter - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series

 

Definition



Work analysis is a systematic process of gathering information about work, jobs, and the relationships among jobs.
The chronological Steps in Work Analysis (given in the form of questions)

1. What are the required outcomes/measures for assessing strategy execution (e.g., customer requirements for products/services derived from the strategic plan)?
2. What are necessary, critical, essential tasks, activities, behaviors required to meet or exceed the requirements established at step 1? what the relative importance, frequency, and essentiality of these tasks for achieving measures at step 1?
3. What are the necessary knowledge, skills, abilities and other characteristics or competencies required to perform the activities at step 2?
4. How should jobs/work be defined? Where does the work get done to maximize efficiency/effectiveness? Do we use individual jons, work teams, independent contractors, full-time/part-time? Do we outsource?



Major Goals of Work Analysis



1. Description of observables
2. Description of job characteristics
3. Verifiable and reliable data


Major Products of Work Analysis



Job description
Job classification
Job evaluation
Job specification

Job description

Job descriptions defne the job in terms of its content and scope. Job descriptions are often summarized in employment ads.

Job specification

Job specifications consist of the KASOCs need to carry out the job tasks and duties.

Strategic Job Analysis - Work Analysis

Strategic job analysis comes into picture when a new business is started as a separate unit or as a separate division. It also comes into picture when jobs are changing dramatically or when a new job is being created. In this case, the analysis takes on a rather predictive bent and the job is described through the anticipated tasks that need to be performed in order to meet organizational goals. If a job currently exists, then a conventional or routine job analysis procedure is used.

If the job isn't in existence, then subject matter experts (SMEs) and the primary customers (users of outputs of the job) are brought together to identify the tasks and output of the new job. While internal customers described their requirement, SMEs help in bringing the external customer and environment into the analysis. Detailed description of job tasks and the required KASOCs are developed with the help of SMEs. The results of this strategic analysis are compared with existing job descriptions if the analysis is carried for existing jobs expected to have a big change. If the jobs are changing due to introduction of new technology, the experts from hardware and software supplies are also consulted in the process of job analysis.


Formal Approaches to Work Analysis



Position Analysis questionnaire
Management position description questionnaire
Competency modeling
O*Net
Critical Incident Technique
Job compatibility questionnaire (JCQ)
Job Diagnostic Survey
Mulitmethod Job Design Questionnaire



Competency Modeling

Most experts contend tht competency modeling is more focused on how objectives are accomplished rather than what is accomplished. Competency modeling attempts to identify and define competencies that are common for an occupational group. The concept of competencies is also used in the case of organizations. But here our concern is with competencies required for a job position and competencies that an individual in the job possesses. Thereby, the most common purpose for competency modeling will be to derive training and development programs.

Even though the derivation of competencies lacks rigor, use of competency modeling is very popular. Peoplesoft, SAP and Oracle have competency modeling components to help HR managers. But Bernardin points out that there is difficulty in distinguishing between competencies and psychological traits.

O*Net and DOT

Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT) classifies job based on a nine-digit code and provides job descriptions.

O*NET - The Occupational Information Network was developed as a replacement of the DOT. It is  positioned as a tool for job analysis and career exploration.

O*NET is based on a six-domain content model.

Worker requirements
Experience requirements
Worker characteristics
Occupational requirements
Occupation specific requirements
Occupation charactertistics

Visit online onetcenter for more information


A presentation on Work and Job Analysis by J.Bowen


________________________________________________________

Chapter Learning Objectives



After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Understand what work analysis is and what its major products are.


Explain the purposes and uses for work analysis data.


Compare and contrast methods for collecting data.


Describe commonly used and newer methods for conducting work analysis, including O*NET.


Explain how work analysis information is applied to job design efforts.


Understand that different procedures emphasize different kinds of information that may be more or less useful for different HRM functions.


Conduct and prepare a work analysis report.
____________________________________________________


Reference
H John Bernardin, Human Resource Management, Fourth Edition, McGraw Hill, 2007
http://knol.google.com/k/narayana-rao/work-analysis-and-design-hrm-chapter/2utb2lsm2k7a/1028#

Related Chapters
Human Resource Planning and Recruitment
Personnel Selection 

Updated 6.1.2012

Human Resource Planning and Recruitment - Review Notes of Bernardin's Chapter

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series


Human resources decisions at aggregate level are strategic decisions. The size of human resource depends on the technology and capital employed. Human resource management scholars feel that HR figures in strategic planning only when layoffs are required.  They advocate that HR planning should be integral part of strategic planning and competitive strategy planning. The most effective approach to HR planning and staffing is to assess HR needs with a focus on meeting current customer requirements and projected expansion in the customer base. All associates of an organization have to be involved in these two activities: meeting current customer requirements and expanding customer base.

Steps in HRP

Environmental scanning
labor demand forecast
Labor supply forecast
Gap analysis
Action programming
Control and evaluation


1. Environmental scanning by HR department

Environmental scanning by HR department helps in identifying and anticipating opportunities that can be profitably used and threats and problems that have to be tackled by the organization in the area of human resources. These inputs are to be taken into account in developing organization's strategic plans. This environmental scanning also provides information that supports decision making by HR managers. The scanning is to cover both external environment as well as internal environment.

2. Labor analysis

Labor demand analysis is to be made company level as well as industry level.

3. Labor Supply analysis

Labor supply analysis projects resource availability.

4. Gap Analysis

This analysis identies potential shortages or surpluses.

5. Action programming

Actions to be taken by HR department to structure the human resources to support the strategy.

6. Evaluation

This is done at periodical intervals to find out the actual results in comparison to anticipated results. This is basically the control function. The aim is to take tactical actions to still deliver the priority results of the strategic plan.


The Recruitment Function

The major responsibility for the recruitment process rests with the HRM department. But most of the tasks are shared with the line managers.

The steps and concepts are relevant for recruitment.

1. Job analysis 2. Time lapse data 3. Yield ratio

Both internal recruitment and external recruitment alternatives are available.

External recruitment sources

Un-solicited applications/walk-ins

Referrals

Advertising

Employment agencies

Search firms

Campus visits

Internet based recruitment options


Understanding the Recruits

Effective recruiting requires that the organization know the needs and desires of potential candidates regarding all major characteristics of the job. They need to know how candidates search for jobs. HR departments have not systematized this information gathering process. Most organizations are relying on hunches and research indicates that these "hunches" are not particularly accurate.


______________________________________________________________


Chapter Learning Objectives

After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Understand the importance of HRP to the organization.


Identify the six steps in the HRP process.


Explain the methods by which an organization can develop forecasts of anticipated personnel demand and understand labor markets.


Understand how an organization can stay apprised of and evaluate its personnel supply and, if necessary, implement a downsizing program.


Determine which recruitment methods are best for given situations, including the role of the Internet.


Understand the pros and cons of internal versus external recruiting.


Know the most important features of recruitment advertising.


Know the legal implications of recruitment and planning.



Reference

Bernardin, H. Joh, Human Resource Management, 4th Edition, Mc-Graw Hill, 2007.



http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073381438/student_view0/chapter5/

Personnel Selection - Bernardin's Chapter - Review Notes

Human resource management revision article series


Organizations are interested in selecting employees who will be effective, efficient, work for them as long as the organization wants them and who will not engage in counterproductive behavior such as violence, substance abuse, avoidable accidents, and employee theft.

Application blanks, reference nd background checks, various forms of standardized testing, and some form of interview is a standard practice. Selection involves the gathering and assessing information about candidates willing to work in the organization and making the employment decision. The same process is followed for entry level external recruitment, higher level external recruitement, internal promotions, transfers and even job retention decision in case of downsizing efforts.


Selection methods need to have reliability, validity, and utility.

Reliability concerns the consistency of measurement.

Validity refers to the relation between the performance in the test and the performance on the job.

Utility is gain from using the method.

Information about the Application - Through Various Application Forms or Blanks

Application blanks ask candidates for a job to fill details of education, employment history and experience details during the employment.

Biographical information blanks (BIB) ask for more personal information with questions about personal background and life experiences.

Accomplishment record asks candidates to write examples of their accomplishments. Bernardin quotes the example that in the case of search for a new business school dean, applicants were asked to cite a fund-raising project they had successfully organized.

Background Checks and References

Bernardin has noted that research indicates that 20 to 25 percent of job applicants include at least one major fabrication. Hence background checks is a good practice.

References may not yield significant information as there were lawsuits on former employers for defamation of character etc. But companies are also being sued for not giving adequate information about a former employee when requested. Background checks shuold include police records also.

Bernardin recommends companies to develop letter of reference as a performance appraisal form and use it for both internal and external candidates. He advises companies to do their utmost to obtain accurate reference information despite difficulties as the company can avoid negligent hiring lawsuits.

Personnel testing

Cognitive ability test
Tests of specific ability
Personality/motivational testing
What personality?
How do we measure personality
Validity of personality tests

Cognitive ability tests measure one's mental capacity to acquire knowledge based on the accumulation of learning from all possible sources till that time. Achievement tests are different and they measure the effects of knowledge obtained till that time. A final examination in a subject is an example of achievement test. Knowledge based tests assess a candidate on a sample of what is required on the job.

What is personality?
Personality refers to an individual's consistent pattern of behavior. The consistent pattern is comprised of traits. The five big traits which are used to describe the personality of a person are:

1. Introversion/extroversion
2. Emotional stability
3. Agreeableness/ likability
4. Conscientiousness
5. Openness to experience

About various psychometric tests includes ability tests   )

How to Establish a Psychological Testing Program

1. Study the manuals provided by test publishers.
2. Check the review of the test in Mental Measuements Yearbook.
3. Find out from the test publishers the users and interact with them and find out their experience.
4. Go through the test items and evaluate them for ethical, legal and privacy ramifications.

Evaluate the test like you evaluate other products. Don't simply believe the brochure.

Assessment Center

Assessment centers use trained observers and a variety of techniques to make judgments about behavior, from specially developed assessment simulations. Assessment center focus on job dimensions.

Interviews

Types of interviews
 Structured interviews
Group/panel interviews
Situational or behavioral interviews

Sun Microsystesm interviews job applicants several times by as many as 20 interviewers


Presentation slides
http://www.andrews.edu/~schwab/670sele6.pdf

____________________________________________________________


Chapter Learning Objectives

After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Understand the concepts of reliability, validity, and utility.


Understand the validity evidence for various selection methods.


Discuss approaches to the more effective use for application blanks, reference checks, biographical data, and the interview in order to increase the validity and legal defensibility of each.


Discuss the approaches available for drug testing.


Describe the validity of different approaches to interviewing.


Explain how the various types of candidate information should be integrated and evaluated.

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073381438/student_view0/chapter6/

Performance Management and Appraisal - Bernardin - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series


Performance management is a critical component of a broader set of human resource practices that are linked to business objectives, personal and organizational development, and corporate strategy.

Performance is defined as the record of outcomes produced in specified job functions or activities during a specified time period.


Performance data are used for compensation, staffing purposes, training needs analysis and research and evaluation.

Appraisals are challenged in courts and there are regulation in place to protect rights of employees.

Bernardin emphasized that the effects of appraisal and performance management systems will be more positive if and when certain prescriptions are followed that have generally not been heeded by practitioners.

The prescriptions indicated by Bernarding are:

1. Precision in the definition and measurement.
2. The content and measurement of performance should derive from internal and external customers.
3. The system needs a formal process for investigating and correcting for the effects of situational constraints on performance.

Performance on the job as a whole of a person would be equal to the sum (average) performance on the major job functions or activities. It should not be confused with traits and competencies of the person.

What are the uses for Performance Data?



Performance data are used for compensation, staffing purposes, training needs analysis and research and evaluation.

Six primary Creteria of Performance



1. Quality 2. Quantity 3. Timeliness 4. Cost-effectivenss 5. Need for supervision
6. Interpersonal impact.

Designing an Appraisal System

The system is based on the decisions in the following dimensions:

Measurement content
Measurement process
Defining the rater
Defining the rateee

Measurement content

Effective performance appraisal focuses n the record of outcomes with major emphasis on outcomes directly related to an organization's mission and objectives.

Measurement process

The process can compare ratees.
Comparison of a person's performance to anchors of his job.
Comparison among anchors.

Defining the rater

Raters can be ratees themselves (self rating), supervisors, peers, clients or customers, or higher level managers.

Defining the ratee

The ratee may be defined at the individual, work group, division or organizationwide level.



Possible rating errors



1.Leniency/severity 2. Halo/Horn's effect 3. Central tendency 4. Fundamental attribution errors (actor - observer bias) 5. Representativeness 6. Availability 7. Anchoring


Appraisal feedback



Raters have a responsibility to give feedback and improve the performance of the ratee.

Raters should provide feedback that is clear, specific, descriptive, job related, constructive, frequent and timely.


____________________________________________________________

Chapter Learning Objectives

After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Understand the value and uses of performance appraisals in organizations and the prescriptions for effective appraisal.


Present a definition of performance and apply the definition to various job functions.


Discuss the legal implications of performance appraisal.


Explain the various errors in ratings and proven methods to reduce them.


Describe the necessary steps for implementing an effective appraisal feedback system.

Source:
H. John Bernardin, Human Resource Management

Training and Development - Bernardin - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
Training is defined as any attempt to improve employee performance on a currently held job or one related to it.

Development refers to learning opportunities designed to help employees grow to higher responsibility jobs.

Needs Analysis

Needs analysis is three stage process: Organizational analysis, job analysis, person analysis

Organizational Needs

Organizational analysis find out the areas and skills where training emphasis should be placed. Short and long-term goals and objectives of the organization and any trends that may affect these goals determine the areas of importance to the organization. The human resources inventory of the organization can reveal projected employee retirements, promotions, turnover and the resultant new recruitment. Sophisticated personnel inventories can be maintained to indicate teh knowledge and skills inventory of individual employees and they can be compared with the knowledge and skills needed as per the HR plan. Climate and efficiency indexes help in the identification training needed to alleviate the current deficiencies in these dimensions.

More elaborate list of data sources used in organizational needs analysis

Organizational goals and objectives, Human resources inventory, Organizational climate surveys, Job satisfaction survey, Efficiency indexes, Exit interviews, Recently made and likely to be made changes in technology, MBO system outputs and documents, Manager recommendations

Job Analysis

Job analysis should document the tasks or duties involved in the job. It also has to specify knowledge, attitude, behavior and other characteristics required for a person to do the job effectively and efficiently.

Person Analysis

The person analysis identifies specific persons and the specific knowledge or skills in which those specific persons are to be trained or developed.

Special Training Programs



Employee orientation programs



The objectives of the program
1. To assist the new employee in adjusting to the organization and feeling comfortable and positive about the new job.
2. To clarify the job requirements,demands, and performance expectations; and
3. To get the employee understand the organization's culture and quickly adopt the organization's goals, values and behaviors.


After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Define what is meant by training and explain why it is a critical function for corporations today.


Explain how to conduct a needs assessment, including performing organizational, task, and person analyses and deriving instructional objectives for a training program.


Know how to design a training program to facilitate learning.


Identify the critical elements related to transfer of training.


Compare and contrast the various techniques available for training, including their relative advantages and disadvantages, with particular emphasis on e-learning.


Identify criteria to use to evaluate training effectiveness.


Understand different experimental designs that can be used for evaluating training programs.


Understand the components of training programs for employee orientation and onboarding, teamwork, generational issues, diversity awareness, sexual harassment, creativity, and international assignments.

http://nraoblogs.blogspot.com/2011/12/backlinks-distribution-and-marketing.html

Career Development - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
Everybody understands that there are hierachies in organizations and normally one has to start at lower levels and move up the hierarchy with demonstrated success at lower levels. But as organizations flattened, the levels in the hierarchy are coming down. But still value contributed by an employee is expected to go up with time and experience.



Hence individuals do career planning. They anticipate things that they would like to do in future. Organization need to career development activities so that employee's value contribution keeps increasing with years.

The business environment is highly turbulent and complex and lifetime employment concept does not hold anymore as more companies are laying off people more frequently and also more companies are getting closed. Therefore individuals have to focus on employability apart from the current job related career. Employees have plan their career and look out for their own best career interests at various points of time. Hence employees must develop new and better skills of self assessment and do career planning.

What Should Organizations Do?

Organizations have to take up career development activities to decrease employee turnover, to avoid shortage manpower at various levels and improve the satisfaction and motivation of employees.

Career Development - Definition

Career development in the present context is development of a set of knowledge, attitudes and behaviors associated with work-related activities and experiences over the span of a person's life.


Career development has two important activities. One by the employees that is career planning. One by the organization which is termed as career management by Bernardin.

Career Development Systems

Activities and Tools

Self-assessment tools
- Career-planning workshops
- Career workbooks
Individual counselling
Information services
Organizational assessment programs
Developmental programs

Career Programs for Special Categories of Employees

Fast-track employees

Organizations often identify stars or individuals with high career potential to take up senior positions early in their careers and provide them with intensive development opportunities.

Outplacement programs

Entrenched employees
Entrenched employee remain in the jobs but do not have adequate commitment to the job. Given an opportunity without loss they are willing to leave the job and look for a different opportunity.

Programs for women, minorities, and employees with diabilities
Diversity initiatives are calling for special efforts to develop various underrepresented groups.

Programs for retiring employees

It is important that employees are aided in their transition to retirement.

Repatriates
When expatriates return to home country, they become repatriates. They have career issues after long stints in foreign countries. Career development issues can be significant for them and HR people have to take care of them.




Objectives of the chapter

After reading this chapter, you should be able to

Describe the new changes taking place in the workplace and what implications these have for individuals and organizations.


Define organizational career development and the reasons for understanding career development.


Understand the importance of integrating career development programs with other organizational systems (e.g., training, selection, recruitment).


Identify the steps in designing career development systems.


Describe the components of career development systems.


Understand how to design career programs for various target groups of employees such as fast-track employees, entrenched employees, supervisors, executives, women, minorities, employed spouses and parents, repatriates, and others.

Source:
Bernardin, Human Resource Management,McGraw Hill

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073381438/student_view0/chapter9/

Direct and Indirect Compensation - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
The term compensation refers to all forms of financial returns and tangible benefits that employees receive as part of employee relationship.

The compensation system does influence company's success. The amount of pay can motivate, energize, and direct behavior. The compensation level of an organization attracts high performance talent. It also has effect on the profitability of the company.

Compensation system of a company has to take care of external equity and internal equity.

External equity is comparison between one organization's compensation and other organization's compensation levels for similar jobs.

Internal equity is comparison among various jobs.

Organizations have to maintain both to have a workforce that is satisfied and voluntarily stays with the company.

Job Evaluation for Internal Equity

Job evaluation is defined as the process of assessing the value of each job in relation to other jobs in an organization.

Job evaluation methods

1. Job ranking 2. Job classification 3. Point-factor plans

Current Issues and Trends in Salary Administration

Broadbanding
Pay for knowledge, skills or competence
Team pay plans

Government Influence on Compensation Issues

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) 1938
The minimum wage law is in force in USA. In 1938, the minimum wage was $0.25. In 2002, it was $5.15 per hour.

Effective from July 24, 2009, the minimum wage is $7.25 per hour.
http://www.dol.gov/dol/topic/wages/minimumwage.htm
FLSA's overtime provisions establish 40 hours as the standard workweek and employers have to pay workers at least 1.5 times the regular hourly rate for all work in excess of 40 hours in any workweek.

Pay Equity or Comparable Worth Policy

Indirect Compensation: Employee Benefits

Five Categories

1. Government Mandated Programs

Social security
Unemployment insurance
Workers' compensation insurance
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA)
Family Medical Leave ACt of 1993 (FMLA)
State-mandated diability insurance plans

2. Employee Welfare Programs

Health care plans
Life Insurance

3. Pension Plans

4. Time-off Programs

5. Employee Services

Education programs
Employee assistance programs and mental health care
Employee recognition programs
Child care

International compensation Issues

Base salary
Foreign service premium
Benefits
Tax issues

Pay for Performance

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
Pay for Performance existed from the piece rate systems and it exists now also in various forms as incentive pay, merit pay and bonuses.

Does PFP Work?

Bernardin concludes the discussion with the statement that PFP systems can be effective if they are tailored to particular work situations and strategies and contribute to high-probability estimates by employees concerning their effort and their performance and their performance and desired outcomes. Vroom's model of motivation and goal setting theories have a great deal of predictive power in the area of PFP systems

A well designed PFP system should lead to a higher degree of individual or group motivation and result in productivity improvement and lower costs.

But the increased production can come with certain disutilities. The quality may come down and it may increase costs of inspection. It could lead to unsafe and unhealthy behaviors.

The pay differences may not be accepted as fair and may lead to some conflict.

PFP Systems are effective when;

1. Employees value tangible outcomes like money and prizes.
2. The reward or outcome is preferred to other possible rewards.
3. The performane of the employees measurable.
4. Employee is capable of controlling the rate of output and has the capability of increasing the absolute output.
5. Employee is also aware that he can increase the output through his actions.
6. Employee is also aware that he will get increased reward by increasing output.
7. The performance rewarded is compatible with the goals of the organization

PFP Systems and Plans

Individual Plans

Merit pay

Incentive pay

Sales incentive plans


Performance Bonuses

performance bonuses are one-time payments based on performance. The bonus does not add to the base pay and as it is paid at one time, it would give the feeling of a large sum and may have different motivation effect than merit pay plans that pay periodically.

Group Incentive Plans

Profit sharing

Gain sharing

- Scanlon plan
- Rucker plan
- IMPROSHARE
- Winsharing

Employee Stock Option Plans

Managerial and Executive Incentive Pay


Payments for Entrepreneurial Talent

There is good amount of promotional activity for entrepeneurship and some employees may be interested in taking up their own ventures. Companies are coming out with innovative schemes to support such aspirations of employees. At IBM, employees can submit business plans for IBM risk capital. Employees can negotiate a share of the profits.

Managing the Employee Relationship - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series

Issues related to Organizational Justice



Justice, or fairness is thought to exist when people receive those things they believe they deserve to receive based upon their contribution. (Bernardin)

Distributive justice deals with perceptions of equity in the allocation of rewards and penalties given by the organization.

Procedural justice is a perception of fair rules, laws, or policies that allocate rewards and penalties.

Companies promote ethics programs to ensure honest, fair and responsible actions on the part of employees both managerial and supervisory and others. Ethics programs emphasize

1. Welfare of others as much as feasible.
2. careful evaluation of a situation for decision making to understand the anticipated and unintended consequences of possible alternative actions.
3. Spiritual or social thinking - think of yourself and the organization as a part of the larger society.
4. Respect to the norms of the society.

Human resource professionals as they take various decisions relating to employees have to keep in mind the issue of organizational justice.

Employee Relations - Organizational Entry



Employee relations activities formally start with the time of selection interview and continue till the time payment of last pension to an employee or his or her representatives.

Organizational socialization is the process by which members of the organization transmit their expectations and routines to the new comers. It is also the process through a new comers comes to appreciate the values, abilities, expected behaviors, and other social knowledge essential to be an accepted member of the community of the organization.

Orientation is a term used for the formalized set of activities designed by the organization to socialize a person or induct a person into the organization. Orientation programs include informational training sessions, site tours, interaction with various organization members and mentorships.

Organizations and HR professionals have to give a realistic job preview to potential recruits in the advertisement process, information process and interview process. Employee handbook is a good device to explain the organizations policies and procedures and make employee know various facilities.

Ongoing Employee Relations



Employee handbooks periodically updated inform the policies and procedures of the companies and help in making things clear employees about their role, rights, and responsibilities. Thepurpose of the policies and procedures is to establish the guidelines by which the organization and employee contribute to the mutual relationship.

Employee surveys or feedback programs indication of issues that are troubling the employees and also brings out issues which are causing them delight and satisfaction.  Employee surveys facilitate planned organization change and team building. This will improve employee relationship.

Grievances and Grievance Handling Mechanisms

The simplest way to define grievance may be to say that it is a formal, written complaint about the way in which the employment relationship is being carried out.

In unionized organizations, the grievance procedure is involves stewards and other union leaders representing the worker having grievance. Peer review systems are used by companies to review the decision involved in the grievance.

Employement Relationship at the Time of Exit



Organizational exists can be through retirement, resignation, termination or layoff.

For retirement, private organizations are providing flexible options like part time work for some period and then involving retired employees in social activities of the organization. Retirement training programs are being organized for employees.

Companies want to reduce employee turnover. Exit interviews are recommended to find out the reasons for an employee leaving the company.

Terminations must be done on consistent basis so that they have to support of the employees in general.

Layoff is large scale termination of employment. HR managers have to act in a way to maintain goodwill with those affected by layoffs and also the people retained. The behavior of the management during the troubled period affects the feelings of both layoff victims and survivors.


Source:
Textbook
Human Resource Management by H. John Bernardin

Labor Relations and Collective Bargaining - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
Why do Workers Join Unions?

Bernardin provided three reasons.

1. Dissatisfaction with the work environment, compensation, and supervision.
2. A desire to have more influence in affecting change in the work environment.
3. Employee beliefs regarding the potential benefit of unions.

In USA, the National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) was enacted to protect workers' rights to organize and join unions. Subsequently Taf-Harley Act was passed and it has put some limits on some of the powers of unions.

Knolwedge of labor relations laws and process of collective bargaining is important for HRM specialists and general managers. Collective bargaining has to take views of both business managers and employees. Management representatives can't concede to issue that ultimately would impair to company's ability to stay in business. Similarly unions can't concede a relative fall in the benefits of workers compared to other companies in the area and economy.

The collective bargaining results in a labor contract valid for two to three years and in cases to stretching to five years.

Issues in collective bargaining

1. Wage related issues
2. Supplementary economic benefits
3. Institutional isses
4. Administrative issues.

Types of Bargaining

1. Distributive bargaining
2. Integrative bargaining
3. Concessionary bargaining

Conducting Labor Contract Negotiations - Process for HR Professionals

Preparation

Reviewing and diagnosing the mistakes and weaknesses from past negotiated agreements and negotiation processes is a continuous activity that helps in future bargaining.  Collecting and reviewing recent agreements in the local area and industry wide databases on labor issues is to be done. Preparation also includes the understanding of current economic conditions, that include productivity and inflation trends and projected performance of the company.

Meetings conduct

There should be provisions in the bargaining terms sheet for negotiations to proceed smoothly. "Take it or leave it" proposals are typically ineffective as negotiation steps.

Resolution of bargaining deadlocks

The bargaining deadlocks can be referred to mediators.

Administration of the Contract

Despite the amount of time spent for coming out with an agreement, there appear problems in the actual implementation of the agreement.

Grievances and grievance procedure

A grievance is a formal complaint regarding an event, action, or practice. In the context of collective bargaining agreements, it is a complaint that says, the contract is violated. The first step of the grievance procedure is a meeting between the supervisor, the person concerned and the union representative. If it is not resolved at this stage, it goes to the manager of the supervisor. If it is not resolved here, it goes to the company level grievance committee.


Arbitration process

Arbitration involves bringing an impartial third party with mutual agreement to provide a ruling in the case of a deadlock that is final and binding on both parties.

Current Issues in U.S. Labor Relations Area (Bernardin)

1. Union membership
2. Mergers and acquisitions
3. Retraining
4. Employee benefits
5. International Labor Relations Issues

Employee Health and Safety - Review Notes

Human Resource Management Revision Article Series
Many laws are designed to higlight the role of employers to protect workers from illness. Prevention activities related to health and safety are made mandatory and fines and penalties are imposed for violating these laws and regulations.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration Act
(http://www.osha.gov/)

The act was created in1970. Since the act was created, US employment increased by more than two times but fatalities and injury rates were cut by more than 40+.


Human resource professionals have to understand the provisions applicable to their organizations and implement the necessary measures in association with safety and health professionals.


Employer Responsibilities under OSHA

Employers have certain responsibilities under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. The following list is a summary of the most important ones:

- Provide a workplace free from serious recognized hazards and comply with standards, rules and regulations issued under the OSHA Act.

- Examine workplace conditions to make sure they conform to applicable OSHA standards.

- Make sure employees have and use safe tools and equipment and properly maintain this equipment.

- Use color codes, posters, labels or signs to warn employees of potential hazards.

- Establish or update operating procedures and communicate them so that employees follow safety and health requirements.

- Provide medical examinations and training when required by OSHA standards.

- Post, at a prominent location within the workplace, the OSHA poster (or the state-plan equivalent) informing employees of their rights and responsibilities.

- Report to the nearest OSHA office within 8 hours any fatal accident or one that results in the hospitalization of three or more employees.

- Keep records of work-related injuries and illnesses. (Note: Employers with 10 or fewer employees and employers in certain low-hazard industries are exempt from this requirement.)

- Provide employees, former employees and their representatives access to the Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses (OSHA Form 300).

- Provide access to employee medical records and exposure records to employees or their authorized representatives.

- Provide to the OSHA compliance officer the names of authorized employee representatives who may be asked to accompany the compliance officer during an inspection.

- Not discriminate against employees who exercise their rights under the Act.

- Post OSHA citations at or near the work area involved. Each citation must remain posted until the violation has been corrected, or for three working days, whichever is longer. Post abatement verification documents or tags.

- Correct cited violations by the deadline set in the OSHA citation and submit required abatement verification documentation.

Source: OSHA web page

Contemporary Issues Related to Health and Safety in Workplaces

Aids and the workplace
Drugs in the workplace
Smoking in the workplace
Violence in the workplace
Video display terminals
Repetitive strain injuries

Source:
Bernardin, Human Resource Management,McGraw Hill

Management of Training Programmes - Training Function

Training

Training is that organised process concerned with the acquisition of capability, or the maintenance of existing capability. (Pepper, 1992)


Development

Where the objective is to acquire a set of capabilities, which will equip a person to do a job a some time in the predictable future, which is not within his present ability, that person is often said to undergo a process of development. (Pepper, 1992)

Responsibility for Training

The manager of any work area is responsible, amongst other things, for producing a planned volume of work to defined standards. This work is done by the employees in that area, or by machines or equipment operated by the employees.

The manager must, for purely practical reasons of control of standards and quality be responsible for the work done by the employees, responsible for supervising them in doing this work and responsible for ensuring that anyone who needs correction or basic instruction gets it, and gets it to a level consistent with the quality and safety requirements of the actual work place, the equipment and the product. (Pepper, 1992)

Thus the manager of an employee is responsbile for training him.


Training Opportunities

Common situations in company which require involvement of training department.

1. New recruits to the company

2. Transfers within the company (transferee new to the job).

3. Promotion

4. Installation of new plant or equipment

5. Introduction of new procedure

6. New standards, rules and practices

7. New relationships in organization (Redesign of organization)

8. Identified deficiencies in relation to maintenance of standards, adaptability, and managerial skills.

9. Retirement and redundancy



Training is a collaborative service


Training is a collaborative service: It does things for other functions, to suit the purposes of other functions, and does them with the other functions.

Training which is not fully collaborative is likely to be sterile, ineffective.

Training has to help employees do better in their jobs.

The practice of basics of techniques acquired in the training programs occurs in the job only. A new techniqe can be used by an operator only after the permission of his superior.

Hence there has to be an agreement between operating managers and training officers regarding the concepts and techniques covered in a training program.

To arrive at this agreement training officer has to sit with the operating managers and do the training needs analysis. Based on the accepted training need statement, the training officer has to come out with a training proposal, which is again discussed with the operating manager for his approval.

The approved training program is organized by the department with the involvement of external trainers, internal operating managers and trainers of the training department.

There has to be review of the program with the trianees first and then with operating managers. Then the training department has to review the program for using the learnings in developing and conducting future programs.


References


Pepper, Alan D., Managing the Training and Development Function, 2nd Ed, Gower, 1992


Originally posted in
http://knol.google.com/k/-/-/2utb2lsm2k7a/564

Talent Management

Talent management is a systematic process to secure, develop and utilize general and targeted individual competencies and organizational capabilities for creating sustainable value for multiple stakeholders.

What is Talent Management? - Definition and Scope


Often companies focus mainly on two HR interventions when defining their talent management strategy : i) Recruitment and ii) Retention. (Deloitte)

“The integrated set of resources, processes and values designed to attract and engage key talent to drive business priorities.” (Deloitte)

Talent management is a systematic process to secure general and targeted individual competencies (what people know, do and value) and organizational capabilities (just not person, the process) that creates sustainable value for multiple stakeholders (emplyees, customers, etc.). (Dave Ulrich)

Ulrich's definition includes development of talent also. If some people feel it does not, then we need to include the activity of developing competencies and capabilities in the definition of talent management.

I propose the following definition.

Talent management is a systematic process to secure, develop and utilize general and targeted individual competencies and organizational capabilities for creating sustainable value for multiple stakeholders.

Talent Management Activities


Making a case of talent management process in the HRM processes
Building teamwork among talented persons
Aligning the human resouce with strategy of the organization.
Assessment of talent periodically
Developing future talent (competencies and capabilities)
Providing space for diversity. Value diversity with unity.
Matching people with positions so that talent finds adequate role.
Building adequate human resource pool. Developing substitutes well in time.
Building technology competence and connectedness among human resources
Making human resources well versed in business processes
Measurement of results
Cooperating with line management and advising them in talent management issues.



References

Dave Ulrich, HR Transformation

Deloitte Touche, http://www.deloitte.com/view/en_LU/lu/services/consulting/hcas/press-release/465d483cc320e110VgnVCM100000ba42f00aRCRD.htm

Original Knol
http://knol.google.com/k/narayana-rao/talent-management/2utb2lsm2k7a/1673#
 
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