Title: HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
1HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
- Norma Heaton
- Week 6 Employee development
2Employee development
- Objectives
- Understand the current context for initiatives in
training and development in the UK - - Consider different approaches to management
development - Examine methods for evaluating training and
development - Examine components of career management
3Background
- Employee development seen as a cost rather than
an investment - Critical reports
- Constable and McCormick (1987)
- UK managers receiving on average 1 days training
per year - Handy (1987)
- Competitor countries carrying out more management
development and doing it better
4Groups of management development activities
- Recommendations derived from 1980s reports
- Education
- MBAs, MPAs, vocational masters
- Training
- Focus on management competencies, Management
Charter Initiative - Development
- Mentoring, coaching, organisation development
- Ref Guest and King (2005)
5Research on management in the UK
- 4.5 million individuals have significant
management responsibilities but 36 of
enterprises say their managers are not proficient - UK business leaders are rated behind
international competitors (Germany, USA, Canada,
France) - Half of all junior managers rate the quality of
leadership in their organisation as poor - High rate of failure amongst small business
attributable in part to poor management and
vision - Source Department for Education and Skills/
Department of Trade and Industry, 2002
6Alan Mumford the management development paradox
- Managers often say I learned to be a manager
from experience - Managers lack the skills and knowledge to do
their jobs fully effectively - Early definition An attempt to improve
managerial effectiveness through a planned and
deliberate learning process - Revised definition An attempt to improve
managerial effectiveness through a learning
process formal and informal
7Mumfords types of management development
- Informal managerial accidental processes
- Formalised development planned processes
- Integrated managerial opportunistic processes
8Informal managerial
- Occurs within managers activities
- Explicit intention is task performance
- No clear development objectives
- Unstructured in development terms
- Not planned in advance
- Owned by managers
9Formalised development
- Often away from normal managerial activities
- Explicit intention is development
- Clear development objectives
- Structured for development by developers
- Planned beforehand or reviewed subsequently as
learning experiences - Owned more by developers than managers
10Integrated managerial
- Occurs within managerial activities
- Intention is both task performance and
development - Clear development objectives
- Structured for development by boss and
subordinate - Planned beforehand and/or reviewed subsequently
as learning experiences - Owned by managers
11A model of learning and training
- Business strategy leads to a strategy for people
development - Identify learning and development needs
- Design development activity
- Carry out development
- Evaluate development
12Identifying learning and development needs
- Traditional ad-hoc, piecemeal approach
- Use performance appraisal/review as a structured
way of identifying skills and behaviours required
to meet business needs - Use assessment or development centres to analyse
development needs - Use of personal development plans
- See Mumford and Gold (2004) for further detail
13Management development as education
- Growth of Business Schools and MBAs
- Development of MPA Masters in Public
Administration - Company specific MBAs
- Growth of vocational MSc eg finance, HRM,
marketing - Challenge for Business Schools is to maintain
relevance and focus on development
14Developing managers through training
- Management Charter Initiative
- Focus on competences and accreditation
- Pragmatic and practical approach
- Used as the basis for design of professional
programmes, eg - Chartered Management Institute
- Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development
15Development activities
- Seminars, workshops and conferences
- Mentoring
- Coaching
- Action learning through work projects
- Outdoor management development
- Self-development including distance learning
16Evaluating management development
- Kirkpatricks model
- Level 1 - reaction of participants
- Level 2 learning attained during
training/development - Level 3 job behaviour in the work environment
after training/development - Level 4 effect on the trainees department
17Techniques of evaluation
- Reaction
- Questionnaires, interviews, group discussion
- Learning
- Tests, examinations, structured exercises
- Behaviour
- Direct measures such as sales, production targets
- Indirect measures such as managers ratings,
interviews - Results
- May be related in a general way to the health
of the organisation
18Initial conclusions
- Studies by Newell (2004) and Thompson (2001)
confirm managerial preference for learning
through work based experiences such as
challenging assignments and early responsibility - Studies also confirm that mentoring and coaching
are highly valued but only about 1/3
organisations have formal schemes in place - Guest and King (2005) conclude
- Amount of management education has increased
- Dearth of good research about effectiveness
- Another solution may be through career management
19Career management components
- CIPD (2004) propose five components of career
management - Career planning and support activities
- Career information and advice
- Developmental assignments
- Internal job markets and posting systems
- Initiatives aimed at specific populations
20Career planning and support activities
- Setting objectives through PDPs
- Formal appraisal
- Informal appraisal and developmental feedback
- Informal career support
- Developmental programmes
21Career information, advice and counselling
- Career counselling by trained individuals
- Career workshops or courses
- Career coaching
- Career information on the internet
22Developmental assignments
- External secondments
- Manages career break schemes
- Internal secondments, project assignments
- International assignments
23Internal job markets and posting systems
- Internal job market
- Online job posting or vacancy boards
- Web based systems for cvs and applications
24Initiatives aimed at specific populations
- High-potential development schemes
- Succession planning
- Graduate entry schemes
- Development or assessment centres
- Managed career moves
25Conclusions on career management
- Lack of consensus on impact
- Evidence that internal advertising, mentoring and
career path information are increasingly common - Matching individual and organisational needs is
difficult to achieve in practice - Cohen (2006)
26References and further reading
- Armstrong,M. (2003) A handbook of human resource
management practice. Kogan Page London - CIPD (2004) Career management a CIPD guide,
CIPDLondon - Cohen,L. and El-Sawad,A. (2006) Careers in
T.Redman and A. Wilkinson (eds) Contemporary
Human Resource Management. FT/Prentice Hall - Doyle,M. (2004) Management development in
Beardwell,I., Holden,L. and Claydon,T. (eds)
Human resource management a contemporary
perspective. FT/Prentice Hall London - Guest,D. and King,Z. (2005) Management
development and career development in Bach,S.
(ed) Managing Human Resources, BlackwellOxford
27References ctd
- Mumford,M. and Gold,J. (2004) Management
development strategies for action. CIPD London - Newell, H. (2004) Who will follow the leader?
Managers perceptions of management development
activities an international comparison, SKOPE
Research Paper no 51, Warwick University - Thompson, A. et al (2001) Changing patterns of
management development, Institute of Management
London - Wexley,K. and Latham,G. (2002) Developing and
training human resources in organisations.
Prentice Hall New Jersey