Title: PEOPLE RESOURCING
1PEOPLE RESOURCING
- Evaluating resourcing activities
- Norma Heaton
- September 2006
2Why should we evaluate resourcing activities?
- To maximise the contribution of the resourcing
function - To establish whether improvements could be made
(Taylor, 2005) - To demonstrate that HR activities add value
3Adding value 3 types of contribution
- Delivering business objectives
- Administrative excellence
- Acting as a champion for people management
4Delivering business objectives
- At a time of organisation expansion key
resourcing activities will be? - At a time of organisation contraction key
resourcing activities will be.?
5Administrative excellence
- Add value by ensuring administration of
resourcing activities is cost effective and of a
high standard - Administering recruitment and selection processes
- Administering and recording absence
- Drawing up appraisal documentation
6Acting as a champion for people management
- Organisations that are good at managing their
staff increase their chances of achieving
long-term competitive advantage - PD people need to explain and demonstrate the
worth of effective people management practices - See Survival strategy, People Management 28
October 2004
7Evaluation criteria
- Problems of evaluation
- Outcomes may be intangible
- Payback may be difficult to calculate
- 3 questions to bear in mind
- Are we achieving our objectives as effectively as
possible? - How far does a practice achieve what it sets out
to achieve? - Are we achieving our objectives as efficiently as
possible? - The most effective approach may be expensive than
viable alternatives - Are we achieving our objectives as fairly as
possible? - Importance of discrimination legislation
- Effect of unfairness on motivation
8Forward and backward looking criteria
- Example of backward looking criteria turnover
levels - Future oriented evaluation usually takes the form
of cost-benefit analysis - See Bratton (2003) and Taylor (2005) for worked
examples
9Quantitative evaluation criteria
- Straightforward personnel information on
resourcing issues - Candidate acceptance rates
- Number of formal grievance cases
- Creation of ratios
- Recruitment cost per new recruit
- Evaluative tools such as questionnaires
- Proportion of employees satisfied with
work/manager etc
10Qualitative evaluation criteria
- Provide explanations eg why are objectives not
being met? - Provide detail and a richer understanding
- Back up key messages and add background colour
11Evaluation methods
- Benchmarking
- HR auditing
- Survey based evaluation
- Goal based evaluation
12Benchmarking
- The systematic process of comparing your
business with others, or parts of your own with
another, to test how you stand and to see whether
change is needed. Usually you will identify
examples of superior performance and when you do
you should set out to emulate and even better
them (Bramham, 1997, p1)
13Benchmarking
- Internal benchmarking
- Most common in large organisations where several
units carry out similar types of activity - Comparison can be made and efforts made to
establish reasons for differential performance - External benchmarking
- Less common and more problematic
- Reluctance to share data on behalf of better
performing companies - Alternative is to use published data eg CIPD
surveys, IRS surveys
14HR auditing - features
- Comparison of performance against other
organisations - Comparison with standards acknowledged to be
best practice - Approach appropriate for organisations seeking to
be employer of choice - Uses research linking certain PD practices to
positive business outcomes
15Survey based evaluation
- Management opinion of HR function
- Tend to focus on satisfaction with key services
offered by HR - May be an opportunity for managers to have a go
at HR - See Cooper (2001) and Buyens and De Vos (2001)
- Surveys of employees
- May focus on development needs
- May attempt to measure how people feel about
their jobs and how they are treated
16Goal based evaluation
- Used to determine how effectively specific
objectives are being met - Examples might include target numbers of
applications from specific groups - May be affected by changing priorities and
contexts
17Approaches to HRM audits (Nutley 2000)
- Systems audit
- Identify system controls
- Assess adequacy against best practice guidelines
- Example recruitment and selection
- Compliance audit
- Systems audit may be combined with a test of
whether practice complies with requirements of
internal control - Example investigate a sample of selection
decisions - Performance audit
- Appraising value for money in the HR area
- Examples absence management, turnover and
retention rates
18Approaches to HRM audits - 2
- User satisfaction audit
- Management and employee surveys (as above)
- Value added audit
- Cost-benefit analysis
- Certain techniques such as training and
development are more amenable to this - Strategic contribution audit
- Tend to focus on senior personnel staff and their
representation at board level, their input into
corporate strategy and their role in implementing
strategy
19Approaches to HRM audits - 3
- Nutley (2000) draws the following conclusions
- Purpose can vary
- Focus on achievement of accountability v
organisational improvement - Emphasis on minimum standards v excellence
- Benefits include
- Good evidence based information about the
practice of HRM - Weaknesses and problems of implementation are put
on the agenda - Independent audit strengthens a weak HR/personnel
system - Drawbacks include
- Focus on procedure v desire for local flexibility
- Do benefits outweigh costs?
20Cutting edge approaches to evalution
- Evolving methods involve measuring the impact of
PD activities on organisation performance in
financial terms - Sears Group (USA) exercise is a good illustration
- a 5 point improvement in employee attitudes
will drive a 1.3 point improvement in customer
satisfaction which in turn will lead to a 0.5 per
cent improvement in revenue growth - See discussion in Holbeche (2001)
21Conclusions?
- A major challenge for HRM researchers is to
examine not only the value added of different
strategies but also to predict the magnitude of
the value added of the HRM function for
organisational outcomes more accurately and to
make their research results meaningful to HR
practitioners (Bratton, 2003)
22CIPD tools for evaluation
- Developing managers for business performance
managing the return on your investment (CIPD,
2004) - Managing the psychological contract taking the
temperature (CIPD,2004) - People and performance designing the HR
processes for maximum performance delivery
(CIPD, 2005)
23Questions to consider
- What are the forces driving the move to
demonstrate added value in the field of HRM? - What are the strengths and weaknesses of the
various audit and evaluation methods? - What do you consider to be best practice in
evaluating HRM?
24References and further reading
- Bramham,J, (1997) Benchmarking for people
managers, LondonCIPD - Bratton,J.(2003) Evaluating human resource
management in Bratton,J. and Gold,J. Human
Resource ManagementTheory and Practice,
Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan - Buyens,D. and De Vos,A. (2001) Perceptions of the
value of the HR function, Human Resource
Management Journal, Vol 11, No 3, pp70-89 - Cooper,C. (2001) Win by a canvas, People
Management, 25 January 2001 - Holbeche,L. (2001) Aligning Human Resources and
Business Strategy, Roffey Park Institute, Oxford
25References continued
- Nutley,S. (2000) Beyond systems HRM audits in
the public sector, Human Resource Management
Journal, Vol 10, No 2, pp21-38 - Purcell,J.et al (2003) The multipack scan,
People Management, 15 May 2003 - Taylor,S. (2005) People Resourcing, LondonCIPD