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The Challenges of Human Resource Management

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Title: The Challenges of Human Resource Management


1
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • There is an old joke that goes.. The
    organization of the future will be so
    technologically advanced that it will be run by
    just one person and a dog. The person will be
    there to feed the dog, and the dog will be there
    to make sure that the person doesnt touch
    anything.
  • In the past, observers feared that machines might
    one day eliminate the need for people at work. In
    reality, just the opposite has been occurring.
  • Competitive advantage belongs to companies that
    know how to attract, select, deploy, and develop
    talent.
  • Competitive Advantage Through People
  • While people have always been central to
    organization, today they have taken on an even
    more central role in building a firms
    competitive advantage.
  • In knowledge-based industries such as software
    and information services, success increasingly
    depends on people-embodied know-how. This
    includes the knowledge, skills, and abilities
    imbedded in an organizations members.

2
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Competitive Advantage Through People
  • A firms success is based on establishing a set
    of core competencies integrated knowledge sets
    within an organization that distinguish it from
    its competitor and deliver value to customers.
    Examples
  • McDonalds management efficiency
  • Federal Express package routing, delivery, and
    employee relations
  • Canon Corporation precision mechanics, fine
    optics, and microelectronics
  • Organizations can achieve competitive advantage
    through people if they meet the following
    criteria
  • The Resources must be of value Value is
    increased when employees find ways to decrease
    costs, provide something unique to customers, or
    some combination of the two. Empowerment
    programs, total quality initiative, and
    continuous improvement efforts.
  • The Resource must be rare people are a source of
    competitive advantage when their skills,
    knowledge, and abilities are not equally
    available to competitors. Microsoft and other
    firms hire and train the brightest employees in
    order to gain advantage over competitors.

3
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Competitive Advantage Through People
  • The Resources must be difficult to imitate when
    employee capabilities and contributions cannot be
    copied by others. (teamwork)
  • The Resources must be organized when employees
    talents can be combined and deployed to work on
    new assignments at a moments notice.
  • Nearly 80 of executives said the importance of
    HRM in their firms has grown
  • substantially over the past ten years, and
    two-thirds said that HR expenditures are
  • now viewed as a strategic investment rather than
    simply a cost to be minimized.
  • Competitive Challenges and Human Resources
    Management
  • Going Global
  • Embracing technology
  • Managing Change
  • Developing human capital
  • Responding to the market
  • Containing Costs

4
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Competitive Challenges and Human Resources
    Management
  • Challenge 1 Going Global
  • In order to grow and prosper, many companies are
    seeking business opportunities in global markets.
  • Exporting accounts for more than 956 billion a
    year. US trade deficit is now nearly 400B
  • Impact on Globalization
  • Globalization trend toward opening up foreign
    markets to international trade and investment
  • Approximately 70 to 85 of the US economy today
    is affected by international competition.
  • Nearly 97 of all US exporters are small and
    medium-sized companies.
  • Efforts to lower international barriers
  • NAFTA facilitate commerce between Mexico,
    Canada, and the U.S.
  • FTAA Will encompass the entire Western
    Hemisphere and extend from the tip of Alaska to
    the bottom of Argentina.

5
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Efforts to lower international barriers
  • EU European Union focuses on the integration of
    European markets
  • APEC Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation has
    helped establish freer trade among Pacific Rim
    Countries.
  • Effect on Globalization on HRM
  • Finding competent individuals that understand,
    geographies, cultures, laws, and business
    practice.
  • Challenge 2 Embracing New Technology
  • The introduction of advanced technology tends to
    reduce the number of jobs that require little
    skill and to increase the number of jobs that
    require considerable skills.
  • This move is from touch labor to knowledge
    workers, where employees responsibilities expand
    to include a richer array of activities such as
    planning, decision making, and problem solving.

6
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 2 Embracing New Technology
  • Today, fully one-third of all courses are devoted
    to computer skills training (compared with 25 in
    1996)
  • Influence of Technology in HRM
  • Today, many firms are using technology to manage
    their HRM called Human Resources Information
    System (HRIS)
  • HRIS computerized system that provides current
    and accurate data for purposes of control and
    decision making.
  • Three major components
  • The operational impact automating routine
    activities, alleviating the administrative
    burden, reducing costs, and improving
    productivity internal to the HR function itself.
    (payroll processing, maintaining employee
    records, administering benefits programs)
  • The Relational impact it enhances service by
    providing line managers and employees with remote
    access to HR databases, supporting their HR
    related decisions, and increasing their ability
    to connect with other parts of the corporation.
    (scanning resumes, tracking application
    information)

7
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Three major components
  • The transformational impact expanding the scope
    and function of the HR depart. (training,
    on-line performance evaluation, employees
    self-learning)
  • Challenge 3 Managing Change
  • Due to technology, the globalization of
    competition and markets, and workforce
  • demographics, CHANGE in today's business world is
    inevitable.
  • Types of Change
  • Programs that focused on total quality,
    continuous improvement, downsizing,
  • reengineering, outsourcing, and the like are all
    examples of the means
  • organizations are using to modify the way they
    operate in order to be more
  • successful. Two types of change
  • Reactive-change that occurs after external forces
    have already affected performance
  • Proactive-change initiated to take advantage of
    targeted opportunities.

8
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Managing Change Through HR
  • 84 of executives polled said that they have at
    least one change initiative going
  • on in their organizations.
  • Unfortunately, successful change or change
    management rarely occurs naturally or easily.
    Here is why
  • Not establishing a sense or urgency
  • Not creating a powerful coalition to guide the
    effort
  • Lacking leaders who have a vision
  • Lacking leaders who communicate the vision
  • Not removing obstacles to the new vision
  • Not systematically planning for and creating
    short-term wins
  • Declaring victory too soon
  • Not anchoring changes in the corporate culture
  • Responsibilities change, job assignments change,
    work processes change. And this is a continuous
    change- a part of the job rather than temporary.

9
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 4 Developing Human Capital
  • The idea that organizations compete through
    people highlights the fact that
  • success increasingly depends on an organizations
    ability to manage Human
  • capital.
  • Human capital the economic value of knowledge,
    skills, and capabilities.
  • Human Capital and HRM
  • Human capital is intangible and elusive and
    cannot be managed the way organizations manage
    jobs, products, and technologies.
  • One of the reasons for this is that employees,
    not the organization, own their human capital.
  • If valued employees leave a company, they take
    their human capital with them, and any investment
    the company has made in training and developing
    those people is lost.
  • To build human capital in organizations, managers
    must continue to develop superior knowledge,
    skills, and experience within the workforce.

10
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Human Capital and HRM
  • Staffing programs focus on identifying,
    recruiting, and hiring the best and the brightest
    talent available.
  • Training programs complement these staffing
    practices to provide skill enhancement,
    particularly in areas that cannot be transferred
    to another company if an employee should leave.
    (What is transferable skills?)
  • Challenge 5 Responding to the Market
  • Meeting customers expectations is essential for
    any organization.
  • Focusing on internal management issues, managers
    must also meet customer requirements of quality,
    innovation, variety, and responsiveness.
  • These standards separate the successful and
    unsuccessful companies
  • Who well does a company understand its customers
    needs?
  • How fast can it develop and get a new product to
    market?
  • How effectively has it responded to special
    concerns?
  • Faster, better, cheaper..

11
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 5 Responding to the Market
  • Organizations use several approaches to address
    this very crucial issues
  • Total Quality Management (TQ M)
  • Six Sigma
  • Reengineering
  • TQM, Six Sigma, Reengineering, and HRM
  • TQM is a set of principles and practices whose
    core ideas include understanding customer needs,
    doing things right the first time, and striving
    for continuous improvement.
  • Six Sigma a statistical method of translating a
    customers needs into separate tasks and defining
    the best way to perform each task in concert with
    the others.
  • Reengineering has been described as the
    fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of
    business processes to achieve dramatic
    improvements in cost, quality, service and speed.
    (ISO 9000)

12
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 6 Containing Costs
  • Investments in reengineering, TQM, human capital,
    technology, globalization,
  • and the like are all very important for
    organizational competitiveness.
  • Yet, at the same time, there are increasing
    pressures on companies to lower costs and improve
    productivity to maximize efficiency.
  • Labor costs are one of the largest expenditures
    of any organization
  • Organizations have tried a number of approaches
    to lower costs
  • Downsizing, outsourcing and employee leasing, and
    productivity enhancement.
  • 1) Downsizing the planned elimination of jobs.
  • Other ways of downsizing besides direct layoffs
  • Early retirements
  • Sweetened voluntary separation program
  • Sabbaticals
  • Severance packages

13
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 6 Containing Costs
  • 2) Outsourcing contracting outside the
    organization to have work done that
  • formerly was done by internal employees.
  • Some of the most common outsourcing are
  • Services of accounting firms
  • Advertising firms
  • Law firms
  • Maintenance such as, security, catering, and
    payroll
  • Employee Leasing Process of dismissing
    employees who are then hired by a leasing company
    (which handles all HR related activities) and
    contracting with that company to lease back the
    employees.
  • Impact on HR 93 of all HR depts. reported
    outsourcing some of their work
  • Increasing morale especially if you know your
    work is only temporarily
  • Increasing productivity level
  • Managing contracting companies
  • Legal issues with temporary workers

14
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 6 Containing Costs
  • 3) Productivity Enhancement Productivity can be
    defined as the output
  • gained from a fixed amount of inputs,
    organizations can increase productivity
  • either by reducing the imports (the cost
    approach) or by increasing the amount that
  • employees produce.
  • Two view points
  • View Point 1 managers may cut costs only to
    find that productivity falls at even
  • at ore rapid rate WHY?????????
  • View Point 2 -Mangers may find that increasing
    investment in employees
  • (raising labor costs) may lead to even greater
    returns in enhanced productivity. ?
  • Fact The US is the worlds most productive
    nation. However, other can catch-up
  • How to Increase Productivity?
  • Employee productivity is the result of a
    combination of employee abilities, motivation,
    and work environment. Figure 1.3
  • When productivity falls off or more positively,
    when productivity improves the changes is
    usually traceable to enhanced skill, motivation,
    or a work environment conducive to high
    performance.

15
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Challenge 6 Containing Costs
  • How to Increase Productivity?
  • Employee productivity is the result of a
    combination of employee abilities, motivation,
    and work environment. Figure 1.3
  • When productivity falls off or more positively,
    when productivity improves the changes is
    usually traceable to enhanced skill, motivation,
    or a work environment conducive to high
    performance.
  • Demographics and Employee Concerns
  • Demographic Changes among the most significant
    challenges to managers are the demographic
    changes occurring the the US.
  • The Diversity Challenges figure 1.4
  • In the year 2010 minorities will make up an even
    larges share of the US labor
  • force than they do today.
  • Blacks will increase their share from 10 to 12
    percent
  • Hispanics from 7 to 12 percent
  • Asian American from 3 to 6 percent
  • These groups are expected to account for about 70
    percent of labor force.

16
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Demographics and Employee Concerns
  • Age Distribution of Employees
  • The of older workers is beginning to rise as
    baby boomers approach retirement age and is
    projected to reach 15.2 by 2010.
  • Companies are finding that large portions of
    their workforces are nearing retirement.
  • Managers are concerned that the expertise of
    these employees is likely to be drained too
    rapidly from companies.
  • What are companies dealing with this issue
  • Attracting older workers to work for them
  • Innovative ways of training Old version You
    cant teach an old dog new tricks New version
    You cant teach an old dog the same way you
    teach a puppy
  • Gender Distributions of the Workforce (figure
    1.5)
  • Bureau of Labor suggest that women will continue
    to join the US labor force and are expected to
    account for about 48 by 2010.

17
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Demographics and Employee Concerns
  • Gender Distributions of the Workforce (figure
    1.5)
  • HR Issues with the upcoming Gender
  • Employers are under constant pressure to ensure
    equality for women with respect of employment,
    advancement opportunities, and compensation.
  • Need to accommodate working mothers and father
    through parental leaves, part-time employment,
    flexible work schedules, job sharing,
    telecommuting, and more sensitive to the growing
    need for policies and procedure to eliminate
    sexual harassment in the workplace.
  • Rising Levels of Education (figure 1.5)
  • The most Secure and fastest-growing sectors of
    employment over the past few decades have been in
    areas requiring higher levels of education.
  • However, this brings yet another challenge and
    that is that the there is a widening gap between
    the educated and the noneducated.
  • Recent study suggests that less than half of all
    high school seniors are able to handle
    mathematics problems involving fractions,
    decimals, percents, elementary geometry, and
    simple algebra.

18
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Demographics and Employee Concerns
  • Cultural Changes
  • The attitudes, beliefs, values, and customs of
    people in a society are an integral part of their
    culture.
  • Employee Rights
  • Over the past few decades, federal legislation
    has radically changed the rules for management of
    employees by granting them many specific rights.
    Among these are
  • Equal Employment Opportunity (chapter 2)
  • Union Representation, if desired (chapter 14)
  • Safe and Healthful Work environment (chapter 12)
  • Pension plan that is fiscally sound (chapter 11)
  • Equal Pay for men and women performing the same
    job (chapter 9)
  • Employment at will doctrine (chapter 13)

19
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Demographics and Employee Concerns
  • Changing Attitudes Towards Work
  • Employees today are less likely to define their
    personal success only in terms of financial
    gains.
  • This trend has been evolving for some time, but
    observes have noted that it has peaked since the
    terrorist attacks of 9/11.
  • Personal fulfillment and self-expression as
    well as a balance between work and family are
    key factors in a complex array of job attitudes.
  • Employees are looking for
  • Interesting work
  • Balancing the challenges and rewards of work with
    those in their personal lives
  • Ways of living that are less complicated but more
    meaningful
  • HRM has become more complex than it was when
    employees were concerned primarily with economic
    survival.

20
The Challenges of Human Resource Management
  • Responsibilities of the Human Resource Manager
  • Advise and Counsel
  • Service
  • Policy formulation and implementation
  • Employee advocacy
  • Competencies of the Human Resources Manager
    (figure 1.9)
  • Business mastery
  • HR Mastery
  • Change Mastery
  • Personal credibility
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