Title: Managing Human Resources
1Managing Human Resources
2Learning Goals
- Explain the strategic importance of managing
human resources effectively - Describe several important laws and government
regulations that affect how organizations manage
their human resources - Explain the objective of human resources planning
and describe how organizations respond to the
unpredictability of future business needs
(continued)
3Learning Goals
(cont'd)
- Describe the hiring process
- Describe several types of training and
development programs - Describe several principles for improving the
accuracy of managers appraisals of employee
performance - Describe the basic elements of a monetary
compensation package
4Strategic Importance
- Human resources management (HRM) the
philosophies, policies, and practices that an
organization uses to affect the behaviors of
people who work for the organization
- Strategic use of HRM activities can improve
organizational effectiveness
5Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
Resources Planning Activity
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Include HRprofessionals inthe formulationand
implementation of business strategy and
discussions of its HR implications
- Stay informed ofthe latest technical principles
for managing human resources
- Accept responsibility for managing their own
behavior and careers in organizations
6Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
ResourcesRecruitment and Selection Activity
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Help disseminate information about open positions
to all potentially qualified internal applicants - Understand and abide by all legal regulations
- Develop a recruiting plan to guarantee a diverse
pool of applicants
- Participate in recruiting by making referrals and
answering questions about the organization
7Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
Resources Training and Development Activity
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Develop and administer training and development
programs - Inform employees of opportunities for training
and development
- Identify own training and development needs
- Actively seek out and participate inactivities
that help build own competencies - Assist in socialization and training of other
employees
- Work with employees to identify their training
and development needs - Provide on-the-job socialization and training
8Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
Resources Performance Appraisal Activity
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Develop performance appraisal tools and train
managers to use them - Train managers in how to conduct performance
review sessions
- Candidly appraise the performance of others when
askedto participate in 360-degree appraisals
- Help develop performance measures
- Conduct performance appraisals
9Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
Resources Performance Appraisal Activity
(contd)
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Monitor managers decisions to be sure they are
performance-based
- Seek and use honest feedback to improve own
performance
- Use performance information to make decisions
about pay raises, promotions, firing etc - Provide feedback to employees to help them
improve future performance
10Shared Responsibilities for Managing Human
Resources Compensation Activity
Line Managers
HR Professionals
Employees
- Assist in developing incentive and bonus plans
- Establish appropriate rates of base pay in
compliance with legal requirements - Work with managers to design and develop
incentives and bonus plans - Work with accounting and financial staff to
monitor compensation costs
- Develop an accurate understanding of all elements
of the organizations pay practices - Be alert to dysfunctional and possible unethical
attempts to game performance-based pay practices
11Conditions for Gaining a Sustainable Competitive
Advantage Through HRM
Competitors must not be able to easily copy the
companys approach to HRM
Employees must be rare or unique in some way
Employees mustbe a source ofadded value
12Changes in HR Practices at GE to Encourage
Innovation
- Recruiting more managers from outside the company
- Hiring more employees from the countries where GE
sells its products and services - Setting goals for managers to develop creative
new business ideas and tying compensation to
meeting these goals - Rewarding managers for revenue growth and
customer satisfaction - Urging people to stay in their jobs longer so
they can develop deeper knowledge of their
industry
13Social Consequences of HRM Snapshot
Our aim is to treat our jobcandidates as well
as we treat our customers,to do something
memorable for them. You cant treat people
shabbily, especially in a world where there are
far more open jobs than there is available talent
to fill them. We strive to put the humanity back
into the recruiting experience.
Jason S. Warner, Director of North American
Recruiting, Starbucks Corporation
14Legal and Regulatory Environment Equal
Employment Opportunity EEO
- Job applicants and employees should be
- Judged on characteristics that are related to the
work that they are being hired to do
2. Judged on their job performance after being
hired
3. Protected from discrimination based on their
personal background characteristics, such as
gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and so forth
15Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (1964 with
amendments in 1978 and 1991)
- Prohibits discrimination by employers, employment
agencies, and unions with 15 or more employees on
the basis of
- Race
- Color
- Religion
- Sex
- National origin
- Pregnancy (Pregnancy Discrimination Act, 1978)
- Identifies pregnancy as a disability and entitles
the woman to the same benefits as any other
disability
- 1991 Amendment clarifies how cases brought under
the act should proceed
16Enforcement of U.S. EEO Laws
Makes rules to implement and interpret EEO laws
Conducts investigations and may file lawsuits in
federal courts
Equal EmploymentOpportunityCommission (EEOC)
Imposessanctions
Makes judgments about guilt, which may be
appealed to federal courts
17EEO in the Global Arena Whos Protected Where by
Legislation?
Country United States India Canada China United
Kingdom Mexico
(continued)
18EEO in the Global Arena Whos Protected Where by
Legislation?
Country United States India Canada China United
Kingdom Mexico
- Sexual Orientation
- No
- No
-
- No
-
-
- PoliticalIdeology
- No
- No
- No
- No
-
-
- Marital orFamily Status
- No
- No
-
- No
-
-
19Legal and Regulatory Environment Compensation
and Benefits
- Fair Labor Standards Act (1938)
- Establishes a minimum wage, which may be raised
by individual states - Controls hours through premium pay for overtime
- Controls working hours for children
- Applies to most nonmanagerial employees in
private industry
- Requires men and women to be paid equally when
they are doing equal work (in terms of skill,
effort, responsibility, and working conditions)
in the same organization
20Compensation and Benefits Comparable Worth
- Some states extend the Equal Pay Act by requiring
employers to assess the worth of all jobs and
ensure that jobs of comparable worth are paid
similarly
21Human Resource Planning
- Involves forecasting the organizations human
resources needs and developing the steps to be
taken to meet them
- Contingent workers employees who are hired by
companies for specific tasks or short periods of
time with the understanding that their employment
may be ended atany time
- Layoffs a strategy of last resort. Potential
negative effects of layoffs
- More gossip
- Lower morale
- More resignations
- Less employee loyalty
- More charges of discrimination
- More workplace violence
22Historical Trend in Growth Rate of the U.S.
Workforce (adapted from Figure 13.1)
23Effects of Layoffs as Reported by Human Resource
Managers in Companies That Reduce Their Workforce
(adapted from Figure 13.2)
More profits
More gossip
Lower morale
More resignations
Less employee loyalty
More charges of discrimination
More workplace violence
24Human Resource Planning (contd)
- Competency inventory a detailed file maintained
for each employee that lists level of education,
training, experience, length of service, current
job title and salary, and performance history
- Purpose of competency models
To keep track of the talent in the organization
so that it can be nurtured and used effectively
25Hiring Process
- Activities related to the recruitment of
applicants to fill open positions in an
organization and the selection of the best
applicants for a position - Vacancies stimulate the hiring process through
26Vacancies Stimulate the Hiring Process(adapted
from Figure 13.3)
Organizational Growth
- Internal
- Movement
- Promotion
- Demotion
- Transfer
Recruitment
Vacancy Created
Selection
Exit from Organization (Turnover)
27Problems Encountered When Applying for Jobs on
the Internet(adapted from Figure 13.4)
Difficult to navigate site
Difficult to use
Wanted more personal contact
Concerns about security of personal data
Lack of relevant information about the company
Not enough jobs listed to make it worth the effort
Slow feedback and follow-up
28Hiring Process Recruitment
Organization web site
Internal job positions, paper-based and Intranet
Common recruitment methods
Announcementsin newspapers,magazines,
employment websites, etc.
Employee referrals
29Hiring Process Employee Selection
- A process that involves deciding which of these
recruits should actually be hired and for which
positions
Résumés
Reference checks
Commoninformationsources
Tests
Interviews
30Hiring Process Examples of Questions to Use in
a Structured Interview
- Competency Being Assessed Teamwork
- Sketch out two or three key strengths you have in
working as part of a work team. Can you
illustrate the first strength with a recent
example? repeat this question and the following
probes for each strength
Probes
- When did this example take place?
- What possible negative outcomes were avoided by
the way you handled the situation? - How often do situations like this happen?
- What happened in the next time it came up?
(continued)
31Hiring Process Examples of Questions to Use in
a Structured Interview
(contd)
- Competency Being Assessed Teamwork
2. Tell me about a time when you used your
teamwork competency to solve a problem with a
customer
Probes
- Where did this take place?
- What did the customer say?
- What did you tell your teammates?
- Did the team have any problems dealing with the
situations? Explain - How did the customer respond?
32Training and Development
- Training activities that help employees overcome
limitations and improve performance in their
current jobs
Orientation training
Basic skills training
Commontrainingapproaches
E-learning
Team training
33Training and Development
(cont'd)
- Development practices that help employees gain
the competencies they will need in the future in
order to advance in their careers
Career development
Coredevelopmentapproaches
Coaching
Mentoring
34Performance Appraisal
- A formal, structured system for evaluating an
employees job performance
- Common uses of performance appraisal
- To make decisions about who will be promoted,
demoted, transferred, or dismissed - To make decisions about pay raises
- To improve future performance of employees
35Performance Appraisal Performance Feedback
Sessions
- Managers and their subordinates meet to exchange
performance information and discuss how to
improve future performance
- Performance information increasingly includes
- Employees own assessment of performance
- Assessment by teammates
- Information from customers
36Performance Appraisal Accuracy
- Difficult for managers to accurately assess
performance of subordinates
- Two approaches to improve accuracy
- Use appropriate rating scales that provide
specific descriptions of what each level of
performance means - Use multiple raters
- One example. 360-degree appraisalmeasures
performance by obtaining assessments of the
employee from a variety of sources supervisors,
subordinates, colleagues inside the company,
people outside the organization with whom the
employee does business, and even a self-appraisal
by the employee
37Performance Appraisals for Teams
- Some teams may have full responsibility for
constructing and conducting their own performance
appraisals of each other - Team self-appraisal of each member is difficult
- Manager to whom the team reports is often
responsible for collecting performance
information from the team and discussing it with
each team member privately
38Compensation Two Components
- Nonmonetary compensation the many forms of
social and psychological rewards, such as
recognition and respect from others and
opportunities for self-development
- Monetary compensation the direct payments such
as salary, wages, and bonuses, as well as
benefits such as covering the costs of insurance
plans
39Compensation Pay Fairness
- What people believe they deserve to be paid in
relation to what others deserve to be paid
- However, compensation must be externally
competitive to attract qualified applicants
- Components of pay system employees consider in
evaluating fairness
- Base payperceived fairness increases if at or
above market average - Incentive paysuch as commissions, bonuses, and
profit sharing - Employee benefitssome required by law and others
are voluntary
40Average Annual Monetary Benefits and
Earnings(adapted from Figure 13.6)
41Vacationing Around the World(adapted from Figure
13.7)
Italy
France
Germany
Brazil
Britain
Canada
South Korea
Japan
U.S.
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Days
Average annual vacation days