Title: BA 210: Human Resources Management
1BA 210 Human Resources Management
2Review Session (Mon Mar 31) and Exam 2 (Wed Apr
2)
- Review Session Monday
- Same as last time Take student questions.
Optional attendance. - Sample questions and study guide to be available
after this class. - Take questions at review session, office hours,
TAs. - Exam 2 Wednesday Oct 30 Covers Part 2 of course
- Last Name starting with A-T Right here
- Last Name starting with U-Z Lincoln 192
- Format 50 questions, mostly multiple choice
- 70 minutes maximum, can leave after 35 minutes
- Please bring Ids.
- Comments relative to first exam
3Part Two Organizations and Environment
Environment
Organization
Organizational Culture
Ethics
Strategy
Global Mgmt
Organizational Structure
Organizational Design
Human Resources Mgmt
4Why is Human Resources Management (HRM) important
to you?
- HRM will affect
- your ability to get and keep an job
- your salary and benefits
- your chances for promotion
- your chance to be treated fairly
- You need to understand the HRM policies of your
organization - HRM is a fundamental part of managers jobs
- Interview job candidates
- Evaluate work performance
5Todays Roadmap
- Objective To understand key issues in human
resource management, particularly - Human Resources Mgmt Competitive Advantage
- Human Resource Planning
- Recruitment and Selection
- Performance Appraisal and Feedback
- Very descriptive day today
6Human resource management and competitive
advantage
- Big trend in the past two decades to link human
resource practices, strategy and performance - Strategic HRM managing the HRM system to
support the organizations strategy and goals - Strategic HRM aims to enhance the organizations
efficiency, quality, innovation, and
responsiveness to customers. - In contrast to HRM as personnel administering
policies - High performance work practices
- E.g., Cross-functional and self-managed work
teams, TQM, employee involvement, training,
information sharing
7HRM Systems and Market Value
410,000
Market Value in Dollars per Employee
390,000
370,000
350,000
330,000
310,000
290,000
270,000
250,000
Top Quintile
Lowest Quintile
Middle Quintile
Firms with excellent HRM Systems have greater
market value per employee
Quality of the HRM System
Source Adapted from M. A. Huselid and B. E.
Becker. The impact of human resource management
practices on turnover, productivity, and
corporate financial performance. Academy of
Management Journal, 38, 1995, pp. 635-672
8The HRM Process (Exh 12.2)
9Human Resource Planning
TB for defn
- Driven by organizations strategy and goals
- Forecasts of current and future staffing needs
- Both to meet and generate product demand
- At a high level and through individual job
analysis - Assessment of current staff capabilities
- Competency inventory
- Comparison to strategic requirements
- HRP drives recruitment and selection process
The right number and kind of people in the right
places and at the right time
10Human Resource Planning Outsourcing
- Outsourcing Using outside suppliers and
contract workers for specific organizational
functions formerly done internally - Outsourcing should be a
- Taps cutting-edge expertise and capabilities
- Provides a source of new ideas
- Provides flexibility in resource and staffing
levels - Provides lower initial and ongoing costs
- Problems with Outsourcing
- Loss of control outsiders are not committed to
the firm. On the other hand - Unions are often against outsourcing.
11Recruitment A dizzying variety of sources (Exh
12.4)
12Pros Cons of Internal vs. External Recruitment
- External Recruiting seeking outside the firm
- Brings in new skills and ideas
- Must pay particular attention to evaluating
(unknown) skills - Emphasize employee referrals because of greater
knowledge and incentives (reputation) - Internal Recruiting moving people in the firm
- Job candidates, qualifications, and availability
are known - promotion from within can motivate employees
- Can be costly if job skills must be learned on
the job - A balance is typically most effective
13Selection The prediction exercise
- Selection Assessing applicants qualifications
in order to hire the most appropriate candidates - Success means good performance by the new hire
- rejection failure - reject candidates who would
have performed the job successfully - acceptance failure - hire candidates who perform
poorly - Tools for selection interviews, simulations,
tests
14Each selection tool has strengths and weaknesses
- Resumes and application forms initial screening
- Interviews almost universal and
- Written tests - measure intelligence, ability,
personality, interest, etc. popular validity
varies - Performance-simulation tests are most valid but
most expensive - Assessment center - simulate challenges of
managerial jobs - Work sampling - perform key tasks (non-managerial
jobs) - Reference checks tough to get negative
information - See text, figure 12.10 and strengths/weaknesses
15Suggestions For Interviewing
- Work hard to minimize bias
- Structured (same job-related questions)
interviews in preference to unstructured
(conversational) interviews. - Train interviewers to avoid similar-to-me, halo
effect etc. biases, as well issues regarding
legality of questions - Use multiple interviewers and in-depth interviews
- They are supposed to talk, not you!
- Practice active listening
- Get detailed answers about actual job behaviors.
- Take notes during the interview things blend
together!
16The other side of selection being chosen by the
candidate
BX
- Beware the temptation to over-rate and oversell
the attractiveness of the job and firm. - Managers may feel that if they are honest, an
applicant may not be willing to work there. - Research indicates this is a poor strategy.
- Realistic Job Preview Providing an honest
assessment of the advantage and disadvantages of
a job and organization. - Avoids hiring, training and then losing an
employee because they misperceived the job before
agreeing to come to work. - Right after selection Pay attention to
orientation to make new member feel comfortable,
know the ropes, get a strong start
17Training and Development
B
- Training (individual performers managers)
Helping employees be effective performers, in
their current jobs - Learn technical, interpersonal, problem-solving
skills. - On-the-job vs. off-the-job instruction
- Development (usually managers or professionals)
Enabling employees to take on new challenges - Varied job experience is key developmentally
- Action learning
- Powerful technique that overcomes the traditional
now what do I do with this knowledge on my real
job problem.
18Employee Performance Management
- Employee Performance Management Establishing
standards appraising and improving employee
performance - Performance appraisal and performance improvement
are partially at odds - Growth and development requires understanding and
support - Appraisal requires impersonal objectivity and
making tough evaluation decisions - Employees want to know how they are doing, but
also want to maintain a positive self-image - Performance appraisals are often put off or
implemented poorly. - Several reasons They are never necessary to meet
todays crisis for a manager to being
evaluative is stressful. - High-performing organizations put enormous
attention on performance management
19Doing performance appraisal well
- Subjective Evaluations (based on managers
perceptions) - Evaluate behaviors rather than traits. Saying
someone has a bad attitude does little good
identifying behaviors that indicate a bad
attitude allows discussion and correction - Describe specific, important job-related
behaviors rather than making overall judgements
or citing outlying incidents. For example, a
behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS) is far
superior to a graphic rating scale - Objective Evaluations (based on measurable
results) - Make sure the result is under the employees
control. - Work with employees to set goals for the future,
and evaluate performance against those goals
(MBO). - Remember that difficult goals can drive out
learning - Aim for a mix of subjective and objective
evaluations
20Graphic Rating Scale
21Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale (BARS)
22Feedback examples from self-assessment
- 1 a. Describe the behavior b. Evaluate the
behavior2. a. Focus on the feelings that the
behavior evokes b. Tell the person what they
should be doing differently 3. a. Give specific
instances of the behavior b. Generalize4. a.
Deal only with behavior that the person can
control b. Sometimes focus on something the
person can do nothing about5. a. Tell the person
as soon as possible after the behavior b.
Sometimes wait too long6. a. Focus on the effect
the behavior has on me b. Try to figure out
why the individual did what he or she did7. a.
Balance negative feedback with positive feedback
b. Sometimes focus only on the negative
23Getting valid information for promotion and
feedback
- Forced Rankings
- The problem Everyone gets rated as
high-performing. So who do you promote? Where
is the deadwood? - Forced rankings create
- Employees are in competition with each other
- Doesnt allow for variation across departments
- Multiple evaluators (coworkers, subordinates)
- Especially useful when work is done largely in
teams. - 360 degree feedback everyone you come in contact
with - Often must be used developmentally rather
evaluatively
24Compensation And Benefits
- Goal Attract and retain talent to improve
performance - Trends in Compensation
- Adapt to changing nature of work and the
workplace - Skill-based pay meshes with changing nature of
jobs - Increase flexibility of pay system
- Reduce number of pay levels bands instead of
levels - Benefits
- Legally required social security, workers
compensation - Voluntary health insurance, retirement, day care
- Cafeteria-style benefits plans allow employees to
choose the best mix of benefits for them can be
hard to manage.
25Legal and Regulatory Environment of HRM (U.S.)
Equal employment opportunity and
non-discrimination (EEO)
Compensation and benefits (FLSA)
Human resources management
Protecting employee health and safety (OSHA)
26Effective Feedback Tips
- Be specific and focus on correctable behavior.
Provide a suggested improvement. - Focus on problem-solving and improvement, not
criticism. - Express confidence in workers ability to
improve. - Use both formal (scheduled) and informal (as
opportunity presents) feedback. - Treat subordinates with respect and praise
achievements. - Set a timetable for agreed changes.
27Unions
- Unions Represent workers interests to
management - Managerial power over individual workers led
workers to join together in unions to try to
prevent this. - Remember Charlie Chaplin.
- Unions are often (not always) associated with
restrictive work rules that increase costs and
reduce flexibility - Especially when management has a history of not
taking workers interests seriously - Not all workers want unions, and membership is
lower today than 40 years ago. - Collective Bargaining Developing a multi-faceted
contract between the organization and workers
(collectively)
28HRM Major Points
- HRM adds to firm performance if utilized to build
competitive advantage and high-performance work
practices - Recruitment Balance internal and external
recruitment to gain advantages of each. - Selection Consider validity of selection tools,
use performance simulations if possible. - Interviews Avoid biases, get detailed answers,
listen actively. - Performance Management Balance appraisal and
improvement, blend subjective and objective
measures. - Feedback Focus on specific behaviors and
problem-solve, be supportive not critical, set
deadlines.
29Assignment for Mon Apr 7 Decision-Making
- Decision-Making Chapter 6 of textbook
- T123 Skip 9
- Mastering Management Decision-Making module
- Complete the introduction, concepts, exercises
and resolution sections of the Decision-Making
module - Packet 3 at T.I.S.