Title: HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT BMG346J2
1HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT BMG346J2
- Week 6
- Strategic aspects of employee relations
2Employee relations
- AIM
- To review developments in employee relations and
assess approaches to employee involvement - OBJECTIVES
- Understand the background to changing forms of
employee involvement and participations - Articulate the differences between various forms
of involvement and participation, in particular
their methods and strategic influence
3Defining employee relations
- Employee relations consist of all those areas of
HRM that involve relationships with employees,
directly or through agreements with trade unions.
4Are employee relations important?
- Employee relations are now placed well down on
the agenda of HR managers - Recruitment, selection, development and
performance management are regarded as more
important - Perception that UK employee relations are in a
healthy state - A good employee relations climate cannot be taken
for granted - A generation of HR managers are unaccustomed to
dealing with collective disputes
5Trends in employee relations in the UK
- Trade union decline
- Decline in collective bargaining and industrial
action - Rise in emphasis on employment rights
6Trade union decline (1)
- Trade union membership fell from a peak of 13
million in 1979 to 6.4 million in 2005 (26.2 per
cent of the workforce, 29.0 per cent of
employees) - Fall due to
- Hostile employment legislation in the 1980s
- Industrial restructuring with decline in
established industries and rise in small scale
office and hi-tech operations
7Trade union decline (2)
- Northern Ireland has the highest trade union
density compared to other UK regions (40.4 per
cent of employees) - Almost three in five public sector employees in
the UK are trade union members - Less than one in five private sector employees
are trade union members
8Decline in collective bargaining and industrial
action
- Decline in the number of employees whose terms
and conditions are determined through collective
bargaining ( negotiation with a union or unions) - National agreements on pay and conditions are now
rare - Fall in the number of days lost through strike
action UK average lower than average for
European Union
9Rise in emphasis on employment rights
- The law now provides a minimum floor of rights
for employees in fields such as - Unfair dismissal
- Anti-discrimination legislation (sex, race,
disability, religion, sexual orientation) - National minimum wage
- Family-friendly measures such as the right to
request part-time working in some circumstances
10The nature of union recognition
- 1970s general assumption - most employers would
automatically recognise and deal with unions - 1990s many employers introducing new working
patterns without consultation - Present day, increasing distinction between
- Workplaces where unions have maintained a
presence - Workplaces where unions are being edged out
- Non-union workplaces
- Source Marchington and Wilkinson (2005)
11Contemporary study of employee relations
- Torrington, Hall and Taylor (2005) suggest
employee involvement provides a good reference
point when thinking about the strategic choices
faced today by managers in employee relations - Topics to consider
- Why involve employees?
- History and development of employee involvement
- Forms of involvement and participation
12Why have involvement and participation?
- Few would disagree that employees should have a
say in workplace affairs. The problem is that
there is less agreement over the ways in which
the voices of employees should be expressed - Hyman and Mason, 1995
13Reasons for introducing employee involvement
- Information and education
- Gaining commitment
- Securing enhanced employee contributions
- Recruitment and retention
- Conflict handling and stability
- External forces
14History of participation and involvement
- Profit sharing, 19th century
- Introduced by some employers as part of a policy
to extend welfare provisions but dropped because
of worsening economic conditions - Whitley Councils 1917
- Whitley Committee proposed setting up joint
employer-union bodies at national, district and
workplace level and these have survived in parts
of the public sector - Joint Production and Advisory Committees 1940s
- Drive to stimulate productivity and growth
through factory-level committees where employees
were involved in discussions over efficiency and
production
15History ctd
- Bullock Committee of Enquiry 1977
- UK entry into Europe and election of Labour
government led to Committee established to
discuss worker directors - Many employers were hostile to the idea
- Government changed before recommendations
implemented
16History ctd
- Individualist employee involvement
- 1980s, championed by management, associated with
interest in HRM - Directed at securing greater employee commitment
to the organisation - Grown largely without legislative support
- Employee empowerment represents the most recent
manifestation
17Employee involvement and participation compared
(Hyman and Mason, 1995)
- Involvement
- Management inspired
- Employees may be passive recipients
- Tends to be task based
- Assumes common interests between employer and
employee
- Participation
- Government or workforce inspired
- Employee representatives actively involved
- Decision making at higher organisational levels
- Plurality of interests recognised
18Components of employee involvement and
participation
- A degree of involvement the extent to which
employees influence final decisions - B level at which individuals are involved
- C range of subject matter dealt with
- D form of involvement
- Source Marchington (1992) discussed in
Beardwell, Holden and Claydon (2004)
19Degree of involvement the escalator
- Control
- Co-Determination
- Consultation
- Communication
- Information
20Level and range of involvement
- Level
- Can be differentiated between task, section,
department, establishment, division/region,
corporate and industry - Range
- At one extreme these can be broad strategic
decisions - The other extreme concerns marginal items such as
the state of the car park
21Forms of involvement and participation
- Downward communications
- Upward problem solving
- Financial employee involvement
- Representative participation
22Forms of participation another division
- Direct ( face to face or written contact between
managers and subordinates) - Indirect (employees involved through their
representatives) - Financial (profit sharing etc)
23Downward communications
- i) House journals/ company newspapers/e-mails
- ii) Employee reports
- iii) Team briefings
- Regular, structured system to enable top
management to cascade through the organisation
news and developments - Used to encourage commitment and to channel
conflict - WERS (Workplace Employee Relations Survey 04
used by 85 of companies)
24Upward problem solving
- i) Suggestion schemes (WERS 30 usage)
- ii) Quality circles
- Used to develop employees or to improve quality
- Groups meeting regularly and voluntarily to
identify, analyse and solve problems (WERS - 21
usage) - iii) Attitude surveys (WERS 42 usage)
- Systematic means of investigating employees
views - Some companies see a benefit in avoiding
reliance on trade union views - Helpful in developing policies
- Enhance by establishing project teams
25Financial participation
- Employee share schemes include
- Share Incentive Plans (SIP) where companies can
give up to 3000 worth of shares to each employee - Savings Related Share Option Schemes (SAYE) where
participants can save up to 250 per month to
acquire shares
26Employee share ownership
- What do you consider to be the advantages and
disadvantages from the point of view of the
employee and employer?
27Representative participation Joint Consultative
Committees
- JCCs were popular in the 1940s, declined in the
1950s and 1960s, and regained some popularity in
the 1970s - If they are given only unimportant issues to deal
with, employees will view them as ineffectual - Recent legislative changes include the European
Works Council Directive and the Information and
Consultation Regulations
28Empowerment
- Associated with culture change, delayering and
restructuring - Devolving power and responsibilities to teams at
workplace or customer level - a change management tool which helps
organisations create an environment where every
individual can use his or her abilities and
energies to satisfy the customer (Cook and
Macauley, cited Beardwell, Holden and Claydon,
2004557)
29Claimed benefits of empowerment for
organisations
- Greater awareness of business needs among
employees - Cost reduction from delayering and employee ideas
- Improved quality, profitability and productivity
measures - Enhanced loyalty and commitment
- Decrease in staff turnover
- More effective communication
30Claimed benefits for employees
- Increase in job satisfaction
- Increase in day-to-day control over tasks
- Ownership of work
- Increase in self-confidence
- Creation of teamwork
- Acquisition of new knowledge and skills
31Criticisms of empowerment
- Practical reasons for failure, including lack of
training and inadequate communication - Failure to recognise that empowerment usually
means wholesale culture change - Ideological criticism that empowerment is
exploitation - Empowerment may undermine trade union influence
32Views on empowerment
- Empowering people today is as important as
involving them was in the 1980s and getting them
to participate in the 1970s? - Empowerment will become a generic term to
incorporate involvement and participation?
33Summary
- Employee relations practice in the UK was
dominated by trade unions and collective
bargaining for most of the twentieth century - Employment legislation has become more important
in the employment relationship - As trade union influence has declined, managers
have looked to other forms of employee
involvement
34References
- Beardwell, Holden and Claydon (2004) Human
Resource Management (chapter 14), FT/Prentice
Hall - Hyman,J. and Mason,B. (1995) Managing Employee
Involvement and Participation, Sage - Kersley.B. et al (2005) Inside the Workplace
first findings from the 2004 Workplace Employee
Relations Survey, ESRC/DTI - Marchington,M. and Wilkkinson,A. (2005) Human
Resource Management at Work, CIPD - Torrington, Hall and Taylor (2005) Human Resource
Management (chapter 20), FT/Prentice Hall
35Further reading and websites
- Gennard,J and Judge,G (2005) Employee Relations,
CIPD - Lashley,C. (1995) Towards an understanding of
employee empowerment in hospitality
services,International Journal of Contemporary
Hospitality Management, Vol 7, No 1, pp27-32 - Rose,E. (2004) Employment Relations, FT/Prentice
Hall - www.delni.gov.uk (Department for Employment and
Learning) - www.dti.gov.uk (Department of Trade and Industry)
- www.lra.org.uk (Labour Relations Agency)