Title: Human Resource Management: An International Perspective
1Human Resource Management An International
Perspective
- Fachhochschule Ludwigshafen am Rhein
- Dr. Yvonne Stedham
2Course Materials available on
- http//www.scsr.nevada.edu/ystedham/
3Introductions
- Instructor
- Students Table Tents
- Name
- Expected graduation
- Work Experience
- Traveling and Languages
- Interest in HR
- Aspirations
4Relevance of this Course
- What is HRM? HRM Functions?
- What is the relationship between HR and
organizational performance? - Why would HR practices differ from country to
country? HR trends and practices in the U.S.
5Course Overview
- This course was designed to introduce students to
the issues that emerge from performing the human
resource management function in an international
context. - The focus of the course is on the relevance of
the human resource management function to the
performance of an organization. - The relationship between the external environment
of an organization and human resource management
(HRM) will be explored with a particular emphasis
on the effect of cultural differences on
management processes. - Current HRM trends and practices in the U.S. will
be reviewed. Relevant legal conditions, as well
as trends and developments in Employee Staffing
and Selection and Compensation will addressed.
6HR and Organizational Performance
- What is an organization?
- What is organizational effectiveness?
- How does HR contribute?
7HR and Organizational Performance
-
- What is an organization? Why do organizations
exist? - Organizations People
- Mission, goals, objectives --- concerted effort
efficiency effectiveness. - When is an organization effective?
- Distinguish between efficiency and effectiveness.
Distinguish effectiveness measures for the short,
intermediate, and long run.
8Measurement of organizational effectiveness
- Long run?
- Intermediate run?
- Short run?
- A contingency approach
9The Organization
10Strategic Planning
- Scanning the environment SWOT
- Vision
- Mission
- Goals
- Objectives
- Strategies and Tactics
- Performance Indicators
11The International Organization
12HR and Org. Performance
- Individual effectiveness is the foundation for
organizational effectiveness. - Individual effectiveness depends on .
13HR and Org. Performance
- Individual effectiveness f(Ability,Motivation)
- Individual effectiveness Ability Motivation
14HR and Org. Performance
- Match
- Individuals
- (Knowledge, Skills, Abilities and Needs)
- with
- Jobs
- (Requirements and Rewards)
15The HRM Framework
16Course Format
17HR and Org. PerformanceStrategic HRM
- Political Development and the Role of HR
- Reading September 11
- Economic Development and the Role of HR
- Agriculture/LandIndustrial/Capital-Information/Kn
owledge - Jeffrey Pfeffer
- What CEOs want from HR
- HR Leaders
- Case Sun Micro Systems
- Globalization
18 Reasons for becoming international
- Groups of four
- Why do companies internationalize?
- List specific reasons and purposes.
- At least three
19 Reasons for becoming international
-
- Profit Revenue Cost (VolumePrice) Cost
- A desire for continued growth.
- Domestic market saturation
- The potential to now exploit a new technological
advantage - Preferable suppliers (quality, cost)
- Labor market (supply, quality, cost)
- Government involvement/restrictions
- Reducing distance to customers (cost)
- Tariff barriers
- Increased foreign competition in home country
- Reduce general business risk by diversifying
into other countries
20 Types of "international" organizations
- International organizationAny organization that
exports to/imports from organizations in other
countries with primarily domestic production
-Multidomestic. - Multinational organization An organization with
operations in different countries but each is
viewed as a relatively separate enterprise. - Global organization An enterprise structured so
that national boundaries become blurred. The best
people are hired irrespective of national origin.
Transnational
21Globalization
- European Training and Development Journal Article
Engle/Stedham et al.
22HR and Org. PerformanceStrategic HRM
- HR Management Roles
- Administrative record keeping, processing, ST,
Examples? - Operational support, IT, Examples?
- Strategic org-wide, LT, Examples?
- HR as a strategic partner Involvement in
strategic planning, decision-making on mergers,
acquisitions, and downsizing, redesigning
organizations and work processes, ensuring
financial accountability for HR results,
attracting and retaining human resources,
developing human resource capabilities and
competencies, identifying and rewarding
performance - HR Planning
- KSAs requirements vs KSA availabilities
- Filling the gap
- International Issues
- Staffing and Compensation
23Country Specific External Conditions for HR
- List external conditions and trends that affect
the HR function. Specify which function is
affected. - Create such a list first for Germany and then for
the U.S. - Groups of four
- Appoint a spokesperson and share with the class.
24External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- Why different answers for different countries?
25External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- Cultural differences
- What is culture?
- Cultural characteristics
- Social stratification, religion, education,
language, political system, economic system - Where do cultural differences come from?
- Kluckhohn and Strodbeck
- Six Values Orientation Dimensions
26 Cultural dimensions
- All peoples have common life problems (?)
choose different solutions - Six basic dimensions describe the cultural
orientations of societies - What is the nature of people?
- What is a person's relationship to nature?
- What is a person's relationship to other people?
- What is the primary mode of activity?
- What is the conception of space?
- What is the temporal orientation?
27External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- Self-Assessment
- Global Readiness Index and Personal Values
- Understanding your own values
- If you understand others you are learned, if you
understand yourself you are wise!
28External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- Measuring Culture
- Geert Hofstede IBM
- Cultures Consequences
- Survey
29Hofstede Publications
- Hofstede, Geert (1980) Cultures Consequences
- Hofstede, Geert (1991) Cultures and
Organizations - Hofstede, Geert (1984) Cultures Consequences
International Differences in Work-Related Values - Hofstede, Geert and Michael Harris Bond (1984)
The Confucius Connection from cultural roots to
economic growth. Organizational Dynamics, 16, 4,
4-21
30Hofstede Publications
- Hofstede, Geert (2001) Cultures Consequences
Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions, and
Organizations Across Nations. - Hofstede, Geert (1994) VSM94 Values Survey
Module 1994 Manual. Tilberg, Netherlands IRIC. - Hofstede, Geert and Bond, M.H. (1984)
Hofstedes Culture Dimensions An Independent
Validation Using Rokeachs Value Survey.
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 15(4)
417-433. - ___
31Hofstedes Cultural Dimensions
- Individualism/Collectivism
- Individualistic society self and immediate
family - Collectivistic group give up freedom for
security - Masculinity/Femininity
- Masculine aggressive achievement materialistic
- Feminine emphasis is on relationships and
quality of life - Uncertainty Avoidance
- Acceptance of ambiguity and uncertainty need for
strict rules and regulations - Power Distance
- Acceptance of unequal distribution of power and
other attributes - Confucian Dynamism or LT/ST
- ST instant gratification
- LT discipline and perseverance
32Compare Germany, the U.S. and Japan
- Ind hi, mod, low?
- Masc vs Fem?
- Uncertainty A hi, mod, low?
- Power distance - hi, mod, low?
- LT vs ST?
33Cultural Differences and HR Management
- Japan has the following cultural characteristics
. - Japan is known for the following management
approaches . - The U.S. has the following cultural
characteristics . - The U.S. is known for the following management
approaches . - Germany has the following cultural
characteristics . - Germany is known for the following management
approaches .
34- U.S. Japan Germany
- Individualism 91 46 67
- Power distance 40 54 35
- Uncertainty
- avoidance 46 92 65
- Masculinity 62 95 66
- ST/LT 29 80 25
35Cultural Differences and HR Management
- Japan hi UNC, hi POW, Coll, MAS, LT
- Consensus, group based, long dm, lack of risk
taking and creativity, life time employment - U.S. low UNC, low POW, Ind, MAS, ST .
- Delegation, participative management, emphasis on
individual performance, creativity and risk
taking - Germany moderately hi UNC, low POW, Ind, ST
- Expert based, need for education and
certification, delegation, participative
management, extensive employee protection,
somewhat risk averse
36André Laurents Research
- Main reason for a hierarchical structure is so
that everybody knows who has authority over
whom. - In order to have efficient work relationships,
it is often necessary to bypass the hierarchical
line. - It is important for managers to have at hand the
precise answers to most questions their
subordinates may raise about their work.
37Laurents Research
- Main reason for a hierarchical structure is so
that everybody knows who has authority over
whom. - Germany 26 agree
- US 17 agree
- Japan 50 agree
- France, Italy, Spain 43, 42, 34
- In order to have efficient work relationships,
it is often necessary to bypass the hierarchical
line. - Germany 45 disagree
- US 32 disagree
- France, Italy, Spain 43, 56, 74
- It is important for managers to have at hand the
precise answers to most questions their
subordinates may raise about their work. - Germany 46 agree
- US 18 agree
- Japan 78 agree
- France, Italy, Spain 53, 66, 77
38External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
39External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- What is ethics?
- Relevance?
- Different across cultures?
- Beekun/Stedham/Yamamura Papers
- Nikes Voice
- Personnel demands attention overseas
40External EnvironmentCulture and Ethics
International HRM
- Ethics Philosophies
- Consequentialist vs Non-consequentialist
- Consequentialist Utilitarianism, Egoism
- Non-consequentialist Justice, Inherent Morality
41International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Numbers
- 37,000 MNCs worldwide
- Control 200,000 foreign affiliates
- 73 million employees
- In the U.S., MNCs employ 3 mill Americans, 10
of the U.S. manufacturing workforce - 80 of mid- and large-size U.S. companies send
managers abroad - 300,000 U.S. expatriates are on assignment at any
given time - Optimal level of internationalization?
42International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Staffing Philosophies
- Ethnocentric Key positions are filled with
PCNs (parent country nationals), e.g., Procter
Gamble Associate with higher incidence of IHRM
problems - Polycentric Key positions are filled with HCNs
- Geocentric or global Best managers are
recruited from within or outside the company
regardless of nationality, TCNs used by
European MNCs, transpatriates, some U.S.
companies (Philips, Heinz, Unilever, IBM) - Regiocentric Recruiting on a regional basis
43International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Expatriate Selection
- Relevant KSAs?
- Technical, Managerial
- Adaptiveness
- Measurement
- SMILE Speciality management ability
international flexibility language facility
endeavor (Matsushita) - Spouse and Family
- Failure rates
- 40 on average lower for European and Japanese
- Rosalie Tung
44International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Expatriate Selection
- Failure rates
- 40 on average lower for European and Japanese
- Rosalie Tung Reasons
- Selection is based on headquarter criteria
- Lack of training, preparation, orientation
- Alienation/lack of support from headquarters
- Inability to adapt to local culture/work enviro
- Problems with spouse,family
- Compensation
- Poor programs fro career support/repatriation
45International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Training
- Cultural toughness China, Brazil, India, Japan,
Russia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, France - Less than 1/3 of expatriates receive training
- Pre-departure training, postarrival training,
reentry training - Culture, language, everyday matters
- Cross-cultural training to ease the adjustment to
the new environment by reducing culture shock
a state of disorientation and anxiety about not
knowing how to behave in an unfamiliar culture
46International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Training
- Four stages of culture shock
- Honeymoon
- Irritation and hostility
- Gradual adjustment
- Biculturalism
- Training techniques and Rigor of training
- Area studies
- Culture assimilators
- Language training
- Sensitivity training
- Field experiences
- Colgate In-country training
47International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Training Examples
- ABB (Asea Brown Bovari) rotates 500 managers
around the world .. Every two to three years - PesiCo orientation program for foreign managers
one year at U.S. bottling division plants - Honda of America Japanese language, culture,
lifestyle training .. Tokyo up to 3 years - GE engineers and managers must have global
perspective .. Regular language and
cross-cultural training
48International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Compensation
- 100,000 manager in U.S. -gt 300,000 in London,
1mill in Tokyo or Stockholm - Equity and goodwill
- Purchasing power and standard of living
- Tax differentials and tax equalization
- Balance sheet approach
- Allowances Cost of living, housing, education,
home leave, shipping and storage - Repatriation
49International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- You have been assigned the mentor to an employee,
John Smith, from the U.S. who will be working
with you in your department for the next three
years. His family, wife who is a computer
programmer and two sons (13 and 15 years old), is
coming with him. - You are writing to John telling him about what to
expect on the job and in the community. Tell
him about some of the cross-cultural conflicts he
may run into with his co-workers and how he
should handle them. You also want to give advice
to each family member. - Groups of four make a list of relevant issues.
50International HRM The Expatriate Assignment
- Nancy Adler Paper Female Expatriates
- Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resource Management
Stedham/Nechita paper Comparing Theory and
Practice of Expatriate Assignments
51HR Trends and Practices in the U.S.
- The Legal Environment
- Staffing and Selection
- Compensation and Benefits
52HR Trends and Practices in the U.S.
- The Legal Environment
- The employment relationship
- Discrimination legislation
53Legal Conditions in the U.S.
- The Employment Relationship Equitable Exchange
- Psychological Contract
- Employment Contract
- Formal agreement, voluntary Defines and governs
the terms and conditions of the employment
relationship promises and expectations change
with time - Written or oral, both are legally enforceable
54Sources of Laws and Regulations
- Common Law England Court-made Law Case-by-case
decisions ? Precedence (Germany and other country
code-based law) States develop and administer
own common law. - Constitutional Law Supersedes Prohibits
deprivation of employment right without due
process.
55Employment at Will
- Right of both parties to terminate the
employment relationship at any time, for any
reason - (Tennessee Court in late 1900s)
- If set-term contract Termination for
- Just cause
- Failure to perform
- If indeterminate-term contract --- employment
at will (common law) most are at-will
56Workplace Torts
- Breaches of legal duty by ER when establishing
or modifying the initial relationship (common
law) - Tort
- Civil wrong violation of a duty by the ER that
leads to harm or damages suffered by others -
Examples - 1. Fraud or misrepresentation lie/mislead
applicant when communicating conditions and terms
-gt ER violates a duty to be truthful in the
presentation of information - 2. Negligent hiring ER violates duty to protect
Ees and customers against unreasonable and
foreseeable risk of harm
57Fair Labor Standards Act 1938
- Minimum Wage 5.75
- Lower for tipped employees
- Child Labor
- Age 16 no restrictions
- Age 18 harzardous occupations
- Age 14-15 limitations on hours
58Fair Labor Standards Act 1938
- Exempt vs Non-exempt Employees
- Exempt executive, administrative, professional,
outside sales ER does not have to pay overtime - Non-exempt must be paid overtime
- Overtime
- Hours worked in excess of 40 hours must be
compensated 1.5 the regular rate of pay - Compensatory time off
- Illegal in private sector unless given at 1.5 rate
59Statutory Laws
- Derived from written statutes that are passed by
legislative bodies such as Federal Congress
State Legislature/Assemblies Local
Municipal/Councils - Agencies Interpret, administer, enforce law and
publish rules and regulatory guidelines that are
given great deference by courts. - . DOL Department of Labor OFCCP Office for
Contract Compliance Programs EEOC Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
60Discrimination Legislation EEO Framework -
Specific Laws
- U.S. Constitution
- 5th Amendment Due Process of law --- Prohibition
upon federal government no person shall be
deprived of life, liberty, or property does not
speak directly to specific subjects such as
employment ? Courts prefer to defer to existing
statutory laws because it they are more
specific!! - 14th Amendment Prohibition for States to enacts
any law that does not guarantee equal
protection for all.
61Statutory Laws
- Civil Rights Act 1866
- Right to make and enforce contracts for
employment for all citizens as enjoyed by white
citizens. - Civil Rights Act of 1871
- Right to sue if deprived of any rights or
privileges guaranteed by the Constitution and
laws for ALL citizens. Must show intention. - Equal Pay Act 1963
- Equal pay for equal work regardless of SEX
(female employees only) amendment to FLSA .
62Equal Pay Act
- Equal Work
- Substantially similar in terms of skill, effort,
responsibilities, working conditions. - Exceptions
- Seniority Merit Quantity of production
- Note If in violation of EPA, ER may not LOWER
wages.
63Title VII of CRA 1964
- Coverage ERs with 15 or more employees Federal,
State, Local governments Educational
Institutions Employment Agencies Labor Unions - Not covered Until recently Congress Private
Clubs Religious Organizations. - CRA 1964 Several Titles each focusing on
discrimination in a different sectors of
society (education, right to vote, ) Title VII
focuses on discrimination in employment.
64Title VII
- 703 (a)
- Employer may not discriminate on the basis of
race, color, national origin, sex, and religion
in any employment decision.
65Title VII
- Color White, black, yellow, brown, red.
- Race Local geographic or global human population
distinguished by genetically transmitted physical
characteristics Caucasian Negro Hispanic
Oriental Indian. - National Origin Citizenship Heritage Any
country, nation. - Religion All kinds not associated with any of
the other characteristics Christian, Hindu,
Muslim, Buddhist.
66Title VII
- 703 (b) . Nondiscriminatory apprenticeship
program - 704 (a) . Unlawful to discriminate if opposed
unlawful employment practice assisted in TVII
investigation. - 704 (b) . Prohibits ads concerning employment
indicating preference for any of the prohibited
factors. - 1978 Amendment
- Pregnancy Discrimination Act --- prohibits
discrimination on the basis of pregnancy,
childbirth, or related condition. Reinstatement
right for similar position no loss of seniority
coverage of disability insurance.
67Title VII
- Exemptions that are written into the law
- Discrimination on the basis of the protected
factors is permissible when such qualification
is a bona-fide occupational qualification (BFOQ)
reasonably necessary to the operation of that
particular business or enterprise burden of
proof is with ER very narrowly interpreted ---
preferences of ER, coworkers, clients are
irrelevant. - Seniority Systems Bona fide seniority or merit
systems are lawful if no intention to
discriminate job or departmental systems are not
seen as bona fide, plant or company-wide
systems are seen as bona fide.
68Exemptions to TVII
- Testing Employer may give and act upon
professionally developed ability tests if they
are not used to discriminate on the basis of the
protected factors. - Preferential Treatment It is unlawful to
interpret TVII as requiring preferential
treatment of individuals of protected groups -
reverse discrimination - National Security Discrimination is permitted
69Further TVII Issues
- Fetal Protection -- Johnson Controls 1991 An
employers exclusion of fertile women, but not
fertile men, could not be justified on grounds
that the rule protected the womans reproductive
capacity and the physical welfare of the fetus.
The safety qualification is limited to those
instances where sex or pregnancy presents danger
to customers or third parties. A fetus is not a
third party whose safety is essential to the
operation of the employers business, and thus
cannot be the basis of a BFOQ.
70Sexual Harassment
- Quid pro quo
- Hostile work environment sexual harassment.
- Unwelcome sexual advances in exchange for a
favorable employment condition. - Employer is liable. ER liable even if the
employer had no knowledge of the harassment. - Pattern of behavior. Reasonable person standard.
- Training, Policy, and Complaint and Investigation
Process.
71Sexual Harassment
- Examples
- Office Romance
- Stedham/Mitchell paper
72Executive Order 11246
- Contractors doing business with federal
government ( amount of contract specified). Same
provisions as TVII AND requires contractors to
develop affirmative action plans Formal,
specific personnel programs that are designed to
increase the participation of protected groups.
73Age Discrimination in Employment Act 1967
- Amended 1986. Protects EEs and applicants who are
40 years old and above (no upper limit). - No mandatory retirement age (except law
enforcement officers, firefighters, tenured
professors, executive under certain conditions,
top policy makers). - No reverse discrimination.
74Americans with Disabilities Act 1990
- Since 1994 covers ERs with 15 or more EEs.
- 43 mill. disabled Americans.
- Protects
- Physical or mental impairment that substantially
limits one or more life activities (walk, see,
..) - Record of impairment
- Regarded as having impairment
- about 1,000 disabilities incl. affective
disorders, biochemically based disorders - AIDS,
Cancer, Anxiety Disorders, Eating Disorders,
Infertility, Epilepsy - Disability evaluated with adjustive equipment
(glasses)
75Americans with Disabilities Act
- How it protects
- .Punitive damages
- .Essential job functions
- .Reasonable accommodations
- .Restructuring of physical facilities
- .Perceptual restructuring
- 1994 5,500 complaints (25 more than were
expected) - Sample Job Description
76Family and Medical Leave Act 1993
- Employers with more than 50 employees have to
provide 12 weeks of unpaid leave for family or
medical emergencies. - Employer must guarantee the employee the same or
a comparable job. The employer must also pay the
health-care coverage for the EE --- which the EE
has to be back if he/she fails to return to work.
ERs are allowed to exempt key employees
defined as the highest paid 10 of their work
force whose leave would cause substantial
economic harm to the employer. Also exempt are
EEs who have not worked at least 1,250 hours (25
hrs a week) in the previous 12 months.
77Enforcement of Laws and Court Process
- Filing a Discrimination Complaint
- Local EEO Agency
- NERC (Nevada Civil Rights Commission)
- EEOC
- Investigation
- Right to sue letter
78Evidence of Discrimination
- Intentional Discrimination
- Disparate Treatment different standards applied
to various groups - Adverse or Disparate Impact same standards are
applied but disproportionately less minority
applicants are selected
79Federal Court Process
- Presentation of evidence in TVII
- Burden of Proof shifts
- Plaintiff ? Defendant ? Plaintiff
- Prima Facie Evidence
- 1. Disparate Treatment 1. Job-based/legitimate 1.
Defendant explanation pretext true
McDonnell Rule 4 conditions reason was
rejection for prejudice - 2. Adverse Impact 2. Business Necessity, 2.
Other method - 80 or 4/5 Rule BFOQ, Validation
80Disparate Treatment 4 Conditions- McDonnel Rule
- Plaintiff must show
- belongs to protected class
- applied and was qualified for the job
- despite the qualifications - was rejected
- position remained open and the employer continued
to seek applications from persons with the
complainants qualifications - -gtApplied also in ADEA cases
81Adverse Impact 80 or 4/5 Rule
- Selection Ratios
- Number of nonminority applicants selected
- DIVIDED BY
- Number of nonminority applicants applied
- THIS IS
- Nonminority selection ratio
- Number of minority applicants selected
- DIVIDED BY
- Number of minority applicants applied
- THIS IS
- Minority selection ratio
82Adverse Impact
- Compare the two selection ratios
- If the ratio for nonminorities is smaller there
may be evidence of discrimination - If the ratio is less than 80 or 4/5 of the
nonminority ratio, then there is evidence of
adverse impact (because the difference in the
ratios is statistically significant)
83Adverse Impact - Example
- 100 White applicants
- 100 African American applicants
- 20 of the White applicants are selected
- 5 of the African Americans are selected
- 20100 .2 Nonminority Selection Ratio
- 5100 .05 Minority Selection Ratio
- .05 .2 .25 This does not meet the 80
rule!
84Adverse Impact - Example
- 100 White applicants
- 100 African American applicants
- 20 of the White applicants are selected
- 16 of the African Americans are selected
- 20100 .2 Non-minority ratio
- 16100 .16 Minority ratio
- .16 .2 .80 meets the 80 rule
85HR Trends and Practices in the U.S.
- Staffing and Selection
- Measurement Principles
- Reliability and Validity
- Selection Methods
- Application forms and resumes
- Interview
- Assessment Centers
86Staffing and Selection
- The most important HR function
- Definitions
- Recruitment Creating a pool of qualified
applicants -
- Staffing
- Mutual process by which
- the individual and the organization become
matched to - form the employment relationship.
- Mutual Process Series of interrelated activities
- R, S, DM, job offers, hiring.
87Selection
- Selection
- The process of obtaining
- and using information
- about job applicants
- to determine who should be hired.
- Focus here is on how to collect relevant info on
applicants KSAs.
88Recruitment
- How can we mess up?
- Recruitment Planning
- Relevant market
- Number of contacts
- Yield ratios
89Recruitment
- Recruitment Sources and Channels - Effectiveness
- Internal vs external recruitment
- Peter Principle
- Walk-ins
- Referrals
- College
- Employment Agencies and Professional Societies
- Advertising
- Temporary Employees
- Internet
- Realistic Job Previews
90Measurement in Selection
- Selection decisions are based on what
information? Purpose is to ..
91Measurement in Selection
- How can we mess up?
- Measure irrelevant KSAs
- Measure KSAs inaccurately
92Definition of Measurement
- Application of rules for assigning numbers to
objects to represent quantities of attributes. - Differences between applicant scores are due to
actual differences in KSAs. - Rules
- Specified algorithms to assign numbers (She is a
10) same results by different users
93Quality of Measures Reliability
- How good a measure is my test? To what extent
does the measure accurately capture the KSA we
are interested in? - The scores obtained on a measure are
- X obtained X true X error
- If there was no error in the measure, every time
we apply the measure to the same person we should
get the same score. - A reliable measure is a consistent measure.
- The reliability of a measure reflects the
measures consistency.
94Reliability
- Three methods to evaluate the reliability of a
measure - Each method focuses on a different source of
measurement error. Measurement error are those
factors that impact the obtained score but are
not at all related to the attribute that is being
measured. - The methods
- Test-Retest Reliability
- Parallel or Equivalent Forms Reliability
- Internal Consistency Reliability
- Split-Half and Odd-Even Cronbach Alpha
- Spearman-Brown Adjustment
95Spearman-Brown Formula to Correct a Split-Half
Reliability Coefficient
96Reliability
- The conclusion that a measure is reliable can
only be drawn if, and only if, the reliability
coefficient (a correlation coefficient) is
statistically significant (as determined by a
t-test.
97Standard Error of Measurement
98Reliability
- Important
- The difference in the score between two
applicants is only significant if it is at least
two times the standard error of measurement. - Example The standard error of measurement for a
test is 1.5. Candidate A scores 18, candidate B
scores 24 - does candidate B really have more of
the attribute that is being measured?
99Quality of MeasuresValidity
- Validity in Selection concerns the following
question How appropriate is it to make
inferences from the scores on a measure to
performance? - Is the score a good predictor of performance? Is
the score actually related to future performance? - Relationship between reliability and validity
100Validity
- Three methods to evaluate the validity of a
measure. - Content Validity
- Criterion-Related (Empirical) Validity Validity
Coefficient - Predictive Validity
- Concurrent Validity
101Content versus Face Validity
- Content Validity deals with the representative
sampling of the content domain of a job by a
selection measure - Face Validity concerns the appearance of whether
a measure is measuring what is intended
102Utility Analysis
- Using dollar-and-cents terms as well as other
measures - such as percentage increase in output,
- it shows the degree to which the use of a
selection measure improves the quality of
individuals selected - over what would have happened if the measure had
not been used.
103An Equation for Calculating the Utility of a
Selection Program
- Expected Dollar Gain from Selection
- NsrxySDyZx-NT(C)
- Expected Dollar Gain from Selectionreturn in
dollars to the organization for having a valid
selection program
104Utility
- Nsnumber of job applicants selected
- rxyvalidity coefficient of the selection
procedure - SDystandard deviation of job performance in
dollars - Zxaverage score on the selection procedure of
those hired expressed in z or standardized score
form as compared to the applicant pool - NTnumber of applicants assessed with the
selection procedure - Ccost of assessing each job applicant with the
selection procedure
105Strategies for Selection Decision-Making
- Compensatory Model
- Multiple Hurdles
- Combination
- Profile Matching
106Application Forms and Resumes
- Information about the applicants background and
present status -- brief and general OR long and
detailed?? - Based on .. Past behavior is a good predictor of
future behavior - To determine minimum qualifications and general
suitability for job permanent record - Determine relative strengths and weaknesses
- It is assumed that all data collected are used
- Training and Experience Requirements
- Job-related training - formal and informal
- Type of training length quality
107Application Form
- Specific job-related experience and
accomplishments - Minimum qualifications
- Maintained Filing System YES NO
- Used computer and Microsoft Word for Windows 2000
word processor to type letters and reports - Used a Dictaphone to transcribe correspondence
- TE Evaluation Form
- Specific tasks are listed indicate YES NO
- For YES, describe experience
108Application
- Likely candidate for Adverse Impact -- Why?
- Current forms -- 100 had at least 1
inappropriate question on average 7
inappropriate questions. - Are these questions acceptable? What do you
really want to know? - What was your maiden name?
- What is your date of birth? What is your age?
- What is your height and weight?
- What language do you commonly use?
- What is your religious faith?
- List the number and ages of your children?
- Do you have any physical or mental disabilities?
- List your birthplace.
- Have you ever been arrested?
- Do you own your car/residence?
109Application Forms ...
- Adverse Impact High
- Validity On average .1 -- corrected for
attenuation .13 - Select content
- Job-related - Job-related language
- Usefulness
- Fairness -- Face Validity
110Resumé
- U.S. Short and concise dates job related
achievements - Groups
- Compare to German resumé
111References and Recommendations
- To verify information
- Assess applicants job experience
- Assess applicants effectiveness in those jobs --
what done and how well??
112References
- Sources of and methods to collect Reference Data
- Methods In-person Mail Letter of R Phone
- Sources Former ER Personal Investigative
agencies Public record - Usefulness of reference data
- Reliability .4 or less
- Validity .16-.26
- Reference giver-better if immediate supervisor
- Old and new jobs are very similar?
- Adverse Impact ??
113References ..
- Validity -- not much evidence -- favorable info
-- job related - better if content of the new and old job are very
similar - low validity because low reliability and
restricted range - Defamation of character
- Recommendations
- dont use subjective info
- written consent by applicant
- ask only specific job-related info
- development of reference checking system
114Employment Interview
- KSAs to be measured
- Validity
- Adverse Impact
115Employment Interview
- Research
- Interview does not add to selecting the most
qualified candidate because..
116Interview
- Sources of problems
- impression formation
- human perception
117Improve the Validity of the Interview
- 1. Decide on location and seating
- 2. More than one interviewer Panel
- 3. KSAs to be measured Measure interpersonal,
communication skills - 4. Job-related questions only - Multiple
Questions (Behavioral Interview Questions) - 5. Limit pre-interview info
- 6. Use a rating format
- 7. Train the interviewer
118Interview Simulation
119HR Trends and Practices in the U.S.
- Staffing and Selection - Selection Methods
- Assessment Centers
- Managerial positions
- Battery of tests
- Management, interpersonal, soft skills
- Physical Attractiveness
- Notion of Fit
- Emotional Intelligence
120Judge and Ferris (1992) The Elusive Criterion
of Fit in HR Staffing
- The practice of selection strongly emphasizes a
less tangible notion of fit - between job applicant and the organization.
- How could fit be measured?
- Definition of fit The degree to which the
goals and values of an - applicant or employee match those of employees
considered successful in - the organization.
- The notion of liking an applicant
- Why fit control mechanism, homogeneity,
job-related , - predictability of public behavior
- The employment interview and fit
- Impression Management
121Emotional Intelligence
- Daniel Goleman
- Developing emotional intelligence
- Five dimensions
- Self-awareness Realistic self assessment-how
does this fir with my values analyze gut feeling - Managing emotions anger, anxiety, sadness
controlling ones impulses manage stress effect
on ability to pay attention - Motivating other what moves us to action is
emotion optimism - Showing empathy read emotions in others
prevents acting in self interest - Staying connected emotions are not only
contagious, they spread from the top down
122HR Trends and Practices in the U.S.
- Compensation and Benefits
- Theory
- Techniques
- Benefits
123Compensation and Benefits
- Exchange relationship
- Equity
- Internal Equity
- External Equity
- Individual Equity
124Internal Equity
125Internal Equity
- Worth of a job?
- Input .. KSAs
- Ouput
- Attributes Complexity
126Internal Equity
- Develop of job hierarchy
- Job Evaluation
- Job Evaluation Methods
- Compensable Factors
- Ranking
- Classification
- Point Factor Method
- The Hays System Know-How, Problem Solving,
Accountability
127External Equity
- Myth of a market pay rate
- Published data
- Survey design
- Benchmark jobs
- Relevant market
- Level and range
- Administration
- Benefits
- Philosophy
- Leveling
128Integrating Internal and External Equity
- Scatterplot
- Regression Analysis JE points and Market pay
- Market Pay Line
- Follow, lead, lag
- Pay grades Height and Width Overlap
- Compa Ratio, Red and green circle employees
- Pay Compression
129Individual Equity
130Individual Equity
- Motivation Theories
- Variable Pay Systems
- Individual Piece rate, sales commission,
bonuses, special recognitions, safety awards,
attendance bonus - Group (Team) Gainsharing, quality improvement
awards, labor cost reduction payout - Organization Profit sharing, employee stock
ownership options, executive stock options,
deferred compensation - Merit Pay Systems - Design
131Individual Equity
- Performance measurement?
- Size of reward Purchasing power and recognition
- Type of reward
- Linkage to performance
- Pay Secrecy
- Example Compensation at IBM
132Individual Equity
- Annual Pay Raises Exercise
- Attached
- Individually make decisions
- Groups decide
133Employee Benefits
- Compensation Package
- Direct vs Indirect
- Direct Base Pay and Variable Pay
- Indirect Benefits
- Composition
- 20 of direct pay in benefits
- For each 1.00 in pay additional 20 cents in
benefits
134Employee Benefits
- Types of Benefits
- Government Mandated
- Security Workers Compensation, Unemployment
Compensation - Retirement Security Social Security
- Health Care COBRA and HIPPA provisions
- Family Oriented Family Medical Leave Act
- Time off Military reserve, Jury, Election
- Employer Voluntary
135Employee Benefits
- Employer Voluntary
- Security Supplemental UE benefits, Severance pay
- Retirement Security Early retirement options,
Pension plans, IRAs, 401 (k) plans - Health Care Medical, Dental, Vision,
Prescription Drugs, EAPs, Wellness Programs,
HMOs - Financial, Insurance Life, Disability,
Educational assistance - Family Oriented Dependent Care, Child Care,
Alternative work arrangements - Time off Lunch and rest breaks, holidays and
vacations, funeral and bereavement leaves - Social and recreational
136Employee Benefits
137Employee Benefits
- Employee preferences
- Competition
- Cost
- Attraction and retention
138Employee Benefits
- Social Security Act 1935
- Social Security Retirement employer and
employee pay - Employer payroll tax to fund UE (3.5) of the
first 6,000 earned by each worker - Employer pays Workers Comp, by State
- Time off benefits most expensive 5 to 13 of
total compensation
139Employee Benefits
- COBRA Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act require extended health care
coverage for employers with 20 or more employees - HIPPAA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act - HMO Health Maintenance Organization
140Employee Benefits
- Flexible benefits plans Cafeteria-Style
benefits plans - Work Life Balance Reading
- Flexible Spending Accounts
- Benefits Communication
141HR Audit
- Instructions for HR Audit Case Study
- Teams of three students
- You will be provided with some background
information for the company you picked. - An HRM audit is a formal review of the outcomes
of HRM functions. To conduct the audit, the HR
department identified key functions and the key
measures of business performance and customer
satisfaction that would indicate each function is
succeeding.
142HR Audit
- Business and Customer Satisfaction Indicators
- Staffing Average days to fill open requisitions
Ratio of acceptances to offers made Ratio of
minority/women applicants to representation in
local labor market Average years of
experience/education per job family Anticipation
of personnel needs Timeliness of referring
qualified workers to line supervisors Treatment
of applicants Skill in handling terminations
Adaptability to changing labor market
143HR Audit
- Compensation Per capita average merit increases
Percentage of overtime hours to straight time
Ratio of average salary offers to average salary
in community Fairness of existing job evaluation
system Competitiveness in local labor market
Relationship between pay and performance Employee
satisfaction with pay - Benefits Average unemployment compensation
payment Average workers compensation payment
Benefit cost per payroll dollar Percentage of
sick leave to total pay Promptness in handling
claims Fairness and consistency in the
application of benefit policies Communication of
benefits to
144HR Audit
- Training Percentage of employees participating in
training programs per job family Percentage of
employees receiving tuition refunds Training
dollars per employee Extent to which training
programs meet the needs of employees and the
company Communication to employees about
available training opportunities Quality of
introduction/orientation programs - Employee Appraisal and Development Distribution
of performance appraisal ratings Appropriate
psychometric properties of appraisal forms
Assistance in identifying management potential
Organizational development opportunities provided
by HRM
145HR Audit
- Overall Effectiveness Ratio of HR staff to
employee population Turnover rate Absenteeism
rate Ratio of per capital revenue to per capita
cost Net income per employee Unionization
Accuracy and clarity of information provided to
managers and employees Competence and expertise
of staff Working relationship between
organizational units and the HR department answer
the questions that are provided with the
background information in detail.
146HR Audit
- You need to conduct some research to gather
additional information about the company. Since
you do not have access to all the information
required for an in-depth HR audit, you are asked
to provide an analysis of the HR function in
your company by also using the following
questions - To what extent does your company emphasize the
importance and value of the human resources of
the company through the philosophy and beliefs of
top management? - To what extent does your company invest time and
money in improving human resource procedures and
practices?
147HR Audit
- To what extent does your company develop, monitor
and evaluate human resource practices? - To what extent does your company emphasize ensure
uniform application of all human resource
policies throughout the company? - To what extent does your company include the HR
director/function in the development of strategic
plans for the company? - Are the HR practices consistent with the
companys mission? - Is this company considered an employer of choice
(check The Most Admired Companies annual
publication by Fortune Magazine)? - Is this company known for progressive and novel
HR practices? Describe and explain.
148HR Audit
- Suggested (not required) structure for your
report - Company Introduction
- Industry and products Market Share Current
Status - Revenue, Number of employees
- Level of internationalization
- History Positives and Setbacks
- Business Strategy - Mission
- HR Practices and their Success
- Strategic Role of HR
- Code of Ethics
- Consistency between Strategy and HR Practices
- Unique HR Aspects
- The number one thing you should know about this
company? - Why we would love (or not) to work for this
company. - Recommendations
149HR Audit
- Appendix Answers to the questions that were
provided with the background information. - The report should not be between 10 and 15 pages
long. It is due the last day of class. - You have 20 minutes for your presentation and 10
minutes for questions and answers. Each team
member must participate in the presentation. - You presentation may, but does not have to,
follow the structure of your report. - Company List
- BP Amoco,
- Motorola
- GM
- Johnson Johnson
- American Airlines
- Southwest Airlines
- Ford
- Arthur Anderson
150Course Summary
- Warren Bennis
- List 10 things that you have learned in this
course. - How will you be able to apply these things?
- How will these things help you in your future
career?