Title: Human%20Resource
1Chapter 6
2Toyota Georgetown
- Weve got nothing, technology-wise, that anyone
else cant have. Theres no secret Toyota
Quality Machine out there. The quality machine is
the workforce -- the team members on the paint
line, the suppliers, the engineers -- everybody
who has a hand in production here takes the
attitude that were making world-class vehicles.
3Key IdeaIntroduction
Businesses are learning that to satisfy
customers, they must first satisfy
employees. Impact of Fredrick Taylor
Scientific Management
4Objectives of HRM
- To build a high-performance workplace and
maintain an environment for quality excellence to
enable employees and the organization to achieve
strategic objectives and adapt to change.
5Key Activities in HRM
- Determine organizations HR needs to build a
high-performance workplace - Assist in design of work systems
- Recruit, select, train develop, counsel,
motivate, and reward employees - Act as liaison with unions government
- Handle other matters of employeewell-being
6Leading Practices (1 of 2)
- Design work and jobs to promote cooperation,
initiative, empowerment, innovation, and
organizational culture - Promote teamwork and skill sharing across work
units and locations - Empower individuals and teams to make decisions
that affect quality and customer satisfaction - Develop effective performance management systems,
compensation, and reward and recognition
approaches
7Leading Practices (2 of 2)
- Effective processes for hiring and career
progression - Make extensive investments in training and
education - Motivate employees to develop and use their full
potential - Maintain a work environment conducive to the
well-being and growth of all employees - Monitor extent and effectiveness of HR practices
and measure employee satisfaction
8Teams
- Team - a small number of people with
complementary skills who are committed to a
common purpose, set of performance goals, and
approach for which they hold themselves mutually
accountable
9Teams
- Cooperation vs. competition among employees
- Teams represent a fundamental shift in how work
is done - Teams lead to higher employee satisfaction and
improvement in quality
10Types of Teams
- Management teams
- Natural work teams
- Self managed teams
- Virtual teams
- Quality circles
- Problem solving teams
- Project teams
11Key IdeaTeams
The three basic functions of quality circles and
problem-solving teams are to identify, analyze,
and solve quality and productivity problems.
12Functions of Teams
13Key IdeaBuilding Effective Teams
The key stages of a teams life cycle are called
forming, storming, norming, performing, and
adjourning.
14Ingredients for Successful Teams (1 of 2 )
- Clarity in team goals
- Improvement plan
- Clearly defined roles
- Clear communication
- Beneficial team behaviors
15Ingredients for Successful Teams (2 of 2)
- Well-defined decision procedures
- Balanced participation
- Established ground rules
- Awareness of group process
- Use of scientific approach
16Six Sigma Project Teams
- Champions senior managers who promote Six Sigma
- Master Black Belts highly trained experts
responsible for strategy, training, mentoring,
deployment, and results. - Black Belts Experts who perform technical
analyses - Green Belts functional employees trained in
introductory Six Sigma tools - Team Members Employees who support specific
projects
17High Performance Work Systems
Compensation and recognition
Work and Job Design
Flexibility Innovation Knowledge and skill
sharing Organizational alignment Customer
focus Rapid response
Health and safety
Empowerment
Suggestion systems
Employee Involvement
Training and Education
Teamwork and Cooperation
18Designing High Performance Work Systems
- Work design - how employees are organized in
formal and informal units (departments, teams,
etc.) - Job design - responsibilities and tasks assigned
to individuals
19Key IdeaWork and Job Design
The design of work should provide individuals
with both the intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
to achieve quality and operational performance
objectives.
20Hackman/Oldham Model
Critical psychological states
Core job characteristics
Outcomes
Skill variety Task identity Task significance
Experienced meaningfulness of work
High motivation High satisfaction High
work effectiveness
Experienced responsibility
Autonomy Feedback from job
Knowledge of actual results
Moderators
21Enhancing Work Design
- Job enlargement expanding workers jobs
- Job rotation having workers learn several tasks
and rotate among them - Job enrichment granting more authority,
responsibility, and autonomy
22Employee Involvement
- Employee Involvement - any activity by which
employees participate in work-related decisions
and improvement activities, with the objectives
of tapping the creative energies of all employees
and improving their motivation
23Key IdeaEmployee Involvement
EI approaches can range from simple sharing of
information or providing input on work-related
issues and making suggestions to self-directed
responsibilities such as setting goals,making
business decisions, and solving problems, often
in cross-functional teams.
24Advantages of EI
- Replaces adversarial mentality with trust and
cooperation - Develops skills and leadership abilities
- Increases morale and commitment
- Fosters creativity and innovation
- Helps people understand quality principles and
instilling them into the organizations culture - Allows employees to solve problems at the source
- Improves quality and productivity
25Suggestion System
- Toyota example
- Employees generate nearly 3 million ideas each
year, of which 85 percent are implemented by
management.
26Empowerment
- Giving people authority to make decisions based
on what they feel is right, to have control over
their work, to take risks and learn from
mistakes, and to promote change.
A sincere belief and trust in people.
27Successful Empowerment
- Provide education, resources, and encouragement
- Remove restrictive policies/procedures
- Foster an atmosphere of trust
- Share information freely
- Make work valuable
- Train managers in hands-off leadership
- Train employees in allowed latitude
28Empowerment
- Leaders and managers must relinquish some of the
power and authority. - Management fear and resistance
- Advantages of EI
- It is not for everyone
29Key IdeaRecruitment
Meeting and exceeding customer expectations
begins with hiring the right people whose skills
and attitudes will support and enhance the
organizations objectives.
30Training and Education
- Quality awareness
- Leadership
- Project management
- Communications
- Teamwork
- Problem solving
- Interpreting and using data
- Meeting customer requirements
- Process analysis
- Process simplification
- Waste reduction
- Cycle time reduction
- Error proofing
31Key IdeaTraining and Education
Customer needs and strategic directions should
drive training strategies. It is an essential
requirement. It is one of the largest initial
cost in a TQ initiative.
32Compensation
- The objective of a good compensation system
should be attract, retain and not demotivate
employees. - Always a sticky issue.
33Compensation and Recognition
- Compensation
- Merit versus capability/performance based plans
- Gainsharing
- Recognition
- Monetary or non-monetary
- Formal or informal
- Individual or group
34Key IdeaRecognition
Recognition provides a visible means of promoting
quality efforts and telling employees that the
organization values their efforts, which
stimulates their motivation to improve.
35Effective Recognition and Reward Strategies
- Give both individual and team awards
- Involve everyone
- Tie rewards to quality
- Allow peers and customers to nominate and
recognize superior performance - Publicize extensively
- Make recognition fun
36Motivation
- Motivation - an individuals response to a felt
need - Theories
- Content Theories (Maslow MacGregor Herzberg)
- Process Theories (Vroom Porter Lawler)
- Environmentally-based Theories (Skinner Adams
Bandura, Snyder, Williams)
37Key IdeaMotivation
There is no such thing as an unmotivated
employee, but the system within which people work
can either seriously impede motivation or enhance
it.
38Performance Appraisal
- How you are measured is how you perform!
- Conventional appraisal systems
- Focus on short-term results and individual
behavior fail to deal with uncontrollable
factors - New approaches
- Focus on company goals such as quality and
behaviors like teamwork - 360-degree feedback mastery descriptions
39Key IdeaPerformance Appraisal
Performance appraisals are most effective when
they are based on the objectives that support the
strategic directions of the organization, best
practices, and continuous improvement.
40Measuring Employee Satisfaction and Effectiveness
- Satisfaction
- Quality of worklife, teamwork, communications,
training, leadership, compensation, benefits,
internal suppliers and customers - Effectiveness
- Team and individual behaviors cost, quality, and
productivity improvements employee turnover
suggestions training effectiveness
41Key IdeaMeasuring employee
HR measures allow companies to predict customer
satisfaction, identify those issues that have the
greatest impact on business performance, and
allocate appropriate resources.
42Human Resources in the Baldrige Award Criteria
- The Human Resource Focus Category examines how an
organizations work systems and employee learning
and motivation enable employees to develop and
utilize their full potential in alignment with
the organization s overall objectives and action
plans, and how the organization builds and
maintains a work environment and an employee
support climate conducive to performance
excellence and to personal and organizational
growth. - 5.1 Work Systems
- a. Organization and Management of Work
- b. Employee Performance Management System
- c. Hiring and Career Progression
- 5.2 Employee Learning and Motivation
- a. Employee Education, Training, and
Development - b. Motivation and Career Development
- 5.3 Employee Well-Being and Satisfaction
- a. Work Environment
- b. Employee Support and Satisfaction