Human Resource
Bona Fide Occupational
A business characteristic providing a legitimate reason why an employer can exclude persons on otherwise illegal bases of consideration. Example: Asians to wait on customers in a Chinese restaurant; Catholics to serve in certain religious-based positions
Voluntary absenteeism
Avoidable without justifiable cause (e.g., faking illness)
Competency-Based Job Analysis
Competencies: Individual capabilities linked to enhanced performance by individuals or teams Varies widely from organization to organization
equal employment opportunity (EEO)
deals with the concept of discrimination and is the law of managing diversity
Quid Pro Quo
linking employment outcomes to the individual's granting of sexual favors.
Balanced Score cards
measures the strategic performance of organizations on four persectives: Financial Internal Customer Learning and growth
Human resource strategic plan
should be based on the overall strategic plan
discrimination
"Recognizing differences among items or people." Illegal in employment-related situations
FTE (Full Time Equivalents)
A measure equal to one person working full-time for a year
Specialist
A person with in-depth knowledge and expertise in a limited area of HR.
Generalist
A person with responsibility for performing a variety of HR activities.
burden proof
A plaintiff charging discrimination: Must be a protected-class member Must prove that disparate impact or disparate treatment existed.
Business Necessity
A practice that is necessary for safe and efficient organizational operations.
Affirmative action
A requirement for federal government contractors with more than 50 employees and over $50,000 in government contracts annually to formally document the inclusion of women and racial minorities in the workforce.
Disparate treatment
A situation that exists when protected-class members are treated differently from others.
Job analysis
A systematic way of gathering and analyzing information about the content, context, and the human requirements of jobs.
Sexual Harrasment
Actions that are sexually directed, are unwanted, and subject the worker to adverse employment conditions or create a hostile work environment.
Absenteeism
Any failure to report for work as scheduled or to stay at work when scheduled.
Personality Tests
Assess the degree to which candidates' attributes match specific job criteria.
selection
Choosing individuals with qualifications
Glass Ceiling
Discriminatory practices that have prevented women and other protected-class members from advancing to executive-level jobs.
Retaliation
EEO laws prohibit employers from taking punitive actions against individuals exercising legal rights.
Negligent Hiring
Employer fails to check an employee's background and the employee later injures someone on the job
Job Description
Identification of the tasks, duties, and responsibilities of a job
protected class
Individuals within a group identified for protection under equal employment laws and regulation.
Cognitive Ability Tests
Measure an individual's thinking, memory, reasoning, and verbal and mathematical abilities.
Negligent Retention
Negligent Retention
disparate impact
Occurs when substantial underrepresentation of protected-class members results from employment decisions that work to their disadvantage.
individual performance
P = A * E * S P = Performance A = Ability E= Effort S = Support
undue hardship
Significant difficulty or expense imposed on an employer in making an accommodation for individuals with disabilities.
Task-based job analysis
Task: a distinct, identifiable work activity composed of motions Duty: a larger work segment composed of several tasks that are performed by an individual Responsibilities: obligations to perform certain tasks and duties
job specifications
The knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) an individual needs to perform a job satisfactorily.
Involuntary absenteeism
Unavoidable with understandable cause (e.g., actual illness)
Structured Interview
Use a set of standardized questions asked of all job applicants. Useful for initial screening and comparisons
ROI (Return of Investment)
a calculation showing the value of expenditures for HR activities
3 HR Roles
administrative operational, employee advocate, and strategic
Hostile Environment
an individual's performance or psychological well-being is unreasonably affected by intimidating or offensive working conditions
HRMS (human resource management system)
an integrated system provided information used by HR management in decision making.
KSA (Knowledge skills and ability)
are collected and used to provide a basis for determining what capabilities will be needed in the future.
Benchmarking
compares specific measures of performance against data on those measures on other organizations.
civil rights act of 1964
created the equal employment commission to enforce anti-discrimination laws.
staffing
emphasizes the need to provide an adequate supply of qualified individuals to fill the jobs in an organization
WARN Act (Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification)
is a federal law that provides 60-day notice to employees and communities of pending downsizing, plant closings, hiring freezes and layoffs.
Organization Culture
is a pattern of shared values and beliefs of a work force.
Human Resource Management
is management systems to ensure that human talent is used effectively and efficiently
Turnover
is the process in which employees leave an organization and have to be replaced
psychological contract
refers to the unwritten expectations employees and employers have about the nature of their work relationships.
Individual Motivation
the desire within a person causing that person to act.
labor market
the external supply pool from which organizations attract their employees
EVA (Economic Value Added)
the net operating profit of a firm after the cost of capital is deducted
recruiting
the process of generating a pool of qualified applicants for organizational jobs