HR MANA Test 1

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HR Triad

which consists of HR professionals, line managers, and all the other employees who are affected by HR policies and practices

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

which is helping improve society and making a positive contribution to the communities that are home to the company employees and customers

Managing with Ethics and CSR

Code of ethics: -Asking questions, raising concerns -Bribery and corruption -Conflicts of interest -Correct financial reporting -Equal opportunity practices -Gifts and hospitality -Safeguarding information Corporate Social Responsibility: helping improve society and making a positive contribution to the communities that are home to the company employees and customers

Intangible Human Assets

comparatively social in nature and include such organizational characteristics as an employer-of-choice reputation, the depth of employee talent and loyalty, and the ability to innovate and change.

Managing with Teams

(1) Customers -Improved quality -Faster response times -Innovation in products and services (2) Employers -Expand informal networks -Improve understanding of the business -Multicultural learning opportunities

The HR Triad

(1) HR Professionals: people with substantial specialized and technical knowledge of HR issues, laws, and practices -Society for Human Resource Managers (SHRM) -Human Resource Certification Institute (HCI) (2) Line managers -Decentralization: pros and cons (3) Employees who are affected by HR polices and practices

Five Special Themes

(1) Managing with team (2) Managing with diversity and inclusion (3) Managing with ethics and corporate social responsibility (4) Managing with new technologies (5) Managing with metrics and analytics

Managing with New Technologies

(1) Social Media Recruiting, training, engaging employees, communication/collaboration (2) Mobile Technologies -Clock-in, check benefits, change work schedules, take training courses, monitor policy updates (3) Gamification -Performance management and training

What are two ways companies are striving to serve society and shareholders at the same time?

(1) Through scrupulous legal compliance (2) Strong community relationships

Age Differences

(1) Traditionlists (1929-1945) -disciplined, hardworking, sense of obligation, need to save and a preference for formality (2) Baby Boomers (1946-1964) -Healthy, wellness, personal growth, strong sense of entitlement (3) Generation X (1964-1981) -Work-life balance, not loyal to companies, continuous learning and skill development, some comfort with change and technology (4) Millennials (1982-1999) -Comfort with change and innovation, preference for positive and instant feedback

HRM strategies can improve firm performance in at least 4 ways:

(1) by shaping employee behaviors so that they support business strategies (2) by substantially impacting labor costs (3) by enhancing motivation and productivity (4) by affecting the organization's ability to attract and retain talent

Company Culture

-Company culture: social glue; assumptions, values, norms -Vision: future of the company -Mission statement: how it aims to address interests of stakeholders -Values: Enduring beliefs, how employees are expected to behave -Company subcultures: (1) International firms, M&A, different divisions, occupations, age groups (2)Diverse opinions, change status quo (3) Glass ceiling

Socio-Cultural Landscape

-Refers to the attitudes and values of society -Attitudes and values of people in the workforce can vary substantially across nations and are also reflected in differences in national cultures

Human Resource Management Strategy

-A set of HR activities designed to gain a competitive advantage -HR: human capital or talent Helps the organization ensure that employees are focused on the most important strategic outcome by: -shaping employee behaviors -impacting labor costs -enhancing motivation and productivity -attracting and retaining talent

Other Employees: Roles and Responsibilities to Ensure Fair Treatment and Legal Compliance

-Accept and fulfill responsibilities to behave fairly toward your colleague and employer -Be informed about the legal landscape and behave in accordance with it -Work with HR professionals to establish procedures for dealing fairly with workplace issues -Report discriminatory or other illegal behavior among subordinates, colleagues, or superiors to an HR professional -Participate in diversity training and provide feedback on its effectiveness and other diversity and inclusion initiatives -Inform managers of any disabilities requiring accommodation

Demographic Factors

-Age, gender, ethnicity, income, and education -Consumers and labor market -Future labor market: slow growth, decrease in skills availability, and changing ethnic and age composition -Education workforce: 50% of college students can be found globally (customer service to finance & accounting)

Satisfying Multiple Stakeholders

-Appropriate HR practices make it possible to create a win-win situation, even when conflicting interests of stakeholders exist

HRM Strategy and Implementation

-Change increases uncertainity, requires learning -Resistance to change: fear, misunderstanding, cynicism -Overcome resistance: (1) Involving employees: task forces, focus groups, surveys, hotlines (2) Establishing accountability: incetive pay, bonuses (3) Show respect -Review and Revise

Types of Cultures

-Clan -Entrepreneurial -Bureaucratic -Market

Diversity and Inclusion

-Culture of Inclusion (1) Recruiting (2) Community outreach (3) Aligning diversity with business goals (4) Increasing diversity in higher-level positions (5) Collecting metrics -Employee Resource Groups (1) Community outreach (2) Guest speakers (3) Mentoring and educational opportunities (4) Shaping company policies (5) Providing input about products and services

Discrimination Allegations

-Disparate treatment -Disparate impact -Job relatedness -Business necessity -Bona fide occupational qualifications -Bona fide seniority system

Fairness

-Distributive justice: outcomes I receive vs. outcomes others receive -Procedural justice: fairness of the process -Interaction Justice: Employees' feelings about how managers are sensitive to the situations, giving them the information they need, and treat them respectfully -Negative Outcomes: (1) Change in work attitudes (2) Change in work behaviors (3) Changes in overall health and psychological well-being (4) Lawsuits

External Environment

-Economic factors -Demographic factors -Socio-Cultural factors -Political factors -The political and legal landscape -Unions -The global landscape

HR Professionals: Roles and Responsibilities to ensure Fair Treatment and Legal Compliance

-Encourage the use of social views of fairness rather than adopting a narrow legalistic model -Stay up-to-date about new developments in the legal landscape; consult with legal experts if needed -Develop and help implement policies that support fair and ethical behavior by everyone in the organization -Administer grievance procedures and participate in alternative dispute resolution activities -Design, deliver, and evaluate diversity training and other diversity and inclusion activities -Help keep employer and employee rights and responsibilities in balance -Articulate and oversee organizational compliance with the ADA

Stakeholders of the Organization: Owners and Investors

-Financial Returns -Corporate reputation -Long-term survival

Bureaucratic Culture

-Following rules -Respect for hierarchy -Control and efficacy produce effectiveness

High Commitment HRM Strategy Characteristics

-General job descriptions -High skill requirement -Extensive training focused on performance -Competitive wages -Pay is linked closely to performance -Generous benefits -Self managed teams -High levels of employee participation in decision making -High job security for good performers

Market Culture

-Goal achievement -Less concern for personal relationship -Competition produces effectiveness

Stakeholders of the Organization: Organization Members

-Good pay and benefits -Good quality of work life -Long-term employability

Settling Disputes

-Grievance procedure -Mediation and arbitration -Lawsuits: (1) Monetary damages (2) Settlement agreements

Business Strategies

-How a particular business unit will compete -Actions intended to achieve a goal -High quality -Low cost -Customer service ("Making each store the heart of the local neighborhood) -Innovation

Management with Metrics and Analytics

-Instead of using "gut instincts," managers use metrics and analytics to make HR decisions -Metrics: evaluate performance of individuals, departments, the organization overall and of specific HR activities -Analytics: Help show the relationship among various indicators (metrics)

Stakeholders of the Organization: Society

-Legal compliance -Social Responsibility -Ethnical practices

Clan Culture

-Loyal -Traditional -Human development procedures effectivness

Strategic Importance of Managing HR

-Managing HR successfully can provide organizations with effective solutions to managing various demands of multiple stakeholdes

Examples of Stakeholdes

-Owners -Investors -Customers -Employees -Society -Suppliers -Unions -Joint-Ventures

Political Landscape

-Politics and legal regulations go hand-in-hand because politicians enact and enforce laws -As government administrations come and go, businesses must constantly analyze the implications of their philosophies and policies

Line Managers: Roles and Responsibilities to Ensure Fair Treatment and Legal Compliance

-Proactively seek to understand and respond to employees' fairness concerns -Stay informed about the legal landscape and behave in accordance with it -Establish and review policies to ensure fair treatment of employees in collaboration with HR professionals -Learn the steps involved in the organization's grievance procedures and follow them -Participate in diversity training programs and other diversity and inclusion activities -Intervene if you observe discriminatory or other illegal or unethical behavior among subordinates, collegues, or superiors -Facilitate the organizations accommodations to the ADA

Stakeholders of the Organization: Customer

-Quality -Speed and responsiveness -Low Prices -Innovation -Convienience

Demographic Landscape

-Refers to the characteristics of the people where the company does business -These characteristics include the populations age, gender, ethnicity, income and education -Demographic characteristics describe the nature of an organization's consumers, community, and, most relevant to an HRM context, an organization's labor market

Stakeholders of the Organization: Other Organizations (suppliers, unions, alliance, partners)

-Reliability -Trustworthiness -Collaborative problem solving

What are ways to improve customer satisfaction?

-Requires finding ways to improve the company's ability to understand the customer's perspective -Ex: through hiring practices, a company can make sure that its employees are demographically similar to customes

Technology

-Robotics -Virtual teams: (1) Challenge in creating a sense of org culture (2) Must provide training (3) Strong communicators (4) Self-starters -Human Resource Information Systems: gathering, analyzing, and distributing data about employees -e-HRM: conducting HR activities and social networking among employees

High Control HRM Strategy Characteristics

-Specific job descriptions -Low skill requirement -Limited training -Low wages -Pay is linked closely to performance -Minimal benefits -Intense supervision -Low levels of employee participation in decision making -Low job security

Suppliers

-Suppliers provide the resources a company needs to conduct its business -The resources needed by most companies include material and equipment, information, and people

Managing with Diversity and Inclusion

-Surface level and deep-level diversity -Management practices must be sensitive to issues such as religion, sexual orientation, marital and family status, age, military service, etc -Positive impact on: (1) Legal compliance (2) Employee commitment (3) Customer satisfaction (4) Firm reputation (5) Financial and operational performance

Entrepreneurial Culture

-Taking risks -Creativity -Innovativness produces effectiveness

Political Factors

-Tax policies -Trade policies -Immigration policies -Regulations -Advocacy groups

Internal Environment

-Technology -Company culture -Business Strategies -Financial, organizational, reputational, and human resources

Economic Landscape

-The economic landscape has the potential to greatly impact organizations, including their very survival -Refers to the economic conditions in which firms compete -The nature of the economy and its direction can be measured through a number of indicators including interest rates, unemployment rates, inflation rates, consumer confidence index, productivity measures, gross national products, industry sales and so forth

Activities for Managing Human Resources

-The formal HR policies developed by the company as well as the ways these policies are implemented in the daily practices of managers -Job analysis and competency modeling -Workforce planning, recruitment and retention -Selecting employees -Training and development -Performance management -Total compensation -Performance-based pay -Benefits -Workplace safety, health and well-being

Alliance Partners

-Though cooperative alliances with other firms, a company seeks to achieve goals that are common to al members of the alliance -Some alliances are formed to influence government actions -Research and development needs are anoher common reason for alliance formatons

Many aspects of HR management contribute to a good quality of working life which include:

-Training and development to improve employee's skills and knowledge -Job designs that allow employees to really use their knowledge of skills -Management practices that give employees responsibility for important decisions -Selction and promotion systems that ensure fair and equitable treatment -Safe and healthy physical and psychological environmets -Work organized around teams

Unions

-Unions may also serve as suppliers of people -When employees are represented by a union, the employer involves the union in joint discussions on issues such as improving productivity, outsourcing polices, improving safety, compensation, benefits, and various other conditions of work

The many HR policies and practices that companies need to understand and create include:

-Using job analysis and competency modeling -Managing talent through workforce planning, recruitment, and retention -Selecting employees to fit the job and the organization -Training and developing a competitive workforce -Conducting performance management -Developing an approach to total compensation -Using performance-based pay to achieve strategic objectives -Providing benefits -Promoting workplace safety

Socio-Cultural Factors

-Work-life balance -Pay levels -Benefits -Diversity and inclusion

Business Necessity

A defense when an employer can show that the employment decision was based on a factor that is essential to the safe operation of the business

Bona Fide Seniority System

A defense when employment decisions such as promotions, job assignments, and layoffs are made on the basis of seniority

Bona Fide Occupational Qualification (BFOQ)

A defense when practices are "reasonably necessary to the normal operations of that particular business or enterprise"

Disparate Impact (or adverse impact)

A legal term used to refer to unequal and discriminatory treatment based on a characteristic that is associated with being a member or a protected group

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)

Agency of the Department of Justice charged with enforcing Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other anti-discrimination laws

Mediation

All concerned parties present their case to a third-party neutral: the mediator

Competitive Advantage

All or some of the customers prefer their products/service

Human Resources

Are all of the people who currently contribute to doing the work of the organization, as well as those who potentially could contribute in the future, and those who have contributed in the recent past

Sustainable Competitive Advantage

Competitive advantage that is difficult to understand and/or copy Often, HR are the source of sustainable competitive advantage--employees are the source of added value Goal of HR management is to maximize the value added by ALL employees

Harrasment

Conduct that creates a hostile, intimidating, or offensive work environment

Mission Statement

Defines a company's business and provides a clear view of what the company is trying to accomplish

Horizontal Alignment

Exists when all of the HR policies and practices that comprise the HRM system are consistent with each other and so present a coherent message to employees concerning how they should behave while at work

Vertical Alignment

Exists when the HRM system fit with all elements of the internal environment(the culture, business strategy, technology and so on) and all elements of the external environment (economic landscape, demographic landscape, etc.)

Triple Bottom Line

Financial, environmental, and social performance

Financial, Organization, Reputation, and HR

Financial: current available capital and ability to borrow -Organizational: current reporting structure, policies, and procedures -Reputation: Reputation with customers, suppliers, potential employees -HR: ability to implment

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Forbids discrimination on the basis of sex, race, color, religion, or national origin in all areas of the employment relationship

Corporate Social Responsibility

Helping improve society and making a positive contribution to the communities that are home to the company employees and customers

Stakeholders

Individuals or groups with interests, rights, or ownership in an organization and its activities

Affirmative Action Programs (AAPs)

Intended to reduce employment discrimination or to correct underutilization of qualified members of protected groups in an organization's relevant labor market

Abritration

Is a more formal process for alternative dispute resolution that includes third-parties who render a judgement, yet is not so formal that rules of a court must be followed

Vision

Is top management's view of the kind of company it is trying to create

Triple Bottom Line Definition

Looks at an organizational performance as a combination of financial, environmental, ad social performance

Quid pro Quo sexual harassment

Obtaining favors of a sexual nature in exchange or conditions of employment such as a promotion, pay increase, etc.

Constructive Discharge

Occurs when working conditions become so unbearable that a reasonable person feels compelled to quit

Procedural Justice

Perceptions about fairness in the process used to determine outcomes

Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives

Policies and practices that an organization adopts voluntarily (not because of legal requirements) for the purpose of ensuring that all members of a diverse workforce feel they are treated fairly

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

Prohibits private employers, state and local governments, employment agencies, and labor unions from discriminating against qualified individuals with disabilities in job application procedures, hiring, firing, advancement, compensation, job training, and other terms and conditions, and privileges of employment

Sex-Plus Discrimination

Putting special restrictions on one protected group (generally women)

Legal Precedents

Refer back to important decisions that were made in the past and use these as the basis for making a decision in a new case

Strategy Implementation

Refers to putting the chosen strategic plans into action

HR Analytics

Refers to the statistical and quantitative analysis of HR metrics in order to discover relationships between metrics and predict HR related outcomes

Affirmative Action Goals and Timetables

Specify how the organization plans to correct any underutilization of protected groups

Strategic HR objectives

State in a quantitative or qualitative termswhat is to be achieved with regard to the firm's human resources

Sustainability

The commitment of an organization to balance financial performance with contributions to the quality of their employees, society at large, and the environment

Settlement Agreement

The defendant does not admit to wrongdoing but nevertheless agrees to pay money to the plaintiff or plaintiffs

Values

The strong enduring beliefs and tenets that the company holds dear, that help to define the company, and that differentiate it from other companies

Discrimination

The unequal treatment of persons or groups that is unfair, improper, or unjustifiable and based on an individual charactersitic

Human Resource Information System (HRIS)

When computer technologies are used to gather, analyze, and distribute information about job applicants and employees

Distributive Justice

When employees believe that they outcomes they experience are fair in comparison to the outcomes of others

Job Relatedness

a defense against discrimination claims in which the firm must show that the decision was made for job related reasons

The Glass Ceiling

a metaphor for an apparent barrier that keeps women from reaching upper levels of management in corporations

Business Strategy

a set of integrated and coordinated commitments and actions intended to achieve stated business goals

Human Resource Certification Institute (HRCI)

a well-known certification provider for HR professionals -Are 6 different types

Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM)

an association for HR professionals headquartered in the US that has local chapters in most cities, as well as many student chapters at colleges and universities

HR Portals

are a single access point to all HR-related digital content and apps

HR Metrics

are measurements used to assess progress against HR objectives and short-term goals

Utilization Analysis

determines the number of minorities and women employed (utilized) in each type of job in the organization

Culture of Inclusion

employers strive to create a company culture in which everyone feels equally integrated into the larger system

Grievance Procedures

encourage employees to voice their concerns to the company instead of to the courts, and they encourage employees to seek constructive resolutions without litigation

Company Subculture

exists when assumptions, values and norms are shared by some (but not all) organizational members.

Customized HRM strategy

focuses on achieving very specific outcomes of most importance to a particular company, taking into account all elements of the internal and external envirnment

Employee Resource Group

groups that are formally supported by the company to help employees from underrepresented groups or those who share common interests (or backgrounds) network with each other and other employees who support them and diversity

Availability Analysis

measures how many minorities and women are available to work in the relevant labor market of an organization

Human Resource Activities

include the formal HR policies developed by the company as well as the actual ways these policies are implemented in the daily practices of supervisors and managers

Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)

involves making an agreement to forego litigation and instead resolve disputes by either internal or external mediation or arbitration

World Federation of People Management Associations (WFPMA)

links country and region specific professional associations around the world -Recognizes the unique and extensive body of professional knowledge needed by HR professionals working in multinational companies

Human Resource Professionals

people with substantial specialized and technical knowledge of HR issues, laws, policies, and practices

Interactional Justice

perceptions of employee's feelings about whether managers are sensitive to their situations give them the information they need, and treat them politely and respectfully

Tangible Assets

relatively easy to measure and include such assets as inventory, equipment, real estate, and financial assets.

HR profession's code of ethics

states that HR professionals must regard the obligation to implement public objectives and protect the public interest as more important than blind loyalty to an employer's preferences.

Gamification

takes the addictive and competitive elements of games and applies the to HR related activities

Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP)

the agency responsible for overseeing the employment practices of federal contractors and enforcing relevant federal regulations

Economic Cycles

the fluctuations in economic activity that occur over long periods of time in developed market economies.

Strategy Formulation

the process of determining the best course of action to achieve competitive advantage

e-HRM

the use of information technologies for both conducting human resources management activities and for social networking among employees

Human Resource Management System

when an organization systematically understands, creates, coordinates, align and integrates all of their policies and practices.

Strategic Alignment

when an organization's HRM system supports and facilitates the behaviors and competencies needed for organizational success


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