BA 232 Business Management Chapter 9
technology-based training methods
-CD-ROM/DVD/videotapes/audiotapes -Videoconferencing/teleconferencing/satellite TV -E-Learning
the legal environment of HRM
1. Equal Employment Opportunity 2. Compensation and Benefits 3. Labor Relations 4. Health and Safety
work unit orientation
1. familiarize the employee with the goals of the work unit, 2. clarifies how his or her job contributes to the unit goals, 3. and includes an introduction of his or her new co-workers
tips for managers- being a good interviewer
1.review the job description and the job specification to help in assessing the applicant 2. prepare a structured set of questions to ask all applicants for the job. 3. review an applicant's resume before meeting them 4. Ask questions and listen 5. write the evaluation of the interview while it is fresh in your mind.
human resource inventory
A report listing important information about employees such as name, education, training, skills, languages spoken, and so forth
Ethnicity
A social division based on national origin, religion, language, and often race.
job specification
A written statement that describes the minimum qualifications a person must have to perform the job successfully
accept errors
Accepting candidates who would later prove to be poor performers
performance simulation tests
Are made up of actual job behaviors. Best know performance simulation test is known as work sampling. Well-constructed performance-simulations tests are valid predictors.
Employment Planning for a manager
Assessing current human resources and future human resource needs; developing a program to meet future human resource needs.The addition of staff through recruitment, the reduction of staff through downsizing, and selection.
family-friendly benefits
Benefits that provide a wide range of scheduling options and allow employees more flexibility at work, accommodating their needs for work-life balance
variable pay
Compensation linked directly to individual, team, or organizational performance
The Human Resource Management Process
Consists of these interrelated activities: recruitment, selection, training, compensation, and supervision. The goals are to obtain, develop, and retain employees.
three approaches to multi-person comparison.
Group order ranking- evaluating manager places employees into classifications individual ranking approach- highest to lowest performance levels paired comparison approach-everyone compared with everyone else. Each employee compared to every other employee.
race
Identity with a group of people descended from a biological ancestor
Employee Benefits
Indirect and non-cash compensation in addition to their normal wages or salaries paid to an employee. Some benefits are mandated by law (such as social security, unemployment compensation, and workers compensation), others vary from firm to firm or industry to industry (such as health insurance, life insurance, medical plan, paid vacation, pension, and gratuity).
orientation of new employees
Orientation- training designed to prepare employees to perform their jobs effectively, learn about their organization, and establish work relationships. The objectives include making new employees familiar with the organization's rules, policies and procedures
Skill-Based Pay Systems
Pay structure that set pay according to the employee's levels of skill or knowledge and what they are capable of doing (KSA) Knowledge skills and abilities.
Affirmative Action Programs
Programs that ensure that decisions and practices enhance the employment, upgrading, and retention of members of protected groups
orientation and training and development
Programs that introduce new employees to their job, the people they will be working with, and the organization. Adapt associates to the organization and ensure job skills and knowledge are kept current.
Job orientation
Provides new employees with basic information about the organization for which they are working. Clarify duties and responsibilities. correct unrealistic expectations new employees might hold about the job.
Eight important HRM activities
Strategic hr planning recruitment and downsizing selection orientation training and development performance management compensation and benefits safety and health
Inclusion
The achievement of a work environment in which all individuals are treated fairly and respectfully, have equal opportunities and resources, and can contribute fully to the organization's success.
Reliability
The degree to which a selection device measures the same thing constantly.
Employment Planning
The process by which managers ensure they have the right numbers and kinds of people in the right places at the right time
Validity
The proven relationship between a selection device and some relevant criterion.
determining whether employee training is needed
What are organizational goals and what tasks need to be done to complete this? What skills or knowledge needed, behaviors necessary for job holder to perform complete duties. Evolving workplace.
employee training
a learning experience that seeks a relatively permanent change in employees by improving their ability to perform on the job
Realistic Job Preview (RJP)
a preview of a job that provides both positive and negative information about the job and the company
Employee Counseling
a process designed to help employees overcome performance-related problems
Job Analysis
a purposeful, systematic process for collecting information on the important work-related aspects of a job. An assessment that defines jobs and behaviors necessary to perform them
lay-off survivor sickness
a set of attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors of employees who survive layoffs
performance management system
a system that establishes performance standards that are used to evaluate employee performance
job description
a written statement that describes a job
discipline
actions taken by a manager to enforce an organization's standards and regulations
360-degree appraisal
an appraisal device that seeks feedback from a variety of sources for the person being rated
sexual harassment
any unwanted remark, behavior, or touch that has sexual content that affects an individual's employment,performance, or work environment.
behavioral or situational interview
applicants are observed how they behave and what they do in situations. 8x more effective in predicting successful job performance.
work-life balance
efforts to help employees balance the competing demands of their personal and professional lives
factors influencing pay and benefits
employee tenure and performance, kind of job, kind of business, unionization?, labor or capital intensive, management philosophy, geographical location, company profitability, size of the company,
board representatives
employees who sit on a company's board of directors and represent the interests of the firm's employees
Hugo Munsterberg was known as ____.
father of industrial psychology effectively using workers to achieve economic production.
Downsizing Options
firing, layoffs, attrition, transfers, reduced workweeks, early retirements, job sharing
organizational orientation
general orientation that presents topics of relevance and interest to all employees about organization's goals and interests, history, philosophy, procedures, rules, and clarifies relevant HR policies. (work hours, pay procedures, overtime requirements)
work councils
groups of nominated or elected employees who must be consulted when management makes decisions involving personnel
Last steps in HRM process
identify performance goals, correct performance problems if necessary, help employees sustain high levels of performance over their entire work career. (performance appraisals, compensation, and benefits, safety and health)
Methods of Recruiting Employees
internet/social media Employee referrals company web site college recruiting/job fairs professional recruiting organizations
contingent jobs
jobs that are temporary and not expected to last
All HRM processes influenced by what outside factors
legislation,diversity, work process, unions, environment,downsizing, restructuring
reject errors
rejecting candidates who would have performed successfully on the job
selection process
screening job applicants to ensure that the most appropriate candidates are hired. the major intent of any selection activity is to reduce the probability of making reject errors or accept errors while increasing the probability of making correct decisions.
Human Resource Management
the management function concerned with getting,training, motivating,and keeping competent employees.
workforce diversity
the ways in which people in an organization are different from and similar to one another in terms of gender,age, race, sexual orientation, ethnicity,cultural background, physical abilities or disabilities.
two most common forms of representative participation
work councils and board representatives
specific performance appraisals methods
written essay critical incidents adjective rating scales bars MBO 360- degree appraisal multi-person compares one another- only one not absolute measuring device.
Traditional Training Methods
• On-the-job • Job rotation • Mentoring and coaching • Experiential exercises • Workbooks/manuals • Classroom lectures