SHRM - People

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Salary Data - Leveling

Adjusts salaries when surveyed jobs are similar but not identical to jobs in the org

Growth Strategy: Turnkey operation

An existing facility and its operations are acquired and run by the purchaser without major changes.

Growth Strategy: Management contract

Another company is brought in to manage and run the daily operations of the local business. Decisions about financing and ownership reside with the host-country owners.

Bias

When an appraiser's values, beliefs, or prejudices distort ratings (either consciously or unconsciously).

Leniency

When appraisers do not want to give low scores.

Monthly voluntary turnover rate

When you see an increased trend in voluntary turnover, this usually correlates to low engagement

Successive Approximation Model

a version of ADDIE that gains feedback and builds models earlier in the process (preparation, iterative design, iterative development)

Vision statement

a vivid, guiding image of the organization's desired future—the future it hopes to attain through its strategy. It should inspire & motivate. Can be aspirational.

Job description

a written description of a job and its essential functions and requirements, including tasks, knowledge, skills, abilities, responsibilities, and reporting structure.

Leading indicator

action in this area can change future performance and help achieve future success Leading indicators are the best indicators of how the strategy is performing

Career planning

actions and activities individuals perform to give direction to their work lives. Focus on individual

Value drivers

actions, processes, or results that are needed to deliver a desired value.

Job enrichment

added depth of responsibilities in a job

Business strategy

addresses the way in which the enterprise will relate to its industry and marketplace—how it will define its particular value to its customers.

Team learning

aligning and developing the capacity of a team to create the results its members desire.

Employee life cycle

all of the activities associated with an employee's tenure in an organization (common phases = recruitment, integration, development, & transition)

Total rewards

all of the direct & indirect remuneration approaches used to attract, recognize, and retain workers. Contains direct (pay systems) & indirect (benefits & recognition) comp Compensatory time off is considered indirect compensation. Cash recognition and achievement awards (gift cards), overtime pay, and cash bonuses are all considered direct compensation.

Compensation

all other financial returns (beyond any tangible benefits payments or services), including salary and allowances

Job rotation

also known as cross-training, refers to employee movement between different jobs.

Balanced scorecard

an approach to identify KPIs and make sure that objectives used to measure performance are strategically aligned to the various sources of value (finance, customers, internal business processes, and learning & growth) It takes into consideration such intangibles as whether a business process has been improved or employees have learned new skills. It can be used in a single department or throughout the organization.

Learning management system (LMS)

an electronic system that holds course content information and suggested curriculum and certification paths

ADDIE Model

an instructional design model conducive to any type of learning style (ADDIE = Analysis of needs, design, development, implementation, and evaluation)

Employee survey

an instrument used to collect and assess information on employee engagement, satisfaction, and perceptions surrounding the work environment.

Selection screening

analyzing the candidates' application forms, curricula vitae, and résumés to locate the most-qualified candidates for an open job

Realistic job preview (RJP)

any part of the selection process that provides an applicant with honest and complete information about a job and the work environment

Discretionary method

applicant characteristics that are assessed are typically very subjective and rely heavily on the intuition of the decision maker.

Focus strategies

apply cost leadership or differentiation within narrow industry segments or niches.

Cross cultural assessment tools

cross-cultural adaptability inventory, cultural orientations indicator, intercultural development inventory, SAGE (self-assessment for global endeavors)

Revenue per employee

decrease in revenue per employee may correlate to decrease in engagement Total revenue/total number of employees

Planning

define strategic alignment, create a charter, define deliverables, create project schedule, assemble a team

Corporate strategy

defines the scope of the firm in terms of the industries and markets in which it competes (global expansion? Vertical integration? Diversification?) Growth is not a strategy, but is a strategic goal

Differential/variable pay

depends on performance, not added to base pay, example = hazard pay, shift pay, emergency-shift pay, overtime, etc.

Lagging indicator

describes effects that have already occurred and cannot be changed

Pay compression, or salary compression

describes situations where there is only a small difference in pay between employees regardless of their experience, skills, level, or seniority.

Behaviorally anchored rating scale (BARS)

describing examples of desirable & undesirable behavior, and then examples are measured against a scale of performance levels

Selection interviews

designed to probe areas of interest to the interviewer in order to determine how well the candidate meets the needs of the organization.

Nonessential functions

desirable, but not necessary, aspects of the job.

Job evaluation

determines the value and price of a job in order to place and compare it within an organization as well as attract and retain employees in a competitive environment

Comparative methods

directly compare performance of each employee with that of others (ranking, paired-comparison, forced distribution)

Employee engagement survey

focuses more on job satisfaction, commitment, and morale

Lean Project management

focuses on eliminating waste by maintaining focus on intended value of project, empowering team to make decisions, analyzing & solving problems, and continuous learning

PESTLE analysis

for political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental categories

Sourcing

generates a pool of qualified & diverse applicants, is a precursor to recruiting.

Developmental activities

have a long-term focus, preparing for future responsibilities & capacities of current employees to perform jobs

Key workforce reporting metrics

headcount, representation of groups & subgroups (hourly, salaried, executive, manager, etc.), and demographics

Key performance indicators (KPIs)

help organizations make the right measurements. They are quantifiable measures of performance used to gauge progress toward strategic objectives or agreed standards of performance

Action learning

immediately implement what was learned

Aon Hewitt Engagement model

"say", "stay", "strive" Engaged employees say (speak positively about the org), stay (have a sense of belonging/desire to be a part of the org), and strive (are motivated and exert effort toward success)

Retention rate

# of employees who remain employed for entire measurement period/# of employees at start of measurement period * 100%

Monthly Turnover Rate

# of voluntary separations during month/avg # of employees during month * 100%

Growth Strategy: Contract manufacturing

A firm arranges for a local manufacturer to produce components or products as a means of lowering labor costs.

Growth Strategy: Merger/acquisition

A firm purchases the assets of a local firm outright, resulting in expanding the acquiring company's employee base and facilities. Integration of acquired companies often involves significant cultural, systems, and management challenges. Data privacy can be a big issue.

Common job description elements

job ID, position summary, minimum qualifications, duties & responsibilities, success factors, physical demands, working conditions, & performance standards.

Career development

process through which employees progress through a series of stages in their careers. Includes 1) career planning and 2) career management

Implementation

program is delivered to desired audience (make sure to pilot), instructor selection, logistics

Design thinking

places the customer at the center of the project by understanding the in-depth requirements of the project's intended end user or beneficiary.

3 stages to initiatives

planning, executing, closing

Authoritarian

power resides with top-level management

Substantive method

pre-employment tests, help to reduce the candidate pool to finalists for the job (cognitive ability, aptitude test, personality test, psychomotor test, assessment centers)

Dual career ladders

provide a meaningful career path for professional and technical employees without requiring that they be placed in supervisory or managerial positions

Types of interviews

structured, unstructured, behavioral, competency-based, group, stress interview

Job analysis

studies the tasks, responsibilities, and conditions that are associated with a job & which personal quals are necessary for the performance of the job.

Job specifications

the minimum qualifications necessary to perform a job

Head count

the number of people on the organization's payroll at a particular time.

Selection

the process of evaluating the most suitable candidates for a position.

Recruitment

the process of getting candidates to actually apply for jobs.

Performance management

the process of maintaining or improving employee job performance

Career management

the process of preparing, implementing, and monitoring an employee's career path. Focus on the organization

Strategic planning

the process of setting goals and designing a path toward a competitive position

Market based job evaluation

the relative worth and pay structure of different jobs are based on their market value or the going rate in the marketplace (i.e. market pricing)

Job-content-based job evaluation

the relative worth and the pay structure of different jobs are based on an assessment of their content (for example, responsibilities and requirements) and their relationship to other jobs within the organization.

Pedagogy

the study of education of children

Competency-based systems

set pay at the level at which an employee can operate in defined competencies (for example, directing or training others).

Pay range

sets the upper and lower limits of compensation for employees whose jobs fit within that particular grade The midpoint represents the market rate.

Needs analysis

should occur at individual, task, and org level

Strictness

some appraisers may be reluctant to give high ratings.

Perquisites

special incidental payments, benefits, or privileges given to individual employees, over and above their regular rewards. Free/discounted products or services, mobile devises, training programs, educational fees, etc. Perquisites are like perks at work!

Mission statement

specifies what activities the organization intends to pursue and what course management has charted for the future—a concise statement of the organization's strategy

Defined contribution

type of retirement plan, amount of money that is to be regularly contributed to the fund is specified

Defined benefit

type of retirement plan, promises specific benefit amount upon retirement

Push model of L&D

used for required trainings, etc.

Assessment methods

used throughout the selection process to identify applicant knowledge and skills that cannot be determined through interviews (substantive, discretionary, and contingent)

Organizational values

(to be distinguished from the economic value an enterprise produces for its stakeholders) are beliefs that are important to an organization and often dictate employee behavior. The process of developing mission, vision, and values statements is reiterated at the business unit and functional levels. Each unit considers its own work in light of the organization's strategic statements and expresses its own mission, vision, and values

Kirkpatrick's 4 Levels of Evaluation

1) Reaction level- measures client's reaction to program 2) Learning level- evaluates program by testing clients' new knowledge 3) Behavior level- evaluates program by measuring a change in behavior. 4) Results level- evaluates program by measuring organizational results.

Developing a pay structure

1) grouping jobs into pay grades, and 2) setting pay ranges

4 drivers of engagement

1. The work itself, including opportunities for development 2. Confidence & trust in leadership 3. Recognition & rewards 4. Org comms that are delivered in a timely & orderly way

SMARTER

7 qualities that characterize effective objectives (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-based, evaluated, and revised)

Growth Strategy: Greenfield operation

A company builds a new location from the ground up. This represents a major task and a commitment to completely staff and equip the new location.

Growth Strategy: Brownfield operation

A company repurposes, through expansion or redevelopment, an abandoned, closed, or underutilized industrial or commercial property.

Growth Strategy: Licensing

A local firm is granted the rights to produce or sell a product. A low-risk entry strategy; avoids tariffs and quotas imposed on exports. However, there is little control of the licensee's activities and results.

Growth Strategy: Franchising

A trademark, product, or service is licensed for an initial fee and ongoing royalties. Often used in the fast-food industry. Similar to licensing as a low-risk entry strategy, although control over franchisee behavior is greater.

Growth Strategy: Strategic Alliance

Companies agree to share assets, such as technology or sales capabilities, to accomplish a goal. The relationship may have varying degrees of tightness and formality. Some alliances involve customers, partners, or competitors.

Porter's competitive strategies

Cost leadership, differentiation, focus strategies

Yield ratios

Determine which recruitment source or method or type of recruiter produces the greatest yield and identify areas that may need improvement

Strategic Planning & Management process

Formulation, development, implementation, and evaluation

Salary Data - Aging

Uses movement in market rates to adjust outdated salary data

Job documentation

Includes job description, job specifications, and job competencies.

Learning

Individuals & organization are encouraged to increase knowledge, competence, and performance

Development

Materials are created, purchased, modified (passive or participatory learning

Growth Strategy: Equity partnership

One firm acquires partial ownership through purchase of shares. The relationship may be general (sharing proportionally in control, profits, and liabilities) or limited (no managerial authority, liability limited to investment). Partnership agreements define such issues as leadership and division of profits and losses.

Incentives or premiums

Payments in return for the achievement of specific, time-limited, targeted objectives

Cost per hire

SHRM determined, cost per hire (CPH) is a measure of the effort exerted (defined in financial terms) to staff an open position in an organization. Basically same as cost of hire, but allows for variance within organizations. [(sum of external costs)+(sum of internal costs)]/total number of hires in a time period

Entitlement-oriented (culture)

Some organizations promote a caring, protective feeling and want employees to feel as if they are a part of the family. As benefits increase, there is more emphasis on the success of the org. as a whole

Benefits

Tangible payments or services provided to broad groups of employees to cover issues such as retirement, health care, sick pay/disability schemes, life insurance, and paid time off.

Contribution-oriented (culture)

The compensation programs of other organizations are more performance-driven, putting emphasis on the performance and contributions of individual employees.

Category rating methods

The least complex means of appraising performance. The appraiser marks an employee's level of performance on a designated form Use either a graphic scale, like a Likert scale, a checklist, or forced choice

Objectives

The most specific and measurable of the strategic statements.

Well being

physical, psychological, and social health Engagement is more likely when employee well-being is high

Growth Strategy: Joint venture

Two or more companies invest together in forming a new company that is jointly owned. Equal contribution = stipulation.

Blended learning

a combo of on-the-job, self, and instructor led study

Systems thinking

a conceptual framework that makes patterns clearer and helps one see how things interrelate and how to change them.

Curriculum vitae (CV)

a fairly detailed overview of a candidate's accomplishments, especially those relevant to the realm of academia

Shared vision

a look into the future that fosters genuine commitment and is shared by all who need to possess it.

Assessment centers

a method of evaluating candidates who are presented with content-valid workplace situations to which they respond and who are then evaluated on their responses.

Compa-ratio (compensation ratio)

a metric used to determine how actual wages match, lead, or lag the target market. Computed by dividing the pay rate of an employee by the midpoint of the pay range.

Total rewards strategy

a plan or method implemented by an org that provides monetary, benefits-in-kind, and developmental rewards to employees who achieve specific biz goals

Environmental scanning

a process of systematically surveying and gathering data, from both internal and external sources, that can be analyzed to identify opportunities and threats and to strengthen strategic plans and goals.

Knowledge café

a process that introduces individuals from across the organization so that they can share knowledge & experience

Compensation philosophy

a short (broad) statement documenting the org's guiding principles & core values about employee comp.

SWOT analysis

a simple and effective process for assessing an organization's strategic capabilities in comparison to threats and opportunities identified during environmental scanning

Kaizen

a systematic approach for business improvement, requiring that all people and processes in an organization work to continuously improve (5 steps: know your customer, let it flow, go to Gemba, empower people, be transparent)

Job analysis

a systematic study of jobs to determine what activities (tasks) and responsibilities they include, the personal qualifications necessary for performance of jobs, and work conditions results in job competencies, requirements, and specifications. Should be completed on a regular & ongoing basis Must be completed prior to engaging in recruiting activities for a vacant position A common approach to keeping job descriptions updated is to review them during performance reviews.

Learning organization

a systems level concept in which an organization is characterized by its ability to adapt to changes in its environment and respond quickly to lessons of experience by altering org behavior. Committed to retaining knowledge over time.

Green-circle rates

are the opposite of red-circle rates—an employee's pay is below the minimum of the range.

Pay grades

are used to group jobs that have approximately the same relative worth in an organization. Helps to create a pay structure for the entire org as opposed to having to set up a separate pay range for each job.

Developing a total rewards strategy

assessment, design, implementation, and evaluation

Types of culture

authoritarian, mechanistic, participative, learning, high-performance

Skill-based systems

base pay on the number of different skills an employee is qualified to perform

Categories to measure employee engagement

career development (job enlargement, job enrichment, job rotation, and work specification), relationship w/management, comp & ben, work environment

70-20-10 ratio

challenging assignments = 70%, developmental relationships = 20%, coursework & training = 10%

Competencies

clusters of highly interrelated attributes, including knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs), needed to do the job.

Participative

collaborative decision making/group problem solving

Remuneration surveys

collect information on prevailing market compensation and benefits practices, including starting wage rates, base pay, pay ranges, other statutory and market cash payments, variable compensation, and time off.

Broadbanding (salary bands)

combines two or more salary grades to create larger ranges and give people wide latitude to move within their job without outgrowing the pay scale

5 Elements needed for effective implementation of strategy

communication outward to the entire team, communication inward toward leaders, leadership support of decisions made by subordinates, free flow of info across org. boundaries, enough info to allow team members to connect their work to the strategy

Differentiation

companies aim to charge a higher price by offering something different or by offering the same thing in a different way from competitors in their industry or market—or by creating the perception that a product is different through superior marketing

Cost leadership

companies try to capture market share via having the lowest price

Evaluate

compare program to stated objectives

Benefits gap analysis

compares organizational needs, employee needs, and the existing set of benefits to identify the benefits that best match the needs of the organization and its employees.

Benchmarking

compares performance levels and/or processes of one entity with those of another to identify performance gaps and set goals aimed at improving performance.

External equity

comparing an organization's compensation levels and benefits to those of other organizations that are in the same labor market and that compete for the same employees. The use of remuneration surveys is critical in assessing external equity.

There is a strong link between engagement, wellness, and 3 psychological needs

competence, autonomy, and relatedness

Mental models

our deeply ingrained assumptions that influence how we understand the world and how we take action.

Contingent method

drug tests, medical exams, etc.

Single-rate pay (flat-rate pay) systems

each incumbent of a job has the same rate of pay, regardless of performance or seniority.

Paired-comparison method

each job is compared with every other job being evaluated

Performance objectives should measure

effectiveness, efficiency, and impact.

Behavioral engagement

effort employees put into their jobs, which leads to greater value, creating higher performance than from their less-engaged counterparts

Six Sigma project management

emphasizes focusing on projects with a quantifiable return of value, encouraging team commitment to quality and involvement in problem solving, measuring results in a manner that allows empirical analysis, and fact-based decision making

Person-based pay

employee characteristics, rather than how the job is performed, determine pay.

Red-circle rates

employee pay rates above the range maximum.

IDP components

employee profile, career goals & objectives, development objectives, training & development objectives, outcomes, signatures & dates

Management by objectives (MBO)

employees help set objectives for themselves

Job ranking

establishing a hierarchy of jobs from lowest to highest based on each job's overall value to the organization

Quantitative methods

evaluate specific factors on a scale and provide a score that indicates how valuable one job is compared to another. They use a variety of measurement factors called compensable factors (which reflect how much the job adds value to the organization).

Performance standards

expectations of management translated into 2 key elements that employees can deliver (behaviors and results)

Recruitment cost ratio

external costs + internal costs/first year compensation of hires in a time period x 100% Can be interpreted as: for every $1 of first-year compensation of hires, 10 cents was spent on recruitment.

Strategic management

includes the actions that leaders take to move their organizations toward the goals set in strategic planning and to create value for all stakeholders. Provides the organization with: consistent, long-term goals, consistent decision-making by leaders, better competitive and external vision, and better internal vision.

Trait engagement

inherent personality-based elements that make an individual predisposed to being engaged

Strategic drift

is a phenomenon in which an organization fails to recognize and respond to changes in its environment that necessitate strategic change

Strategy

is essentially a plan of action for accomplishing an organization's long-range goals to create value. Must look inward, at the org, and outward, at competitive landscape Growth is the result of successful strategy

Critical chain project management

is used when resources cannot be increased to meet deadlines

Key Areas of Employee Engagement

leadership characteristics, team practices, organizational values, work itself

Pull model of L&D

learning and development is a continuous process, easily accessible anywhere and anytime

Organizational learning

learning processes/activities that may occur at one of many levels in the organization (individual, group, organization)

Growth-share matrix

matrix used to find where the greatest value in the organization lies (growth trend predicts greater value and larger market share indicates competitive position Business line that is growing with a dominant market share = star Static but dominant business line = cash cow Consuming resources without offering strong value or growth = dog Winner or loser = question mark

Employee opinion survey

measures data on specific issues

Vacancy rate

measures the percentage of job positions that remain vacant over a specific period of time

Executing

meeting objectives in terms of schedule, budget, and quality.

Point Factor system

most common, the compensable factors chosen for the evaluation must reflect the nature of the job. Each factor gets a score and then the job gets an overall point value, which is compared to other jobs.

Reasonable accommodation

necessary, appropriate modifications or adjustments that do not impose a disproportionate or undue burden on the employer

Essential functions

not always included, these are the primary job duties that a qualified individual must be able to perform, either with or without reasonable accommodation

Knowledge-based system

pay is based on the level of knowledge the employee has in a field.

Productivity-based pay system

pay is determined by the employee's output.

Recency

occurs when an appraiser gives more weight to recent occurrences and discounts or minimizes the employee's earlier performance during the appraisal period.

Primacy

occurs when an appraiser gives more weight to the employee's earlier performance and discounts or minimizes recent occurrences.

Central tendency

occurs when an appraiser rates all employees within a narrow range, regardless of differences in actual performance.

Contrast

occurs when an employee's rating is based on how his or her performance compares to that of another employee instead of on objective performance standards.

Training delivery methods

on-the-job training, self-directed study, instructor-led study

Employee engagement

organizational and employees' willingness to "go the extra mile". The antithesis of burnout (vigor, dedication, and absorption). Not the same thing as involvement, although involvement can boost engagement.

Training

providing knowledge, skills, & abilities specific to a particular task or job

Measures of employee performance

quality, quantity, timeliness, cost-effectiveness

Systems thinking

recognizes that organizations are composed of interacting and sometimes interdependent parts that together create a dynamic internal environment

Gantt charts

represent the scheduling of tasks visually, showing the length and timing of specific activities

Performance-based pay system

the individual employee's performance on the job is the basis for the amount and timing of pay increases

Applicant tracking system (ATS)

systems that provide an automated way for organizations to manage the recruiting process.

5 disciplines that support an environment of learning

systems thinking, mental models, personal mastery, team learning, and shared vision

High-performance

talent is championed

Mechanistic

tasks & responsibilities defined clearly, communication processes, accountability

Andragogy

that discipline that studies how adults learn

Staffing

the HR function that acts on the organizational human capital needs identified through workforce planning and attempts to provide an adequate supply of qualified individuals to complete the body of work necessary for the organization's financial success

Retention

the ability to keep talented employees in the organization

Ethnocentrism

the belief that one's own culture and practices are more correct than other cultures' expressions.

Strategic fit

the consonance or compatibility of an organization's strategy with its external and internal environments, especially with regard to the goals and values it chooses and the resources and capabilities that can be deployed toward strategic goals

Straight piece-rate system

the employee receives a base wage rate and is awarded additional compensation for the amount of output produced

Differential piece-rate system

the employee receives one piece rate up to the standard and then a higher rate once the standard has been exceeded.

Time-based step-rate pay system

the employee's pay rate is based on longevity in the job. Pay increases occur on a pre-determined schedule.

Employee value proposition (EVP)

the foundation of an employer brand. Helps explain why someone wants to work at the company, and while they will continue to do so.

Personal mastery

the high level of proficiency in a subject or skill area.

Employment brand

the identity an organization presents to current or prospective employees. the process of positioning an organization as an "employer of choice" in the labor market

Cost of hire

the traditional measure of recruiting costs, determined by taking the total (recruiting) costs of all hires and dividing that figure by the number of new hires. Can calculate cost of hire by employee type to make sure we don't average out too much

Performance appraisal

the typical method of measuring employee's adherence to performance standards & providing feedback

Learning style

the way individuals take in and process new information. 3 distinct types: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic (tactile)

Boudreau and Ramstad criticism of job descriptions

they say that job descriptions only describe the current state of the job, and they don't do a good job ID-ing emerging role challenges.

Action mapping

training should be tightly focused on specific performance measures that the org has determined are important

Incentive pay

used to motivate employees to perform at a higher level by paying for performance that exceeds base-pay expectations (like sales based commissions) Incentivizing executives to meet business objectives is the most critical factor in designing executive compensation plans.

Agile project management

used when the assumptions on which a project is based are unclear or may evolve as project work proceeds. The project focuses on iterations of the deliverables

Critical path analysis

uses information about start or mandatory end dates, the logical relationship of tasks, and the length of each task to find the earliest completion date

Halo/horn effect

when an employee is extremely competent in one area and is therefore rated high in all categories. Conversely, the horn effect may occur when one weakness results in an overall low rating.

Job enlargement

when an employee is given additional, different tasks in the same job

Stay interviews

when current employees discuss what they do and don't like about their jobs

Internal equity

when employees feel that performance or job differences result in corresponding differences in rewards that are fair.

Nonquantitative methods

will indicate that one job is more important than another, but will not specify how much more

State engagement

workplace conditions & practices that can be improved through org interventions

Job classification

writes descriptions for each class of jobs. Individual jobs are then put into the grade that best matches their class description, based on the judgment of the evaluator

Narrative methods

written narrative performance appraisals (essay, critical incidents, field review)


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