Human Resource management Chapter 1

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HRM is a major contributor to the success of an enterprise because it is in a key position...

...to affect customers, business results and ultimately shareholder value

Change agent

A person who acts as a catalyst for change

Social capital

Describes the strength of personal relationships existing within an organisation. It promotes knowledge sharing, employee motivation, teamwork, collaboration and willingness to get things done

Talent manager

Focus is on identifying, hiring and developing the human resources critical for the organisation's success.

Retrenchment strategy

Focus is on performance improvement by increasing productivity, cost cutting, downsizing, re-engineering and selling or shutting down business operations

By building skill levels

HR manager allows individual employees to benefit from increased job satisfaction and improved job prospects while creating value for the organisation

Organisation ambassador

HR manager is expected to be a role model for everything the organisation stands for. The value, culture, strategies and the nature of the business itself must be clearly understood and communicated

Board and senior executive resource

HR manager should be at the forefront in contributing to the board of directors' understanding of how HR policies and practices promote business success and mitigate risk.

Strategic partner

HR managers being an essential part of the management team running an organisation and contributing to the achievement of the organisation's objectives by translating business strategy into action

To be able to link business strategies to HR policies

HR managers must have business acumen, customer orientation and an awareness of the competition

What is a company's most important resource?

Human capital

Key HRM activities

Job analysis, human resource/employment planning, recruitment, selection, performance appraisal, human resource development, career planning and development, employee motivation, change and cultural transformation, remuneration, benefits

Objectives

Measurable targets to be achieved within a certain time frame

Humanistic HRM

Recognises the need for the integration of HR policies and practices with the organisation's business strategy, but places emphasis on employee development, collaboration, participation, trust and informed choice.

transnational strategy

blend of global and multi-domestic strategies. Standardised to a degree but also made some what unique to reflect local needs.

values

broad preferences defining appropriate or desired courses of action or outcomes

How are business' maximising human capital

by focusing on selecting, developing and rewarding top talent, encouraging open communication, teamwork and collaboration, refusing to tolerate poor performance or compromise long-term objectives for short-term gains

HR managers with an internet presence

can be used to attract and track the progress of desirable candidates, and to promote organisation as an employer of choice

Organisation interests

centred on an approach that recognises interdependence of stakeholders, making stakeholders partners to gain a competitive advantage

Performance appraisal

concerned with determining how well employees are doing their job, communicating that information to the employees and establishing a plan for performance improvement.

Organisations shift mindset from

conscript mindset to a volunteer mindset

Global strategy

consider's ones culture superior to others, plays down culture differences and treats different markets as one big market, limits knowledge transfer

when looking at international strategies, organisations must consider

cost efficiency, and customisation

Employee relations

deals primarily with employee attitudes and behaviour and the relationships between the organisation and its employees. Sometimes regarded as being the same as industrial relations however, employee relations focuses more on workplace relations

Job analysis

defines a job in terms of specific tasks and responsibilities and identifies the abilities, skills, knowledge and qualifications needed to perform it successfully

Strategy

defines the direction in which an organisation intends to move and establishes the framework for action by which it intends to get there

discretionary effort

effort employees voluntarily make in excess of the minimum amount required to satisfy the job requirements

High performance HR has a positive effect on organisations by increasing

employee knowledge, skills and abilities (KSAs), empowering employees to act and motivating them to perform

conscript mindset

employees are external motivated to perform

volunteer mindset

employees are internally motivated to perform

Seven dimensions of effective people management that produce substantially enhanced economic performance

employment security, rigourous selection, self-managed teams and decentralised decision making, comparatively high compensation linked to individual and organisational performance, extensive training, reduced status distinctions, and extensive sharing of financial and performance info

stages of strategic formulation and integration

establish a mission and key objectives, analyse the environment, analyse and select business strategies, implement the strategies, monitor and evaluate

human resource development activities

focus on the acquisition of the attitudes, skills and knowledge required for employees to learn how to perform their jobs, improve their performance, prepare themselves for more senior positions and achieve their career goals

strategic HRM

focuses on the linking of all HR activities with the organisation's strategic objective

strategy selection

generating a series of strategic options based on the organisation's objectives and a comparison of its internal strengths and weaknesses, and it's external opportunities and threats

organisations can improve labour productivity by

giving employees more knowledge, better skills, more resources and better designed jobs

environmental analysis

identify any strategic opportunities and threats that may be present, and the organisation's strengths and weaknesses

HRM activities are

interrelated and together they represent the core of HRM

Selection

involves choosing from available candidates the individual predicted to be most likely to perform successfully in a job

strategy implementation

involves designing an organisations structure and control systems and evaluating the selected strategies in achieving the organisation's key objectives

Strategy formulation

involves selecting an organisations mission, key objectives and business strategies

management by objectives

involves setting specific measurable goals with each employee and then periodically reviewing the progress made

Human resource management

involves the productive use of people in achieving the organisation's strategic business objectives and the satisfaction of individual employee needs

Strategic planning to be successful

it is important to achieve a fit between the organisation's strategy, structure, culture and methods of control

Products of job analysis

job description and job specifications

Information generated from performance appraisal is used to

link rewards to performance, identify training and development needs, making placement decisions

High performance work systems (HPWS)

make work more satisfying and rewarding and leads to increases in employee discretionary effort and productivity

strategic management gives

managers consistent guidelines for action and allows the anticipation of problems and opportunities

Feedback

managers must ask whether the strategy is being implemented as planned and whether it is achieving the desired results

single factor productivity

measures the ratio of total outputs to a single category of inputs

HR planning achieves

more effective and efficient use of human resources, more satisfied and better developed employees, more satisfied and better developed employees, more effective equal opportunity planning

HRM strategies

need to be developed as an integral part of an organisation's overall strategy

Stability strategy

neutral strategy that attempts to maintain the status quo by pursuing established business objectives

Growth strategy

organisation can expand internally or through acquisitions, mergers or joint ventures. Can focus on building existing strengths or moving into new areas of business

triple bottom line

organisations focusing on their environmental and social performance as well as their financial performance

Human resource/employment planning

process by which an organisation attempts to ensure that it has the right number of qualified people in the right jobs at the right time

Polycentric orientation

produces a diverse mix of strategies because strategies are adapted to meet the needs of each business unit

geocentric view

produces global strategies on major corporate issues but permits business units to develop local strategies on other issues

Bottom line

refers to final result, such as net profit after tax

strategic choice

refers to managers being proactive in facilitating the organisation's successful adaption to changes in the environment

Remuneration

refers to the cash rewards such as the base pay, bonuses, incentive payments and allowances, which employees receive for working in an organisation.

HR functional expert

refers to the efficiency of HR managers and their effective management of HR activities so that they can create value

long term business success

requires strategic management of HRM to create a sustained competitive advantage

Employee advocate

requires the HR manager to be the employee's voice in management decisions

SWOT analysis

review of organisation's strengths and weaknesses and the opportunities and threats in its environment

Steps in the selection process

reviewing the application forms, psychological testing, employment interviewing, reference checking and completing medical examinations

Benefits

sometimes referred to as indirect or non-cash remuneration. Include superannuation, life insurance, disability insurance, annual leave, sick leave, maternity leave and tuition refund programs

8 Key roles of HRM

strategic partner, HR functional expert, Employee advocate, agent for change and cultural transformation, talent manager, organisational ambassador, board and senior executive resource, legal advisor

Strategic intent

sustained obsession to achieve a challenging long term objective

Industrial relations

take a broader perspective, involving industrial tribunals, trade unions, employer associations and governments and their roles in the making of rules governing the employer-employee relationship

HRM involves

the acquisition, development, reward and motivation, maintenance and department of an organisation's human resources

Management

the art of getting things done through people

work intensification

the increase in effort that employees must make

Human capital

the knowledge skills and abilities present in an organisation's human resources. It is the product of learning education and training

mission statements

the operational, ethical and finical reasons for the organisation's existence

Recruitment

the process of seeking and attracting a pool of applicants from which qualified candidates for job vacancies within an organisation can be selected.

Strategic management

the process whereby managers establish an organisations long term direction, set specific performance objectives, develop strategies and achieve these objectives in the light of all the relevant internal and external circumstances

total factor productivity

the ratio of total outputs to inputs from labour, capital, materials, technology and energy

Benefits work because

they improve the quality of work life and reinforce the attractiveness of an organisation as a place to work

The purpose of strategy

to maintain a position of advantage by capitalising on an organisation's strengths and minimising it's weaknesses.

Two approaches to measuring productivity

total factor productivity and single factor productivity

Employee motivation

vital to the success of any organisation. highly motivated employees tend to be more productive, have lower rates of absenteeism, turnover and lateness

HR manager's development role centres on

wealth created through and by people in the organisation

Health and safety programs

when effective, help guarantee the physics and mental wellbeing of employees.

proactive

when managers anticipate problems and take corrective measures to minimise their effect

reactive

when managers wait until a problem occurs before taking action

Employee motivation is concerned with

why people do things and why one employee works harder than another

Significance of job analysis

basic starting point for HR planning and other HR activities such as recruitment and selection

Career planning and development activities

benefit both employees and organisation

Core values

assist in decision making and are brought to life by the implementation of policies and practices that reinforce them

Legal advisor

Increasing legislation of workplace means HR managers should be knowledgable about law

Multi-domestic strategy

Sensitive to cultural differences but gives less attention to similarities between markets

Board and senior executive resource 2

Should be regarded as valued advisor on trends and issues, should be prepared to tackle problems such as corporate governance and ethical issues.

Instrumental HRM

Stresses the rational, quantitative and strategic aspects of managing human resources. Performance improvement and improved competitive advantage are highlighted.Really important to integrate HR policies and practices with the organisation's business strategy

Factors that influence ethical behaviour

a person's personality and culture, the situation, its importance to the individual, corporate culture, existence of clear organisational policies

Plan

action step that shows how an objective or a goal is to be achieved

Productivity

an organisations total output of goods and services divided by its total inputs

Stakeholder

any individual group or organisation that is affected by or has a vested interest in an organisation's policies and decisions

Change and cultural transformation

are the inevitable results of globalisation, new technology and competitive pressures forcing organisations and employees to become more innovative, flexible, more skilled and more productive

Knowledge workers

are the major wealth creators


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