MGMT 373 EX 3
Distributive Bargaining
"Divide pie into 2"
Integrative Bargaining
"Win, win solution"
How is the purpose of an HRM audit similar and different from HR analytics?
- HRM audit using customer-orientation approach - HRM analytics using economic approach
HRM Technology (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
- automation and collaboration: using equipment and information processing to perform activities that had been performed by people and facilitating electronic communication between people - automation has improved HRM by reducing the number of people needed to perform routine tasks
What are the needs of those customers?
- committed employees - competent employees
Information Systems (Elements of a High Performance Work System)
- enable organizations to share information widely - hr take advantage of this technology to give employees access to information about benefits, training opportunities, job openings, etc.
Reward Systems (Elements of a High Performance Work System)
- encourage people to strive for objectives that support the organization's overall goals - include performance measures - hr develops and administers reward systems
Outcomes of High Performance Work Systems
- higher productivity - efficiency - high product quality - great customer satisfaction - low employee turnover
People (Elements of a High Performance Work System)
- hr help the organization recruit and select people with the needed qualifications - training, development, and career management ensure that these people are able to perform their current and future jobs with the organization
What are the HRM functions that contribute to high performance work systems?
- job design - recruitment and selection - training and development - performance management - compensation - HRM technology
Job Design (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
- jobs must be designed appropriately for the organization to benefit from teamwork and employee empowerment - job design aimed at empowerment includes access to resources such as information technology
Who are HRM's customers?
- line managers - strategic planners - employees
Elements of a High Performance Work System
- organizational structure - task design - people - reward systems - information systems
Performance Management (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
- performance management should be related to the organization's goals - managers need to understand the process of employee performance to do this - how to make the performance management system support organizational goals: 1. define and measure performance in precise terms 2. link performance measures to meeting customer needs 3. measure and correct for the effect of situational constraints
What can HR do to meet those needs?
- qualified staffing - performance management - rewards - training and development
Recruitment and Selection (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
- recruitment and selection aim at obtaining the kinds of employees who can thrive in this type of setting - looking for employees who are enthusiastic about and able to contribute to teamwork, empowerment, and knowledge sharing
Compensation (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
- reinforce compensation by linking it to performance measures - compensation systems can help to create the conditions that contribute to high performance - organizations can increase empowerment and job satisfaction by including employees in decisions about compensation and by communicating the basis for decisions about pay
Conditions That Contribute to High Performance
- teams perform work - employees participate in selection - employees receive formal performance feedback and are actively involved in the performance improvement process - ongoing training is emphasized and rewarded - employees' rewards and compensation relate to the company's financial performance - equipment and work processes are structured, and technology is used to encourage maximum flexibility and interaction among employees - employees participate in planning changes in equipment, layout, and work methods - work design allows employees to use a variety of skills - employees understand how their jobs contribute to the finished product or service - ethical behavior is encouraged
guarantee that when employees become participants in a pension plan and work a specified number of years, they will receive a pension at retirement age, regardless of whether they remained with the employer
vesting rights
state programs that provide benefits to workers who suffer work-related injuries or illnesses, or to their survivors
workers' compensation
The service industry (finance, insurance, real estate) is rapidly growing in the economy and in the south were unions are not as big.
Change in the structure of the economy for union memberships.
Communication
Communication demonstrates that the pay plan is fair. When employees understand the incentive pay plan's requirements, the plan is more likely to influence their behavior as desired. Important when changing the pay plan.
Arbitration
Conflict resolution in which 3rd party determines a binding settlement.
Mediation
Conflict resolution in which third party hears both sides and facilitates the negotiation but has no formal authority to dictate a resolution.
piecework rates: cons
Cons - Most jobs, including those of managers, have no physical output, so it is hard to develop an appropriate performance measure.
a federally mandated program to minimize the hardships of unemployment through payments to unemployed workers, help in finding new jobs, and incentives to stabilize employment
unemployment insurance
Compa Ratio
Pay relative to average pay. This system gives the biggest pay increases to the best performers and to those whose pay is relatively low for their job. Reward more valuable by relating to economic conditions.
Stock Option
Rights to buy a certain number of shares of stock at a specified price. Traditionally, stock options have been granted to executives.
NLRA Section 7
Sets out the rights of employees, including the "right to self organize", to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining.
1. Stock Option 2. Employee Stock Ownership
What are 2 types of ownership programs for stock ownership?
1. Profit 2. Stock Price
What are 2 ways organizations measure their performance?
1. Gainsharing 2. Bonuses 3. Team Awards
What are 3 types of pay for group performance?
1. Financial 2. Customer 3. Internal 4. Learning and growth
What are 4 categories of a balanced score card?
Not rolled into base pay. Must re-earn them during each performance period. Bonus is a one-time reward. Linked to objective performance measures, rather than subjective ratings.
What are 4 characteristics of Performance Bonuses?
1. No physical output, hard to develop 2. Doesn't work for complex jobs 3. May not reward employes for focusing on quality 4. May not encourage employees to learn 5. Poor incentive if wants to encourage teamwork
What are 5 disadvantages of Piece rate?
1. Piecework Rates 2. Standard Hour Plans 3. Merit Pay 4. Individual Bonus 5. Sales Commissions
What are 5 forms of pay for individual Performance?
Group Bonuses
Bonuses for group performance tend to be for smaller work groups. These bonuses reward the members of a group for attaining a specific goal, usually measured in terms of physical output. Team members to cooperate so that they can achieve their goal.
Corporate Campaigns
Bringing public, financial, or political pressure on employers during union organization and contract negotiation.
Considerations for Setting Up a Profit-Sharing Plan
1. Get supervisors on board with the plan. 2. Make sure employees understand how the plan works. 3. Identify behaviors and results that contribute to greater profits. 4. Make sure managers understand that they contribute to profit-sharing goals by encouraging their employees and keeping them focused on their goals. 5. Consider linking rewards to the department's or division's performance, if profits can be assigned to the group. 6. Make rewards big enough to matter. 7. Time the profit-sharing payments for maximum effect. Time lag is detrimental.
10 conditions for effective gainsharing
1. Management commitment 2. Need for change or commitment to continuous improvement 3. Management acceptance and encouragement of employee input 4. High levels of cooperation and interaction 5. Employment security 6. Information sharing on productivity and costs 7. Goal setting 8. Commitment of all parties to process of change & improvement 9. Performance standard and calculation that employees understand and consider fair and that is closely related to managerial objectives 10.Employees who value working in groups
Effective Incentive Pay Requirements
1. Performance measures are linked to the organization's goals. 2. Employees believe they can meet performance standards. 3. Organization gives employees the resources they need to meet their goals. 4. Employees value the rewards given 5. Employees believe the reward system is fair. 6. Pay plan takes into account that employees may ignore any goals that are not rewarded.
four categories of a balances scorecard include:
1. financial 2. customer 3. internal 4. learning and growth
Performance Bonus
Can be extremely effective and give the organization great flexibility in deciding what kinds of behavior to reward. organizations also may motivate employees with one-time bonuses.
Fact Finder
3rd party to collective bargaining who reports the reasons for a dispute, the views and arguments of both sides, and possibly a recommended settlement, which the parties may decline.
1. Employee discusses problem with supervisor and supervisor and union steward decides whether problem was resolved or violated the contract. 2. Written grievance is submitted to superintendent or other line manager and manager puts response in writing. 3. Union appeals grievance to top line management and decisions of appeal are put into writing. 4. Union decides whether to appeal unresolved conflict to arbitration or not.
4 Steps to Grievance Procedure
Union Shop
A clause in a collective bargaining agreement that requires new employees to join the union, usually 30-60 days after being hired, or they will be fired.
Strike
A collective decision by union members not to work until certain demands and conditions are met. Those who don't want to have to anyways if part of the union.
Balanced Scorecard
A combination of performance measures directed toward the company's long- and short-term goals and used as the basis for awarding incentive pay. Customize according to their markets, products and objectives. Combine the advantages of different incentive pay plans. The organization shows employees information about what its goals are and what it expects employees to accomplish.
Closed Shop
A firm that requires individuals to join a union before they can be hired. (illegal for those covered by the National Labor Relations Act)
Union
A formal association of workers that promotes the interest of its members through collective action.
HRM Audit
A formal review of the outcomes of HRM functions, based on identifying key HRM functions and measures of business performance.
Union Steward
A local employee elected by union members to represent them in ensuring that the terms of the contract are enforced.
Scanlon Plan
A popular form of gainsharing, The plan gives employees a bonus if the ratio of labor costs to the sales value of production is below a set standard.
Merit Pay
A system of linking pay increases to ratings on a performance ratings and appraisals. They make use of a merit increase grid. Disadvantage: -expensive -Makes assumptions that are misleading The system gives lowest paid best performers the biggest pay increases.
Differential Piece Rate "Rising and Falling Differentials"
A variation of straight piecework, in which the piece rate is higher when a greater amount is produced. If worker produces more than the standard output, the piece rate is higher. If worker produces at or below, the amount paid per piece is lower
Piecework Rate
A wage based on the amount workers produce. An incentive to work efficiently, some organizations pay production workers. The amount paid per unit is set at a level that rewards employees for above-average production volume. advantage of piece rates is the direct link between how much work the employee does and the amount the employee earns. This type of pay is easy to understand and seems fair to many people, if they think the production standard is reasonable
Stock Ownership
Actually makes employees part owners of the organization. Intended as a way to encourage employees to focus on the success of the organization as a whole. Some companies are trying to push eligibility for options further down the organization's structure.
Associate Union Membership
Alternative form of union membership in which members receive discounts on insurance and credit cards rather than representation in collective bargaining.
Card Check Provision
An agreement that if 50% or more of employees sign an authorization card, the employer will recognize their union representation.
Employee Stock Ownership "ESOPs"
An arrangement in which the organization distributes shares of stock to all its employees by placing it in a trust. Most common form of employee ownership. popularity is that earnings of the trust holdings are exempt from income taxes. ESOPs raise a number of issues. They carry a significant risk for employees. By law, an ESOP must invest at least 51 percent of its assets in the company's own stock (in contrast to other kinds of stock funds that hold a wide diversity of companies
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO)
An association that seeks to advance the shared interests of its member unions at the national level.
Lockout
An employers exclusion of workers from a workplace until they meet certain conditions.
1. Proposals are presented and negotiations between union and management. 2. Each side makes a series of decisions. 3. Pressure for agreement increases (bargaining power for each party)
Bargaining Process
Short Term Incentive
Bonuses based on ROI, year's profits, or other measures related to the organization's goals. Actual payment of bonus may be delayed to gain tax advantages.
Task Design (Elements of a High Performance Work System)
Determines how the details of the organization's necessary activities will be group, whether into jobs or team responsibilities. - makes jobs efficient while encouraging high quality
Straight Commission Plan
Earn only commission. Some earn no commissions at all, but a straight salary.
Participation in Decisions
Employee participation in pay-related decisions can be part of a general move toward employee empowerment. Employee participation can contribute to the incentive plan's success.
federal law that increased responsibility of pension plan trustees to protect retirees, established certain rights related to vesting and portability, and created the pension benefit guarantee corporation
Employee retirement income security act
Consent Election
Employer and union arrive at an agreement stating the time and place of the election.
Attitudinal Bargaining
Establish trust between union and mgmt before negotiating.
Executive Order 10988
Established collective bargaining rights for federal employees
federal law requiring organizations with 50 or more employees to provide up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave after childbirth or adoption; to care for a seriously ill family member or for an employee's own serious illness; or to take care of urgency needs that arise when a spouse, child, or parent i the National Guard or Reserved is called to active duty
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act)
Federal Law that supports collective bargaining and sets out the rights of employees to form unions.
Labor Relations
Field that emphasizes skills managers and union leaders can use to minimize costly forms of conflict and seek win-win solutions to disagreements.
Incentive Pay
Forms of pay linked to an employees performance as an individual, group member, or organization member. Pay specifically designed to energize, direct, or control employees behavior. Influential because the amount paid is linked to certain predefined behaviors or outcomes. Disadvantage: can interfere with management goals To motivate employees to contribute to the organization's success, pay plans must be well designed.
Gainsharing
Organizations that want employees to focus on efficiency, adopt a program which measures increases in productivity and effectiveness and distributes a portion of each gain to employees. Knowing they can enjoy a financial benefit from helping the company be more productive, employees supposedly will look for ways to improve and work more efficiently. Addresses challenges of identifying appropriate performance measures for complex jobs. Frees employees to determine how to improve their own and groups performance. Broadens focus beyond individual interest
Training and Development (HRM's Contribution to High Performance)
When organizations base hiring decisions on qualities like decision-making and teamwork skills, training may be required to teach employees the specific skills they need to perform the duties of their job.
a health care plan that requires patients to receive their medical care from the HMO's health care professionals, who are often paid a flat salary, and provides all services on a prepaid basis
Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)
Grievance Procedure Criteria: Fairness
Whether the process threats employees equitably and gives them a voice during the process.
Ballot election, then the NLRB certifies, no additional election for one year, after contract negotiations occur then no election for 3 years.
How does the election and certification process work for unionization?
Grievance Procedure Criteria: Effectiveness
How well the procedure resolves day to day contract questions
Competition for scarce human resources can lead employers to offer much of what employees traditionally sought through union membership.
Human Resource Practices for Union Memberships
Stipulation Election
If the parties cannot agree on a time and place for the election, then the NLRB dictates a time and place.
Profit
In competitive marketplace, result when an organization is efficiently providing products that customers want at a price they are willing to pay.
forms of pay linked to an employee's performance as an individual, group member, or organization member
Incentive Pay
Profit Sharing
Incentive pay in which payments are a percentage of the organization's profits and do not become part of the employees' base salary. May encourage employees to think like owners. More likely to cooperate Evidence is not clear whether profit sharing helps organizations perform better. Given the limitations of profit sharing plans, one strategy is to use them as a component of a pay system that includes other kinds of pay more directly linked to individual behavior. This increases employees' commitment to organizational goals while addressing concerns about fairness.
Straight Piecework Plan
Incentive pay in which the employer pays the same rate per piece, no matter how much the worker produces.
Long Term Incentive
Include stock options and stock purchase plans. Rationale is that executives will want to do what is best for the organization because that will cause the value of their stock to grow.
Types of incentive pay
Individual Piecework Rates Standard Hour Plan Merit Pay Individual Bonuses Sales Commissions Group Gainsharing (Scanlon Plan) Group-related (group rewards or awards) Organizations Stock Ownership (Options or ESOP) Profit Sharing
health care reform law passed in 2010 that includes incentives and penalties for employers providing health insurance as a benefit
Patient Protection and Affordable care act
rights to buy a certain number of shares of stock at a specified price
stock options
Obtain pay and working conditions that satisfy their members. Giving members a voice in decision that affect them. Influence the way pay and promotions are determined.
Labor Unions Goals for Unionization
Industrial Union
Labor union whose members are linked by their work in a particular industry. (try to work in as many employees with a wide range of skills as possible)
Craft Unions
Labor unions in which all members have a particular skill or occupation.
U.S. producers are having a hard time competing with companies (with unions)that have an entirely different pay scale, putting U.S. companies at a disadvantage.
Management Efforts to control Costs for union memberships
Making decisions that will increase the organizations profits. Decrease costs while increasing output. (sees unions as a threat to these goals)
Management Goals for Unionization
Sales Commission
Pay calculated as a percentage of sales. Some earn a commission in addition to a base salary. Commission rates vary tremendously from one industry and company to another. Paying most or all of a salesperson's compensation in the form of salary frees the salesperson to focus on developing customer goodwill. Paying most or all of a salesperson's compensation in the form of commissions encourages the salesperson to focus on closing sales. Directly influence how they spend their time, how they treat customers, and how much the organization sells. Affects the kinds of people who will want to take and keep sales jobs with the organization. assumes that the organization wants to attract people with some willingness to take risks
incentive pay in which the employer pays the same rate per piece, no matter how much the worker produces
straight piecework plan
Work rules and limitations on workloads & lost production due to strikes and work slowdowns.
Negative Effects of Unions on Productivity
Collective Bargaining
Negotiations between union representatives and management representatives to arrive at a contract defining conditions of employment for the term of the contract and to administer that contract.
Retention Bonuses
Organizations involved in acquisitions, in which a one-time incentives paid in exchange for remaining with the company—to top managers, engineers, top-performing salespeople, and information technology specialists.
Reduce turnover by giving employees a route to resolve conflict & maintaining emphasis on pay systems based on seniority.
Positive Effects of Unions on Productivity
a health care plan that contracts with health care professionals to provide services at a reduced fee and gives patients financial incentives to use network providers
Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)
NLRA Section 8
Prohibits certain activities by employers as unfair labor practices. Employers cannot interfere with employees who join labor unions.
piecework rates: pros
Pros - Direct link between how much work the employee does and the amount the employee earns. It is easy to understand and seems fair to many people, if they think the production standard is reasonable
Exercising
Purchasing the stock is called ___ the option
Standard Hour Plan
Quantity oriented incentive for production workers, in which it pays workers extra for work done in less than a preset "standard time" These plans are much like piecework plans. They encourage employees to work as fast as they can, but not necessarily to care about quality or service.
Landrum Griffin Act
Regulates unions actions with regard to their members, including financial disclosure and the conduct of elections. Protects the right to nominate candidates for union office, participate in union meetings and secret ballot elections.
Agency Shop
Requires employees who do not join the union to pay fees for unions representation services. (prevents free loaders from getting benefits without doing any work)
Maintenance of Membership
Requiring workers to remain members of the union for the period of the labor contract (usually 3 years)
Grievance Procedure Criteria: Efficiency
Resolving issues at a reasonable cost and without major delays
Team Awards
Similar to group bonuses, but more likely to use a broad range of performance measures: -Cost savings -Successful completion of a project -Meeting deadlines Disadvantage:, competition among individuals may be replaced by competition among groups
To ensure that workers have a voice in how they are treated by their employers. Drives laws and regulations that affect labor unions.
Society Goals for Unionization
Right to Work Laws (Taft-Hartley Act)
States that prohibit contacts requiring employees to join unions as a condition of obtaining or continuing employment like union shops, agency shops and maintenance of membership.
Employee Neutrality Provision
The employer pledges not to oppose organizing attempts elsewhere in the company
Check Off Provisions
The employer, on behalf of the union, automatically deducts union dues from the employees paychecks.
Stock Price
The owners' investment in a corporation. When it is rising, the value of that investment is growing.
Grievance Procedure
The process of resolving union-management conflicts over interpretation or violation of collective bargaining agreement.
High Performance Work Systems
The right combination of people, technology, and organizational structure to make full use of resources and opportunities in achieving their organizations' goals.
report that describes pension plan's funding, eligibility requirements, risks, and other details
summary plan descriptions
Organizational Structure (Elements of a High Performance Work System)
The way the organization groups its people into useful divisions, departments, and reporting relationships. - promotes cooperation, learning, and continuous improvement
Labor Relations Level of Decisions: Administering Contracts
These decisions involve day to day activities in which union members and the organization's managers may have disagreements. (Violations of work rules, or workers treated unfairly, etc.)
Labor Relations Level of Decisions: Negotiating Contracts
This decision involves things like pay structure, job security, work rules, workplace safety, and other issues in a contract.
Labor Relations Level of Decisions: Labor Relations Strategy
This decision is influenced by outside forces such as pubic opinion and competition and involves whether the organization will work with unions or develop nonunion operations.
Performance measures are linked to the organization's goals. Employees believe they can meet performance standards. Organization gives employees the resources they need to meet their goals. Employees value the rewards given. Employees believe the reward system is fair. Pay plan takes into account that employees may ignore any goals that are not rewarded
What are 6 requirements that effective incentive pay plans need to meet?
Get supervisors on board with the plan. Make sure employees understand how the plan works. Identify behaviors and results that contribute to greater profits. Make sure managers understand that they contribute to profit-sharing goals by encouraging their employees and keeping them focused on their goals. Consider linking rewards to the department's or division's performance, if profits can be assigned to the group. Make rewards big enough to matter. Time the profit-sharing payments for maximum effect.
What are 7 steps to setting up a profit sharing plan that motivates employees?
HRM Analytics
Type of assessment of HRM effectiveness that involves determining the impact of, or the financial cost and benefits of, a program or practice.
Management commitment. Need for change or strong commitment to continuous improvement. Management acceptance and encouragement of employee input. High levels of cooperation and interaction. Employment security. Information sharing on productivity and costs. Goal setting. Commitment of all involved parties to the process of change and improvement. Performance standard and calculation that employees understand and consider fair and that is closely related to managerial objectives. Employees who value working in groups.
Under what 10 conditions is gainsharing most likely to succeed?
Authorization Cards >> Petition of Election >> Election Campaign >> Election and Certification
Union Organizing Process
30%
Union members must obtained signed authorization cards from at least _____ of employees
1. Individuals performance rating 2. Individuals Compa Ratio
What are 2 factors merit pay decisions are based on?
1. Participation Decision 2. Communication
What are 2 other factors that influence and control the way employee work is done?
They are dissatisfied with how they are treated by their employers and they believe unions can improve their work situation.
Why do employees unionize?
Intra-Organizational Bargaining
Women, minorities, blue collar, etc. - make sure all are heard.
a combination of performance measures directed toward the company's long- and short-term goals and used as the basis for awarding incentive pay
balanced scorecard
a benefits plan that offers employees a set of alternatives form which they can choose the yeps and amounts of benefits they want
cafeteria style plan
retirement plan in which the employer sets up an individual account for each employee and contributes a percentage of the employee's salary; the account earns interest at a predefined rate
cash balance plan
incentive pay calculated as a percentage of sales
commissions
federal law that requires employers to permit employees or their dependents to extent their health insurance cover-age at group rates for up to 36 months following a qualifying event, such as a layoff, reduction in hours, or the employee's death
consolidated omnibus budget reconciliation act (COBRA)
retirement plan funded by contributions form the employer and employee
contributory plan
pension plan that guarantees a specified level of retirement income
defined benefit plan
retirement plan in which the employer sets up an individual account for each employee and specifies the size of the investment into that account
defined contribution plan
incentive pay in which the piece rate is higher when a greater amount is produced
differential piece rates
compensation in forms other than cash
employee benefits
an arrangement in which the organization distributes shares of stock to all tis employees by placing it in a trust
employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
a set of communications, activities, and facilities designed to change health-related behaviors in ways that reduce health risks
employee wellness program
Incentive pay is influential because...
the amount paid is linked to certain predefined behaviors or outcomes. --For incentive pay to motivate employees to contribute to the organization's success, pay plans must be well designed.
the number of employees a company has laid off in the past and the cost of providing them with unemployment benefits
experience rating
employee-controlled pretax earnings set aside to pay for certain eligible expenses, such as health care expenses, during the same year
flexible spending account
group incentive program that measures improvements in productivity and effectiveness and distributes a portion of each gain to employees
gainsharing
Gainsharing Addresses challenge of ...
identifying appropriate performance measures for complex jobs. Frees employees to determine how to improve their own and their group's performance by sharing knowledge and making suggestions.
short term disability insurance
insurance that pays a percentage of disabled employee's salary as benefits to the employee for six months or less
insurance that pays a percentage of a disabled employee's salary after jan initial period and potentially for the rest of the employee's life
long term disability insurance
a system of linking pay increases to ratings on performance appraisals
merit pay
retirement plan funded entirely by contributions from the employer
noncontributory plan
federal agency that insures retirement benefits and guarantees retirees a basic benefit if the employer experiences financial difficulties
pension benefit guarantee corporation
a wage based on the amount workers produce
piecework rate
incentive pay in which payments are a percentage of hte organization's profits and do not become part of the employees' base salary
profit sharing
a gainsharing Programm in which employees receive a bonus if the ratio of labor costs to the sales value of production is below a set standard
scanlon plan
the federal Old Age, Survivors, Disability, and Health Insurance (OASDHI) program, which combines old age (retirement) insurance, survivor's insurance, disability insurance, hospital insurance, and supplementary medical insurance for the elderly
social security
benefits required by law
social security, unemployment insurance, workers' compensation insurance, family and medical leave, health care
an incentive plan that pays workers extra for work done in less than a preset "standard time."
standard hour plan