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This chapter discusses the strategic significance of human resource management, as well as the planning, staffing, and development processes involved. It explores topics such as recruitment and selection, employee performance evaluation, compensation and benefits, legal issues in HR management, workplace diversity, and the changing nature of the contemporary workplace.
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CHAPTER 8 Managing Human Resources
Learning Objectives • Define human resource management, discuss its strategic significance, and explain how managers plan for human resources • Identify the issues involved in staffing a company, including internal and external recruiting and selection • Discuss different ways in which organizations go about developing the capabilities of employees and managers • Explain ways in which organizations evaluate employee performance
More Learning Objectives • Discuss the importance of wages and salaries, incentives, and benefit programs in attracting and keeping skilled workers • Describe some of the key legal issues involved in hiring, compensating, and managing workers • Discuss workplace diversity, the management of knowledge workers, and the use of contingent and temporary workers as important changes in the contemporary workplace
Human Resource Management • Human resource managers are responsible for: • Recruiting • Training • Employee development • Design of evaluation • Compensation & benefits programs
Job Analysis • A detailed study of the specific duties in a particular job and the human qualities required for that job
Job Description • Outlines the objectives, responsibilities, and key tasks of a job • Describes the conditions under which the tasks must be accomplished • Explains the relationships between that position and others in the firm • Describes the skills required to do the job
Job Specification • Describes the type of attributes a person needs for the job • Skills • Abilities • Other credentials
Forecasting • Determining the firm’s demand for employees and the likely supply of employees • short, medium, and long-term, based upon existing demand and anticipated changes in demand • Must address the shortage or surplus of required skills in the labour market and within the organization itself • Internal Supply • External supply
Employee Information Systems • Computerized systems that contain information about employees, and which can be used to track availability and suitability for upcoming jobs • Information may include • Education • Work experience • Skills • Career aspirations
Internal Recruiting • Hiring from within the organization • Promoting or transferring existing staff • Closed promotion systems • managers choose the candidates for a promotion • Open promotion systems • allow individual employees to apply for positions of interest • Seniority may also be the basis for promotional consideration
External Recruiting • Hiring from outside of the firm • recruiting • selection
Application Forms • First step in recruiting • Allows employers to gather information relevant to the hiring decision • History • Education • Work experience • Job-related demographic information
Testing • Aptitude and ability tests • Video assessment • Drug screening • Tests must be job-related and a good indicator of future job performance • Tests cannot be used to discriminate against anyone for reasons unrelated to the job
Assessment Centres • Trainees perform work-related exercises under the supervision of expert appraisers • selection tests • simulated situations • presentations • group discussions • Allows appraisers to test trainees’ managerial behaviours under stressful conditions • Allows opportunity for criticism and support
Video Assessment • Use of videos to show potential new hires realistic work situations • Candidates are then asked to respond to various ways of handling the situations in the videos • As with all tests, the assessment must be relevant to the job and a useful screening tool
Interviews • Structured • Involves the use of a common set of questions • Unstructured • Questions may vary from candidate to candidate • More often used when interviewing managerial or professional candidates
Workforce Development • Orientation • Training and development • on-the-job • off-the-job
Orientation • Introduces employees to the firm and their position • policies • personnel • programs • nature of the job
Work-Based Programs • On-the-job training • Employees gain new skills while performing them at work • Vestibule training • Employees work in a simulated environment • Systematic job rotations and transfers
On-the-Job Training • Employees learn new skills while performing their duties • Advantages • it allows employees to learn under realistic circumstances • Disadvantages • trainees may be distracted by the workplace • lack of standardization • May be unplanned and informal, or planned and formal
Instructional-Based Programs • Trains workers through the use of classroom-based programs • Lecture or discussion • Computer-assisted instruction • Employees use personal computers and software to learn specific materials • Off-the-job training • Employees learn new skills at a location other than the work site
Training Technology • New technologies are reshaping the face of employee training • Video teleconferencing • Delivery of centralized training to branch offices allows for cost savings in travel and highly effective training • Interactive video • A combination of video and computer-based instruction
Performance Appraisal • Formal evaluations of employee performance • Actual performance is compared to objectives • Should be regularly scheduled • Performance expectations must be made clear • Results are used to determine training needs, promotion opportunities, compensation, and dismissal • May involve feedback from peers, supervisors, and subordinates (360 degree feedback)
Methods for Appraising Performance • Ranking Methods • Simple ranking (rank order from top to bottom) • Forced distribution (group into predefined frequencies of performance ratings) • Rating Methods • Graphic rating scale (statement with rating scale) • Critical Incident Method • Recall and discussion of especially good, or poor, performance
Compensation and Benefits • Wages and salaries • Incentive programs • Comparable worth consideration • Benefits programs
Wages and Salaries • Wages • paid based on number of hours worked or number of units produced • Salaries • paid at regular intervals regardless of the time or output involved • Wage and salary considerations • amount of total compensation • competitors’ compensation levels • compensation across various jobs and ranks
Job Evaluation • A method of determining the relative value or worth of a job to the organization so that individuals who perform it can be appropriately compensated
Establishing a Pay Structure • Useful for determining basic compensation • Develop a pay structure by linking a rational pay scale, level by level, to jobs • Linking should be based on the value of the job to the organization
Performance-Based Compensation • Merit Pay • Employees are paid based on their relative contribution to the firm for some of their compensation • Skill-Based Pay • Employees are paid for acquired skill level, rather than specific performance • Knowledge-Based Pay • Employees are paid for learning
Incentive Compensation Systems • Piece-Rate Plan • employees are paid a certain amount for each unit of product they produce • Individual Incentive Plan • employees receive a salary increase, or other similar reward, for outstanding performance • Sales Commission • salespeople are paid based on unit, or dollar, sales • Other Incentives • may be non-monetary, such as time relief or points
Team and Group Incentive Systems • Gainsharing programs • Employees get a bonus if the firm’s costs are reduced due to increased work efficiency • Performance increases • Awards directed to a team of employees to reward combined effort • Profit-sharing plans • The profitability level of the firm is used to determine the reward level for its employees
Indirect Compensation and Benefits • Benefits: non-financial rewards • Mandated Protection Plans: EI, CPP • Optional Protection Plans: health, dental, life insurance • Paid Time Off: vacation time, personal leave • Other Types of Benefits: wellness programs, child-care benefits • Cafeteria-Style Benefits Plan: employees choose their own benefits
Equal Employment Opportunity • Regulations protecting people from unfair, or inappropriate, discrimination in the workplace • Decisions are made whenever employees are hired or promoted • The regulations are there to prevent such decisions from being made on any basis other than job-related reasons
Canadian Human Rights Act • Ensures that any individual who wishes to obtain employment has an equal opportunity to apply • Key anti-discrimination legislation enacted in 1977 • applies to all federal agencies, federal Crown corporations, and firms that do business inter-provincially • prohibits discrimination based on: age, race, colour, national/ethnic origin, physical handicap, religion, gender, marital status, or prison record (if pardoned) • enforced by the Human Rights Commission
Bona Fide Occupational Requirement • Allows an individual to be chosen over another due to job characteristics • when only a particular type of candidate is acceptable because of the nature of the job • a washroom attendant in a luxurious hotel should be a female
Employment Equity Act • Federally legislated • Designates four groups as employment disadvantaged • women • visible minorities • aboriginal people • people with disabilities • Companies covered by the act are required to publish statistics showing their employment of individuals from the four groups
Comparable Worth • Principle • equal wages should be paid for work of equal value to the firm • jobs must be classified based on the qualifications needed to do the job • jobs with similar requirements must be paid the same • critics argue that such approaches ignore the supply and demand aspects of labour; more scarce employees are paid more than those with plentiful skill sets
Dealing with Sexual Harassment • Develop clear and enforceable policies • Inform all employees of the policies • Train employees to recognize and refrain from sexual harassment • Take complaints seriously • Establish a procedure to deal with complaints • Take action against those involved
Employee Health and Safety • Health and safety programs reduce absenteeism and labour turnover, increase productivity and morale, by making the workplace safer & healthier • Each province has its own regulations • Government inspectors come on-site, unannounced, to ensure that health and safety regulations are being met • Canada places behind other industrialized nations in safety for mining and construction
Retirement • Retirement plans may allow early retirement, usually after the age of 55 • Flexible plans allow those who wish to leave early to do so, while allowing those who are able and willing to work longer the opportunity to do so • Regular retirement age is 65 years, but many choose to work beyond that time • Health statistics show that workers over the age of 65 are more likely to suffer from work-related causes
Managing Workforce Diversity • Everyone in the workforce must be treated equitably • The workforce is becoming more diverse • Gender • Race • Age • Ethnicity • Physical ability
Managing Knowledge Workers • Employees who are experts in specific fields • technology, engineering, science • Identify with their profession rather than the firm • Prefer to work independently • Define performance based on their industry and peers, rather than their employer • Pose a special management challenge
Managing Contingent and Temporary Workers • Contingent Workers • work for a firm on a basis other than full or part-time • freelance, on-call, temporary subcontractors • Temporary Workers • Hired through outside agencies • Management Issues • fairness and cost issues