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1. Chapter 9 – Managing Human Resources
2. Chapter 9 Learning Goals What is the human resource management process?
How are human resource needs determined?
How do human resource managers find good people to fill the jobs?
What is the employee selection process?
What types of training and development do organizations offer their employees?
3. Chapter 9 Learning Goals (cont’d.) What is a performance appraisal?
How are employees compensated?
What is organizational career management?
What are the key laws and federal agencies affecting human resource management?
What trends are affecting human resource management?
4. Human Resource Management Hiring, developing, motivating, & evaluating employees
Challenges
Decreasing number of applicants & increased competition for those workers
Workers want work & home life balance
Technology is changing the way business is done
Laws governing employee-employer relationship
5. Human Resource Management Process
6. Job Analysis & Design Job Analysis
Study the job to determine its tasks and duties
Helps in hiring requirements, setting pay, determining performance evaluation criteria, and designing training programs.
Job Description
Responsibilities and duties of the job
Job Specification
List of skills and qualifications a person needs to perform the job
7. HR Planning & Forecasting How many people are needed and how many can we get from inside the company?
HR demand forecast
Internal supply forecast
Compare forecasts
Take action
Hire, pay overtime, subcontract, contingent workers, reassign, lay off, terminate, retire
8. Labor Supply & Demand A labor shortage in the 1990s turned the tables for employers
some individuals seeking work advertised themselves as free agents
employers bid for interviews with free agents
US Department of Labor estimated there are 10 million free agents
9. Employee Recruitment How do companies find good workers?
Determine a source for applicants
Internal
Skills inventory
External
Recruitment
If external, determine type of recruitment to use
Job fair, internet, search firms, college recruiters, newspaper
10. Employee Selection Go through the selection process to determine who is the best candidate for the position.
11. Training & Development Process Training Needs Assessment
Training Objective
Design of Training Program
Conduct Training Program
Evaluate Training Program
12. Employee Training & Development Types of Training
Orientation
Formal and informal
On-the-job Training
Job rotation
Apprenticeship
Mentoring
Off-the-job Training
Classroom
Vestibule training
Programmed instruction
13. Training and Development Forecasting International predicts that the need for life-long learning will characterize business in the future
Implications:
need for higher training budgets
need for constant retraining due to turnover
use of technology for just-in-time training
training as a motivational & retention tool
14. Performance Planning & Evaluation Employees learn about job performance expectations
Supervisors evaluate employees
Actual performance is compared to expected performance
Helps make decisions about training needs, compensation, promotions, job changes, etc
15. Performance planning & evaluation process:
16. Performance Evaluation 360° Evaluation: performance feedback that combines self-appraisal with ratings made by coworkers at the same level, above, and below the target person in the managerial hierarchy
Advantages:
provides a well-rounded view
avoids individual bias
can have more impact than a single source
can establish consensus
17. Employee Compensation & Benefits Factors that affect pay
Pay structure & internal influences
Pay level & external influences
Firm’s condition
Types of Compensation
Direct
Indirect
18. Direct Compensation Hourly wage
Salary
Piecework & commission
Accelerated commission schedule
Bonus
Profit sharing
19. Indirect Compensation Benefits & Services
Required by law: unemployment, workers’ compensation, Social Security
Optional: paid time off, health insurance, retirement plan, life insurance, college tuition reimbursement, fitness center memberships, etc
Cafeteria Plans
20. Organizational Career Management Facilitating employee job changes
Within the organization
Promotion
Transfer
Demotion
Separation from the organization
Layoff
Termination
Resignation
Retirement
21. Laws affecting HR Management Exhibit 9-8, pg. 273
Cannot discriminate based on age, race, gender, color, national origin, religion or disability
Family and Medical Leave Act requires employers to provide employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave a year
22. Federal Agencies that enforce HR laws Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP)
Department of Labor
And Others
23. Affirmative Action Programs To insure opportunities & fair treatment of protected classes
Protected Classes – people with legal protection against discrimination
Examples: women, minorities, disabled individuals, veterans, etc.
24. Trends in HR Management Social Changes
More women in the workforce
Increased frequency of job changes
Time MBA’s expected
to stay in first job
25. Trends in HR Management, cont. More diverse workforce
More difficult to manage
Work to remove glass ceiling
Advancing Technology
Outsourcing
Telecommuting
Going Global
More employees are going overseas
26. Review
Human Resource Management
Job analysis and design
HR planning and forecasting
Employee recruitment
Employee selection
Training and development
Performance planning and evaluation
Compensation and benefits
Organizational career management
Human Resource Laws
Trends
Looking Ahead
Motivating Employees and Teams