Human Resource Management
Dr. B.S.N.RAJU
    ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
     DEPARTMENT OF MBA
HUMAN RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT
          Definitions
    Why HRM is important
       Core objectives
          HRM goals
     Good HRM practices
Definition
          HRM is the
           Planning,
          Organising,
         Directing and
         Controlling of
Human Resource Management
       Procurement
       Development
       Compensation
        Integration
      Maintenance and
       Separation of
    Of Human resources
       to the end that
          Individual
     Organisational and
            Social
objectives to be accomplished
HRM
HRM is the process of
 Attracting
 Holding and
 Motivating
 people in the organisation
in attainment of goals
     The Human Resource Approach
HIGHER                GREATER
Employee motivation   Quality & quantity
& applied ability     of work
GREATER               HIGHER
Employee rewards      organisational
& recognition         productivity & profit
     HRM challenges
   Extremely high competition
   Retaining talents
   Deliver value added HR services
   Rapid technological advances and impact
   Changing legal, political & social realities
   Changing values & educational levels
   Changing consumer demands
       To meet the challenges the
     companies need people who are…
   More Committed
   Highly Motivated
   Highly Skilled
   Good Potential
   Excellent team players
  Goals of HRM:
General    Specific
Productivity    attracting
QWL retaining
Legal compliance     motivating
Competitive advantage        retraining
    ‘Good’ Human Resource practices
              and ethics
    Recognize people’s needs & expectations
    Respect the individual and treat them as
    human beings
    Provide justice in treatment
    Free and fair practices
‘Good’ Human Resource Practices
and ethics
    Provide good working conditions
    Opportunities for career progression
    & personal development
    Function as a democracy
    Observe the legislations & codes of
    conduct relating to employment
Hard V’s Soft HRM
  Hard                       Soft
Workers are a resource Workers are key
like any other resource to competitive
                        advantage and
                        must be nurtured
                        & developed
Any Questions ?
  THANK YOU
Who is Responsible?
        Line managers
               
        HR professionals
               
   Consultants/sub-contractors
                
           employees
Current Issues in HRM
   Responding to intensified competition
   Managing international operations
   Technological innovation
   Complying with the law
   Managing with/without trade unions
   Ethical concerns**
   Best practice V’s Best fit
Best Practice V’s Best Fit
   Best Practice:
    -   best way of carrying out HR activities that is
    universally applicable
    -   advanced selection methods, serious
    commitment to employee involvement,
    substantial investment in T&D etc.
   Best Fit:
-       all is contingent on the circumstances of each
    organisation
Some Ethical Concerns
   Dismissing someone for incapability
   Failing to dismiss a senior manager
   Paying women less than men
   Pressure to change hours or location
   Paying less when you can pay more
   Failing to tell the truth at a tribunal
   Failing to make ‘costly’ H&S alterations
HRM Activities
     1.      Strategy Formulation
    2.    Human Resource Planning
      3.    Recruitment & Selection
 4.    Appraisal & Performance Mgt.
         5.  Reward Management
      6.    Training & Development
          7.  Employee Relations
             8.  Administration
            Organisation
Reward           The       Resourcing
               Strategic
                 Core      Performance
Employee
Relations
            Development
The execution of strategy lies in the hands
of individuals and therefore no matter how
good the strategy is, if it fails to take
account of the people element it is
doomed to failure at worst or to partial
success at best.
                  (Gunnigle et al 1997)
Organisational Strategy &
       HR Strategy
                   Separation
OS           HRS
OS                  Fit
             HRS
OS           HRS    Dialogue
Torrington & Hall 2002
  OS HRS         Holistic
   OS      HRS   HR Driven
 Human Resource Planning Process
    EXTERNAL ENVIR.        INTERNAL ENVIR.
DEMAND FOR LABOUR SUPPLY OF LABOUR
           ESTIMATE OF IMBALANCE
                 ACTION PLANS
      recruitment; training & development;
     redundancy, dismissals; redeployment;
   employee relations; organisation development
             IMPLEMENT & REVIEW
Current + Future    Current Supply
Demand for labour        of labour
The Recruitment & Selection
          Process
    Human resource planning
               
         Job analysis
               
         Recruitment
               
           Selection
               
          Induction
     Performance Management
1.   Clear objectives are essential for effective
     performance
2.   Communication is good
3.   Involvement         Commitment
4.   Everyone’s work should relate to the
     organisation’s work
5.   People need feedback
6.   Responsibility and autonomy enrich jobs
Establish, communicate        Evaluate
& agree objectives        performance
Communicate                    Compare
Decisions & results        performance
                         with objectives
Take corrective action        Decide on
Review objectives             appropriate
Continue unchanged            action
Appraisal Systems
   Formalise the review part of the
    performance cycle
   Usually annual/bi-annual
   Form based
   Link to pay?
   One way V’s two way
The Appraisal Interview
         • Tell-and sell
        • Tell-and listen
     • Joint-problem-solving
   Reward Package =
Pay + incentives + benefits
- Pay = basic wage
- Benefits = indirect rewards (eg. Car,
  VHI, expenses)
- Incentives = performance beyond
  expectations (eg. Bonus, awards, share
  options)
Objectives of Reward Package
        • Attract employees
     • Retain “good” employees
             • Motivate
    • Contribute to H.R. strategy
     Effective Reward System
•   Satisfies basic needs
•   Flexible
•   Internal equity
•   External equity
•   Trust (management & staff believe in it)
Training & Development
      - Assessment of need
        - Design & delivery
      - Transfer & evaluation
The Evidence For Change
•   Growth of A-typical employment
•   Flexibility debate
•   Technological revolution
•   Quality initiatives
•   Management-employee communications
   Partnership Model
• Employers recognise & facilitate worker & T.U.
  involvement in strategic decision making
• Workers/T.U.’s commit to productivity
  improvements
• Gains shared
• Productivity improvements business expansion
      Cutting Edge of HRM
Key changes:
• Attendance management             performance
• Use of management to implement HR strategy
• Emphasis on communication & training as tools
• Belief in potential of people to yield competitive
  advantage
  HRM @ INTEL
•Quarterly employee lunches
• Employee Resource Centre
• Meetings culture
• Profit sharing
• Flexible working arrangements
• 360° feedback
              Vision based on
              5 core principles:
1.   Total quality
2.   Total involvement
3.   Management by facts
4.   Emphasis on H&S
5.   Clear objectives
Strategic responses to
increased competition
1. Widespread rationalisation,
  redundancies, contracting-out, de-
  layering
2. Mergers, acquisitions, strategic
  alliances
3. Enterprise level partnership
Human resources is not fluffy
(Sunday Times Jan 2002)
   18 of FTSE 100 have board representation for
    HR
   Need to focus on ‘best fit’ as well as ‘best
    practice’
   Need to quantify & communicate contribution
   HR is not ‘touchy-feely’ – often left with
    controversial decisions that no one else will
    deal with
A higher status for the people
person (Financial Times 29/01/02)
   HR managers need to understand how their
    jobs have changed
   Need to be involved in looking for talented
    recruits, working on top level succession and
    helping to devise the long-term strategy of
    the organisation
   Dominated by professional rather than
    administration staff
   Report to the CEO & sit on the board