Title: BAD 64271 Human Resource Management
1BAD 64271Human Resource Management
- Dr. Cathy DuBois
- Fall 2002
2Overarching Goal of HRM
- Support Organizational Goals
3HR Policies/Practices
- Organizational interests
- factors technological change
- global competition
- Social interests
- factors societal/ economic well-being
- fairness/demographic changes
- Employee interests
- factors focus on self-interests/ actualization
family structures
4Evolution of HRM Function
- 1. File Maintenance
- Scientific Management
- Management knows best
- Human Relations
- happy worker
- 2. Government Accountability
- fairness based
- stimulated lots of HR research
- led to improved HR practices
5Evolution of HRM Function (continued)
- 3. Organizational Accountability
- Personnel Human Resource Management
- sophisticated, research-based HRM
- 4. Strategic Partnership
- HR as competitive advantage
- strategic role of HR function
- HR competencies
- value the worker employee empowerment
6Strategic HRM
- Aligning HRM practices with
- organizational mission/strategies/goals
- organizational culture
- organizational capabilities
- environment
- Key the HR department exists to support
attainment of organizational goals
7Strategic HRM
- Requirements
- Clear definition of organizational mission,
culture, strategy, and goals - Strong organizational value for planning and
ongoing evaluation - Strong organizational commitment to using the
organizations human resources as a competitive
advantage
8Strategic HRM
- Requirements (continued)
- VP of HRM
- HR VP / staff with state-of-the art HRM knowledge
and skills (understanding of legal and research
implications of various practices) - HR VP / staff with business knowledge (general,
organization specific environment)
9Regulatory Model
- The Regulatory Model
- The Regulatory Model applied to EEO
10EEO Legislation
- 1963 Equal Pay Act
- 1964 Title Vll Civil Rights Act
- 1967 Age Discrimination in Employment Act
- 1978 Pregnancy Discrimination Act
- 1986 Immigration Reform Control Act
- 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act
- 1991 Civil Rights Act
- 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act
11Discrimination
- Discrimination making distinctions
- 2 kinds of illegal discrimination
- Disparate Treatment differential treatment of
protected class individuals - Disparate Impact identical treatment of
protected class individuals, but differential
outcomes
12Sexual Harassment (1964 CRA)
- What constitutes Sexual Harassment?
- Who are the perpetrators? What is their
motivation? - Employer responsibilities
- Target (victim) responsibilities
13Immigration Reform Control Act 1986
- Employers may not discriminate among U.S.
citizens because of national origin - Employers may discriminate against aliens in
favor of equally qualified U.S. citizens - Employers may not hire illegal aliens
- exception seasonal workers
- Employers must validate eligibility of all
individuals hired
14Americans with Disabilities Act 1990
- Protected a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits 1 or more of the major life
activities - Reasonable accommodations job access, fob
design, fob transfer, employee assistance,
elimination of unnecessary qualifications
151991 Civil Rights Act
- Purposes
- Reinstate the spirit of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
- Clarify application of the law in newly relevant
areas - Changes
- Burden of proof reinstated
- Specify clearly NO quotas or test score
adjustments - Allow punitive damages with jury trials for
intentional discrimination lawsuits - Applies to US citizens abroad, employed by
majority US-owned companies
16Common EEO Misconceptions
- EEO laws are designed to protect groups, not
individuals. - Reality EEO laws are designed to protect
individuals who have been discriminated against
rather than groups. - EEO laws require that you hire an unqualified
minority applicant. - Reality EEO laws require that you use job and/or
business-related selection practices to hire
qualified individuals
17Defenses Against Discrimination
- 1. Job Relatedness- empirical or content validity
- 2. Business Necessity- the essence of the
business operation would be undermined by hiring
a specific group - 3. Bona Fide Occupational Qualification (BFOQ)- a
specific requirement is necessary for successful
functioning in a job - 4. Bona Fide Seniority System- in place for some
time not designed with intent to discriminate.
18Proving Adverse Impact
- Definition of AI seemingly neutral standards are
applied to everyone, but they have an adverse
impact on a protected class - 4/5 Rule comparison of minority and majority
selection ratios - If the selection ratio for any protected class is
less than 4/5, or 80, of the selection ratio of
the majority group- adverse impact
19Proving Adverse Impact (Cont.)
- Examples
- 1. hired/ applied compute for each group
- Female 30/100 30 Male 60/100 60
- minority / majority (compare with 4/5)
- 30 / 60 .30/.60 0.5 (5/10 or 50)
- 2. hired/ applied compute for each group
- Female 3/10 30 Male 30/100 30
- minority / majority (compare with 4/5)
- 30 / 30 .30/.30 1 No Adverse
Impact!
20Affirmative Action
- To avoid reverse discrimination charges, adopt a
voluntary AA policy only if your work force lacks
diversity - Unless under court order, do not specify quotas
- Your AA policy and practices should not be so
restrictive as to bar majority applicants - Demonstrate support of top management for your AA
policy hold managers accountable - Make your AA policy temporary, only until not
needed
21EEO vs. Diversity
- Incentives
- Government vs. customer/ labor market
- Implications
- Organizational culture
- Individual employee attitudes
- Organizational policies
- Outcomes
- Organizational
- Societal
- Individual
22How Managing Diversity Can Provide Competitive
Advantage
- Cost as diversity within orgs increases, those
without it lag - Resource Acquisition attract retain the best
minorities - Marketing effectiveness for target groups
increases - Creativity increases with less conformity to
past norms - Problem Solving broader perspectivesbetter
decisions - System Flexibility diverse systems are more
fluid, flexible
23Characteristics Associated with Long-Term
Diversity Program Success
- Top management provides resources, advocates
diversity - Diversity program is structured
- Diversity is defined as a business objective
- Diversity viewed as needed to generate revenue,
profits - Diversity program is evaluated
- Manager involvement is mandatory
- Program seen as a culture change
- Demographic groups not blamed for problems
- Behaviors/skills needed to interact with others
are taught - Managers rewarded on progress toward diversity
goals
24Job Analysis
- Outputs Job DescriptionJob Specification
- How is job analysis information used?
- Many approaches- focus on different types of
information -
25Job Analysis (Continued)
- Create Matrix Link Tasks/ Behaviors to KSAOs
- Strategic use/ prioritization
- jobs that have changed
- critical jobs
- performance deficient jobs
- entry level jobs/ jobs with large number of
applicants - jots with evidence of adverse impact
26Job Analysis (Continued)
- Current challenges in job analysis
- continually changing jobs
- flexible jobs
- team-based jobs
27Human Resource Planning
- I. Needs Forecasting
- 1. Analysis of external conditions/ business
goals - - economic, social, political factors - markets
and competition - - government and legislation - technologies
- - population and work force
- 2. Demand Forecast future HR requirements,
threats - opportunities
- - organization and job design - plans and
budgets - - technologies and systems - management policies
and philosophy - - affirmative action/ EEO goals plans
- 3. Supply Forecast future HR availability
- - immediate longer term - external LM relevant
labor markets - - internal labor market employee skill levels,
performance, succession plans
28Human Resource Planning (Cont.)
- II. Program Planning
- 1. Feasibility Analysis reconcile demand
supply - - identify areas of shortage and surplus
- - specify recruitment goals and selection plans
- 2. Performance Management
- - organization climate, standards, quality of
work life - - reward structures compensation, benefits
- - performance assessment goals, coaching, work
evaluation - 3. Career Management
- - policies and systems placement, promotion,
development, termination - - career opportunities, ladders
- - management succession
- - individual career planning assistance / support
29Human Resource Planning
- Labor Demand
- derived from service/product demand
- influenced by labor productivity
- Labor Supply
- consider internal and external labor markets
30Human Resource Planning (Cont.)
- Labor Markets HR Tactics
- Tight LM labor demand exceeds labor supply
- - training or retraining - succession planning
- - promotion from within - subcontracting
- - use of part-time/ temporary workers - use of
overtime - Loose LM labor supply exceeds labor demand
- - pay cuts - reduced hours
- - work-sharing - voluntary early retirements
- - inducements to quit (e.g. severance pay)
- - layoffs
31Recruiting
- General Purpose provide an organization with a
pool of potentially qualified job candidates - Specific Purposes
- increase the pool of qualified applicants with
minimum cost - increase the success rate of selection
- decrease the probability of turnover
- meet EEO / social obligations
- enhance organizational image to public
32Recruiting
- External sources / methods
- - employee referrals (incentives) - walk-ins
- - employment agencies - schools
- - trade associations / unions - temporary
agencies - - advertising- newspapers / trade journals -
internet - - professional organizations / conferences
- Internal sources / methods
- - promotions - transfers
- - job rotations - rehires / recalls
- - organizational career systems - skill
inventories - - replacement / succession systems - job
posting
33Recruiting Evaluation
- Yield Pyramid
- Criteria
- 5 above average performance rating
- 10 1 year survival
- 50 accepted job
- 100 qualified and offered job
- 150 invited for interview
- 200 potentially qualified
- 600 number of applicants
- Compute cost per Hire for each source
34Recruiting Evaluation
- Compute Yield Ratios for each applicant source
- in / out
- ex applied / interviewed
- Build Spreadsheet
- Columns
- - each step of the recruitment/selection process
- - performance, turnover
- - cost per hire
- Rows each source of applicants
35Doing Recruitment Well
- Convey full job information Realistic Job
Preview - Why effective - met expectations
- - ability to cope
- - responsibility for decision to accept job
- Convey rich organizational information
- Strategic timing of job offer acceptance
policies - Offer flexibility to recruits (but be honest!)
- Address applicant perception of your hiring
process - Collect data! Evaluate your efforts!
36Employee Selection
- Goal person job/organization MATCH
- Selection is a Technical process
- Matching process requires Measurement of the
Person and Job / Organization - Measuring the Job/ Organization
- Job/ Organization analysis
- Measuring the person TESTS
- interviews, paper pencil tests, etc.
- Doing measurement well
- Reliability Validity
37Employee SelectionPerson- Job/ organization match
- Performance
- f (Aptitudes / abilities x
- Skills x
- Task Understanding x
- Choice to Perform x
- Level of Effort x
- Persistence of Effort x
- Situational Constraints / Factors)
38Determinants of Performance
Effort
Personality, values, interests, etc.
Job Knowledge
Performance
Ability
Skill
Experience
Context
39Determinants of Performance
- Performance is not 1 thing!
- Dimensions technical, leadership, communication,
etc. - Job Knowledge
- declarative, procedural, strategic, self
- Context
- task understanding, situational
constraints/supports - Effort
- choice to perform, level of effort, persistence
of effort
40Reliability
- Consistency of measurement, replicability
- range 0-1
- psychological vs. physical measurement
- person being measured
- person doing measurement
- environment
- for Selection 0.7 acceptable
- methods to assess repeated measures
- reliability is necessary for validity
41Validity
- Degree to which a test measures what it is
supposed to measure - in selection want to predict from tests which
applicant will be a good match, which applicant
will perform well - Validation the courts Job Relatedness
42Validity (continued)
- Approaches to validation
- 1. Face validity does the test seem
reasonable - 2. Content validation
- rational judgement (job experts)
- test is representative of job/ organization
- 3. Criterion-related / empirical validation
- statistical relationship, range -1 to 1
(correlation) - correlation of test score (predictor) with
measure of job performance (criterion) - 0.2 to 0.5 acceptable
43Reliability and Validity Assessments
- Summary
- Reliability and Validity assessments relate to
whether or not to use a test in a selection
process - Reliability and Validity assessments do not
relate to assessment of individual applicants
(i.e., they are not part of determining which
applicant is the best one to hire)
44Laws Impacting Selection
- Goal make the best person- job/ org match and
minimize chances of a lawsuit - Applicable Laws
- Fair Labor Standards Act Child labor laws
- State Licensure laws
- Privacy laws federal and state
- Polygraph laws
- Contract laws truth in hiring
- EEO laws employment discrimination
45Negligent Hiring Defamation
- Reference Check Problem
- Potential employers need information on
applicants from previous employers, to avoid
negligent hiring lawsuits - BUT
- Previous employers are wary of giving information
because of the potential for defamation lawsuits
46Negligent Hiring
- An individual acting under the auspices of
employment caused injury to someone - Differs from respondeat superior, wherein the
employee is acting within the scope of employment
and injures someone. - Jobs that are vulnerable
- those with a special duty of care
47Defamation
- Courts require proof that
- 1. Defamatory statement was communicated to
another party - 2. Defamatory statement just be a false statement
of fact - 3. Defamatory statement resulted in an injury to
the defamed individuals reputation
48Selection Strategies
- Compensatory all applicants get all tests
(costly!) - (1) applications 200
- (2) paper pencil tests 200
- (3) work sample test 200
- (4) interview 200
- (5) offers 10
- Note courts dont accept bottom line defense
look for adverse impact at each step of the
process
- Multiple Hurdle eliminate applicants at each
step of the hiring process based on whether they
pass/fail each test (greater potential for
adverse impact!) - (1) applications 200
- (2) paper pencil tests 120
- (3) work sample test 40
- (4) interview 20
- (5) offers 10
49Employee Selection
- Selection Methods
- tests, interviews, application blanks, etc.
- Constructs / Attributes
- cognitive ability, personality, job knowledge,
etc. - Important Can measure constructs/attributes
with a variety of selection methods - Identify relevant constructs, then determine
which methods you will use to measure them.
50Employee Selection
- Selection Methods
- Information about an individuals past
- application blanks / bio-data
- reference checks
- Written tests
- cognitive ability
- achievement/ job knowledge
- personality
- honesty
- graphology
51Employee Selection
- Work Sample Tests
- Assessment Centers
- Others
- Physical Measurement
- Physical Abilities
- Medical Screening
- Interviewing
- Unstructured Interviews
- Structured Interviews
52Why cognitive ability predicts Job Performance
- It is probable that workers with higher levels
of cognitive ability - perform mental tasks more quickly
- adapt to new situations more readily
- are more sophisticated in their capacity to
prioritize rules and regulations - are better able to deal with unexpected problems
- are better able to adapt old procedures to new
situations
53The Big 5 Personality Characteristics
McCrae Costa, 1992
- Conscientiousness
- planful, dependable, competent, order,
self-discipline - Agreeableness
- warm, tactful, considerate, trust,
straightforward,, tender-minded - Extroversion/ Sociability
- gregarious, energetic, warm, self-dramatizing,
positive emotions - Neuroticism/ Adjustment
- nervous, moody, self-doubting, anxiety,
self-conscious, vulnerability - Culture/ Openness to experience
- imaginative, curious, original, fantasy, actions,
ideas
54Why Selection Interviews usually have Low Validity
- Questions asked in the Interview
- unrelated to the job
- vary from applicant to applicant
- inappropriate (EEO vulnerability)
- Interviewer Behaviors
- fail to put the applicant at ease
- talk to much!
- create a poor impression of the company
55Why Selection Interviews usually have Low
Validity (continued)
- Interviewer Biases
- snap judgements made on the basis of inaccurate
personal biases - inappropriate weighting of unfavorable/ favorable
information neglect of relevant information - Standards may vary across interviewers
- influence of non-verbal behaviors
- influence of physical attractiveness
- decisions made hastily due to overconfidence
56Ways to improve the Interview
- Use a structured format.
- Ask questions that are job related.
- Use situational questions.
- Use more than 1 interviewer.
- Ask each applicant the same questions.
- Train interviewers in rating
- how to use the rating scale
- common rater errors
- halo/hours
- similar to me
- leniency/harshness/central tendency
57Staffing Practices and Organizational Performance
- 1993 study (Personnel Psychology)
- Composite staffing index, use of
- recruiting evaluation
- validation studies
- structured interviews
- cognitive ability tests
- biographical information blanks
- Superior staffing practices significantly related
to - Annual Profit
- Profit growth
- Overall performance
58Employee Separations
- Perspectives
- Voluntary (quits, retirements)
- Involuntary (discharges, layoffs)
- Uncontrollable (spouse transfer, etc.)
- Controllable (improve HR practices to retain
- employees)
- Detrimental (losing valued employees)
- Beneficial (clearing out poor performers)
59Termination Issues
- Justification
- Amount of Warning
- Confidentiality
- Written statement of Benefits (COBRA)
- Outplacement
- Timing
- Tone of Communications
- Sabotage
- Worker Safety
60Alternatives to Layoffs
- Pay/ Benefit cuts
- Leaves of absence without pay
- Employee Loaning
- Work/Job sharing
- Reduced work hours (30 hour week)
- Early Retirements
- Attrition
- Training and Transfer
- Changes in Job Design
61Success at Work is not 1 thing
- Behavior
- Anything people do on the job
- Performance
- Those behaviors related to organizational goals
- Effectiveness
- How well behavior contributes to accomplishment
of organizational goals - Productivity
- Cost/benefit ratio of efforts toward
organizational goal accomplishment efficiency
62Performance Management
- The total process of
- clarifying performance expectations
- motivating performance, through feedback and
incentives - observing an employees performance
- in relation to job requirements
- over a period of time
- taking steps to facilitate and improve
performance - formally appraising performance
63Performance Management
- Performance management is not done once a year
it is an ongoing process.
64How to Motivate Employees
- Address individual differences
- Properly place employees in jobs
- Set achievable goals
- Provide RESOURCES
- Reward LEARNING Performance
- Use an equitable system of rewards
- Provide a variety of rewards individual needs
- Dont forget money!
65CompensationMeeting Everyones Needs
66CompensationMeeting Everyones Needs (continued)
67Compensation Policy Domains
- External Competitiveness
- Internal Consistency
- Recognizing Individual / Group Contributions
- System Administration
68External Competitiveness
- Fairness compared to what other companies offer
for the same job - Strategic issues
- Pay policy
- Lead / Lag / Meet competition
- Ability to Pay Labor Availability
- Wage Surveys
- custom, purchased, public information
69Internal Consistency
- Fairness compared to other jobs/employees within
the organization - Job Evaluation process to determine the value
/ worth of each job - Build Pay Structure
- Create systematic structure of pay ranges
- Pay Ranges min/median/max for each job
70Job Evaluation Techniques
- Ranking
- Rational ordering of wage ranges
- Comparison with Job Grades
- Rational matching of job descriptions to set of
job grade descriptions - Point Factor
- Statistical approach
- Identify compensable factors and assign points
71Recognizing Individual/Group Contributions
- Variable Pay
- Individual Incentives
- Seniority
- Pay-for-Performance for each employee
- Knowledge-Based Pay
- Group Incentives
- Pay-for-Performance
- Small Group performance
- Organizational performance
72Variable Pay
- Pay that fluctuates according to some
pre-established criterion (individual /
organizational) - Rationale Risk sharing
- employee shares risk with the organization
- Trend
- use of variable pay in the US is growing
- current average
- 5 of an employees pay in the US
- 20 of an employees pay in Japan
73Variable Pay (continued)
- Forms of variable pay
- Commission
- Bonus
- individual merit, reward
- group gain/ profit sharing
- Stock
- examples Microsoft, Wal-Mart
- Peoples Express, America West
74Individual Merit Pay Problems
- De-motivate People
- distribution rarely perceived as fair politics
- requires a terrific performance appraisal system
rare - Hurt organizational performance
- undercut cooperation and teamwork
- Discourage Risk taking Learning
- if potential to interfere with reward
- Destroy intrinsic motivation
- get employees focused on external rewards
75Knowledge-Based Pay
- More pay for more knowledge / skill /
competencies - Rationale
- incentive for employees to increase their human
capital - get / maintain state-of-the-art in their skills
- take responsibility for continual learning
76Knowledge-Based Pay
- Organizational Responsibility
- Provide well-structured support for training and
career development - Potential Problems
- Compensation costs can be high and inefficient
- People get paid for what they have the potential
to do rather than for what they actually do
77Choosing Between Group Individual Incentive
Plans
- Motivational forces
- competition/ cooperation
- Technical Constraints
- at what level is performance measurable and the
performing agent identifiable - Organizational strategy management values
- Organization design and working relationships
78Compensation System Administration
- Communication
- to Managers Employees
- Policy Manuals Presentations
- Maintaining Fairness
- System structure
- Application of the system
- Across job levels
- Dealing with exceptions and changes
- Meeting Organizational Needs
79Employee Benefits
- Increasing importance in attracting workers!
- Cost an additional 25-50 of salary/wages!
- Legally Required Benefits
- Social Security, Workers Compensation,
Unemployment Insurance, Family Medical Leave - Voluntary Benefits
80Benefits
- Voluntary Benefits
- Health Insurance
- Long Term Disability / Death Insurance
- Retirement Savings Plans
- Paid Time Off / Unpaid Time Off
- vacation, sick leave, personal leave, sabbatical,
... - Employee Services
- Employee Assistance Program, childcare, legal
assistance, Wellness Program, food, drycleaning...
81Benefits Planning Issues
- Who gets protected/ benefitted?
- How much choice do employees get?
- How are benefits financed
- employer/ employee contribution split
- How do benefits complement the rest of the
compensation program - base pay and incentives
- External competitiveness
- Cost effectiveness
82Performance Appraisal
- Purposes
- 1. Organizational
- Information for personnel decisions
- - staffing effectiveness - merit pay
- - promotions - termination (justification)
- Connect employee performance to organizational
goal accomplishment - recognition for those on target
- diagnose performance problems
- initiate rectification process
83Performance Appraisal
- Purposes (continued)
- 2. Employee
- Evaluative- feedback regarding past performance
- Developmental- improvement of future performance
and career progress - Need honest feedback regarding strengths
weaknesses!
84Performance Appraisal
- Three Approaches
- 1. Compare individual performance to common
standards - Basic rating scales (anchors numbers,
adjectives) - Weakness scale intervals open to interpretation
- Behaviorally anchored rating scales
- (BARS, BES, BOS)
- Strengths clear performance standards/ goals
objective basis for ratings - Weaknesses costly to develop changing jobs...
85Performance Appraisal
- Three Approaches (continued)
- 2. Compare individual performance of individual
- standards
- MBO Management by objectives- need employee
buy-in - Strengths clear performance goals
individualized - Weakness goals change! Hard to keep up to date.
86Performance Appraisal
- Three Approaches (continued)
- 3. Compare employees to one another
- ranking
- paired comparison
- forced distribution
- Weaknesses no performance information/ standards
can be devastating for low performers open to
rater bias! - Most important, no useful feedback on how to
improve. - Compensation uses for merit money allocation
practical!
87Legally Defensible Performance Appraisal System
- 1. Performance Standards
- Define them!
- Base them on job analysis
- Communicate them to employees
- Use dimensions of job performance
- 2. Train raters
- How to use the PA instrument
- How to avoid rater errors
- How to collect data and use it properly
- How to give feedback
88Legally Defensible Performance Appraisal System
- 3. Use more than 1 rater if possible
- 4. Document extreme ratings particularly well
- 5. Establish formal appeal process
- 6. Provide counseling/ training/ assistance for
- poor performers
89Why Managers Inflate Appraisals
- Self-focused
- Discomfort with giving feedback on poor
performance - Make selves look good / avoid airing problems
- Avoid a confrontation with hard-to-manage
employees - Promote a disliked employee up / out of the
department - Other-focused
- Maximize merit increase money for employees
- Empathy for someone suffering personal problems
- Avoid creating a permanent record of poor
performance - Encourage someone with marginal prior performance
90Why Managers Deflate Appraisals
- Scare better performance out of employees
- Create reputation as a tough manager
- Subdue defiant employees
- Encourage problem employees to quit
- Create a record to justify a planned firing not
truly related to performance - - downsizing, retaliate against an employee,
dont like an employee...
91The New Economy
- Forces causing shift from old to new economy
- globalization of wealth and competition
- introduction of new flexible technologies
- Competitive standards for organizations and
nations - productivity improvement
- ability to deliver quality, variety,
customization, convenience timeliness
92The New Economy (Continued)
- Requirements to compete in the new economy
- new organizational form flexible networks
- new job structures broader domains flexible
- new job requirements highly skilled work force
- new training requirements comprehensive
93Job Skills in the New Economy
- Dimensions of skill change
- - depth of skills
- - breadth of skills
- Context for using skills
- - shift from repetitive to sporadic exceptional
uses - - shift from hands-on to hands-off uses
- Content of skills
- - specific skills to general capabilities
- - concrete skills to abstract skills
- - objective capabilities to personal/people
skills - Skill convergence
-
94Basic Workplace Skills
- 1. The academic basics
- reading, writing, computation
- 2. Communication
- speaking, listening
- 3. Adaptability
- problem solving, creative thinking
- 4. Developmental skills
- self learning, self esteem
- goal setting, motivation
- personal career development
95Basic Workplace Skills (continued)
- 5. Group effectiveness
- interpersonal skills
- negotiation
- teamwork
- 6. Influencing skills
- organizational effectiveness
- leadership skills
96Training Design Model
- 1. Assess Organizational Training Climate
- What does top management think?
- 2. Determine Training Needs
- Needs analysis organization, job, person
- 3. Specify Training Objectives
- Derive from needs analysis
- 4. Specify Training Content
- Derive from objectives
97Training Design Model (continued)
- 5. Specify Learning Methods/Media
- Select what is most appropriate for content,
learners, setting - 6. Specify Conditions of Learning
- whole/part learning
- massed/spaced learning
- over-learning
- feedback
98Training Design Model (continued)
- 7. Evaluate Training Outcomes
- Reaction, learning, behavior, results
- Why Training Evaluation skipped
- top management neglect
- lack of skills among trainers (statistics, what
to evaluate) - misperceptions of costs/risks associated with
training evaluation
99Training Needs Analysis
- Organization Analysis
- How does training fit with the companys
strategic goals? - Does the company have the resources to buy or
develop training? - Do managers employees support training?
- Task Analysis
- Identify tasks
- Identify knowledge, skills, and behavior
100Training needs Analysis (cont.)
- Person Analysis
- Is it a training, motivation, or work design
problem? - Who needs training, and what kind?
- Are employees ready for training?
101New Employee Orientation
- 2 Perspectives
- - Organization
- - Employee
- Organizational Implications if dont do it
- - increased turnover
- - initial productivity problems
- task understanding
- nervous- cognitive drain afraid to ask questions
- conflicting information from various sources
- no idea of big picture
102New Employee Orientation
- Roles
- - Executives
- - Supervisor / Manager
- - Co-workers
- - HR/ training
103Mentoring Functions
- Career Functions
- Sponsorship
- Coaching
- Protection
- Exposure
- Challenging work
- Psychosocial Functions
- Role modeling
- Counseling
- Acceptance and confirmation
- Friendships
104Objectives of Career Management
- Improved performance on the present work
assignment - Advanced preparation for future work
- Skill building
- Experience building
- Goal selection
- Developmental attitude
105Categories of Employee Rights
- Statutory Rights
- Protection from discrimination (EEO)
- Safe working conditions (OSHA)
- Right to form unions
106Categories of Employee Rights
- Contractual Rights
- Employment contract
- Union contract
- Implied contracts/employment policies
- Other Rights
- Ethical treatment
- Privacy (limited)
- Free speech (limited)
107Actions which Develop a Climate of Fairness and
Ethical Behavior
- Do things that develop trust
- share information, follow through with
commitments - Act consistently
- dont confuse or surprise employees
- Be truthful
- avoid white lies and manipulation of people and
information
108Actions which Develop a Climate of Fairness and
Ethical Behavior
- Demonstrate integrity
- - keep confidences, show concern for others
- Define expectations of employees
- Ensure equitable treatment of employees
- Adhere to clear, just, reasonable standards
- Demonstrate respect toward employees
109Just Cause Standard of Discipline
- Notification
- Reasonable Rule
- Investigation prior to Discipline
- Fair Investigation
- Proof of Guilt
- Absence of Discrimination
- Reasonable Penalty
110Progressive Discipline
- A series of management interventions that give
employees opportunities to correct undesirable
behaviors before being discharged. - Example
- verbal warning
- written warning
- suspension
- termination
111Positive Discipline
- A procedure that encourages employees to monitor
their own behaviors and assume responsibility for
the consequences of their own actions - uses a series of steps that increase in urgency
severity until discharge (similar to progressive
discipline) - threats punishment are replaced by counseling
motivating the employee to change (a
decision-making day off withpay, etc.) - placing blame on the employee is replaced by
collaborative problem solving - alters the role of supervisor from adversary to
counselor (requires training for supervisors)
112Prevent Discipline with HRM
- HR Planning
- job descriptions
- job design
- Recruitment Selection
- person/job/organization match
- valid selection procedures
- reference checking
- Compensation
- fairness appeal mechanisms
113Prevent Discipline with HRM
- Training Development
- orientation
- skill improvement
- retraining
- train managers to be effective
- Performance Appraisal/ Management
- clear and reasonable performance standards
- honest and constructive feedback
- frequent feedback
- focus on development
114Drug Testing
- Employer Interests
- Costs absenteeism, accidents, abuse-related
grievances, sick leave - Costs corporate liability for injuries caused by
persons affected by substance abuse - Preservation of favorable employment conditions
for nonuser employees - Employee Interests
- Preserving personal dignity privacy
- Gaining protection from disciplinary actions
where drug testing is not highly reliable
115Union Legislation
- National Labor Relations Act, 1935
- Wagner Act, National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
- Established the Right to form Unions
- Established the Process of How to form Unions
- Taft-Hartley Act, 1947
- Regulated unfair union labor practices
- Permission for states to enact Right to Work
Laws - Landrum-Griffin Act, 1959
- Protect union members from corrupt union
activities
116Decline in Union Membership
- Facts
- 1970 31 of workforce
- 1996 16 of workforce
- Reasons
- 1. Changes in the Labor Force the Economy
- increase of women and minorities
- shift from manufacturing to service
- shift of plants to South Southwest
- global competition cost of unions (wages/jobs)
117Decline in Union Membership
- 2. Changing Role of Unions
- social political advocacy legislation
- management sophistication in union avoidance
- strikes more risky for workers
- 3. Industrial Democracy
- enlightened management practices
- worker voice
- 4. Public Attitudes
- big labor
- corruption
118Changing view of Health Safety
- Past Employee held liable!
- Employer defenses used in court
- Assumption of risk
- worker knew work was dangerous
- Fellow-servant rule
- co-worker caused the accident
- Contributory negligence
- employee violated a company work rule
119Changing view of Health Safety
- Current Organization Responsible
- Social values
- prevent firms from abusing workers- individual
rights - Organizational benefits
- reduction in insurance premiums
- savings of litigation
- fewer wages paid for lost time
- less expense in training replacement workers
- more productivity with less overtime
- attract high quality/productive workers
120OSHAs Basic Provisions
- Enforcement Standards
- National standards from NIOSH
- General Duty clause
- requires that for subject areas where no safety
standards have been adopted, employers have the
general duty to provide safe healthful working
conditions - Hazard Communication
- requires that employees have a right to know
about hazards confronting them at work
121OSHAs Basic Provisions (continued)
- Refusing Unsafe Work
- right of employees to refuse to perform assigned
tasks because of a reasonable apprehension
regarding their health safety (coupled with a
reasonable belief that no less drastic
alternative is available) - Record-keeping requirements
- accident frequency rates
- reporting injuries/illnesses
1224 Approaches to Safety
- Engineering Eliminate hazard
- Environment Eliminate hazard
- Equipment Protect worker
- Education Worker protects self
123Systems Approach to Safety
- Organizational Commitment
- Coordinated Safety Efforts
- safety committees
- employee safety motivation
- safety discipline
- safety incentives
- safety training communications
- safety inspection
- accident research
124Workplace Safety and Health
- Expanding scope of Employer concerns
- Job-related safety and health at work
- white collar SH issues stress, carpal tunnel
- Non-job related safety and health at work
- violence in the workplace, AIDS
- Safety and health outside the workplace
- wellness promotion
- EAPs counseling regarding many non-work issues
(marital/family problems) - Drug testing
125Safety Health Managers Role
- Monitor and Initiate Actions
- Facility Design, Job Design Production systems
- Provide Safety Training and Equipment
- Keep Accurate Safety Records
- Do Safety Research
- Use OSHA, safety engineers, committees, etc.
- Reinforce Safety Culture
- Communicate safety standards with employees,
suppliers, - Assess worker accident proneness (hiring on)
- Reward safety compliance
- Overall Quality of Worklife
126Characteristics of an International Business
Person
- Cross-Functional Abilities
- Flexible
- Adventuresome
- Confident
- Proactive
- Entrepreneurial
- Socially-Oriented
- Decisive
- Ethical
- Professional Judgement
- Team Player
- Patient
127General Adaptation Actions
- 1. Identify, analyze and evaluate business
opportunities - 2. Implement business opportunities
- 3. Optimize utilization of assets
- 4. Conduct international business transactions
- 5. Develop and maintain international
relationships - 6. Appraise, respect and participate in diverse
cultures - 7. Communicate!
- 8. Balance personal life and international
business career
128Symptoms of Culture Shock
- Homesickness
- Boredom
- Withdrawal (e.g., spending excessive amounts of
time reading only seeing other Americans, etc.) - Need for excessive amounts of sleep
- Compulsive eating
- Compulsive drinking
- Irritability
- Exaggerated cleanliness
129More Symptoms of Culture Shock
- Marital stress
- Family tension and conflict
- Chauvinistic excesses
- Stereotyping of host nationals
- Hostility toward host nationals
- Loss of ability to work effectively
- Unexplainable fits of weeping
- Physical ailments (psychosomatic illnesses)
130Expatriate Compensation
- Selection assessment for overseas job
- Training preparation for overseas experience
- Salary relative to home or host country?
- Foreign Service Policy
- round trip airfare
- housing allowance assistance (home host
country) - goods services allowance
131Expatriate Compensation (cont.)
- Foreign Service Policy (continued)
- education allowance
- home visitation/ dependent travel
- auto assistance
- tax equalization
- Bottom Line
- Expatriate employees cost the organization 3 to 5
times as much as home country employees!