Title: The Environmental Context of Human Resource Management
1The Environmental Context of Human Resource
Management
- What is Human Resource Management?
- HRM is the set of organizational activities
directed at attracting, developing, and
maintaining an effective workforce. - Why Human Resource Management?
- Human resources are critical for effective
organizational functioning.
2Job Analysis
- Job Analysis is a systematic procedure for
studying jobs to determine their various elements
and requirements. - Job Description is a list of elements that make
up a particular job. - Job Specification is a list of the qualifications
skills, abilities, etc. required to perform a
particular job. - Job Analysis is the basis for recruiting and
selecting employees for existing or new jobs and
is used to prepare job evaluation forms and to
determine compensation levels.
3Job Description and Job Specification
Source Used with permission of Houghton Mifflin
Company.
4Attracting Human Resources
- How do HRMs forecast human resource demand and
supply? - Assessing trends.
- Sales forecast analysis.
- Forecasting the labor supply.
- Plan for dealing with predicted shortfalls or
overstaffing.
5Attracting Human Resources
- Replacement Chart lists each important
managerial position in the organization and
identifies - who occupies it
- how long he or she will probably remain in that
position - who is or will be a qualified replacement
-
6Attracting Human Resources
- Employee Information System
- Generally a computerized record on each
employees education, skills, experience and
career aspirations. - Easily able to identify any and all employees who
are eligible to fill positions.
7Human Resource Planning
Assess trends in External labor market
Current employees Future
organizational plans General economic trends
8Recruiting Human Resources
- What is recruiting?
- Attracting qualified people to apply for the
jobs that are open. - What are the forms of recruiting?
- Internal recruiting considering present
employees as candidates for openings. - External recruiting attracting people outside
the organization to apply for jobs.
9Recruiting Human Resources
- It is important to bring about a good person-job
fit. - The Realistic Job Preview RJP provides the
applicant with a real picture of what the job
would be like.
10Recruiting Human Resources
- Validation determining the extent to which a
selection device is really predictive of future
job performance. - Predictive validation involves collecting
scores of employees or applicants on a device to
be validated and correlating their scores with
actual job performance.
11Recruiting Human Resources
- Content validation uses logic and job analysis
data to establish that the selection device
measures the exact skills needed for successful
job performance. - Can the applicant actually perform the duties?
12Recruiting Human Resources
- Selection Processes
- Application Blanks
- Tests of ability, skill aptitude or knowledge
- Interviews
- Assessment Centers managerial simulations
- Polygraphs, Drug tests, Physicals, Credit checks
13Selecting Human Resources
Validation, determining the extent to which a
selection device is predictive of future job
performance
Application Blanks
Tests
Interviews
Assessment Centers
14Developing Human Resources
- What does training mean?
- Teaching operational or technical employees how
to do the job for which they were hired. - What is employee development?
- Teaching managers and professionals the skills
needed for both present and future jobs.
15The Training Process
16What Is a Performance Appraisal?
- A Performance Appraisal is a formal assessment
of how well an employee is doing his or her job. - There are various form of appraisals such as
- Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale BARS, a
sophisticated rating method in which supervisors
construct a rating scale associated with
behavioral anchors.
17What Is a Performance Appraisal?
- Common Appraisal Methods
- Objective Methods includes actual output and
special performance tests. - Judgmental Methods ranking and rating
techniques are the most common. - Rating differs from Ranking in that it compares
each employee with a fixed standard rather than
comparison with other employees. -
-
18Graphic Rating Scales for a Bank Teller
19Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale
20What Is a Performance Appraisal?
- Errors in Performance Appraisals
- Recency Error the tendency to base judgments
on the subordinate's most recent performance
because it is most easily recalled. - Overuse of one part of the scale giving
everyone a rating of average, being too easy or
too tough. - Halo Error allowing the assessment of an
employee on one dimension to spread to ratings
of that employee on other dimensions.
21What Is a Performance Appraisal?
- 360-degree Feedback - is a performance appraisal
system in which managers are evaluated by
everyone around them their boss, their peers
and their subordinates.
22What Is a Performance Appraisal?
- Performance Feedback
- Last step in the performance appraisal
- Discussion should generally be focused on the
facts - The assessed level of performance
- How and why that assessment was made
- How it can be improved in the future