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Chapter 10 Strategic Human Resource Planning

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Title: Chapter 10 Strategic Human Resource Planning


1
Chapter 10 Strategic Human Resource Planning
Compatibility of Human Resource Management,
Industrial Relations, and Engineering Under Mass
Production and Lean Production An
ExplorationINP 6935September 18, 2001Dave
Lewis
Human Resource Management
2
Cascio - Chapter 10 (pg 153)
Dr. Wayne F. Cascio
  • Strategic Human Resource Planning

3
Examples of HR problems
  • Finding specialized technical talent
  • Finding seasoned managers
  • Developing fair HR management practices (i.e..
    EEO compliant)
  • Devising fair workable layoff policies
  • Improving productivity
  • Managing career development opportunities

4
Human Resource Planning (HRP)
  • an effort to anticipating future business and
    environmental demands on an organization and to
    meet the HR requirements dictating by these
    conditions

5
Human Resource Planning (HRP)
2 step process
  • Step 1 - Needs forecasting
  • Step 2 -
  • Performance management
  • Career management
  • Note Figure 10-1 p. 155

6
Human Resource Planning (HRP)
  • Integral parts
  • Recruitmentdevelopmentcompensationperformance
    management
  • Linked to external and organizational factors,
    and specific HR programs.

dynamic process
7
HRP planning process
  • the talent inventory
  • HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • action plans
  • control and evaluation procedures

8
Importance of Planning
  • Deal with change--technological , social,
    regulatory, and environmental
  • Objectives
  • "if you don't know where you are going, any road
    will get you there."

9
HR Planning
Strategic Planning
CH10 - Strategic Human Resource Planning
10
Strategic Planning
  • Defining company philosophy
  • Formulating company and divisional statements of
    identity, purpose, and objectives
  • Evaluating the company 's strengths and
    weaknesses
  • Determining the organization design
  • Developing appropriate strategies for achieving
    objectives
  • Devising programs to implement the strategies.

11
Strategic HRM In Action
Six Strategic Principles
  • Make people a key priority
  • Win customers for life
  • Use the total quality management approach to run
    the business
  • Profitably grow by being the leader in
    customer-led applications of technology
  • Rapidly and profitably globalize the business
  • Be the best value supplier.

Global Business Communication Systems
12
HRP planning process
  • the talent inventory
  • HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • action plans
  • control and evaluation procedures

13
Talent inventory
  • Who should be included in the inventory?
  • What specific pieces of information must be
    included for each individual?
  • How can this information best be obtained?
  • What is the most effective way to record such
    information?
  • How can inventory results be reported to top
    management?
  • How often most this in format on be updated ?
  • How can the security of this information be
    protected?

14
Talent Inventory Information Types
  • biographical data
  • selection test scores
  • present and past company training and
    development activities
  • salary history
  • language skills
  • professional qualifications
  • travel attitudes and preferences
  • career interests and assignment preferences
  • experience in foreign countries

15
Uses of Talent inventories
  • identification of candidates for promotion
  • assignment to special projects
  • transfer, and training
  • for organization analysis
  • for human resource planning

16
HRP planning process
  • the talent inventory
  • HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • action plans
  • control and evaluation procedures

17
HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • Estimates current data
  • Projections projected data
  • External Human Resource Supply
  • Internal Human Resource Supply
  • Management Succession Planning

18
HR Forecasts
4X (target year)
2003
Labor productivity
ratio-output per individual
predictor
Productivityratio
Note Figure 10-6 p. 166
19
HRP planning process
  • the talent inventory
  • HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • action plans
  • control and evaluation procedures

20
Action Plans
  • talent inventory


HR forecasts
action plans What you gonna do?
Career Management?
21
Career Management
  • Scarce promotions
  • frustrated expectations
  • job-hopping


Baby Boomers
22
Career Management Career Paths
  • Examine the paths followed in the past to the
    top rungs of the ladders.
  • Identify entry and exit points into the career
    path, usually at the bottom only.
  • Define entry-level position requirements
  • Identify important job experiences leading to the
    top "rung"

23
HRP planning process
  • the talent inventory
  • HR forecasts of supply and demand
  • action plans
  • control and evaluation procedures

24
Control And Evaluation
  • Goals Objectives!
  • Monitoring Performance
  • short-run objectives
  • long-range planning efforts

25
Human Resource Planning (HRP)
2 step process
  • Step 1 - Needs forecasting
  • Step 2 -
  • Performance management
  • Career management
  • Note Figure 10-1 p. 155

26
The HR Planning Process
  • Plan in order to reduce the uncertainty of the
    future!
  • Success in HRP rests on the quality of the action
    programs

27
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28
Compatibility of Human Resource Management,
Industrial Relations, and Engineering Under Mass
Production and Lean Production An Exploration
  • Koji Taira
  • University of Illinois Urbana Champaign
  • August 1995

29
Lean Production
  • A refinement of Mass production developed in
    Japan characterized by
  • Continuous improvement (kaizen)
  • Attempts to minimize waste (muda)
  • simple tasks are automated (jidoka)

30
Objectives of this paper
  • to develop an integrative perspective on the
    nature and problems of transition from mass
    production to lean production
  • to utilize firm theoretic insights for the
    evaluation of the place and prospects of lean
    production in strategic choices of the firm
  • lean production for Europe is explored

31
Lean Production
?
  • Empowers employee involvement/representation/parti
    cipation at three levels of the firm
  • Strategic
  • Executive/administrative
  • Manufacturing
  • Even beyond the firm (suppliers and
    distributors)!

32
Core Firm Car Manufacture
33
Suppliers
34
Multiple Countries
35
Convergence Hypothesis
  • Kerr, Dunlop, Harbison, and Meyers (1960)

36
Models Contrasted
  • Mass Production associated with Taylorism -
    ergonomic aspects of production process are
    streamlined
  • The ceaseless simplification of tasks
  • interchangeable worker - workers were to be
    reduced to brainless voiceless automatons
  • Lean Production - minimizes waste maximizes the
    value-adding portion of work
  • The ultimate is a job that is automated

37
Lean Production
  • "It transfers the maximum number of tasks and
    responsibilities to those workers actually adding
    value to the car on the line, and it has in place
    a system of detecting defects that quickly traces
    every problem, once discovered, to its ultimate
    cause"

38
Implications for HR
  • Transfer of Power
  • The maximum transfer of tasks and
    responsibilities to workers
  • Humanization of the blue collar position
  • implies a drastic reorganization of management
    process and a revolutionary redistribution of
    power

39
Lean Production
  • A refinement of Mass production developed in
    Japan characterized by
  • Continuous improvement (kaizen)
  • Attempts to minimize waste (muda)
  • simple tasks are automated (jidoka)

40
Problems of Transition to Lean Production
  • What should be done about the existing workforce
    that has been "dumbed down"
  • shut down the plant?
  • transform the current workforce

41
Problems of Transition to Lean Production
  • Forms of Resistance
  • Management dislikes empowerment
  • Workers want simple easy jobs
  • Incremental changes cost money
  • unions are also hesitant

42
American Example
  • United Auto Workers/ Ford - a good example
  • Early 80s Ford goes to Japan to learn lean
    production from Mazda

43
The Six Guiding Principles
adopted in November 1984
  • Quality comes first
  • Customers are the focus of everything we do
  • Continuous improvement is essential to our
    success
  • Employee involvement is our way of life
  • Dealers and suppliers are our partners
  • Integrity is never compromised

44
Ford Employees
  • Employees have participated in advance reviews of
    products
  • they have participated in rearranging lines and
    machines
  • they have taken action to eliminate scrap and
    rework
  • they have visited suppliers to seek improved
    quality
  • and they have proposed ways to prevent problems
    from happening

45
Phase II Joint Governance
  • Joint governance
  • Co-management
  • highly developed system of employee/union
    participation in the firm's decision making
  • begins with problem solving through collective
    bargaining with an explicit mutual interest in
    productivity enhancing
  • THE enterprise goals are a top priority!

46
Cultural Transfer?
  • No country can import or transplant foreign
    institutions intact.

?
47
Cultural Transfer?
Taylorism, Fordism, American Plan
Kaizen Muda Jidoka
48
Europe?
  • Historically, Europes HRM/IR has been on its path

Lean Production?
49
Europe?
  • Humanistic HRM/IR - Europe has gone beyond the
    types of HRM/IR expected under lean production.
  • labor-management cooperation are taken for
    granted in Europe

50
Europe?
  • Lean production should only be a matter of
    technical adjustment for Europe
  • Not a traumatic overhauling of the entire HRM/IR
    system as in the United States

51
Conclusions
  • Generated out of a Japanese need for Competitive
    advantages
  • This transition has been forced on American firms
  • Europe's transition to it is likely to be less
    traumatic than that of the United States.
  • more research and more careful analysis

52
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