Roles of HR Generalist
Roles of HR Generalist
Roles of HR Generalist
organizations even the total HR-Functions are outsourced…what are the various roles
that an HR-Professional can look up to. I have spoken to many recruitment consultants
but somehow they failed to give the clarity of role that they are “Head Hunting” for.
People with in the organization…at times are just overlapping the various functions. In
this write-up…I am just trying to explain the various roles that HR Professionals can play
in New Economy…along with the traits required for each function.
Lets start with Recruitment Team. This team is also known as Sourcing or Hiring or
Staffing or Talent Acquisition team in various organizations. They are “Sales People”
within HR Department. Their main role is to get “Best of the Talent” available in the
market. Hence, they need to know what exactly they are looking for. Their role starts with
“Talent Requisition” raised by the respective department…and ends only with Induction
of the New Hire. In between, he needs to prepare the Job Description, Identify the
Competencies required, Identify the source for hiring, Interview the candidate,
Coordinate the interview with the respective department and complete the
documentation.
The various competencies that one must have to be a part of the Recruitment Team are as
follows:
3) Need to identify the various resources for hiring and select the best one based on “Cost
Effectiveness” and “Urgency”.
4) Should have clarity of competencies that he is looking for and also have clarity on the
role a new hire is expected to play.
1. Joining Formalities
7. Liaison with various government organizations for Employee Provident Funds, ESI
and other Retirement Benefits
8. Exit-Interviews
Competencies Required
2) Self-Motivated
3) Should have updated and accurate database…on any hour of the day.
This team is like a “Spokesperson” of the HR-Team. They are the bridge between HR and
Employees. They are the “Policy and Strategy interpreters”. An effective “Employee
Relations Team” can actually control the Attrition Rate of the organization. This team is
expected to play following roles:
1) Handling all the queries of the employees. Be it related to Salary, Leaves, Attendance,
and Transfer etc.
2) They are also expected to explain the various policies, strategies and benefits to
employees.
3) They are expected to stop all type of rumours and misleading communications.
5) They are also expected to give constructive inputs to Training and Development and
OD Team.
6) They play an important role in “Employee Engagement” …winning the trust of the
employee and hence can help the organization in controlling the attrition rate.
7) It is for this team to ensure that the employees in the organization should not leave the
organization for reasons other than salary.
Competencies Required
1) Highly Matured
2) Level Headed
3) Should be well versed with the business of the organization and its policies.
6) Highly Motivated.
This is fairly new role for HR-Professionals. The role of this team…changes, with the
growth of the company. His main role is to ensure that the employees of the organizations
take maximum salary and befits to their home and lose less to Income Tax.
He is the person…who decides how much to pay to the person; what all benefits to entitle
him…based on the market rate…keeping the competitive edge in the industry. He is the
person…who actually announces the annual increment for an organization.
1. Job Analysis
2. Job Evaluation
3. Grading
4. Competency Mapping
5. Salary Surveys
6. Benefits Survey
7. Benchmarking
Competencies Required
4) Should also be good in Income Tax Provisions…related to Salary and benefits and also
Economics.
If you are good in speaking…does not qualify you for being a trainer. You may be
excellent as a Public Speaker and worse in training. Being a good speaker is just one of
the “Must Have” traits for trainers but not the only trait required. There is something a
trainer is expected to do before the delivery…(Training Need Identification) and there is
something he is expected to do after delivery…(Measuring the Training Effectiveness).
Competencies Required
4. Should be empathetic.
5. Clarity of thoughts is must.
You need to take out Tonnes of Sand to get few Grams of Gold…hence the role of a
trainer is to get Gold.
You need to dive into the ocean to get a Shell with a Pearl…hence he is expected to be to
that diver.
This is one of the roles, which is an outcome of New Economy. Though being a “Mentor”
is not a full time job…”Coaching” can be. We can place HR-Coach above HR-Director
but below HR-President. Just like a Cricket Coach, whose role is not only to improve the
batting or bowling…but also fielding, physical fitness, mental toughness and overall
involvement of the each player…the role of HR Coach is to increase the overall
productivity of all the above-mentioned sub-functions of HR Department. Hence, he
cannot afford to say that I don’t know about Recruitment or Compensation & Benefits
etc. He is the centre of the HR-Department and all functions revolve around him. His role
is not very sophisticated one but very tactical.
Competencies Required
5) A true leader.
Conclusion
This is just an attempt to distinguish between various roles that an HR Professional can
play in New Economy. There is a lot that a HR Professional can do.
Human Resource Generalist
Job Title: Human Resource Generalist Company Job Code: ....................................... FLSA
Status: ....................................... Division/Department ....................................... EEO Code:
....................................... Reports to: Human Resource Manager Salary Grade/Band:
....................................... Last Revision Date: .......................................
SUMMARY
Responsible for all human resource activities for the company. Provide advice, assistance and
follow-up on company policies, procedures, and documentation. Coordinate the resolution of
specific policy-related and procedural problems and inquiries.
PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES
ADDITIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES
Managing talent is not something that a company falls into - it's a deliberate undertaking
that can be advantageous to the company and each of the individuals within the
organization. To begin the process, Human Resources must strategically analyze the
current process and integrate the following:
• Recruitment - presenting the company so that the right people will be attracted
and desire employment.
• Retention - initial a reward and support program for existing employees.
• Employee Development - constant learning and development.
• Leadership Development - development programs for employees with high
potential.
• Performance Management System - feedback and measurements that nurture and
support employee performance.
• Workforce Planning - keeping up with changing workforce; include older
workforce and plan for future skills shortages.
• Business Culture - presenting a positive way of performing.
Companies can benefit from developing and retaining the workforce they have and
individuals can benefit from a company that encourages and develops them to meet their
aspirations. A Performance Management System is vital to achieving the goals of both the
company and the individuals. The specific needs are different for each company but the
common elements include -
Organizations can save hundreds of thousands of dollars by not only retaining the talent
that are already working for the company, but increasing performance of the same
individuals by working with them and initiating a performance management system. If
the employee feels valued and on a career path where they will personally benefit -
production tends to increase and the employee is far less likely to seek employment
elsewhere.
Initiating a talent management plan can also be used to attract the types of employees that
you want to join your organization. This process will enable you to learn what types of
people work best in the organization; where improvements can be made and how to make
adjustments as business and culture change. Performance Management System and Talent
Management plan can work hand in hand to improve the overall environment of the
organization.
Hiring and retaining talent has become more difficult. Talent management is a necessary
resource. Workitect offers competency models and workshops on building a competency
model. Develop and retain your best talent.
employee performance
If your
Too often it turns out that the answer is “Nothing,” or at least nothing sufficiently
disagreeable to get the manager to act. Managers often discover that it’s easier to put up
with toothless gripes from the personnel department about not getting employee
performance appraisals done than actually evaluating subordinates. As a result, appraisals
get pushed aside so that “real work” can be done, and your employee performance
management structure is broken.
Make sure that there are some real consequences for not getting employee performance
appraisals in on time. For example, withholding salary increases until paperwork is up-to-
date creates a powerful incentive for getting them done on time. This is particularly true
if the human resources department has the clout to refuse making salary increases
retroactive to rescue managers who just didn’t get around to submitting them on time.
No manager wants to be in the position of explaining a subordinate’s delayed salary
increase to them – especially if the boost in pay is being held up simply because the
manager failed to submit their employee performance appraisal on time. This strategy is
called “building accountability.” It’s a tough-minded approach, but all you’re doing is
insisting that managers play by the rules.
Establishing Deadlines
A gentler measure is simply to make sure that managers know exactly what they’re
supposed to do, and when they’re supposed to do it with a checklist that provides key
dates of the employee performance management cycle. And make it easy for them to do
what you want – make sure forms and procedural instructions are readily available, and
there’s someone on hand to answer the inevitable questions that arise.
Both approaches establish shared responsibilities. Not only are line managers required to
get their employee performance appraisals written, but HR must make sure the employee
performance management process is a model for best practices. Forms should reflect the
reality of people’s jobs; managers must be able to assess all of the subtle elements of both
results and behaviors; training and other support must be available in a just-in-time basis;
and what is expected should be made crystal clear. Without all of these elements, HR
bears the lion’s share of the responsibility for not creating a system that encourages
employee performance management excellence.
But consequences aren’t the only area where HR drops the ball. We’ve talked about
arranging negative consequences for those managers who don’t do what’s expected. But
remember — honey influences behavior better than vinegar does. How often does HR
provide positive consequences to managers who are doing a good job of meeting their
employee performance appraisal responsibilities?
A simple email from an HR rep to a supervisor saying that in reviewing the employee
performance appraisals she wrote, he was impressed by how seriously she took the
responsibility and the fact that they were all submitted before the deadline. Copy her boss
on the email, too.
It’s important to have some mechanism to remind managers when key dates are
approaching. That’s one of the great advantages of online systems. Well-designed online
systems greatly complement employee performance management efforts, providing
managers with at-a-glance information about tasks to be completed.
For example, a dashboard screen can let them know which employee performance
appraisals need to be written and when they’re due, which appraisals written by
subordinate managers have been submitted and are awaiting their review and approval,
and which subordinates need to submit self-appraisals or sign off after an evaluation has
been written and discussed.
An online system can be set up to automatically send managers (and their subordinates)
regular reminders every time an action date is approaching and email red-flag
notifications if a deadline is ever missed. Finally, a good online system can track the
current status of employee performance appraisal completions for different organizational
units. Having this information will allow you to let the head of the sales department know
that the completion percentage in his department is only 84 percent, while manufacturing
and accounting are at the 100 percent level.
Every senior manager should review each appraisal written by a subordinate manager
before that manager reviews it with the employee. This one-over-one review procedure
will ensure a level playing field, since the senior manager can make sure that all of his
juniors are applying similar standards and expectations to their subordinates. He also will
learn who’s taking the responsibilities of employee talent management seriously as he
reviews the appraisals and sees how honestly they’re written.
Shame is a powerful motivator that is often overlooked. There’s nothing wrong with
shaming managers into doing what they’re supposed to do.
How do you do it? The easiest way to make shame work for you is to ask a senior
executive if he’d like to be updated on the status of employee performance appraisal
completions – he will invariably say yes. (Senior executives always want to know the
status of everything). That’s your license to report on exactly who has their employee
performance appraisals in on time and who’s not performing.
Provide a short report beginning, “As you requested, I have listed below the current status
of appraisal completions,” followed by nothing but two columns of names — one labeled
“On time” and the other labeled “Overdue.” Send copies of your report to everyone on
both lists. You can probably count on an immediate reaction from those managers on the
overdue list to finish their appraisals and move to the list of good guys.
Again, an online system can provide executives with up-to-the-minute information about
the status of all employee performance management activities without HR having to feed
it to them. And senior managers can have a powerful influence of creating the
environment where one hundred percent appraisal completions is the norm.
Creating Fool-Proof Accountability
At one major oil company, the CEO and his VP of HR developed an employee
performance appraisal procedure that was a model of simplicity: a requirement that each
manager discuss 13 open-ended questions about performance with each subordinate in
March of each year.
The only writing the system required was a memo from each manager to the CEO every
year no later than March 31. The memo indicates whether or not the manager had
conducted all his discussions – if the discussions had not been conducted, the memo
needed to explain why. And the reason had better be good, the VP-HR explained, because
on April 1 the CEO picks up the phone and starts calling. “Why didn’t you do what I
asked you to do?” he asks each manager who didn’t complete the performance-discussion
assignment. As the VP-HR explained with a sly smile, “You don’t ever want to get that
call from Roy.”
7. To run the Performance Management Cycle is the key Responsibility Areas for
Assistant Manager – Recruitment.
8. To have/create liaison with the business to develop the manpower plan for the
company.
9. To coordinate and manage recruitment at various levels and finding ways to meet the
ramp up plans for the organization.
10. To give huge attention on campus hiring if doing mass recruitments.
11. To take care of the on-boarding and induction for the new hires.
12. To handle training (as and when required) Common Points for both Assistant
Manager – Recruitment and Assistant Manager – Generalist HR Accountability &
Authority Levels.
16. To take ownership for meeting the information needs of internal customers Decision
Making.
17. To take routine decisions that will further the cause of the department or function.
18. To assume responsibility for problems brought to their notice until assigned to the
appropriate problem owner. Internal & External Interface.
19. Should have appropriate knowledge about benefits administrators (PF, Gratuity,
Superannuation, Insurance, etc) or training consultants, recruitment consultants, etc.
21. Should have excellent knowledge of the market conditions impacting HRM.