Managing Human Resource Management
Managing Human Resource Management
Managing Human Resource Management
Management
• Human Resource refers to the knowledge, talents and skills and
behaviors of a human or humans that contribute to the production of
goods and services. Or Any person and their particular abilities and
skills.
• Human resource management (HRM) is the strategic and
consistent approach to the management of an organization's most
valued assets - the people working there who individually and
collectively contribute to the achievement of the objectives of the
business.
• "Human resource management is responsible for how people are
treated in organizations. It is responsible for bringing people into the
organization, helping them perform their work, compensating them
for their labors, and solving problems that arise" (Cherrington, 1995,
p. 5).
A strategy is a course of action. The company’s long-tem
plan for how it will balance its internal strengths and
weaknesses with its external opportunities and threats to
maintain a competitive advantage.
• Strategic Human Resources Management
– Strategic human resource management is the
process of linking the human resource function
with the strategic objectives of the organization
in order to improve performance.
• Basic Model of
How to Align HR
Strategy
and Actions with
Business
Strategy
Source: Adapted from Garrett Walker and J. Randal MacDonald,
“Designing and Implementing an HR Scorecard,” Human
Resources Management 40, no. 4 (2001), p. 370.
Important HR Activities
HR Planning
Organizational
strategic
planning
HRM Human
environmental resources
scanning planning
•Labor markets •Demand forecast
•Technology •Internal labor supply
•Legislation •External labor supply
•Competition •Job analysis
•Economy
The Recruitment and Selection Process – Steps
Advertising
– The Media: selection of the best medium depends
on the positions for which the firm is recruiting.
• Newspapers (local and specific labor markets)
• Trade and professional journals
• Internet job sites
• Marketing programs
• Constructing and effective ad
– Wording related to job interest factors should evoke
the applicant’s attention, interest, desire, and action
(AIDA) and create a positive impression of the
company.
– Org. info, info about job, job specification, process.
• Training and Development
• "Training focuses on learning the skills, knowledge, and attitudes
required to initially perform a job or task or to improve upon the
performance of a current job or task, while
• development activities are not job related, but concentrate on
broadening the employee's horizons.
Training Process
Sources of
Training Needs
Assessment
Figure 9–5
Important T & D Methods
• The type of training depends on the material to be learned, the length of
time learners have, and the financial resources available.
• Audi-visual techniques.
• Class rooms Instructions
Figure 12–1
Compensation
Administration
Process
Job Evaluation
• Job Evaluation
– The systematic determination of the relative
worth of jobs within an organization.
• Employee and Labor Relations
• Just as human resource developers make sure employees have proper
training, there are groups of employees organized as unions to address and
resolve employment-related issues. Unions have been around since the
time of the American Revolution (Mondy and Noe, 1996).
• Those who join unions usually do so for one or both of two reasons—
– to increase wages and/or to eliminate unfair conditions.
– Some of the outcomes of union involvement include better medical plans, extended vacation
time, and increased wages (Cherrington, 1995).
• HR managers are also responsible for resolving
collective bargaining issues i.e. employment related
issues such as compensation and benefits, working
conditions, job security, discipline procedures,
individuals' rights, management's rights, and contract
length.
• Collective bargaining involves management and the
union trying to resolve any issues peacefully—before the
union finds it necessary to strike and/or management
decides to institute a lockout (Cherrington, 1995).
• Article 17 provides for a fundamental right to exercise
the freedom of association and the right to form unions
• Safety, Health & Environment
• Mondy and Noe (1996) define safety as "protecting
employees from injuries caused by work-related
accidents" and
• health as keeping "employees free from physical or
emotional illness" (p. 432).
• The Safety laws are to enhance safety and health and to
decrease accidents, which lead to decreased productivity
and increased operating costs (Cherrington, 1995).
• Health problems recognized in the workplace can include
the effects of smoking, alcohol and drug/substance
abuse, AIDS, stress, etc
• Task: Case Analysis(South West Airlines)