Chapter 10
Chapter 10
Chapter 10
Chapter 10
Human resource management (HRM) administration deals with the efficient performance of the
transactional activities. Record keeping, updating policy and informational materials for a self-
service portal, generating and disseminating internal reports, complying with governmentally
mandated external reporting, and administering labor contracts are all examples of HRM
administration associated with managing an organization’s workforce. Approximately 65% to
75% of all HR activities are transactional. Human resource information systems (HRIS) are vital
tools in managing these increasingly complex transactional requirements.
For this reason, it is absolutely crucial that the employee database, frequently referred to as the
employee master file, be carefully constructed so that the information is accurate and timely. The
employee master file is a record and repository for all relevant employee information and must
be created prior to any other modules for programs, such as recruiting and applicant tracking.
Before this module can be developed, though, an analysis of the jobs in the firm must be
conducted, and specific job descriptions for each position in the organization must be developed.
A primary goal of an effective HR department is to ensure that the organization has the best
available people working in the proper jobs at the appropriate time to maximize the
organization’s productive capacity. To do this, however, the organization must know not only
what each job entails but also what knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSA) are necessary to
perform the job successfully. Job analysis provides both types of information.
Job analysis is the process of systematically obtaining information about jobs by determining the
duties, tasks, or activities of jobs, from which KSA can be estimated. From this analysis, job
descriptions can be developed. Job descriptions define the working contract between the
employee and the organization. Job descriptions uses include:
(1) Evidence for any litigation involving unfair discrimination in hiring, promoting, or
terminating employees
Pratigya Sharma
(2) Development of all the HRM programs, especially talent management in organizations, and
other important HRM programs including recruitment, selection, training and performance
appraisal
1. Identify the sources of information about the job. The best sources are usually job
incumbents and their supervisors; however, professional job analysts can be used for newly
created or complex jobs. Company records and the Internet, specifically the U.S. Department of
Labor’s O*Net database (http://onetonline.org), are also good sources of information about jobs.
2. Identify the types of job information needed. This information can include tasks, duties,
responsibilities, the knowledge required, performance standards, job context, and the equipment
used. A determination of what specific information will be used for the analysis of all jobs must
be made to maintain consistency across the final job descriptions.
3. Determine the appropriate methods of collecting the job data. Techniques include
interviews, questionnaires, observation, and focus groups. The choice of technique(s) depends on
the number of jobs to be analyzed and the funding available.
4. Consider using one or more of the standardized techniques for conducting job analysis to
enhance the final job description, for example, functional job analysis, the position analysis
questionnaire (PAQ), task inventory analysis, or the critical incident method (see Ghorpade,
1988).
Regardless of the approach or technique used to analyze the jobs in an organization, the outcome
must obtain accurate and timely job descriptions.
Pratigya Sharma
HRIS Applications
The utilization of technology, including Web-based job analysis tools, has increased the
availability of information supporting job analysis, reduced costs of collecting information, and
enhanced convenience of collect and analyzing information.
Completing job analyses and deriving job descriptions can be accomplished through online
survey techniques. Job analysis questionnaires can be administered online to job incumbents and
supervisors, and the resulting job descriptions can be analyzed statistically to finalize job
descriptions. This online questionnaire capability can be part of an integrated HRIS software
package covering multiple programs (e.g., SAP, PeopleSoft) or purchased as stand-alone
software.
Maintaining accurate job descriptions can also be aided by an HRIS. Later in this chapter,
service oriented architecture (SOA) with self-service portals for employees (ESS) and managers
(MSS) will be discussed. These portals can be used to make sure that job descriptions remain
accurate and timely. For example, if work procedures or new equipment are introduced, it would
be easy to request that the persons affected by the change, both employees and supervisors,
access their current job descriptions via portals to make necessary updates to the job
descriptions.
HRIS can assist managers charged with improving the efficiency of HR administration by
reducing costs, enhancing the reliability of reporting, and improving service to internal
customers. First, an HRIS can help improve data accuracy by (1) reducing the need for multiple
inputs, (2) eliminating redundancies in data, and (3) reducing the opportunity for human input
errors and associated corrections. . Finally, a properly designed HRIS permits secure global
distribution of data while providing the desired privacy for employee data, facilitating
consideration of alternative methods of consolidating, and improving services to internal
customers.
HR managers face a variety of other administrative requirements in the rapidly evolving HRIS
era. The HRM administrative issues highlighted in this chapter include (1) organizational
Pratigya Sharma
approaches for providing HR in a global economy (i.e., self-service portals, SSCs, outsourcing,
off shoring); (2) compliance mandates for record maintenance and report requirements (e.g.,
Employer Information Report EEO-1), which are associated both with government laws in the
United States (e.g., Occupational Safety and Health Act [OSHA]) and with the labor laws of
other countries; and (3) the measurement of HRM contributions to an organization’s strategic
goals via a balanced scorecard.
Today, computer hardware and the accompanying software packages offer considerable support
for daily HR transactions and make it possible to move beyond the limited administrative
approaches available to the HR managers of the 1950s (PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2006). Modern
HR professionals use technology to more effectively support administrative activities and reduce
organizational costs while improving data accuracy, employee productivity, and customer
service (Bender, 2001; Ulrich, 1997). Indeed, 92% of the companies worldwide included in the
2012–13 CedarCrestone HR technology survey indicated the use of some type of HR
administrative technology (CedarCrestone, 2012). Moreover, global companies reported that,
even with challenging economic conditions, they anticipated growing their technology
commitment for strategic human capital talent management, as well as for workforce
management, service delivery, and business intelligence.
SOA is a collection of internal and external services that can communicate with each other by
point-to-point data exchange or through coordination among different services to achieve a
business purpose. The principles of SOA include loose coupling, flexibility, autonomy,
Pratigya Sharma
• Faster implementation and change management through reuse, modeling, and composite
development; and
SOA is enhanced by eXtensible Markup Language (XML). XML combines text and other
information about the text, such as its structure, allowing data sharing across different
information systems via the Internet.
There are four structural approaches to HR administration facilitated by technology. Each has
opened paths to increased efficiency and effectiveness, improved service, and cost controls,
possibilities unimagined by HR professionals a decade ago.
The self-service portal is an electronic access point to an organization’s HRM information, such
as company policies, benefits schedules, an individual’s payroll data, or other records; access
Pratigya Sharma
may be via the organization’s computers and intranet or remotely from other locations via the
Internet.
Human resources outsourcing (HRO) is the practice of contracting with vendors to perform
HR services and activities.
Manager self-service (MSS) portals are becoming more prevalent in organizations as well. MSS
portals are specialized versions of ESS portals designed to allow managers to view extensive
information about their subordinates and perform many administrative tasks electronically,
including traditional HR functions
Pratigya Sharma
(1) Permitting employees to access company data through self-service portals may increase
the possibility of security breaches and the associated negative outcomes, like identity
theft, for affected employees.
(2) Employees are concerned that even having their data in a company’s HRIS can lead to
misuse of such information by others in the organization and may feel their privacy is
invaded when organizations fail to limit access to personal data housed in HRIS.
(3) Unions may argue that employees are “doing HR work” when they enter data and make
changes online via an ESS portal. Union members who perform such transactions on their
own time may request overtime pay for completing such functions or may choose to do
such functions at work, thus reducing productivity.
(4) MSS portals would not only require more actual work for the managers but also enforce
standardized interfaces that might lead managers to perceive a reduction in their status
and power in the organization.
transactions while still providing excellent service. Such a challenge involved balancing the
desire for control inherent in centralized administrative structures and the desire for flexibility
inherent in decentralized administrative structures—a constant organizational conflict within
large and expanding corporations.
Shared services is a collaborative strategy whereby [one or more] staff functions of a firm are
concentrated in a semi-autonomous organization and managed like a business unit to promote
greater efficiency, value generation and improved service for internal customers.
• Developing customer relationship models (CRMs) to better meet the needs of customers.
Establish a “global good” vision for the SSC that includes its definition and benefits to
ensure that business units “losing” functions are willing to make the commitment to
transfer their work.
Identify leaders, in all the affected groups, to sponsor the SSC vision, promote the
center’s value to the organization, and serve as responsible change agents.
Support transparency regarding who (e.g., affected employees), what (e.g., which
functions), when (e.g., transition plans), and where (e.g., location of the new center). This
openness is essential to building the trust needed to initiate and maintain the center’s
effectiveness.
Conduct initial and ongoing customer “values and requirements” meetings to build trust,
establish performance and service expectations, and solve problems. Implementing
jointly acceptable measures facilitates SSC success and internal customer satisfaction.
Pratigya Sharma
Focus on viewing the SSC’s processes in the context of the overall business functions.
Examine the process behind each function from “end to end.” Understanding the context
of all processes in each function encourages the recognition of the interdependencies
inherent in the SSC concept and bolsters the value-creating goal of SSCs.
Outsourcing is not new in HR administration. HR outsourcing (HRO) firms are hardly uniform.
There are many different types of providers, reflecting the diverse needs of organizations
Pratigya Sharma
Outsourcing contracts should include specific pricing agreements (e.g., flat or fixed fee per
process or per employee served, unit prices per transaction levels, hourly and overtime rates,
revenue sharing, riskreward sharing, failure penalties), expected performance and associated
measures (e.g., transaction quality standards, error rates, system availability and downtime,
customer satisfaction levels, hours of operation), and terms and conditions (e.g., start and end
dates, extensions permitted, termination agreements, dispute resolution procedures, audit
procedures). Obviously, HR administration managers would require significant assistance from
multiple groups such as the legal, operations, and information systems departments within the
organization to establish and monitor the contract, ensuring that the organization is adequately
protected from incompetent or unethical outsourcing providers.
(1) Some organizations outsource only discrete or selected functions, pursuing discrete HRO
through niche third-party providers. This outsourcing involves having specialized
external firms deal only with a particular HR function.
(2) Discrete HRO can achieve cost savings by eliminating the company’s need to hire highly
specialized HR professionals (e.g., executive recruiters) or those with the HRIS expertise
necessary to perform infrequent functions.
(3) Discrete HRO can reduce the HR administration costs associated with frequent, high-
volume transactions such as payroll.
Advantages of HR Outsourcing
4. Providing the firm with skilled transactional and professional services in HR functional
areas such as compensation and in administrative areas such as governmental compliance
and regulations.
Disadvantages of HR Outsourcing
1. Likelihood that the organization will not achieve its strategic goals.
2. Loss of institutional expertise in the outsourced functions, making an HRO decision
reversal difficult or impossible.
3. Outsourcing organizations may lack the contract management expertise to oversee the
vendor and hold it accountable for contract terms.
Offshoring is an expansion of HR outsourcing that includes sending work outside the United
States to vendors located in other countries. Technological capabilities and global competition
have combined to make HRO a global business, and offshoring for MNEs is quite complex.
Offshore ownership is riskier than simple offshore outsourcing. In addition to appropriate
strategic and financial due diligence, organizations considering offshore ownership must pay
particular attention to
• Ready availability of necessary employee knowledge, skills, and abilities such as language; •
information and communication systems compatibility with HRIS;
• Political stability of the country for facility and employee security; and
Although an offshore outsourcing strategy is less risky than offshore ownership, organizations
would still face more risk than they would had they outsourced domestically. HR managers
should always perform due diligence in assessing the reputation and business capabilities of an
outsourcing partner. However, such processes are more complex when dealing with
organizations located halfway across the globe.
Pratigya Sharma
Whether the organization pursues a “domestic only” strategy (i.e., doing business in only one
country) or an MNE approach, countries’ government and labor laws are important external
forces in establishing the context for business.
It is important to recognize that U.S. employment laws underpin the general principles used in
the practice of HRM. There are a number of laws in the United States prohibiting unfair
discrimination on the basis of employee sex, race, age, and disability. There are similar laws and
regulations in other industrialized nations that prohibit unfair discrimination (Briscoe & Schuler,
2004). The general principle underlying these unfair discrimination laws and regulations is that
job performance should be the primary basis for employment decisions that change the
employment status of an individual. This is, of course, just one example among many that
demonstrates how governments affect HR administration. There are many laws and regulations
in the United States that require organizations to report to government agencies (Ledvinka,
1982). All these manual reports are tedious and time consuming, and they account for a
significant amount of the transactional activity of the HR department. The processing for these
activities was affected significantly by the introduction of computer technology and has always
been a part of any integrated HR software package.
Recognizing that an organization can no longer rely solely on a simple financial measure to
assess its ability to achieve sustainable competitive advantage, devised the balanced scorecard to
facilitate the organization’s efforts to measure its success in achieving the strategic goals
required to meet the needs of its stakeholder groups. A balanced scorecard is both a
management and a measurement system that “enables organizations to clarify their vision and
Pratigya Sharma
strategy and translate them into action, [providing] feedback around both the internal business
processes and external outcomes to continuously improve strategic performance and results.
Each of the items is directly related to the balanced scorecard categories. Specifically, lawsuits
and stock price are associated with financial success, reputation is associated with the customer
category, and innovation is part of the learning and growth category. Certainly, HR professionals
understand the impact effective human capital management has on an organization. However,
unless measures to reflect the value-added nature of HRM in leveraging human capital are
developed and linked to the strategic goals reflected in a firm’s balanced scorecard, it is unlikely
that organizations will view such HRM-linked activities as strategic.
2. Identify leading (e.g., on-time order delivery) and lagging (e.g., customer satisfaction level)
indicators.
5. Specify the HR strategy (e.g., offer enhanced productivity training for workers to reduce
product time to market and ensure on-time order delivery).
Researchers have long recognized the need to ensure goal alignment in organizations. HR
measures should reflect a balance of cost controls (e.g., improved productivity) and value
creation (e.g., increased innovation) consistent with the business’s balanced scorecard and
strategic goals.
Pratigya Sharma
We can see multiple opportunities for HR administration managers to align with the strategic
goals covered by the balanced scorecard. For example, deploying HR portals (i.e., ESS and MSS
portals) can provide simultaneous support for financial goals (e.g., cost control through reduced
employee expense) and learning and growth (e.g., e-learning courses). Similarly, strategic use of
outsourcing can support financial goals (e.g., cost reductions) and internal processes (e.g.,
improved time from vacancy request to hiring). Thus, HR administration managers can make
decisions that support the strategic goals contained in the balanced scorecard.