Strategic Human Resource Management: Krista Uggerslev, NAIT
Strategic Human Resource Management: Krista Uggerslev, NAIT
Strategic Human Resource Management: Krista Uggerslev, NAIT
Strategic Human
Resource
1
Management
Chapter
One
© 2019 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Education Limited Schwind 12th Edition, Figure 1-2 Schwind 12th Edition 1-6
CANADIAN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Technological Force:
Flexible Work Design
• Unprecedented degree of technology
– Changed the way we work, play, study, and entertain
ourselves
– Access to information has affected the way organizations
conduct business
• Technology has brought flexibility
– When and where work is carried out (e.g., telecommuting)
• Knowledge Management
– Process of capturing organizational knowledge and
making it available for sharing and building new
knowledge
• Intranets and integrated information systems help
store and access information quickly and accurately
• Internet has a profound impact on HR activities
– social networking sites, video-sharing, etc.
Demographic Force:
Gender Balance in the Workplace
• 47% of the workforce are women (2017)
• Women accounted for 70% of employment growth
in the last 20 years
• Raises importance of:
– Child care
– Work-family balance
– Dual career families
– Employment equity
Demographic Force:
Shift Towards Knowledge Workers
• Shift from primary and extractive industries to
service, technical, and professional jobs
– All services combined currently account for more than 75
percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
• Knowledge workers have been the fastest growing
type of workers
– Need to attract, retain, and retrain
Demographic Force:
Educational Attainment of Workers
© 2019 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Education Limited Schwind 12th Edition, Figure 1-8 Schwind 12th Edition 1-21
CANADIAN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
© 2019 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Education Limited Schwind 12th Edition, Figure 1-9 Schwind 12th Edition 1-22
CANADIAN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Demographic Force:
Generational Shift
• Baby Boomers, Generation X, Generation Y, and
Generation Next (Gen Z) are qualitatively different
workers
– Need to understand that people have different
expectations from their workplaces
• Functional authority
– HR department may be provided authority to make
decisions (e.g., deciding type of benefits)
Job Analysis
2
and Design
Chapter
Two
Learning Objectives
1. Describe the uses of job analysis information for human
resource managers.
2. Discuss the various steps in conducting job analysis and
methods of job data collection.
3. Describe the contents of a job description and a job
specification.
4. Discuss the various approaches to setting performance
standards.
5. Define what competencies are and describe competency
models.
6. Outline the key considerations in job design.
Job Analysis
• Systematic study of a job to discover its
specifications and skill requirements.
• Used for all HR functions:
– Wage-setting, recruitment, training, performance
management, or job-redesign
Phase 1: Preparation
• Step 1
– Become familiar with the organization and its jobs
• Step 2
– Determine uses of job analysis information
• Step 3
– Identify jobs to be analyzed
• Step 6:
– Choose the method for data collection
• Interviews
• Focus groups
• Questionnaires
• Employee logs
• Observation
• Combinations
Job Identity
• Job title, job location, job code
• National Occupational Classification (NOC)
• Skill level and skill type
• Industry and occupational mobility
• Working Conditions:
– May go beyond descriptions of the physical environment
– Hours of work, safety and health hazards, travel
requirements, and other features of the job
• Approvals:
– Reviewed by jobholders and supervisors
Job Specifications
• A written statement that explains the human
knowledge, skills, abilities, and other characteristics
(KSAOs) needed to do a job
• Includes experience, specific tools, actions,
education and training required
• Includes physical and mental demands on
jobholders
Organizational Considerations
• Efficiency
– Achieving maximal output with minimal input
– Scientific management & industrial engineering principles
– Stresses efficiency in effort, time, labour costs, training, and
employee learning time
• Work flow
– Sequence of and balance between jobs in an organization
needed to produce the firm’s goods or services
Ergonomic Considerations
• Considers the physical relationship between the worker
and the work
• Fitting the task to the worker rather than forcing
employees to adapt to the task
• Can lead to significant improvements:
– Efficiency and productivity
– Workplace safety
Employee Considerations
• Having control over one’s work &
Autonomy response to work environment
Task
• Knowing that one’s work is important
Significance
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CANADIAN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Job Specialization:
Increase Quality of Work Life
• Job Rotation
• Job Enlargement
• Job Enrichment
• Employee Involvement and Work Teams
Environmental Considerations
• Workforce Availability
– Abilities and availability of the people who will do the
work
• Social Expectations
– Expectations of larger society and workers
• Work Practices
– Set ways of performing work