HRM10 e CH05
HRM10 e CH05
HRM10 e CH05
tenth edition
Figure 5–1
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 5–3
Planning and Forecasting
Employment or personnel planning
– The process of deciding what positions the firm
will have to fill, and how to fill them.
Succession planning
– The process of deciding how to fill the company’s
most important executive jobs.
What to forecast?
– Overall personnel needs
– The supply of inside candidates
– The supply of outside candidates
Figure 5–2
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 5–5
Forecasting Personnel Needs
Trend analysis
– The study of a firm’s past employment needs over
a period of years to predict future needs.
Ratio analysis
– A forecasting technique for determining future
staff needs by using ratios between a causal
factor and the number of employees needed.
– Assumes that the relationship between the causal
factor and staffing needs is constant
Source: Kenneth Sovereign, Personnel Law (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1999), p. 50. Figure 5–5
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 5–10
Measuring Recruiting Effectiveness
What to measure and how to measure
– How many qualified applicants were attracted
from each recruitment source?
• Assessing both the quantity and the quality of the
applicants produced by a source.
High performance recruiting
– Applying best-practices management techniques
to recruiting.
• Using a benchmarks-oriented approach to analyzing and
measuring the effectiveness of recruiting efforts such as
employee referrals.
Figure 5–10
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 5–24
Issues in Recruiting a More Diverse
Workforce
Single parents
– Providing work schedule flexibility.
Older workers
– Revising polices that make it difficult or
unattractive for older workers to remain
employed.
Recruiting minorities and women
– Understanding recruitment barriers.
– Formulating recruitment plans.
– Instituting specific day-to-day programs.