Meaning & Definition of HRM
Meaning & Definition of HRM
INTRODUCTION
1
OBJECTIVE OF HRM
Social objective:
To be ethically and socially responsible to the needs and
challenges of the society while minimizing the negative impact of such
demands upon the organization. The failure organization to use their
resources for the society’s benefit in ethical ways may lead to
restrictions.
Organization Objectives:
To recognize the role of HRM in bringing about organizational
effectiveness. HRM is not an end in itself. It is only a means to assist
the organization with its primary objective. Simple stated, the
department exists to serve the rest of the organization.
Functional Objective:
To maintain the department’s contribution at a level
appropriation to the organization’s need’s. Resources are wasted when
HRM is either more or less sophisticated to suit the organization’s
demands. The department’s level of service must be tailored to fit the
organization it service.
2
Personal Objective:
FUNCTIONS OF HRM:
3
CHAPTER II
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
To ensure that the labours are really benefited with the welfare
programmes.
To study about the safety measures and safety facilities which are
provided to the labours.
4
SCOPE OF THE STUDY:
The main focus was given to find out and analyze various labour
welfare programmes, which are resulted to attain quality work environment
Calcitech India (P) LTD.
5
CHAPTER III
The area of study for labour welfare is limited in a particular area that is
the Calcitech India (P) LTD.
The study will not represent the whole size of population spread other
various parts of companies.
6
CHAPTER IV
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
After the collected data have been processed, it is necessary that these data are
analyzed. As there are several statistical techniques available to do this the
researcher has to decide which of them he will use, in fact, a decision in this
respect is called for even before the data collection has began so that those
techniques can be used properly.
7
QUESTIONNAIRE DESIGN
8
SAMPLING DESIGN
Method of sampling
Sampling survey
Sample
The total population was divided into group and samples are
collocated randomly from this group.
CONSTRUCTION OF TOOLS
9
The data are collected through speculating designed questionnaire for
the present study the four points. Likes scaling is used in order to elicit frank
opinion of the respondents with regard to work value in for his purposed the
researched interviewed the executing of different levels and in various
departments. They are selected at stratified random sampling.
SOURCES OF DATA
Both the primary data and the secondary data are taken its account for
the purpose of the study.
Primary data:
SECONDARY DATA:
Secondary data are extracted from. The file, resisters, records obtained
from personnel department.
10
Sample size
11
CHAPTER V
11.30 - 7.30
2. Zinc oratate
3. Magenese oratate
4. Pottasium Gluconate
5. Mangenese Gluconate
6. Calcium Styrate
7. Calcium Glucolyne
8. Ferrous Glucolyne
9. Lacto Glucolyne
12
Sister concern : Global Calcium (Plant I, II, III, IV)
Formotech.
(6Nos)
powder.
13
Managing Director
Director
General Manager
Q.C Manager
Production
ProductionManager
Manager
Project Manager
Assistant
Personal Executive Executive
Execution Assistant
Account
Manager
Operators
Staff
Executive
Operators
14
WELFARE FACILITIES
The following are the welfare measures extended to the employees of the
Calcitech India (P) LTD.
2. CANTEEN:
Three sets of Terry cotton uniform and one pair of shoes with socks are
provided once in two years to the workers and staffs. Washing allowance at
the value of Rs.150/-per month is paid to all the employees of company.
4. NIGHT SHIFTALLOWANCE:
15
5. EDUCATIONAL LOAN:
7. MARRIAGE LOAN:
8. FESTIVAL ADVANCE:
The employees who suffered from T.B., Cancers, Leprosy, and Heart
By pass surgery, Kidney transplant and Brain tumor are allowed leave with
wage for a maximum period of six months. The 50% actual treatment cost is
met by the Company as per labour Act provisions.
16
10. MEDICAL POLICY TO OFFICERS:
All the officers and Executives are covered under the Medicals
insurance policy.
17
CHAPTER VI
Review of literature
applied to the industrial worker, “is one which must necessarily be elastic,
intellectual or social, of the employees over above the wages paid, which is
18
Section
Section11
Nature
Natureofof
HRM
HRM
and
andenvironment
environment Section 22
Section 77 Section
Section ofof
HRM
HRM and
and HRP
Ethical issues HR HRP
Ethical issues HR strategic ofof
strategic HRM
HRM Job analysis And
Audit Challenges Job analysis And
Audit Challenges design employee
OfOf
HRM IHRM design employee
HRM IHRM Hiring orientation
Hiring orientation
and placement
and placement
Section
Section66
Industrial relation
Industrial relation Competent
Competent and
and
Trade union
Trade union willing work
willing work
Disputes
Disputesand
and force
force
resolutions
resolutions
HRM
HRM
Section
Section33
Training and
Training and
Organanization
Organanization development,
development,
Goals
Goals appraisal,
appraisal,
Section 55 Section 44 Remuneration
Remuneration
Section Section
Employee welfare Motivation,
Employee welfare Motivation,
Applied
Applied
Safety &&
Safety Health
Health motivation,
motivation,
Promotion &
Promotion & Management,
Management,
Transfers
Transfers Employee
Employee
19
by employer, by government or by other agencies, over and above what is laid
down by law or what is normally expected as part of the contractual benefits
for which the workers may have bargained.
Definition
20
Labour welfare: A historical perspective
The origin of welfare work in India may by trace to the war of 1914-18.
Till then, welfare of the workers was hardly though of owing to the ignorance
and illiteracy of the workers themselves, the shortsightedness of the
employees, the carelessness of the state, and the indifference of the public.
But, since the First World War, it has been expanding steadily, mostly
on a voluntary basis. The economic depression also did much to temper the
interest, which the war had kindled. The governments as well as industrials
were prompted to take active interest in welfare work due to the discontent
and industrial unrest that prevailed in the country, and to some extent due to
the moral pressure brought to bear on them by the work of the intonation
labour office. The Second World War revived and strengthened the welfare
movement, and the benefits resulting from a proper regard for the health and
well being of the employee were gradually recognized, and employers co-
operated with the government in the provision of improved amenities. Active
interest in welfare facilities has survived the impetus of the war and though
the welfare work in India is still considerably below to make rapid progress in
the year to come, especially when the Indian republic is wedded to the ideal of
a welfare state and a socialist pattern of society.
21
Scope of labour welfare
1) Statutory
2) Voluntary
3) Mutual
1) Statutory:
22
2) voluntary:
3) Mutual:
23
• Factories wages act, 1948
24
Victims of
Drink
Social Gambling
Advantage &Other Vices
Necessity of
Labour
Welfare Industrial
Absenteeism
peace
Reduce Permanent
Labour Settled
turnover Labour Force
25
6) Absenteeism: studies prove both authorized absence and unauthorized
absence are reducing drastically on account of labour welfare activities.
Provident Fund
1. Canteen
26
provide cheap and clean food and offer an opportunity to relax in comfort near
the place of work, to save time and trouble to workers, on account of
exhausting journeys to and from the planked work after long hours in the
factory, and to enable them to surmount the difficulties experience in
obtaining meals or food stuffs. It can, thus, have a great influence on the
morale of the workers. “Canteen movement must be accepted by the state as a
definite charge and the running of canteens must be accepted by the
employers as a national investment”. For the successful running of a canteen
there are certain essential conditions. A canteen should be commodious,
being and clean, and must be situated in the factory. Every effort should be
made to create a friendly atmosphere inside it, so that the workers can really
feel comfortable and relaxed. It should be run on no profit basis, and the
articles supplied should be of good quality. The employers should subsidies
to it so that a canteen may be able to sell articles at cheap rates. The factory
management can also provide free building and furniture and crockery. It
may also pointed out that the Government of India hatefully acknowledged
the importance of industrial canteens and the factories Act of,1948, and the
Mines Act of 1952, empower State Governments to issue rules for the
provision of canteens in factories and mines employing 250 or more workers,
has been compulsory.
2. Creches:
27
Children are safe and in good hands. However, now, as mentioned under the
welfare activities, crèches are provided in most of the mills, and at some
places like the Madera Mills, Buckingham and Caryatid Mills, the Delhi Cloth
Mill etc.,
3. Recreational Faculties:
28
4. Medical facilities:
29
any injurious or obnoxious substance is carried on, a sufficient supply of
water, suitable for washing, shall be provided for the use of workers at
suitable places and with facilities for its use. Almost all the factories provide
water for washing soap, soda and towels which are also necessary. In many
cases the number of taps basins is inadequate.
6. Provident Fund:
7. Educational Facilities:
30
More repine deterioration than in counties where the operative are
mechanically minded”. The objective of the programmed is to educate worker
in the principles and techniques of trade union organization and to enable
them to play an intelligent and responsible part in the affairs of the union and
of the management. The programmed of workers education, thus, consists of
three stages:
his or her ability backed by motivation. Stated algebraically the principle is:
given task. However, ability alone is not enough. The person’s desire to
31
Motivation in simple terms may be understood as the set of forces that
cause people to behave in certain ways. The framework shown in Fig. helps
Identifies
needs
Reassess needs
Searches for ways to
deficiencies satisfy needs
Employee
Engages in goal-
Receives rewa rds directed behaviour
Performs
shown in the figure begins with the individual’s needs (Step 1). Needs are felt
energizers. These needs may be psychological (e.g., the need for recognition),
physiological (e.g., the need for water, air or food) or social (e.g., the need for
32
Motivation is goal directed (Step 3). A goal is a specific result that the
individual wants to achieve. An employee’s goals are often driving forces and
accomplishing those goals can significantly reduce needs. For example, some
employees have strong drives for advancement and expectations that working
long hours on visible projects will lead to promotions, raises and greater
overcome this tension, these employees act to reduce it. Employees striving
order to gain visibility and influence with senior managers (Step 4).
Promotions and raises are two of the ways that organizations seek to maintain
needs for advancement and recognition and their behaviours are appropriate
(Step 5). Once the employees have received either rewards or punishments,
stopped, and what kind of subjective reaction is present in the organism while
of action.’
33
Labour measurements is a process that starts with a physiological or
Obviously, the first definition covers all stages shown in the motivation
model.
workers. When people actively seek new ways of doing things, they
whether we are talking about a top manager spending extra time on data
gathering and analysis for a report, or a clerk taking extra care when
34
Quality conscious. A clear understanding of the way motivation works
The high productivity of Japanese workers and the fact that fewer
for managers.
not only, to join the organization but also to remain in it; (ii) people
must perform the tasks for which they are hired, and must do so in a
at work.
35
5. Motivation as a concept represents a highly complex phenomenon that
36
The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle’s (PSLV) lift-off has been the
and research institutes. With this feat, India has joined the exclusive club
of half a dozen nations that can build and, more importantly, launch its
own satellites
The secret behind the success of ISRO has been its employees who are both
capable of using and are willing to use the advanced technology to reach the
goals.
Finally, while organizations have, for some time, viewed their financial and
physical resources from a long-term perspective, only recently have they
begun seriously to apply this same perspective to their human resources.
Many organizations are now beginning to pay increasing attention to
developing their employees as future resources (a ‘talent bank’) upon which
they can draw, as they grow, and develop. Evidence for such a concern can
be seen in the recent growth of management and organizational development
programmes, in the increased popularity of ‘assessment centre’ appraisals, in
recent attention to H.R. planning, and in emergence of HR accounting
systems. More concern is being directed, in addition, towards stimulating
employees to enlarge their job skills (through training, job design, job
rotation, and so on), at both blue-collar and white-collar levels, in an effort
to ensure a continual reservoir of well-trained and highly motivated people
37
CHAPTER VII
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 40% of the employees are highly
satisfied with family welfare facilities provided by the organization.
38
Graph-1
45
40
40
35
35
30
25
20
20
15
10
5
5
40% 35% 20% 5%
0
Highly Satisfied Moderately dissatisfied
satisfied satisfied
39
TABLE - 2
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 30 30%
Satisfied 42 42%
Moderately satisfied 22 22%
Dissatisfied 6 6%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 42% of employees are satisfied and
30% of employees are highly satisfied with their Bonus and incentives
schemes.
Graph-2
40
Bonus and incentives
45
42
40
35
30
30
25
22
20
15
10
6
5
TABLE - 3
41
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 20 20%
Satisfied 40 40%
Moderate satisfied 30 30%
Dissatisfied 10 10%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 40% of the employees are satisfied
with their allowance schmes.
Graph-3
42
45
40
40
35
30
30
25
20
20
15
10
10
5
20% 40% 30% 10%
0
Highly Satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied satisfied
TABLE - 4
Recreational facilities
43
Employees
Highly satisfied 28 28%
Satisfied 44 44%
Moderately satisfied 16 16%
Dissatisfied 12 12%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 44% of employees are satisfied and
28% of highly satisfied with their recreational facilities.
Graph-4
Recreational facilities
44
50
45 44
40
35
30 28
25
20
16
15
12
10
5
28% 44% 16% 12%
0
Highly satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied satisfied
TABLE - 5
45
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 35 35%
Satisfied 43 43%
Moderately satisfied 19 19%
Dissatisfied 3 3%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 43% of employees are satisfied
and 35% of employees are highly satisfied.
Graph-5
46
50
45 43
40
35
35
30
25
19
20
15
10
5 3
35% 43% 19% 3%
0
Highly satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied satisfied
TABLE - 6
47
Accident insurance and safety measurements
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 25 25%
Satisfied 42 42%
Moderately satisfied 28 28%
Dissatisfied 5 5%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 42% are satisfied with their accident
and safety measurements facilities.
Graph-6
Accident insurance and safety measurements
48
45 42
40
35
30 28
25
25
20
15
10
5
5
25% 42% 28% 5%
0
Highly Satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied satisfied
TABLE - 7
49
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 34 34%
Satisfied 39 39%
Moderately satisfied 23 23%
Dissatisfied 4 4%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 39% of employees are satisfied with
their water and restroom facilities.
Graph-7
50
45
40 39
35 34
30
25 23
20
15
10
5 4
TABLE - 8
51
Employees
Highly satisfied 25 25%
Satisfied 40 40%
Moderately satisfied 20 20%
Dissatisfied 15 15%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that the 40% of employees satisfied in
canteen and other amenities.
Graph-8
52
45
40
40
35
30
25
25
20
20
15
15
10
5
25% 40% 20% 15%
0
Highly satisfied satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied
TABLE - 9
53
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 20 20%
Satisfied 40 40%
Moderately satisfied 25 25%
Dissatisfied 15 15%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that 40% of employees are satisfied
with their first aid and medical facilities.
Graph- 9
54
45
40
40
35
30
25
25
20
20
15
15
10
TABLE - 10
55
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 25 25%
Satisfied 50 50%
Moderately satisfied 15 15%
Dissatisfied 10 10%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that the 50% of the employees are satisfied
with their uniform and washing facilities.
Graph-10
56
45
40
40
35
30
25
25
20
20
15
15
10
TABLE - 11
Loan facilities
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 40 40%
Satisfied 34 34%
Moderately satisfied 20 20%
Dissatisfied 6 6%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that the 40% of employees are highly
satisfied loan and facilities with their.
57
Graph-11
Loan facilities
45
40
40
35 34
30
25
20
20
15
10
6
5
58
TABLE – 12
Educational facilities
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 24 24%
Satisfied 36 36%
Moderately satisfied 30 30%
Dissatisfied 10 10%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that the 36% of employees are
satisfied in educational facilities provided by the organization.
59
Graph-12
Educational facilities
40
36
35
30
30
25 24
20
15
10
10
60
TABLE - 13
Number of
Response Employees Percentages
Highly satisfied 15 15%
Satisfied 50 50%
Moderately satisfied 25 25%
Dissatisfied 10 10%
Total 100 100%
INTERPRETATION
From the above table it is inferred that on the whole 50% of the
employees are satisfied with all facilities provided by the organization.
61
Graph-13
45
40
40
35
30
25 25
25
20
15
10
10
5
25% 40% 25% 10%
0
Highly satisfied Satisfied Moderately Dissatisfied
satisfied
62
CHAPTER VIII
FINDINGS
1) It is found out that a majority of labours are highly satisfied with the
2) It is found out that a majority of labours are highly satisfied with the
4) It is found out that majority of the e labours are highly satisfied with
the recreational facilities that are available in the organisation.
5) The majority of the labours are highly satisfied with the procedure
provided for pensions and other retirement benefits are excellent in
the organisation.
6) It is found out that majority of the labours are satisfied with the
7) On the whole it is found out that labours are highly satisfied with the
8) It is found out that majority of the labours are highly satisfied with
the quality working condition in the organization.
63
9) It is found out that majority of the labours agreed that during
festival time only they receive bonus.
10) It is found out that majority of labours are satisfied with proper
motivational aspects provided by the organisation.
11) In overall it is found out that majority of the labours are satisfied
12) The majority of the employees are satisfied with the good and
excellent welfare facilities provided by the organization.
64
CHAPTER IX
Suggestions
65
CHAPTER X
CONCLUSION
others enable the worker to work with high-level motivation and more job
satisfaction. From this study it is clear that Calciteh India (P) LTD is
providing good welfare facilities to the workers. The employees are more
66