Human Resource Management Week 2
Human Resource Management Week 2
Human Resource Management Week 2
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1. Cultural differences (53 percent).
2. Compliance with data-privacy regulations (42 percent).
3. Varying economic conditions across countries (36 percent).
4. Time zone differences (32 percent).
5. Legal environment (32 percent).
6. International compliance (26 percent)
ii. Challenges and Contributions of Diversity – organization must get away from
the tradition of fitting employees into a single corporate mold. Organizations
must create new human resource policies to explicitly recognize and respond to
the unique needs of individual employees. Greater diversity will not only create
certain specific challenges but also make some important contributions.
Communication problems are certain to occur, including misunderstandings as
well as the need to translate verbal and written materials into several languages.
Greater diversity presents new opportunities. Diversity contributes to creating
an organizational culture that is more tolerant of different behavioral styles and
wider views.
B. Regulatory Changes - Organizations face new regulations routinely issued in the
areas of environment, safety and health, equal employment opportunity, pension
reform, and quality of work life. Many of the new changes to health care and health
insurance will have to be implemented by human resource personnel and will have
a significant impact on their activities.
C. Structural Changes to Organization
i. Downsizing - Laying off large numbers of managerial and other employees.
ii. Outsourcing - Subcontracting work to an outside company that specializes in
that particular type of work.
iii. Rightsizing - Continuous and proactive assessment of mission-critical work and
its staffing requirements.
iv. Reengineering - Fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business
processes to achieve dramatic improvements in cost, quality, service, and speed.
D. Technological and Managerial Changes within Organizations
In addition to their uses in performing the traditional functions of accounting and
payroll calculations, computerized information systems are now being used to maintain
easily accessible employee data that are valuable in job placement and labor utilization.
Since the introduction of eHR in the 1990s, the fundamentals of eHR products haven’t
changed because the basic problems they address are the same.
The costs have dropped and what used to take months to implement can now be done in
hours. Today’s employees are much more receptive to being sent to a Web site for
information.
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i. Telecommuting - Working at home by using an electronic linkup with a central
office.
ii. Empowerment - Form of decentralization that involves giving subordinates
substantial authority to make decisions.
iii. Self-managed work teams - Groups of peers are responsible for a particular area
or task.
E. Human Resource Management in the Future
If tomorrow’s human resource managers are to earn the respect of their colleagues and
top management, they must overcome certain negative impressions and biases
sometimes associated with human resource management.
Human resource managers should become well-rounded businesspeople. The following
suggestions can help human resource managers become more familiar with their
businesses:
i. Know the company strategy and business plan.
ii. Know the industry.
iii. Support business needs.
iv. Spend more time with the line people.
v. Keep your hand on the pulse of the organization.
vi. Learn to calculate costs and solutions in hard numbers.
HR professionals who thoroughly understand their businesses will help overcome the
common idea that human resource people are unfamiliar with the operating problems
and issues facing the organization.
Human resource managers should also become fully knowledgeable about present and
future trends and issues in HR and other related fields.
Finally, human resource managers should promote effective human resource utilization
within the organization. Human resource managers should stress the importance of
increasing profits through effectively using the organization’s human resources.
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iv. Minimizing employee turnover and unemployment benefit costs by practicing
sound human relations and creating a work atmosphere that promotes job
satisfaction.
v. Installing and monitoring effective safety and health programs to reduce lost-
time accidents and keep medical and workers’ compensation costs low.
vi. Properly training and developing all employees so they can improve their value
to the company and do a better job of producing and selling high-quality
products and services at the lowest possible cost.
vii. Decreasing costly material waste by eliminating bad work habits and attitudes
and poor working conditions that lead to carelessness and mistakes.
viii. Hiring the best people available at every level and avoiding overstaffing.
ix. Maintaining competitive pay practices and benefit programs to foster a
motivational climate for employees.
x. Encouraging employees, who probably know more about the nuts and bolts of
their jobs than anyone else, to submit ideas for increasing productivity and
reducing costs.
xi. Installing human resource information systems to streamline and automate
many human 20 resource functions.
A. Metrics and the HR Scorecard
i. Metrics - any set of quantitative measures used to assess workforce
performance. Ex. analysis of the cost per hire.
ii. HR Scorecard - A measurement and control system that uses a mix of
quantitative and qualitative measures to evaluate performance.
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iv. Periodically reinforce employee communications
v. Transmit information and not just data
1. Data - Raw material from which information is developed composed of
facts that describe people, places, things, or events and that have not been
interpreted.
2. Information - Data that have been interpreted and that meet a need of
one or more managers.