HRM CH 3
HRM CH 3
HRM CH 3
Objectives:
After studying this chapter you would be able to:
1. Define human resource planning and explain why organizations conduct it.
2. Understand the basic relationship between strategic planning and human resource
planning
3. Explain the human resource planning process.
4. Describe some of the most common used human resource forecasting techniques.
5. State what management can do:
- When shortage of employees exists
- When surplus of employees exists.
6. Explain the role of inventory or employee information in the preparation of human
resource plan.
7. Distinguish between demand for and supply of employees in an organization.
Strategic Planning
Recruitment
Restricted Hiring
Reduced Hours,
No action Early Retirement
Layoff Selection
Although there is no universally accepted set of procedures for undertaking human resource
planning process, there is a general agreement upon the major processes and contents of human
resource planning as illustrated below.
The organizational goals are the result of its strategic planning. Different kinds of public or
business plans can be designed ahead for different number of years. Some organizations plan ten
to twenty years ahead. Such long range planning by organizations is an exception. Most
organizations plan only for the fairly short run of say one to five years. Generally speaking,
however, human resource planning for up to one year is considered short range and is widely
practiced in many organizations. On the other hand, planning for two to four years is considered
medium range and planning for five years and beyond is long-range.
The inventory or employee information has several important uses. The major ones are:
- It enables to compare the number, types and skills specified by the forecast with the
present baseline.
- It enables to ascertain what skills must be developed from the current personnel, via
training.
- It enhances the opportunities for employees to satisfy their career aspirations through
promotion and development.
- It enables to reconcile human resource demand with supply.
Human resource inventory includes job classifications, age, gender, organizational level, rate of
pay, and functions. It may also include resume date, skill, education, training received, and
career interest (Mondy & Neo, 1990). This manpower information can be collected, stored and
retrieved manually by means of filing system in small organizations, where as computerized
system is practically a must for the larger organizations that wish to handle employee
information for many years.
This step enables planners to evaluate the status of current human resources. What skills,
interests, and experiences of current employees have? What jobs are being done? How many
employees are doing particular jobs? Current employees are the most likely candidates to meet
future needs and should be the first ones considered for new positions (Baird, 1990).
These figures for the planning period are obtained by subtracting the current available
manpower from the projected demand. If the figures are positive, employees will have to be
recruited, selected and hired; if the figures show negative, employees may eventually have to be
laid off.
The demand forecast is an estimate of types and numbers of personnel the organization will
require in the future. It is derived from goals and plans. For example, the public organization's
goals and plans should provide the human resource planners with information on such factors as
projected social service, development activities, number of population to be served, new
bureaus or departments to be created, and the like.
Generally, human resource planners must use several techniques of forecasting manpower
requirement and availability. Some of the techniques available are qualitative and quantitative in
nature.
Human Resource Forecasting Techniques.
Forecasting technique range from judgment to sophisticated quantitative models. The most
commonly used techniques of forecasting are:
Judgment and Experience
Zero-Base Forecasting
Bottom-up Approach
Work Standard Data
Key Predicative Factors.
Zero-Base Forecasting
The zero-base forecasting approach uses the organization's current level of employment as the
starting point for determining future staffing needs (Mondy & Noe, 1990). Whenever vacancies
exist due to retirement, layoff, death, or resignation, the vacant positions are not immediately
filled. Instead, personnel requirement analysis is made to determine whether the organization
can justify filling them. The same procedure is followed when organizations create new
positions. Zero-base human resource forecasting, therefore, requires management at different
levels to thorough study and analysis their human resource needs.
Bottom-up Approach
In bottom-up approach, managers from various levels are asked to contribute to employment
forecasting. It has the advantage of drawing many managers into the process and giving them a
sense that they are participating in one of the importance activities of the organization. Here,
unit managers send their employment needs forecasting proposals to the top management who
compare these with the plan and finalize them. According to Mondy and Noe (1990), human
resource forecasting is often most effective when managers periodically project their human
resource needs, comparing their current and anticipated levels, and giving the human resource
department adequate lead time to explore internal and external source.
The total projected units of work for the organization are translated into man-hours or man-days
and the number and type of employees by using the pre-established time standards. However,
work standard technique cannot be applied for estimating professional personnel requirements.
For this, judgment, experience and managerial intent are some of the major determinants of how
many and what types of employees are needed.
Most experts are agreed that the search for manpower must always begin within the organization
where a thorough check on the quantity and quality of existing employees can be made to yield a
manpower audit. The organization itself is a captive source and when the qualifications,
experiences and capacities of manpower within is known, offering them new avenues and
openings can act as powerful incentives (Chatterjee, 1995).
After analyzing the internal human resource availability, the organization will have to examine
the labor market. Recruiting new personnel from the open labor market can be costly and
complicated process that has a strong impact on organizational effectiveness. In order to acquire
the best-qualified people, organizations must have a good policy to ensure that employment
conditions are sufficiently attractive. Once a pool of potential applicants has been developed
there is a need to assess this pool to predict which candidates will assist the, organization in the
attainment of its objectives if selected. Here, employee selection refers to the development of
policies and procedures, and evaluating potential employees in terms of job specification. It is a
means of determining, which people best meet the needs of the organization.
Performance Appraisal
Performance appraisal is the process by which organizations evaluate individual job
performance. When it is done correctly, employees, their supervisors, the human resource
department, and ultimately the organization benefit by ensuring that individual efforts
contribute to the strategic focus of the organization (Werther & Davis, 1996). Organizations use
performance appraisal for manpower planning purposes, as input into personnel information
systems. Moreover, it provides reliable data for management decisions in regard to:
- employee's readiness for taking a new jobs, through transfers and promotions
- training and management development needs.
In general, information collected through performance appraisals enables management to assess
employees' performance and potential for future development.
When human resource plan reveals that the internal supply of employees exceeds the
organization's demand, reduction of surplus workers becomes unavoidable task. Such situation
can be corrected through layoffs, early retirements and/or restricted hiring. When the
organization is unionized, layoff procedures are usually stated clearly in the labor management
agreement. Typically, workers with the least seniority are laid off first. If the organization is
nonunion, it may base layoff on a combination of factors, such as seniority and productivity
level (Mondy & Noe, 1990). In early retirement some employees are reluctant, but others may
be willing to retire. This being the case, early retirement is supposed to be voluntary and the
organization must offer some sort of inducement.
Training and Development
Training and management development must be in the context of the organization's human
resource development policy. They must be based on recognized needs such as:
- changes in technology
- the introduction of new products
- changes in organizations set-up
- organization's desire to upgrade the skills and knowledge of employees with a view to
help them do their current jobs properly and prepare them for future responsibilities, and
the like.
The training and management development programs are relevant and useful only when they are
implemented towards the attainment of organizational objectives.
Motivation and Compensation
The system of motivation and compensation should serve to help the organization achieve the
manpower plan. Compensation is what an organization provides its employees in exchange for
their work contribution. If the organization is not paying competitive rates, the current
employees are likely to leave the organization. Pay dissatisfaction not only affects the quality of
work life but it also has a trouble in recruiting and retaining employees. On the other hand, if the
treatment of employees is perceived to be arbitrary, then the organization will also have problem
of meeting its human resource requirements.
Audit and Adjustment
Human resource planning requires considerable time, personnel, and financial resources. The
return on this investment may not justify the expenditure for small firms. Increasingly, however,
large organizations use human resource planning as a means of achieving greater effectiveness
(Werther & Davis, 1996). For any of various reasons, the human resource programs for meeting
the desired targets may be falling short of organizational objectives. A system for evaluating and
measuring progress should be set up. Many systems of measurement can be used depending
upon the specific program being evaluated.
Moreover, another reason for reviewing progress is to check if changes in the human resource
plans are made necessary, because of changed circumstances or because of the original planning
has been proven wrong.