Human Resource Planning

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The document discusses various topics related to business management and leadership strategies.

The main topics discussed include leadership styles, management techniques, organizational culture and best practices.

Some of the key ideas on pages 2-3 relate to effective communication, building trust within teams, and empowering employees.

Strategy and Human Resources Planning

Strategic Planning and Human Resources


Strategic Planning
Procedures for making decisions about the organization s long-term goals and strategies

Human Resources Planning (HRP)


Process of anticipating and making provision for the movement (flow) of people into, within, and out of an organization.

Strategic Planning and HR Planning


Strategic Human Resources Management (SHRM)
The pattern of human resources deployments and activities that enable an organization to achieve its strategic goals
Strategy formulation providing input as to what is possible given the types and numbers of people available. Strategy implementation making primary resource allocation decisions about structure, processes, and human resources.

HRP and Strategic Planning


Strategic Analysis
What human resources are needed and what are available?

Strategic Formulation
What is required and necessary in support of human resources?

Strategic Implementation
How will the human resources be allocated?
Human Resources Planning Strategic Planning

Step One: Mission, Vision, and Values


Mission
The basic purpose of the organization as well as its scope of operations

Strategic Vision
A statement about where the company is going and what it can become in the future; clarifies the longterm direction of the company and its strategic intent

Core Values
The strong and enduring beliefs and principles that the company uses as a foundation for its decisions

Step Two: Environmental Scanning


Environmental Scanning
The systematic monitoring of the major external forces influencing the organization.
1. Economic factors: general and regional conditions 2. Competitive trends: new processes, services, and innovations 3. Technological changes: robotics and office automation 4. Political and legislative issues: laws and administrative rulings 5. Social concerns: child care and educational priorities 6. Demographic trends: age, composition,and literacy

Figure 22 2

Five Forces Framework

Step Three: Internal Analysis


Culture Competencies

Internal Analysis

Composition

Scanning the Internal Environment


Cultural Audits
Audits of the culture and quality of work life in an organization.
How do employees spend their time? How do they interact with each other? Are employees empowered? What is the predominant leadership style of managers? How do employees advance within the organization?

Competitive Advantage through People


Core Competencies
Integrated knowledge sets within an organization that distinguish it from its competitors and deliver value to customers.

Sustained competitive advantage through people is achieved if these human resources:


1. Are valuable. 2. Are rare and unavailable to competitors. 3. Are difficult to imitate. 4. Are organized for synergy.

Composition: The Human Capital Architecture


Core knowledge workers
Employees who have firm-specific skills that are directly linked to the company s strategy.
Example: Senior software programmer

Traditional job-based employees


Employees with skills to perform a predefined job that are quite valuable to a company, but not unique.
Example: Security guard

Composition: The Human Capital Architecture (cont d)


Contract labor
Employees whose skills are of less strategic value and generally available to all firms.
Example: General electrician

Alliance/partners
Individuals and groups with unique skills, but those skills are not directly related to a company s core strategy.
Example: Independent product label designer

Figure 23 2

Mapping Human Capital

Forecasting: A Critical Element of Planning


Forecasting involves:
a. forecasting the demand for labor b. forecasting the supply of labor c. balancing supply and demand considerations.

Figure 24 2

Model of HR Forecasting

FORECASTING DEMAND

Considerations
Product/service demand Technology Financial resources Absenteeism/turnover Organizational growth Management philosophy

Techniques
Trend analysis Managerial estimates Delphi technique

BALANCING SUPPLY AND DEMAND

(Shortage) Recruitment
Full-time Full Part-time Part Recalls

Techniques
Staffing tables Markov analysis Skills inventories Management inventories Replacement charts Succession planning

External Considerations
Demographic changes Education of the workforce Labor mobility Government policies Unemployment rate

(Surplus) Reductions
Layoffs Terminations Demotions Retirements

FORECASTING SUPPLY

Forecasting Demand for Employees


Quantitative Methods

Forecasting Demand
Qualitative Methods

Quantitative Approach: Trend Analysis


Forecasting labor demand based on an organizational index such as sales:
1. Select a business factor that best predicts human resources needs. 2. Plot the business factor in relation to the number of employees to determine the labor productivity ratio. 3. Compute the productivity ratio for the past five years. 4. Calculate human resources demand by multiplying the business factor by the productivity ratio. 5. Project human resources demand out to the target year(s).

Qualitative Approaches
Management Forecasts
The opinions (judgments) of supervisors, department managers, experts, or others knowledgeable about the organization s future employment needs.

Delphi Technique
An attempt to decrease the subjectivity of forecasts by soliciting and summarizing the judgments of a preselected group of individuals. The final forecast represents a composite group judgment.

Forecasting the Supply of Employees: Internal Labor Supply


Staffing Tables Markov Analysis Skill Inventories Replacement Charts Succession Planning

Forecasting Internal Labor Supply


Staffing Tables
Graphic representations of all organizational jobs, along with the numbers of employees currently occupying those jobs and future (monthly or yearly) employment requirements.

Markov Analysis
A method for tracking the pattern of employee movements through various jobs.

Employee Turnover Rates


Computing Turnover Rates:

Employee Turnover Rates (cont d)


Computing Turnover Rates (cont d):

Highlights in HRM
Costs Associated With The Turnover Of One Computer Programmer
(Turnover costs = Separation costs + Replacement costs + Training costs) Separation costs
1. Exit interview cost for salary and benefits of both interviewer and departing employee during the exit interview = $30+$30 = $60 2. Administrative and record-keeping action = $30 Total separation costs = $60 + $30 = $90

Replacement costs
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Advertising for job opening = $2,500 Preemployment administrative functions and record-keeping action = $100 Selection interview = $250 Employment tests = $40 Meetings to discuss candidates (salary and benefits of managers while participating in meetings )= $250 Total replacement costs = $2,500 + $100 + $250 + $40 + $250 = $3,140

Training costs
1. Booklets, manuals, and reports = $50 2. Education = $240/day for new employees salary and benefits x 10 days of workshops, seminars, or courses = $2,400 3. One-to-one coaching = ($240/day/new employee + $240/day/staff coach or job expert) x 20 days of one-to-one coaching = $9,600 4. Salary and benefits of new employee until he or she gets up to par = $240/day for salary and benefits x 20 days = $4,800 Training costs = $50 + $2,400 + $9,600 + $4,800 = $16,850

Total turnover costs= $90 + $3,140 + $16,850 = $20,080


Source: Adapted from the book Turning Your Human Resources Department into a Profit CenterTM by Michael Mercer, Ph.D. (Castlegate Publishers, Inc., Barrington, Illinois). Copyright 2002 Michael Mercer. Reproduced with permission from Michael Mercer, Ph.D., www.DrMercer.com.

Employee Absenteeism Rates


Computing Absenteeism Rates

Figure 26 2

Hypothetical Markov Analysis for a Retail Company

Internal Demand Forecasting Tools


Skill Inventories
Files of personnel education, experience, interests, skills, etc., that allow managers to quickly match job openings with employee backgrounds.

Replacement Charts
Listings of current jobholders and persons who are potential replacements if an opening occurs.

Succession Planning
The process of identifying, developing, and tracking key individuals for executive positions.

Highlights in HRM
SuccessionPlanning Checklist
RATE THE SUCCESS OF YOUR SUCCESSION PLANNING For each characteristic of a best-practice successionplanning and management program appearing in the left column below, enter a number to the right to indicate how well you believe your organization manages that characteristic. Ask other decision makers in your organization to complete this form individually. Then compile the scores and compare notes.

Scores

Source: From William J. Rothwell, Putting Success into Your Succession Planning, The Journal of Business Strategy 23, no. 3 (May/June 2002): 3237. Republished with permissionThomson Media, One State Street, 26th Floor, New York, NY 10004.

Figure 27 2

An Executive Replacement Chart

Step Four: Formulating Strategy


Strategy Formulation
Moving from simple analysis to devising a coherent course of action.

SWOT analysis
A comparison of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats for strategy formulation purposes. Use the strengths of the organization to capitalize on opportunities, counteract threats, and alleviate internal weaknesses.

Corporate Strategy
Growth and Diversification Mergers and Acquisitions

Corporate Strategy

Strategic Alliances and Joint Ventures

Business Strategy
Value Creation
What the firm adds to a product or service by virtue of making it; the amount of benefits provided by the product or service once the costs of making it are subtracted. Low-cost strategy: competing on productivity and efficiency
Keeping costs low to offer an attractive price to customers (relative to competitors).

Differentiation strategy: compete on added value


Involves providing something unique and distinctive to customers that they value.

External Fit (or External Alignment)

Functional Strategy: Ensuring Alignment

Focuses on the connection between the business objectives and the major initiatives in HR.

Internal Fit (or Internal Alignment)


Aligning HR practices with one another to establish a configuration that is mutually reinforcing.

Figure 28 2

The 7-S Model 7-

Source: McKinsey & Company

Step Five: Strategy Implementation


Taking Action: Reconciling Supply and Demand
Balancing demand and supply considerations
Forecasting business activities (trends) Locating applicants

Organizational downsizing
Reducing headcount

Making layoff decisions


Seniority or performance? Labor agreements

Step Six: Evaluation and Assessment


Evaluation and Assessment Issues
Benchmarking: The process of comparing the organization s processes and practices with those of other companies Human capital metrics
Assess aspects of the workforce

HR metrics
Assess the performance of the HR function itself

Highlights in HRM The Top Ten Measures Of Human Capital


1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Your most important issues Human capital value added Human capital ROI Separation cost Voluntary separation rate Total labor-cost/revenue percentage Total compensation/revenue percentage Training investment factor Time to start Revenue factor

Source: The Top 10 Measures of Human Capital Management, HRFocus 78, no. 5 (May 2001): 8. Copyright 2001. Reprinted by permission of the publisher via Copyright Clearance Center.

Measuring Strategic Alignment


Strategy Mapping and the Balanced Scorecard
Balanced Scorecard (BSC)
A measurement framework that helps managers translate strategic goals into operational objectives financial customer processes learning

Figure 29 2

Balanced Scorecard

Figure 210 2

Assessing Internal Fit

Ensuring Strategic Flexibility for the Future


Organizational Capability
Capacity of the organization to act and change in pursuit of sustainable competitive advantage. Coordination flexibility
The ability to rapidly reallocate resources to new or changing needs.

Resource flexibility
Having human resources who can do many different things in different ways.

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