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CHAPTER 5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources

fundamentals of Human Resource Management 3 rd edition by R.A. Noe , J.R. Hollenbeck, B. Gerhart , and P.M. Wright. CHAPTER 5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources. What Do I Need to Know?. Discuss how to plan for human resources needed to carry out the organization’s strategy.

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CHAPTER 5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources

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  1. fundamentals ofHuman Resource Management 3rd editionby R.A. Noe, J.R. Hollenbeck, B. Gerhart, and P.M. Wright CHAPTER 5 Planning For and Recruiting Human Resources

  2. What Do I Need to Know? • Discuss how to plan for human resources needed to carry out the organization’s strategy. • Determine the labor demand for workers in various job categories. • Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of ways to eliminate a labor surplus and avoid a labor shortage.

  3. What Do I Need to Know? (continued) • Describe recruitment policies organizations use to make job vacancies more attractive. • List and compare sources of job applicants. • Describe the recruiter’s role in the recruitment process, including limits and opportunities.

  4. The Process of Human Resource Planning • Organizations should carry out human resource planning so as to meet business objectives and gain a competitive advantage over competitors. • Human resource planning compares the present state of the organization with its goals for the future • Then identifies what changes it must make in its human resources to meet those goals

  5. Figure 5.1: Overview of the Human Resource Planning Process

  6. Forecasting • Forecasting: attempts to determine the supply and demand for various types of human resources to predict areas within the organization where there will be labor shortages or surpluses. There are three major steps to forecasting: • Forecasting the demand for labor • Determining labor supply • Determining labor surplus or shortage

  7. Forecasting the Demand for Labor Trend Analysis Leading Indicators Objective measures that accurately predict future labor demand. • Constructing and applying statistical models that predict labor demand for the next year, given relatively objective statistics from the previous year.

  8. Determining Labor Supply • Transitional matrix:a chart that lists job categories held in one period and shows the proportion of employees in each of those job categories in a future period. It answers two questions: • “Where did people in each job category go?” • “Where did people now in each job category come from?

  9. Table 5.1: Transitional Matrix – Example for an Auto Parts Manufacturer

  10. Determining Labor Surplus or Shortage • Based on the forecasts for labor demand and supply, the planner can compare the figures to determine whether there will be a shortage or surplus of labor for each job category. • Determining expected shortages and surpluses allows the organization to plan how to address these challenges.

  11. Goal Setting and Strategic Planning • The purpose of setting specific numerical goals is to focus attention on the problem and provide a basis for measuring the organization’s success in addressing labor shortages and surpluses. • The goals should come directly from the analysis of supply and demand. • For each goal, the organization must choose one or more human resource strategies.

  12. Options for Reducing a Surplus

  13. As the average age of many workers in skilled trades grows, the coming demand for workers in many trades is expected to outstrip supply in the United States. There is a potential for employers in some areas to experience a labor shortage because of this.

  14. Options for Avoiding a Shortage

  15. Table 5.2: HR Strategies for Addressing a Labor Shortage or Surplus

  16. A public accounting firm of 250 employees realizes they have a surplus of 15 support personnel (not auditors). What should they do? Hire temporary workers Offer early retirement Downsize people in those positions Wait for attrition and implement a hiring freeze for those positions Test Your Knowledge

  17. Implementing and Evaluating the HR Plan • When implementing the HR strategy, the organization must hold some individual accountable for achieving the goals. • That person must also have the authority and resources needed to accomplish those goals. • Regular progress reports should be issued. • The evaluation of results should not only look at the actual numbers, but should also identify which parts of the planning process contributed to success or failure.

  18. Applying HR Planning to Affirmative Action • Workforce Utilization Review: a comparison of employees in protected groups with the proportion that each group represents in the relevant labor market. • The steps in a workforce utilization review are identical to the steps in the HR planning process. • The organization must assess current utilization patterns, then forecast how they are likely to change in the near future. • If the analyses forecast underutilization of certain groups, then goals and a plan will be established.

  19. Recruiting Human Resources • The role of human resource recruitment is to build a supply of potential new hires that the organization can draw on if the need arises. • Recruiting: any activity carried on by the organization with the primary purpose of identifying and attracting potential employees.

  20. Figure 5.2: Three Aspects of Recruiting

  21. Personnel Policies Several personnel policies are especially relevant to recruitment:

  22. Image advertising, such as in this campaign to recruit nurses, promotes a whole profession or organization as opposed to a specific job opening. This ad is designed to create a positive impression of the profession, which is now facing a shortage of workers.

  23. Recruitment Sources: Internal Sources • Job Posting: the process of communicating information about a job vacancy: • On company bulletin boards • In employee publications • On corporate intranets • Anywhere else the organization communicates with employees

  24. Advantages of Internal Sources • It generates applicants who are well known to the organization. • These applicants are relatively knowledgeable about the organization’s vacancies, which minimizes the possibility of unrealistic job expectations. • Filling vacancies through internal recruiting is generally cheaper and faster than looking outside the organization.

  25. One in Three Positions AreFilled with Insiders

  26. Recruitment Sources: External Sources

  27. Figure 5.3: External Recruiting Sources – Percentage of Employees Hired

  28. Evaluating the Quality of a Source Yield Ratios Cost Per Hire Find the cost of using a particular recruitment source for a particular type of vacancy. Divide that cost by the number of people hired to fill that type of vacancy. A low cost per hire means that the recruitment source is efficient. • A ratio that expresses the percentage of applicants who successfully move from one stage of the recruitment and selection process to the next. • By comparing the yield ratios of different recruitment sources, we can determine which source is the best or most efficient for the type of vacancy.

  29. Table 5.3:Results of a Hypothetical Recruiting Effort

  30. In your last job search, what was your experience with a recruiter or other point of contact before you were offered the job? Lousy, I didn’t take the job Lousy, but I took the job anyway Great, but I didn’t take the job Great, I took the job The experience wasn’t memorable. Your Experience

  31. Recruiter Traits and Behaviors

  32. True = A False = B Applicants respond more positively when the recruiter is an HR specialist than line managers or incumbents. Applicants respond positively to recruiters whom are warm and informative Personnel policies are more important than the recruiter when deciding whether or not to take a job. Realistic job previews should highlight the positive characteristics of the job rather than the negative. Recruiter Characteristics and Behavior

  33. Figure 5.4:Recruits Who Were Offended by Recruiters

  34. Enhancing the Recruiter’s Impact • Recruiters should provide timely feedback. • Recruiters should avoid offensive behavior. • They should avoid behaving in ways that might convey the wrong impression about the organization. • The organization can recruit with teams rather than individual recruiters.

  35. You are the regional HR director of the restaurant chain (e.g., Ruby Tuesday’s or TGI Fridays) and responsible for recruiting all staff for the restaurants in your region. One of the stores in your region needs to hire servers. Recruiting Exercise (1 of 2)

  36. What knowledge, skills, and abilities are required for the positions you are recruiting? Will your sources of applicants be internal, external, or both? Explain. What recruiting strategies will you use? What metrics will you use to measure your success? Recruiting Exercise (2 of 2)

  37. Summary • The first step in human resource planning is personnel forecasting. Through trend analysis and good judgment, the planner tries to determine the supply and demand for various human resources. • The next step is to determine the labor demand for workers in various job categories. Analysis of a transitional matrix can help the planner identify which job categories can be filled internally and where high turnover is likely.

  38. Summary (continued) • To reduce a surplus, downsizing, pay reductions, and demotions deliver fast results but at a high cost in human suffering that may hurt surviving employees’ motivation and future recruiting. • To avoid a labor shortage, requiring overtime is the easiest and fastest strategy. • Internal recruiting generally makes job vacancies more attractive because candidates see opportunities for growth and advancement.

  39. Summary (continued) • Lead-the-market pay strategies make jobs economically desirable. • Internal sources are usually not sufficient for all of an organization’s labor needs. • Through their behavior and other characteristics, recruiters influence the nature of the job vacancy and the kinds of applicants generated.

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