1 / 42

Unit Six

Unit Six. HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. Human Resource Management. Activities undertaken to attract, develop and maintain an effective workforce within an organization. HRM Activities. HR planning Sourcing and Staffing Employee orientation Training and developing employees

quigleyv
Download Presentation

Unit Six

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit Six HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

  2. Human Resource Management Activities undertaken to attract, develop and maintain an effective workforce within an organization.

  3. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  4. HRM Activities HR planning

  5. HRM Activities HR planning • Assessing current human resources • Assessing future human resource needs • Developing a program to meet future human resource needs • Treating with compensation issues • Determining employee benefits

  6. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  7. HRM Activities Sourcing and Staffing

  8. Sourcing and StaffingRecruitment • Hiring from within • Advertising • Employment agencies • Educational institutions • Professional organizations • Walk-ins • Internet • Other

  9. Selection • Success criteria • Prediction • Reliability • Validity • Tools • Applications • Written tests • Performance simulation tests • Interviews • Background • Medical/Physical examination

  10. Interviewing skills

  11. Interviewing skills • Review the job description and job specification. • Prepare a structured set of questions. • Review the applicant’s information. • Put the interviewee at ease. • Ask questions and listen carefully. • Inform the applicant of the next step in the process. • Write the evaluation immediately.

  12. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  13. HRM Activities Employee orientation

  14. Orientation An expansion on information that a new employee obtained during the recruitment and selection stages; an attempt to familiarize new employees with the job, the work unit, and the organization as a whole.

  15. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  16. HRM Activities Training and developing employees

  17. EXHIBIT 5–6 Determining training needs.

  18. Typical training methods • Apprenticeship

  19. Typical training methods • Job instruction training • Step by step (structured) on the job training method in which a trainer (1) prepares a trainee with an overview of the job, its purpose, and the results desired, 2) demonstrates the task or the skill to the trainee, (3) allows the trainee to mimic the demonstration on his or her own, and (4) follows up to provide feedback and help. (businessdictionary.com)

  20. Typical training methods • Classroom lectures • Multimedia

  21. Typical training methods • Simulation exercises

  22. Typical training methods • Computer-based training • Programmed instruction • A method of teaching in which the information to be learned is presented in discrete units, with a correct response to each unit required before the learner may advance to the next unit.

  23. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  24. HRM Activities Compensating employees

  25. Employee Compensation Monetary payments or wages and/or salaries, goods or commodities used in lieu of money to reward employees.

  26. Employee Compensation It involves determining a cost-effective pay structure that will attract and retain competent employees, provide an incentive for them to work hard, and ensure that pay levels will be perceived as fair.

  27. Compensation contd. • The wage and salary should be designed to take into consideration, skill effort and responsibility. May include Benefits • Non-financial rewards designed to enrich employee’s lives.

  28. HRM Activities • HR planning • Sourcing and Staffing • Employee orientation • Training and developing employees • Compensating employees • Evaluating employee performance

  29. HRM Activities Evaluating employee performance

  30. Performance Appraisal • A review of employees’ past performance that emphasizes positive accomplishments as well as deficiencies. • A means of helping employees improve future performance

  31. Performance Appraisal • Involves observing and assessing employee performance, recording the assessment, and providing feedback to the employee. • Employees may be evaluated against: - Absolute standards - Relative standards - Objectives

  32. Occupational Safety and Health

  33. Occupational Safety and Health Employers have both a legal and moral responsibility to ensure that the workplace is free from hazards that may cause death, injuries and illnesses. Laws exist and organizations set up to monitor compliance to health and safety standards in organizations. This process is known as Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).

  34. Occupational Safety and Health In Jamaica, government agencies such as the Ministries of Health and Local Government, National Environmental Planning Agency (NEPA), and laws such as the Factories Act support OSHA. Standards exists for conditions such as noise levels, dust levels, physical protection gear, elevator locations, fire escapes in public buildings, etc.

  35. Occupational Safety and Health Factors contributing to safety and health accidents at the workplace: Human factors - inability to do the job - carelessness or negligence - intoxication - other human deficiencies

  36. Occupational Safety and Health Environmental Factors • tools • Equipment • Physical plant • Materials used • The general work environment

  37. Occupational Safety and Health Internal Standards or Preventative Methods • Education • Motivation • Skills training • Engineering • Protection • Regulations

  38. Current issues in HRM

  39. Current issues in HRM • Work force diversity • Sexual harassment • Layoffs • Layoff-survivor sickness

  40. Workforce Diversity • The composition of the workforce to include men, women, all races, religion, the disabled, homosexuals, heterosexuals, the elderly, etc.

  41. Sexual harassment • Anything of a sexual nature that impedes employees from conducting their normal business during work hours • Hostile work environment

  42. What can be considered sexual harassment? • Sexually suggestive remarks • Unwanted touching • Sexual advances • Requests for sexual favors • Verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature • Subjective description

More Related