HRS1
HRS1
HRS1
Most companies make it a goal to find employees that already have a specific set of
skills prior to hiring them on board. Although employees may have the skills when you
hired them, you cannot expect their knowledge to continue as technology does without
ongoing training. The best thing a company can do is provide employee training for
things like software, management, and even quality control on a continuous basis.
The right employee training, development and education provides big payoffs for the
employer in increased productivity, knowledge, loyalty, and contribution to general
growth of the firm. In most cases external trainings for instance provide participants with
the avenue to meet new set of people in the same field and network. The meeting will
give them the chance to compare issues and find out what is obtainable in each other's
environment. This for sure will introduce positive changes where necessary.
Globalization is one of the key Siemens strategies. It understands that global workforce
development, cultural training and language learning as an investment that very quickly
brings valuable returns. Despite the challenges, many major companies and an
increasing number of small businesses report record profits from their involvement in
global trades. This trend will undoubtedly continue. The best shot for remaining
competitive is to make the adjustments to deal with the realities of operating in a global
economy.
Siemens’s well-trained, highly motivated employees are critical to the goal of meeting
and exceeding their customers’ expectations. Therefore, they invest considerable
resources in training them, upgrading their professional qualifications, safeguarding
their health and assuring their welfare.
Siemens is committed to getting better every day in all it does, as individuals and as
teams. By better understanding consumers' and customers' expectations and
continuously working to innovate and improve products, services and processes,
Siemens will "become the best."
Once the Human Resources manager knows what the required employee
competencies and behaviors are, he or she can turn to identifying the HR activities and
policies that will help to produce them.
1) Attracting, identifying, and hiring the most qualified applicant for the job
To drive this initiative, the function of Chief Diversity Officer (CDO) was established in
November 2008. The primary responsibility of the CDO is global diversity management.
One of his or her main objectives is to ensure that Siemens’ management is filled with
the best possible people and that it better represents the breadth of the company’s
global talent pool and better reflects the diversity of the company’s customers and
younger employees. The goal is to ensure the diversity – as well as processes that
foster diversity – are embedded throughout the company by 2011.
This will not be achieved by quotas, however. The guiding principle remains “recruiting
the best, hiring the best, retaining the best.” In order to measure progress, Siemens
has developed a series of parameters to better record diversity. They refer to five fields:
Expertise, diversity on all levels, the composition of our top talent pools, culture and
branding as well the mix of experience.
Employee development and training is another vital HR activity that Siemens pursues.
HR is responsible for researching an organization's training needs, and for initiating and
evaluating employee development programs designed to address those needs. These
training programs can range from orientation programs, which are designed to
acclimatize new hires to the company, to ambitious education programs intended to
familiarize workers with a new software system.
Global teamwork is the key to developing and using all the potential of the firm’s human
resources. Because it is so important for employees throughout Siemens to feel free to
work together and interact, employees have to understand the whole process, not just
bits and pieces.
All Siemens people are part of a global team, committed to working together across
countries and throughout the world. Only by sharing ideas, technologies and talents can
the Company achieve and sustain profitable growth.
Different cultures, people, traditions, and environment bring a depth and variety of ideas
to business that cannot come from any other source. They are the keys to finding new
solutions to business challenges and new opportunities from unique insights. Creating
an inclusive environment is absolutely critical to ensure that we can benefit from these
diverse viewpoints, diverse ideas and diverse perspectives
To meet the challenges of global megatrends and to benefit from the opportunities they
offer, Siemens needs to stay ahead of the curve. They are well placed to do this. The
company is in daily contact with customers in all parts of the world, serving them from a
global employee base. Being able to attract and retain high-caliber talent globally and
having systems in place with which to build superior international teams are already
among their great strengths. With Siemens’ Diversity Initiative, their goal is now to make
Siemens even stronger in this area.
Siemens is in contact with over two million customers daily. These customers, in every
corner of the globe, expect Siemens to understand their unique needs and concerns.
This requires the best people. And this is precisely what the Diversity Initiative aims to
do: help Siemens build superior teams with broad strengths and a wide range of skills.
And diversity is about more than just good deeds; it’s about good business! Almost all
Fortune 500 companies now have diversity programs, as do most of Siemens’ corporate
accounts. Clearly, diversity is an important competitive advantage.
For an integrated technology company like Siemens, with operations around the world,
diversity is of particular importance. Research demonstrates that diverse workplaces
are happier and more interesting. Diverse companies find it easier to attract people, job
satisfaction is enhanced, and diverse teams are more productive and creative. For a
company like Siemens that depends on innovation, it must do all it can to nurture this
innovation power. This was the thinking behind Siemens’ Managing Board’s decision to
launch the Siemens Diversity Initiative.
Summary:
Siemens cite their people as their primary source of competitive advantage. Successful
companies continuously identify and adopt innovative human resource management
policies and practices to sustain that advantage. More importantly, they structure work
and design training, performance management, pay, and reward policies to help
members of the organization succeed in achieving desired organizational outcomes. In
other words, they integrate and align HRM policies and practices to reinforce employee
behaviors that can best realize the leaders' strategic intent. The set of policies and
practices that collectively make up a company's HRM system is the critical management
tool for communicating and reinforcing the leaders' strategic intent.
Siemens is bound by local statutory labor and social regulations in all of the countries in
which they do business and they align their policies with key international standards.
Their globally binding Business Conduct Guidelines reflect this.
Although these declarations and guidelines are directed mainly at countries, Siemens
attaches great importance to abiding by them and expects its suppliers and business
partners to do the same.
As an active member of the United Nations’ Global Compact, they seek to help abolish
forced labor and child labor all over the world and to promote the freedom of
association.
The Business Conduct Guidelines obligate employees at every level within their
organization to abide by laws and statutory regulations (Compliance) and to embrace
the principles of mutual respect, honesty and integrity. The Guidelines also establish
nondiscrimination as a key global principle – in collaboration between Siemens
employees and in dealings with external partners:
“They respect the personal dignity, privacy, and personal rights of every individual. They
work together with women and men of various nationalities, cultures, religions, and
races. They tolerate no discrimination and no harassment or offence, be it sexual or
otherwise personal (…)”
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