R&S
R&S
R&S
isolation. We always plan, develop and manage our relations both consciously and
unconsciously. The relations are the outcome of our actions and depend to a great extent
upon our ability to manage our actions. The whole context of Human Resource
Management revolves around this core matter of managing relations at work place.
There is no best way to manage people and no manager has formulated how people can
be managed effectively, because people are complex beings with complex needs.
Effective HRM depends very much on the causes and conditions that an organizational
setting would provide. Any Organization has three basic components, People, Purpose,
and Structure.
which meet the needs of the enterprise and which provides satisfaction for the individuals
involved.
HRP is a Four-Phased Process.
The first phase involves the gathering and analysis of data through manpower
inventories and forecasts.
The second phase consists of establishing manpower objectives and policies and
gaining top management approval of these.
The third phase involves designing and implementing plans and promotions to
enable the organization to achieve its manpower objectives.
The fourth phase is concerned with control and evaluation of manpower plans to
facilitate progress in order to benefit both the organization and the individual. The
long run view means that gains may be sacrificed in the short run for the future
grounds. The planning process enables the organization to identify what its
manpower needs is and what potential manpower problems required current
action. This leads to more effective and efficient performance.
specialist skills that are rare and scare. A problem arises in an organization when
employees with such specialized skills leave.
5) Governmental Influences: Government control and changes in legislation with regard
to affirmative action for disadvantages groups, working conditions and hours of work,
restrictions on women and child employment, causal and contract labour, etc. have
stimulated the organizations to be become involved in systematic HRP.
6) Legislative Control: The policies of hire and fire have gone. Now the legislation
makes it difficult to reduce the size of an organization quickly and cheaply. It is easy to
increase but difficult to shed the fat in terms of the numbers employed because of recent
changes in labour law relating to lay-offs and closures. Those responsible for managing
manpower must look far ahead and thus attempt to foresee manpower problems.
7) Impact of the Pressure Group: Pressure groups such as unions, politicians and
persons displaced from land by location of giant enterprises have been raising
contradictory pressure on enterprise management such as internal recruitment and
promotion, preference to employees children, displace person, sons of soil etc.
8) Systems Approach: The spread of system thinking and advent of the macro computer
as the part of the on-going revolution in information technology which emphasis planning
and newer ways of handling voluminous personnel records.
9) Lead Time: The log lead time is necessary in the selection process and training and
deployment of the employee to handle new knowledge and skills successfully.
In the 60s, manpower planning process organizations:
a. Linked the manpower in the organization with its environment.
b. Forecasted their needs for manpower into the future,
c. Forecasted their internal labour supply for meeting the needs,
d. Identified the gaps between need and available human resource
e. Planned for recruitment, selection, and placement of employees, provided for training
and development, and anticipated necessary promotion and transfers.
During the 1970s:
a. The term HUMAN RESOUCE' was coined in place of 'manpower' and gained
acceptance.
b. People were considered as a basic corporate resource
c. Human Resource Planning became widely established as a staff activity in major
business and governmental organizations.
During the 1980s:
a. Employees' were encouraged to participate in decisions with reference to their career
and work.
b. At the same time organization also become conscious of profitability and cost control.
c. Organizations adopted work and career management practices of the type reflected in
innovations under affirmative action
In the 90s, concepts such as job sharing, reduced working hours, flexibility of time, work
customs, job design, job enrichment; empowerment, total quality management, and
business process re-engineering were introduced.
Much emphasis was on flexibility to employees with reference to time, place, gender,
acceptance of ability of a person and hence physically disabled people also given equal
importance, global concept originated the process of internal human resource
management giving importance to culture, social integrity etc.