Human Resource Management: Period Before Industrial Revolution
Human Resource Management: Period Before Industrial Revolution
An important event in industrial revolution was growth of Labour Union (1790) The works
working in the industries or factories were subjected to long working hours and very less wages.
With growing unrest , workers across the world started protest and this led to the establishment
of Labour unions. To deal with labour issues at one end and management at the other
Personnel Management department had to be capable of politics and diplomacy , thus the
industrial relation department emerged.
Post Industrial revolution The term Human resource Management saw a major evolution
after 1850. Various studies were released and many experiments were conducted during this
period which gave HRM altogether a new meaning and importance.
A brief overview of major theories release during this period is presented below
Frederick W. Taylor gave principles of scientific management (1857 o 1911) led to the evolution
of scientific human resource management approach which was involved in
Workers training
Hawthorne studies, conducted by Elton Mayo & Fritz Roethlisberger (1927 to 1940).
Observations and findings of Hawthrone experiment shifted the focus of Human resource from
increasing workers productivity to increasing workers efficiency through greater work
satisfaction.
Douglas McGregor Theory X and Theory Y (1960) and Abraham Maslows Hierarchy of needs
( 1954) These studies and observations led to the transition from the administrative and
passive Personnel Management approach to a more dynamic Human Resource Management
approach which considered workers as a valuable resource.
As a result of these principles and studies , Human resource management became increasingly
line management function , linked to core business operations. Some of the major activities of
HR department are listed as1.Recruitment and selection of skilled workforce.
2.Motivation and employee benefits
3.Training and development of workforce
4.Performance related salaries and appraisals.
HR CHALLENGES
There are many challenges that Human Resource Management departments face. Here are
six important ones:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Health and Welfare Provisions must be made for the care of employees. This
can be in the form of health benefits and sick days. Workshops and company picnics,
outings, holiday celebrations, etc. often boost morale.
5.
6.
Conclusion
Human resource management should take a new approach in this new
environment brought about by globalization. People should not be seen as a
cost to the organization but as a valuable assert which should be trained and
developed to get the best out of them.
MOTIVATION
Motivation is an employee's intrinsic enthusiasm about and drive to accomplish activities
related to work. Motivation is that internal drive that causes an individual to decide to
take action.
Every employee has activities, events, people, and goals in his or her life that he or she
finds motivating. So, motivation about some aspect of life exists in each person's
consciousness and actions
EMPLOYEE EMPOWERMENT
Employee empowerment is giving employees a certain degree of autonomy and
responsibility for decision-making regarding their specific organizational tasks. It allows
decisions to be made at the lower levels of an organization where employees have a
unique view of the issues and problems facing the organization at a certain level.
1.
Companies that encourage diversity in the workplace inspire all of their employees to
perform to their highest ability. Company-wide strategies can then be executed;
resulting in higher productivity, profit, and return on investment.
RETRENCHMENT
Retrenchment is one potential strategy that firms can use to try to turn themselves around
when they are losing profitability. Retrenchment involves cutting back on a firm's activity.it
can mean reducing the level of staffing in the company by laying people off or it can mean
getting the firm out of some particular markets in order to concentrate on the firm's core
competencies
Recruitment
Selection
Meaning
Objective
Process
It is a simple process.
It is a complicated process.
Hurdles
Approach
It is a positive approach.
It is a negative approach.
Sequence
It proceeds selection.
It follows recruitment.
Economy
It is an economical method.
It is an expensive method.
Time
Consuming
Channels of Recruitment
PROCESS OF RECRUITMENT
o
Identify vacancy
Short-listing
Arrange interviews
Poor image: If the image of a firm is perceived to be low (due to factors such as operating in a
declining industry, earning a bad name because of environmental pollution, poor quality products,
nepotism, insider trading allegations against promoters etc.), the likelihood of attracting a large number of
qualified applicants is reduced.
Unattractive job: If the job to be filled is not very attractive, most prospective candidates may turn
indifferent and may not even apply. This is especially true in case of jobs that are dull, boring, anxiety
producing, devoid of career growth opportunities and generally do not reward performance in a proper
way. (e.g., jobs in departmental undertakings such as Railways, Post and Telegraphs, public sector banks
and Insurance companies failing to attract talent from premier management institutes.)
Conservative internal policies: A policy of filling vacancies through internal promotions based on
seniority, experience, job knowledge etc. may often come in the way of searching for qualified hands in
the broader job market in an unbiased way. Likewise, in firms where powerful unions exist, managers may
be compelled to pick up candidates with questionable merit, based on issues such as caste, race,
religion, region, nepotism, friendship etc.
Limited budgetary support : Recruiting efforts require money. Sometimes because of limited
resources, organizations may not like to carry on the recruiting efforts for long periods of time. This can,
ultimately, constrain a recruiters efforts to attract the best person for the job.
Restrictive policies of government : Governmental policies often come in the way of recruiting
people as per the rules for company or on the basis of merit/seniority, etc. For example, reservations for
special groups (such as scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, backward classes, physically handicapped
and disabled persons, ex-servicemen, etc.) have to be observed as per Constitutional provisions while
filling up vacancies in government corporations, departmental undertakings, local bodies, quasigovernment organizations, etc.