Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The roots of HRM can be found in the emergence of industrial welfare to provide
workplace amenities such as medical care, housing and libraries.
When scientific management emerged, HRM function came to life, responsible for
establishing modern personnel methods. [Personnel Administrative Approach]
Chapter-4
Talent Management Process
talent management as the holistic, integrated and results- and goal-oriented
process of planning, recruiting, selecting, developing, managing, and
compensating employees.
1. Decide what positions to fill, through job analysis, personnel planning, and
forecasting.
2. Build a pool of job applicants, by recruiting internal or external candidates.
3. Obtain application forms and perhaps have initial screening interviews.
4. Use selection tools like tests, interviews, background checks, and physical
exams to identify viable candidates.
5. Decide to whom to make an offer.
6. Orient, train, and develop employees so they have the competencies to do
their jobs.
7. Appraise employees to assess how they’re doing.
8. Compensate employees to maintain their motivation.
This stepwise view makes sense. For example, the employer needs job candidates
before
selecting whom to hire.
the appraisal may well also loop back to shape the employee’s subsequent training.
So, first, rather than view these eight HR activities as stepwise, it is best to view
them holistically.
the manager knows that having employees with the right skills depend as much on
recruiting and training as on applicant testing.
holistic and integrated, he or she will probably use the same “profile” of required
human skills, knowledge, and behaviors (“competencies”) for formulating a job’s
recruitment plans as for making selection, training, appraisal, and compensation
decisions for it.
Talent management starts with understanding what jobs need to be filled, and the
human traits and competencies employees need to do those jobs effectively.
job analysis
The procedure for determining the duties and skill requirements of a job
and the kind of person who should be hired for it.
job descriptions
A list of a job’s duties, responsibilities, reporting relationships, working
conditions, and supervisory responsibilities—one product of a job analysis.
job specifications
A list of a job’s “human requirements,” that is, the requisite education, skills,
personality, and so on—another product of a job analysis.
Job evaluation:
Figures out the relative value of a job. The relative importance of job. Pay
structure, relationship, hierarchical position.
Information collected through job analysis:
(Work activities, Human behaviors, Machines, tools, equipment, and work aids,
Performance standards)
Human behaviors. Information about human behaviors the job requires, like
sensing, communicating, lifting weights, or walking long distances.
Human requirements. Information such as knowledge or skills (education,
training, work experience) and required personal attributes (aptitudes,
personality, interests).
Equal employment opportunity (EEO) compliance means not discriminating against
employees and job applicants based on protected factors.
Use of Job analysis information:
RECRUITMENT AND SELECTION, EEO COMPLIANCE, PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL, COMPENSATION, TRAINING
Conducting job analysis:
Identify the use
Review organizational chart and process chart
Select sample of position
Actually Analyze the Job
Verify the Job Analysis Information with the Worker Performing the
Job and with His or Her Immediate Supervisor.
Write JD and JS
organization chart
A chart that shows the organization wide distribution of work, with titles
of each position and interconnecting lines that show who reports to and
communicates with whom.
process chart
A workflow chart that shows the flow of inputs to and outputs from a particular
job.
workflow analysis
A detailed study of the flow of work from job to job in a work process.
job enlargement
Assigning workers additional same-level activities.
job rotation
Systematically moving workers from one job to another.
job enrichment
Redesigning jobs in a way that increases the opportunities for the worker to
experience feelings of responsibility, achievement, growth, and recognition.
Job analysis info
Interviews • Questionnaires • Observation • Diary/logs • Quantitative techniques
Use group interviews when a large number of employees are performing similar or
identical work.
It is helpful to spend several minutes prior to collecting job analysis
information explaining the process that you will be following.
PROS AND CONS
Distortion of information is the main problem. Job analysis often precedes
changing a job’s pay rate. Employees therefore often view it as pay-related, and
exaggerate
some responsibilities while minimizing others.
Having employees fill out questionnaires to describe their job duties and
responsibilities
is another popular job analysis approach?
diary/log
Daily listings made by workers of every activity in which they engage
along with the time each activity takes.
Quantitative Job Analysis Techniques.
aim is to compare jobs for pay purposes, a mere listing of dutie
There is no standard format for writing a job description. However, most
descriptions contain sections that cover:
1. Job identification 2. Job summary 3. Responsibilities and duties
4. Authority of incumbent 5. Standards of performance 6. Working conditions
7. Job specification
• Job descriptions
o Identifying the job, summary, relationships o Responsibilities, duties, standards
• Specifications
Relationships:
There may be a “relationships” statement that shows the jobholder’s relationships
with others inside and outside the organization. The following presents some
illustrative relationships for a human resource manager.
Competency-based job analysis
means describing the job in terms of measurable,
observable, behavioral competencies (such as
skills).
Chapter-5
The plan includes number of decisions regarding hiring:
How many people to hire?
When to hire
And with what qualifications?
Inviting people for a job application is recruitment.
the process of talent acquisition, the process of finding
and hiring high-quality talent needed to meet the organization’s workforce
needs. There are two primary stages of acquiring talent—recruiting and selection.
that internal recruiting might produce the best results overall because existing
employees who are given new work opportunities tend to perform considerably
better than external hires, at least in the first three years of employment in a new
job.
Internal vs External:
companies can create employer branding content and invite users to “link in”
with them. This identifies potential employees and helps spread the word on job
vacancies.
selecting the right person is crucial for several reasons. First, employees
with the right skills will perform better for you and the company.
Validity tells you whether the test is measuring what you think it’s supposed
to be measuring.15 Test validity answers the question “Does this test measure
what it’s supposed to measure?”
validity often refers to evidence that the test is job related.
test validity: The accuracy
criterion validity: relevance with job.
it means demonstrating that those who do well on the test also do well on the job,
and that those who do poorly on the test do poorly on the job.
Content validity: tests the tasks and skills needed for the job.
Construct validity means demonstrating that (1) a selection procedure measures
a construct (an abstract idea such as morale or honesty)
Cognitive tests include tests of general reasoning ability (intelligence) and tests of
specific mental abilities like memory and inductive reasoning.
There are several personality test caveats. First, projective personality tests are difficult
to interpret and score; it usually requires an expert to analyze test takers’ responses
and infer their personalities. Second, for this and other reasons, personality tests can
trigger legal challenges.56 Third, experts debate whether self-report personality tests
suffer from low validity.57 Fourth, people can and will fake responses to personality
and integrity tests.58 The bottom line: make sure the personality tests you use predict
performance for the jobs you are testing for.