HRM Unit 1 Notes
HRM Unit 1 Notes
HRM Unit 1 Notes
UNIT I
PERSPECTIVES IN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
According to the Invancevich and Glueck, ―HRM is concerned with the most
effective use of people to achieve organizational and individual goals. It is the way of
managing people at work, so that they give their best to the organization.
According to Dessler (2008) the policies and practices involved in carrying out the
―people or human resource aspects of a management position, including recruiting,
screening, training, rewarding, and appraising comprises of HRM.
HRM is a management function that helps manager ‘s to recruit, select, train and
develop members for an organization. HRM is concerned with people ‘s dimension in
organizations. The following constitute the core of HRM
HRM refers to a set of programmes, functions and activities designed and carried out in order
to maximize both employee as well as organizational effectiveness.
Scope of HRM
The major HRM activities include HR planning, job analysis, job design, employee
hiring, employee and executive remuneration, employee motivation, employee maintenance,
industrial relations and prospects of HRM.
The scope of Human Resources Management extends to:
All the decisions, strategies, factors, principles, operations, practices, functions,
activities and methods related to the management of people as employees in any type of
organization.
All the dimensions related to people in their employment relationships, and all the
dynamics that flow from it.
The scope of HRM is really vast. All major activities in the working life of a worker –
from the time of his or her entry into an organization until he or she leaves it comes under the
purview of HRM. American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) conducted fairly
an exhaustive study in this field and identified nine broad areas of activities of HRM.
Objectives of HRM
The primary objective of HRM is to ensure the availability of competent and willing
workforce to an organization. The specific objectives include the following:
1) Human capital: assisting the organization in obtaining the right number and types
of employees to fulfil its strategic and operational goals.
2) Developing organizational climate: helping to create a climate in which employees
are encouraged to develop and utilize their skills to the fullest and to employ the skills and
abilities of the workforce efficiently.
3) Helping to maintain performance standards and increase productivity through
effective job design: providing adequate orientation, training and development; providing
performance related feedback; and ensuring effective two-way communication.
4) Helping to establish and maintain a harmonious employer/employee relationship
5) Helping to create and maintain a safe and healthy work environment
6) Developing programs to meet the economic, psychological, and social needs of the
employees and helping the organization to retain the productive employees
7) Ensuring that the organization is in compliance with provincial/territorial and
federal laws affecting the workplace (such as human rights, employment equity, occupational
health and safety, employment standards, and labour relations legislation). To help the
organization to reach its goals
8) To provide organization with well-trained and well-motivated employees
9) To increase the employee’s satisfaction and self-actualization
10) To develop and maintain the quality of work life
11) To communicate HR policies to all employees.
Otherwise, employee performance and satisfaction may decline giving rise to employee
turnover.
Functions of HRM
Human Resources management has an important role to play in equipping organizations to
meet the challenges of an expanding and increasingly competitive sector. Increase in staff
numbers, contractual diversification and changes in demographic profile which compel the
HR managers to reconfigure the role and significance of human resources management. The
functions are responsive to current staffing needs, but can be proactive in reshaping
organizational objectives. All the functions of HRM are correlated with the core objectives of
HRM. For example, personal objectives are sought to be realized through functions like
remuneration, assessment etc
· Managerial Functions
· Operative Functions
Managerial Function Includes:
1. Planning
One of the primary function where number & type of employees needed to accomplish
organizational goals are determined. Research forms core HRM planning which also helps
management to collect, analyze and identify current plus future needs within the organization.
2. Organizing
Organization of the task is another important step. Task is allocated to every member as per
their skills and activities are integrated towards a common goal.
3. Directing
This includes activating employees at different levels and making them contribute maximum
towards organizational goal. Tapping maximum potentialities of an employee via constant
motivation and command is a prime focus.
4. Controlling
Post planning, organizing and directing, performance of an employee is checked, verified and
compared with goals. If actual performance is found deviated from the plan, control measures
are taken.
Operative Function Includes:
PROCUREMENT :
Job Analysis & Design
Describing nature of the job like qualification, skill, work experience required for specific job
position is another important operative task. Whereas, job design includes outlining tasks,
duties and responsibilities into a single work unit to achieve certain goal.
Human Resource Planning: The objective of HR Planning is to ensure that the organization
has the right types of persons at the right time at the right place. It prepares human resources
inventory with a view to assess present and future needs, availability and possible shortages
in human resource. Thereupon, HR Planning forecast demand and supplies and identify
sources of selection. HR Planning develops strategies both long-term and short-term, to meet
the man-power requirement.
Selection : The selection process is concerned with choosing qualified individuals to fill
those jobs. In the selection function, the most qualified applicants are selected for hiring from
among the applicants based on the extent to which their abilities and skills are matching with
the job.
Placement is the process of assigning specific jobs and work places to the selected
candidates.
Induction is the process for welcoming newly recruited employees and supporting them to
adjust to their new roles and working environments.
Internal mobility is the movement of employees (vertically and laterally) to new career and
development opportunities within the same organization.
COMPENSATION
Job design : Job design is the process of creating comparable occupations that provide
sufficient information about the tasks to be done as well as the skills, knowledge, and
credentials needed to perform the job more effectively and successfully.
Motivation: Motivation can be defined as a process which energizes, directs and sustains
human behavior. In HRM the term refers to person's desire to do the best possible job or to
exert the maximum effort to perform assigned tasks.
Job Evaluation : Job evaluation is the systematic process of determining the relative value of
different jobs in an organization. The goal of job evaluation is to compare jobs with each
other in order to create a pay structure that is fair, equitable, and consistent for everyone.
Incentives & Benefits : While incentives and benefits may sound the same because they are
intended to motivate employees and strengthen their bond to the company, there are some
important differences between one and the other.Firstly, incentives are awarded after the work
has been done, as long as the employee has hit specific targets. Benefits, on the other hand,
are delivered from the moment they join the company's workforce.
This also reveals another difference: only employees that stand out for their efficiency and
productivity gain these incentives. Conversely, benefits are offered to everyone equally, and
even to those with below-average performance. And lastly, there is also a difference in the
reasons for offering one or the other. Companies offer benefits to try to attract and retain
talent. Many offer free staff canteens to make their job offer more attractive. Incentives, by
comparison, seek to motivate employees to perform to the best of their abilities.
MAINTENANCE
Minimizing employee turnover and sustaining best performing employees within the
organization is the key. Minimizing ROI within HR department is also a key goal for Human
resource management team.
Health : Health is a stage of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely
the absence of any disease. A person is considered healthy if he is well adjusted to the
environment in which he works.
Safety : Creating a safe working environment, safe equipment and safe procedures that limit
any threats to worker health and safety. Setting up adequate safety supervision. Ensuring
workers aren't subject to extreme mental and physical fatigue.
Employee welfare : Employee welfare means anything done for the comfort and (intellectual
or social) improvement of the employees, over and above the wages paid. In simple words, it
means “the efforts to make life worth living for workmen.” It includes various services,
facilities and amenities provided to employees for their betterment.
Social Security measures : “Social security means the security of an income to take the
place of earnings when they are interrupted by unemployment, sickness or accident to
provide for the retirement through old age, to provide against loss of support by death of
another person and to meet exceptional expenditure connected with birth, death or marriage.
DEVELOPMENT
Training & Development : This function allows employees to acquire new skills and
knowledge to perform their job effectively. Training and development also prepares employees
for higher level responsibilities.
Executive development : Executive development in hrm refers to the training and
development programs which are conducted in an organization to develop
future managers and leaders.
Career planning and development : Career development is the continual process of
managing your learning, leisure and work to progress through your life. It includes gaining
and using the skills and knowledge you need to plan and make informed decisions about
education, training and work.
Succession planning : The term succession planning refers to a business strategy companies
use to pass leadership roles down to another employee or group of employees. Succession
planning ensures that businesses continue to run smoothly and without interruption, after
important people move on to new opportunities, retire, or pass away.
Human resource development : HRD concept was first introduced by Leonard Nadler in
1969 in a conference in US. “He defined HRD as those learning experience which are
organized, for a specific time, and designed to bring about the possibility of behavioral
change”. Human Resource Development (HRD) is the framework for helping employees
develop their personal and organizational skills, knowledge, and abilities. Human Resource
INTEGRATION
Grievance redressal : Grievance redressal policy is the procedure provided by employer to
employee so that they can vent out the issue or complication they face and to get a proper
solution to this.
Discipline: “Discipline is the force that prompts individuals or groups to observe rules,
regulations, standards and procedures deemed necessary for an organization.” Discipline
means systematically conducting the business by the organizational members who strictly
adhere to the essential rules and regulations.
Teams and team work : A team is a group of people who work together toward a common
goal. Teams have defined membership (which can be either large or small) and a set of
activities to take part in. People on a team collaborate on sets of related tasks that are required
to achieve an objective. Teamwork is what happens when a group of people come together
and collectively achieve something. Teamwork offers organisations and employees the ability
to know more about each other in work and learn how to work together well.
Tradee union : Labour unions or trade unions are organizations formed by workers from
related fields that work for the common interest of its members. They help workers in issues
like fairness of pay, good working environment, hours of work and benefits.
CONTROL
Controlling can be defined as that function of management which helps to seek planned
results from the subordinates, managers and at all levels of an organization. The controlling
function helps in measuring the progress towards the organizational goals & brings any
deviations, & indicates corrective action.
HRIS
A human resources information system (HRIS) is a software solution that maintains,
manages, and processes detailed employee information and human resources-related policies
and procedures.
• Capable of enlargement
– produce extraordinary things when inspired
– Can help organisation achieve results quickly, efficiently & effectively.
• The secret of their success is ―The way they treat their employees‖ - Sony
• Nestle CEO ―Every single person in the organization should ask himself or herself – is
there anything I can do to add a little more value to our organization‖
• ―How important are people treated in the Organization. ‖
• Organization – acquires the services from the Employees, Develop their Skills and
motivate them to achieve the organization objectives.
• HR - Productivity, Quality Work Life & Profit.
• ―The Enterprise is People‖, ―Organization need people and People need Organization. ‖
rather than physical, technical or economic. Failure to reorganize this fact causes immense
loss to the nation, enterprise and the individual. In the words of Oliver Sheldon, ―No
industry can be rendered efficient so long as the basic fact remain unrecognized that it is
principally human. It is not a mass of machines and technical processes, but a body of men. It
is not a complex matter, but a complex of humanity. It fulfils its function not by virtue of
some impersonal force, but a human energy. Its body is not an intricate maze of mechanical
devices but a magnified nervous system.
People at work ‘comprise a large number of individuals of different sex, age, socioreligious
group and different educational or literacy standards. These individuals in the work place
exhibit not only similar behaviour patterns and characteristics to a certain degree, but they
also show dissimilarity. Each individual who works has his own set of needs, drives, goals
and experiences. Each has his own physical and psychological traits. Each human being is not
only a product of his biological inheritance but also a result of interactions with his
environment.
Family relationships, religious influences, racial or caste backgrounds, educational
accomplishment, the application of technological innovations, and many other environmental,
experimental influences affect the individual as he works.
People come to work with certain specific motives to earn money, to get employment,
to have better prospect in future, to be treated as a human being while at the place of work.
They sell their labour for reasonable wage / salary and other benefits. It is these people who
provide the knowledge and much of the energy through which organisational objectives are
accomplished.
The management must, therefore, be aware not only of the organisational but also employee
needs. None of these can be ignored
have gradually oriented themselves from the traditional personnel management to a human
resources management approach.
The basic approach of HRM is to perceive the organization as a whole. Its emphasis is not
only on production and productivity but also on the quality of life. It seeks to achieve the
paramount development of human resources and the utmost possible socio-economic
development.
1. Administrative Role of HR
The administrative role of HR management has been heavily oriented to
administration and recordkeeping including essential legal paperwork and policy
implementation. Major changes have happened in the administrative role of HR during the
recent years. Two major shifts driving the transformation of the administrative role are:
Greater use of technology and Outsourcing.
Technology has been widely used to improve the administrative efficiency of HR and
the responsiveness of HR to employees and managers, more HR functions are becoming
available electronically or are being done on the Internet using Web-based technology.
Technology is being used in most HR activities, from employment applications and employee
benefits enrolments to e-learning using Internet-based resources.
Increasingly, many HR administrative functions are being outsourced to vendors. This
outsourcing for administrative activities has grown dramatically in HR areas such as
employee assistance (counselling), retirement planning, benefits administration, payroll
services, and outplacement services.
equal employment opportunity and other laws is ensured, employment applications are
processed, current openings are filled through interviews, supervisors are trained, safety
problems are resolved, and wage and benefit questions are answered. For carrying out these
activities HR manager matches HR activities with the strategies of the organization.
HR technology
Working with executives to develop a revised sale
compensation and incentives plan as new products
It is the era when for the competitive triumph of the organization there is a need to
involve HRM significantly in an integrated manner, which demands such capabilities from
the HR specialists.
• Time saver
Principles of HR policy
• Right man in the right place
• Train everyone for the job to be done
• Make the orgn a coordinated team
• SS the right tools and right conditions of work
• Give security with opportunity, incentive, recognition
• Look ahead, plan head for more and better things.
Types of HR Policies
• Functional vs centralized policy
– Functional – Different categories of personnel
– Centralized – Common throughout the orgn
• Minor vs Major
– Minor – Relationship in a segment of an organization, with considerable
emphasis on details and procedures.
– Major – Overall objectives, procedures and control which affect an organization
as whole.
Specific Policies
Hiring – factors like reservation, marital status,
Terms and conditions – compensation policy, hours of work, overtime, promotion,
transfer, etc
Medical assistance - sickness benefits
Housing, transport, and other allowances.
Training and development
Industrial relations
Coverage of HR Policies
Travel Pay
Work Records
Temporary & Casual
Appointments
Workweek & Pay Periods
Compensation
Employee Discipline
Pay bands
Pay Advances
Sick Leave
Voting
Worker's Compensation
Labour Relations
Probation
Grievance Procedure
Ethical Conduct
Sick
Salary Administration
Relocation Pay
Payroll Deductions
Rates of Pay for New Employees
Terminating Employees
Layoff
Performance
Career Development
Workshops and Seminars
Family Health Leave
Holidays
Vacation
Leaves of Absence Without Pay
Personal Leave
Orientation
Vacancies
Employment Offers
References
Interviewing
Candidate Testing
Transfers
Consultants and Contractors
Recruitment Advertising
Continuous Service
Retirement Plan
Accidental Insurance
Formulating Policies
• Five principal sources for determining the content and meaning of policies
– Past practice
– Prevailing practice in the rival companies
– Attitudes and philosophies of the founders (Top level Management
– Attitudes and philosophies of middle level management.
– Knowledge and experience from handling personnel problems
Elements of HR Policy
History of Company’s Growth
Employment practice and condition of employment
Grievance of redressal procedure
Safety rules and regulation
Mutuality of interest and need for co operation
Employee financial aids
Educational Opportunities
Employee’s news sheet and house journal
Company policy
Collective bargaining
Procedures of disseminating information on company policies
Maintenance of discipline & Public Relations
Employee’s news sheet and house journal
the organisation needs for the lowest price.The result of this analysis will determine whether
to purchase an ―off the shelf‖ package or develop the system internally
• Contract Negotiations
Vendor has to selected and the contract must be negotiated. The contract stipulates
the vendor ‘s responsibilities with regard to software, installation, service, maintenance,
training and Documentation.
• Training
Members of the project team are trained to use HRIS.HR representative will train
managers from other department in how to submit information to HRIS and how
to request information from it.
•Tailoring the system
This step involves making changes to the system to best fit the needs of organisation.
A general rule of thumb is to modify the vendor package, because of modifications frequently
cause problems
• Collecting data
Data must be collected and stored in the system
• Testing system
Once the system is tailored to the organisational needs and data is entered, a period of testing
follows.The purpose of this testing is to verify the output ,All reports are analysed for
accuracy.
• Starting up
Start up begins when all current actions are put into the system and reports are produced
Running in parallel
It is desirable to run the system in parallel with the old system for a period of time.This
allows for comparison of outputs both the system and examination for inaccuracies
• Maintenance
It normally takes several weeks and months for the employees to feel comfortable with the
system. During the stabilisation period any remaining errors and adjustments should be
handled.
• Evaluation
HRIS has been in plea for a reasonable length of time. The system has to be evaluated
To check the efficiency whether the system is beneficial and properly used by the
organisation
Benefits
• Higher speed of retrieval of information
• Reduction in duplication
• Ease in classifying and reclassifying
• Effective decision making
• Higher accuracy of information
• Fast response of quires
• Improve quality of people
• Better work culture
• Systematic procedures
• Transparency
Limitations
• Expensive – finance – manpower requirements
• Large scale computer literacy – inconvenient and threatening
• Personnel designing do not have the thorough information of the users- user do not get the
exact reports.
• Quality of response depends on the accuracy of the input – human intervention.
• Multi user environment – system is operated in batch mode – records are updated once a
week – online facility has to be developed – report generated should not be out of phase with
the realities.
Basic Information of HR
• Number of Employees
• Categories
• Grades
• Total Value of human resources
• Value per employee
HR Acquisition
• Number of employees acquired during the year
• Cost of Acquisition
• Levels for which they were acquired
• HR Development
• All information pertaining to HRD activities of the organization
• HR maintenance
• Cost related to HR maintenance.
• HR Separation
• Cost related to HR Separation, attribution rate.
• Details of benefits provided to the employees
Various Methods:
Non- Monetary Measurement
Monetary Measurement
HR Accounting
• Developing skill inventory
• Performance Appraisal
• Assessing the individual capacity for development
• Attitude survey
• Subjective Appraisal