Module 3-Functions of HRM
Module 3-Functions of HRM
The scope of HRM functions are vivid and wide. Authors have given
diverse set of functions across a range of areas. The major functional
areas of HRM can be discussed under the following heads. This module
gives an overview of these functions, a detailed explanation of each one
is included in the upcoming sessions.
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jobs. This pool can be generated internally (inside the organization) or
externally (outside the organizations).
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Once performance appraisal is done, then appropriate feedback to the
employees needs to be given. Here, the manager has to take the role of a
counsellor and a coach. Counselling is a process where the manager
helps the employee to identify the problems/difficulties associated with
the performance. As a coach the manager provides one to one training to
monitor and improve the performance of the employees. HR manager
functions as an enabler in the entire process by co-ordinating the roles
with the line managers.
Pay structure refers to an array of pay rates for different works or skills
in an organization. It provides a framework through which an
organization makes career and pay opportunities to its employees. The
various components in the pay basket has to be suitable designed. The
different types of payment of compensation include:
Performance related pay
Performance Related Pay (PRP) provides individual employees with
financial rewards linked to an assessment of their work performance.
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Commission: most commonly used in sales, retailing and other
branches of distribution, percentage payments are offered on sales
or turnover, generally once initial targets have been hit.
Competency related pay: Method of rewarding people wholly or
partly in reference to the competence they demonstrate in carrying
out tasks. It is a method of paying for performance.
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Employee Relations is concerned with the relationship between
management and workers and the role of regulatory mechanism in
resolving any industrial dispute. It includes the systems, rules and
procedures used by unions and employers to determine the reward for
effort and other conditions of employment. Protecting the interest of the
employees and their employers, and regulating the ways in which
employers treat their employees are also come under the purview of IR.
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Occupational health programmes deal with the prevention of ill-health
arising from working conditions. They consist of two elements:
1) occupational medicine, which is a specialized branch of preventive
medicine concerned with the diagnosis and prevention of health hazards
at work and dealing with any ill-health or stress which has occurred in
spite of preventive actions, and
2) occupational hygiene, which is concerned with the provision of
systems to measure and control environmental hazards.