The document discusses components of talent management including learning and development and talent relationship management. It also discusses employee motivation and its effect on performance, employee rewards and its effect on productivity, and compares traditional HRD with strategic HRD.
The document discusses components of talent management including learning and development and talent relationship management. It also discusses employee motivation and its effect on performance, employee rewards and its effect on productivity, and compares traditional HRD with strategic HRD.
The document discusses components of talent management including learning and development and talent relationship management. It also discusses employee motivation and its effect on performance, employee rewards and its effect on productivity, and compares traditional HRD with strategic HRD.
The document discusses components of talent management including learning and development and talent relationship management. It also discusses employee motivation and its effect on performance, employee rewards and its effect on productivity, and compares traditional HRD with strategic HRD.
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BA 204 - Assignment # 2
ESSAY:
1. Discuss the following components in the process of talent management.
a. Learning and Development Learning and development policies and programs are essential components in the process of talent management. This component includes everything from ongoing training to learning during the employee lifecycle. It allows for workers to fine-tune and further develop the critical skills needed to meet their performance goals and to help the company complete its strategic goals. In other words, it ensures that people acquire and enhance the skills and competencies they need. It involves taking steps to help talent grow within the company. It should be aligned with the employee development plan and includes identifying roles where particular employees could move to in the future as well as considering how to expand workers’ skills and knowledge to fulfill new challenges facing the organization. Organizations need to consider the value of training and developing employees. When employees gain new skills, they are often eager to use them right away. This promotes innovation in the workplace not only from the newly trained employee but also among the employees he or she works with closely. Learning and development work well when it is aligned not only with the organizations’ goals but also with the personal development goals of the employee. b. Talent Relationship Management Talent relationship management is the process of building effective relationships with people in their roles. It is concerned generally with creating a great place to work, but in particular it is about treating individual employees fairly, recognizing their value, giving them a voice and providing opportunities for growth. The aim is to achieve talent engagement, ensuring that people are committed to their work and the organization. It is better to build an existing relationship rather than try to create a new one when someone leaves.
2. Discuss employee motivation and its effect on employee performance.
Employee motivation is crucial to an organization. It is the root from which stems
both the progress and the downfall of a company. Employee motivation can be defined as the attitude employees have towards their work. It is the desire and energy that makes people continually interested and committed to a job. It is what drives them, pushes them, or "motivates" them to achieve or even show up at work every day. Employee motivation is essential to your company. Motivated employees are dedicated and they work harder, therefore, produce more. In other words, employee motivation improves the quality of work. Without a motivated workplace, a company can face significant losses. An employee who does not feel motivated won't be able to perform well. He won't want to give his best and work hard to achieve his goals. Motivated employees help achieve business goals. They also improve the overall productivity of the organization. If you imagine an employee with low levels of motivation, they are working at a slower pace, spending more time away from their tasks and possibly occupying themselves by surfing online or spending time on their phones. But most of all, they’re largely unfocused and aren’t putting their all into their work. This isn’t only wasting your resources but could have a knock-on effect to other employees, potentially holding back the entire company from producing work to the highest standard or meeting important targets. On the other hand, a motivated employee is enthusiastic, driven and takes pride in their work. They accomplish tasks quickly, take action and want to do a good job, both for themselves and for the company. Whether your company is currently at the top of their game, or on the way up, employee motivation remains at critical importance at every level. The moment employee motivation drops, revenue and company accomplishments could soon follow.
3. Discuss employee rewards and its effect on employee productivity.
Employee reward is an incentive plan to reinforce the desirable behavior of
workers or employers and in return for their service to the organization. Rewards can be monetary in the form of salary or non-monetary in the form of awards for some special services to the company or simply giving an employee a work which he enjoys doing. The primary objective of organizations in giving rewards is to attract, maintain and retain efficient, high performing and motivated employees. There can be various types of rewards an organization can give its employees like money, grade, performance based incentive or performance pay, increment, gift cards, recognition or awards, profit sharing, holiday packages, medical coverage, promotion, bonuses etc. They are given mainly to appreciate the performance of employees and to motivate them. This is because motivated workers lead to higher productivity and the organization as a whole prospers. On the other hand, if workers are unmotivated they can lead to the failure of the organization by disrupting and de- motivating other workers as well. Rewards are considered separate from salary but they may be monetary and have a cost to company. They are generally aligned to organizational goals, when an employee helps the organization to achieve any of its organizational goals he/she is rewarded. Retaining employees is fundamental when aiming to boost productivity levels in the office. In order to retain them, they must be recognized and rewarded on their hard work which can have a significant impact on the company’s ROI. Workers work harder and with more drive when their efforts are being rewarded. They tend to exert more efforts in accomplishing their tasks in order to qualify for the rewards the company has to offer. The more the company focuses on acknowledging their employees’ hard work, the better chances to keep them happier and more committed to the company.
4. Compare and contrast traditional HRD and strategic HRD.
The development of the skills of executives, managers and employees as they
flow from the current orientation of the company is known as traditional human resource development. The skills, in terms of which executives, managers and employees are developed during a traditional human resource development process, emerge from the current strategic orientation of the company and thus the job for which executives, managers and employees are currently responsible. When viewed in this traditional way, human resource development is a maintenance subsystem, intended to improve organizational efficiency by increasing routinization and predictability of human behavior. It facilitates socialization of newcomers into the corporate culture, work group, and job. In a sense traditional human resource development is a rite of passage furnishing newcomers with ideas, techniques, and approaches worked out in the past. In traditional HRD, it uses method such as organization development wherein it focuses on changing the culture of a company by means of planned learning interventions. It also focuses on addressing the training needs of external role players involved with the company or the value chain of the company. Traditional HRD is developing executives, managers and employees of the company in order to be able to adjust to changes taking place externally. It also equips individual executives, managers and employees with the knowledge and skills needed to accomplish their career goals. Lastly it involves training which focuses on empowering executives, managers and employees to be capable of effective and efficient work performance and to furnish them with knowledge and skills needed to perform their jobs. On the other hand, the training philosophy, policy and strategy should, however, also give an indication of the manner in which the skills of executives, managers and employees in particular ought to be developed in order to be capable of effective performance in the future. The skills executives, managers and employees should have are determined according to the future strategic orientation of the company. A training process which enables strategic human resource development should therefore provide for empowering executives, managers and employees for effective performance in terms of the strategic domains which are more emergent in nature such as the complex and chaos domains. The dynamic and uncertain nature of these domains in the strategic environment of companies necessitates that a strategic training process should have other characteristics than those of a traditional training process. Methods such as strategic organizational development and strategic employee development as well as strategic training are used to make strategic human resource development possible. At an organizational level strategic human resource development contributes to executives, managers and employees being able to give effect to the future strategic orientation of the company. In terms of individual executives, managers and employees, strategic human resource development results in executives, managers and employees being developed in a more holistic manner than in the case of a traditional human resource development process. Hence, it provides greater extrinsic and intrinsic job satisfaction, greater customer and client satisfaction, shorter learning times and more effective use of resource and less wastage of materials and also the creation of a learning organization that is flexible and responsible in coping with present and future demands. Moreover, strategic HRD makes activities proactive rather than reactive. SHRD also ties learning to a comprehensive instructional planning process that supports and relates to strategic business plans and human resources plans. Strategic HRD also makes businesses known for their excellence in productivity improvement handle their human resources strategically. Finally, SHRD practitioners will increasingly have to think strategically if they are to enjoy long-term career success. From the above-mentioned benefits of strategic human resource development, it is clear that this type of human resource development enables a company to effectively address the emergent needs of the market or the industry. The unique nature and focus of traditional and strategic training mean that companies should use both these types of training processes in order to ensure that they are empowered for efficient and effective performance in all four the domains of their strategic environment both currently as well as in the future.