Introduction To Human Resource Management
Introduction To Human Resource Management
tenth edition
Introduction to
Human Resource Management
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
All rights reserved. The University of West Alabama
After
After studying
studying this
this chapter,
chapter,
you
you should
should be
be able
able to:
to:
1. Explain what human
human resource management (HR) is and how
it relates to
to the management process.
2. Give at
at least eight examples of how
how managers can
can use
use HR
concepts and techniques.
3. Illustrate the HR management
management responsibilities of line and
staff (HR) managers.
4. Provide aa good example that illustrates HR’s role
role in
formulating
formulating and
and executing company strategy.
5. Write a short essay
essay that addresses the topic: why
why metrics
and measurement
measurement areare crucial
crucial to
to today’s
today’s HR
HR managers.
managers.
6. Outline the plan
plan of this book.
1–2
1–2
1–2
The Manager’s Human Resource
Management Jobs
Management process
– The five basic functions of planning, organizing,
staffing, leading, and controlling.
1–3
Personnel Aspects Of A Manager’s Job
Conducting job analyses (determining the nature of each
employee’s job)
Planning labor needs and recruiting job candidates
Selecting job candidates
Orienting and training new employees
Managing wages and salaries (compensating employees)
Providing incentives and benefits
Appraising performance
Communicating (interviewing, counseling, disciplining)
Training and developing managers
Building employee commitment
1–4
Personnel Mistakes
Hire the wrong person for the job
Experience high turnover
Have your people not doing their best
Waste time with useless interviews
Have your company in court because of discriminatory actions
Have your company receive penalties for unsafe practices
Have some employees think their salaries are unfair and
inequitable relative to others in the organization
Allow a lack of training to undermine your department’s
effectiveness
Commit any unfair labor practices
1–5
Basic HR Concepts
Getting results
– The bottom line of managing
HR creates value by engaging
in activities that produce
the employee behaviors
the company needs to
achieve its strategic
goals.
1–6
Line and Staff Aspects of HRM
Manager Someone who coordinates and oversees
the work of other people so that organizational goals
can be accomplished.
Line manager
– A manager who is authorized to direct the work of
subordinates and is responsible for accomplishing
the organization’s tasks.
Staff manager
– A manager who assists and advises line managers.
1–7
Line Managers’ HRM Responsibilities
1. Placing the right person on the right job
2. Starting new employees in the organization (orientation)
3. Training employees for jobs new to them
4. Improving the job performance of each person
5. Gaining creative cooperation and developing smooth working
relationships
6. Interpreting the firm’s policies and procedures
7. Controlling labor costs
8. Developing the abilities of each person
9. Creating and maintaining department morale
10. Protecting employees’ health and physical condition
1–8
Functions of the HR Manager
A line function
– The HR manager directs the activities of the
people in his or her own department and in
related service areas (like the plant cafeteria).
A coordinative function
– HR managers also coordinate personnel activities,
a duty often referred to as functional control.
Staff (assist and advise) functions
– Assisting and advising line managers is the heart
of the HR manager’s job.
1–9
HR and Authority
Authority
– The right to make decisions, direct others’ work,
and give orders.
Implied authority
– The authority exerted by an HR manager by virtue
of others’ knowledge that he or she has access to
top management.
Line authority
– The authority exerted by an HR manager by
directing the activities of the people in his or her
own department and in service areas.
1–10
Employee Advocacy
HR must take responsibility for:
– Clearly defining how management should be
treating employees.
– Making sure employees have the mechanisms
required to contest unfair practices.
– Represent the interests of employees within the
framework of its primary obligation to senior
management.
1–11
Examples of HR Job Duties
Recruiters
– Search for qualified job applicants.
Equal employment opportunity (EEO)
coordinators
– Investigate and resolve EEO grievances, examine
organizational practices for potential violations,
and compile and submit EEO reports.
Job analysts
– Collect and examine information about jobs to
prepare job descriptions.
1–12
Examples of HR Job Duties (cont’d)
Compensation managers
– Develop compensation plans and handle the
employee benefits program.
Training specialists
– Plan, organize, and direct training activities.
Labor relations specialists
– Advise management on all aspects of union–
management relations.
1–13
HR Department Organizational Chart (Large Company)
Figure 1–1
1–14
Cooperative Line and Staff HR
Management
1. The line manager’s responsibility is to specify the
qualifications employees need to fill specific
positions.
2. HR staff then develops sources of qualified
applicants and conduct initial screening interviews
3. HR administers the appropriate tests and refers the
best applicants to the supervisor (line manager),
who interviews and selects the ones he or she
wants.
1–15
HR Organizational Chart (Small Company)
Figure 1–2
1–16
The Changing Environment Of
HR Management
HR’s changing role:
“ Personnel departments”
– Took over hiring and firing from supervisors,
payroll, and benefit plans administration.
– In the 1930s added “protecting the firm in its
interaction with unions” responsibilities (labor
relations).
– Assumed organizational responsibilities for equal
employment and affirmative action.
1–17
A Changing HR Environment
Globalization
Technological Advances
Exporting Jobs
The Nature of Work
Workforce Demographics
1–18
Measuring HR’s Contribution
Strategy
– The company’s long-term plan for how it will
balance its internal strengths and weaknesses
with its external opportunities and threats to
maintain a competitive advantage.
• HR managers today are more involved in partnering with
their top managers in both designing and implementing
their companies’ strategies.
1–19
HR Metrics
Absence Rate
[(Number of days absent in month) ÷ (Average number of
employees during mo.) × (number of workdays)] × 100
Cost per Hire
(Advertising + Agency Fees + Employee Referrals + Travel cost
of applicants and staff + Relocation costs + Recruiter pay
and benefits) ÷ Number of Hires
Health Care Costs per Employee
Total cost of health care ÷ Total Employees
HR Expense Factor
HR expense ÷ Total operating expense
Figure 1–5
1–20
HR Metrics (cont’d)
Human Capital ROI
Revenue − (Operating Expense − [Compensation cost +
Benefit cost]) ÷ (Compensation cost + Benefit cost)
Human Capital Value Added
Revenue − (Operating Expense − ([Compensation cost +
Benefit Cost]) ÷ Total Number of FTE
Revenue Factor
Revenue ÷ Total Number of FTE
Time to fill
Total days elapsed to fill requisitions ÷ Number hired
1–23
Benefits of a High Performance Work
System (HPWS)
Generate more job applicants
Screen candidates more effectively
Provide more and better training
Link pay more explicitly to performance
Provide a safer work environment
Produce more qualified applicants per position
More employees are hired based on validated
selection tests
Provide more hours of training for new employees
Higher percentages of employees receiving regular
performance appraisals.
1–24
The New HR Manager
New Proficiencies
– HR proficiencies
– Business proficiencies
– Leadership proficiencies
– Learning proficiencies
1–25
The New HR Manager (cont’d)
The Need to “Know Your Employment Law”
– Equal employment laws
– Occupational safety and health laws
– Labor laws
1–26
Effects CFOs Believe Human Capital
Has on Business Outcomes
Figure 1–6
1–27
HR Professional Certification
HR is becoming more professionalized.
Society for Human Resource
Management (SHRM)
– SHRM’s Human Resource Certification
Institute (HRCI)
• SPHR (senior professional in HR)
• PHR (professional in HR)
certificate
1–28
HR and Technology
Benefits of technological applications for HR
– Intranet-based employee portals through which
employees can self-service HR transactions.
– The availability of centralized call centers staffed
with HR specialists.
– Increased efficiency of HR operations.
– The development of data warehouses of HR-
related information.
– The ability to outsource HR activities to specialist
service providers.
1–29
KEY TERMS
1–30
1–31