HRM Presentation
HRM Presentation
HRM Presentation
COMPENSATION
*LABOR UNIONS AND
COLLECTIVE
BARGAINING
Presented by “HR - Group 2”
INDIRECT
FINANCIAL
COMPENSATION
CONTENT
Life Insurance and Disability Insurance
Paid Time Off
Employee Service Benefits
Employee Benefits Legislation
Customized Benefit Plans
Workplace Flexibility (Work-Life Balance)
LIFE INSURANCE AND
DISABILITY INSURANCE
Life insurance
protect the financial health of employees’ families upon the employee’s death
Disability insurance
pay out to the employee if he/she becomes disable to work as a result of a work- related accident or
dismemberment claims
Benefit Period
1. Term life insurance (providing monetary payments to an employee’s beneficiaries upon
the employee’s death during a limited period based on a specified number of years or
maximum age.)
2. Whole life insurance (do not terminate until payment is made to the beneficiaries during
employees’ employment and into the retirement years.)
PAID TIME-OFF
Employers recognize that employees need time away from the job for many purposes and
consider for providing payment for time not worked.
Shift differential
Additional money paid to employees for the inconvenience of working less-desirable hours.
Flextime is not suitable for all types of organizations. For example, its use may be severely limited in
assembly-line operations and companies using multiple shifts.
Compressed Workweek
Any arrangement of work hours that permits employees to fulfill their work obligation in fewer days than
the typical five-day workweek.
A common compressed workweek are four 10-hour days and four 9-hour days and a half day on Friday.
the compressed workweek offers the potential for better use of leisure time for family life, personal
business, and recreation
Job Sharing
Two part-time people split the duties of one job in some agreed-on manner and are paid according to
their contributions.
Example: Rocco and Levine are joint program manger for Explorer Crossover.
Rocco worked Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and Levine worked Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Friday. Both worked about 40 hours a week each.
Job sharing also provides a means of encouraging older workers to remain on the job past retirement
age. Sharing jobs has potential benefits that include the broader range of skills the partners bring to
the job
Two-in-a-Box
Some companies are giving two executives the same responsibilities and the same title and letting
them decide how the work is to be divided. Unlike job sharing, it is a fulltime job for both executives.
A major advantage of this approach is that it can ease transition, permitting a newer manager to learn
from a more experienced manager.
Problems certainly can occur as the egos of two executives meet.
Telecommuting
Work arrangement whereby employees are able to remain at home and perform their work using computers
and other electronic devices that connect them with their offices.
Telecommuting has become more popular in recent years because of traffic congestion and frustration with
commuting and high gas prices.
Employees can accomplish both training and job duties without losing either efficiency or quality by using
the Internet.
Telecommuting can eliminate the need for office space.
Finally, telecommuting is being used as an alternative for executives who are unwilling to relocate. If the
company is willing to permit the executive to not work out of headquarters, telecommuting may be the
answer.
Part-Time Work
Historically, part-time employees have been viewed as basically second-class citizens.
These were the workers who reluctantly accepted a low-paying job until a full-time career break occurred.
Today, increasing highly educated professionals are choosing part-time opportunities in their fields to
address both job and personal needs.
Therefore, part-time work is also an alternative for ones who focuse not just on career targets but also on
larger life goals.
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LABOUR UNIONS
AND COLLECTIVE
BARGAINING
WHAT MEAN LABOUR UNION?
Labour unions
Organizations that exist to represent the interests of employees
in the workplace and to ensure fair treatment when conflicts
arise between one or more employee and management.
Collective bargaining
The process in which labour union leadership enters into good
faith negotiations with management representatives over terms
of employment such as work hours, pay and job security.
Collective Bargaining agreements
Written documents that describe the terms of employment
reached between management and unions
WHY DO UNIONS EXIST?
Thanks to the efforts of labor unions, workers have achieved
higher wages, more reasonable hours, safer working conditions,
health benefits, and aid when retired or injured.
Labor unions were also instrumental in ending the practice of
child labor.
They have exerted a broad influence on employees’ life, reshaping
the political and economic of the country.
In 1991, the coalition of affiliated unions formed the Federation of
Trade Unions of Burma (FTUB) as an underground Labour
movement in Myanmar.
In 2014, the union was renamed as the Confederation of Trade
Unions, Myanmar (CTUM).
In July 2015, Myanmar's Ministry of Labour, Employment and
Social Security officially registered CTUM as a trade union.
WHY EMPLOYEES JOIN
UNIONS
Individuals join unions for different reasons: job,
personal, social or political considerations.
From HR professional’s standpoint, the issues
associated with employees’ dissatisfaction with
management are most relevant.
Some of the common reasons that can cause
employees to join Unions
Compensation and employee benefits
Job Security
Attitude of Management
UNION STRUCTURE
The Labour movement has developed a multilevel organizational structure.
It is easiest to differentiate among three distinct levels within the labor movement: local
unions, national unions, and federations- the AFL-CIO and the change to wain Coalitation.
Local union
Through the local, individuals deal with employer on a day-to-day basis.
Two basic kinds of local unions: Craft and industrial
Its two important activities are administering the collective bargaining agreement and
representing workers in handling grievances.
Other functions-keep informed and promoting membership, maintain effective contact with
national union and negotiating with management at local level
National Union
A national union is composed of local unions and it is the parent organization to local unions.
The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is the largest and fastest-growing national
union in North America.
The national union is governed by a national constitution and a national convention of local
unions.
The national union is active in organizing workers within its jurisdiction, engaging in collective
bargaining at the national level and assisting its locals in their negotiation.
Other functions- provide numerous educational and research services for its locals, dispense strike
funds, publish the union newspaper, provide legal counsel and actively lobby at national and state
levels.
Federations
A federation is an association of unions.
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizational(ALF-CIO)
The AFL-CIO is a voluntary federation of 56 national and international labor unions representing
12.5 million members according to its Web site, including about 3 million members in Working
America, its community affiliate.
The federation’s major activities focus on improving the image of organized labor and lobbying on
behalf of labor interests. Also, politically educating constituencies is crucial, as is resolving disputes
between national unions and policing internal affairs of member unions.
Change to Win Coalition
The Change to Win Coalition is a union federation consisting of unions that broke from the AFL-CIO
and formally launched a rival labor federation representing 6 million workers from seven labor
unions.
The coalition, led by the SEIU, focuses its energies on new membership growth and not as much on
lobbying.
PREVALENCE OF UNIONS
There are possible reasons for declining in unionization and this book provides five of these.
1. In past decades, unions often intimidated workers to become members even if they did not care to
do so.
2. Historically, unions provided a voice to protect the rights of disadvantaged groups, including
women, older workers, and racial minorities. But, in the 1960s, antidiscrimination laws such Tilt
VII of the Civil Rights Act instituted Protections.
3. Globalization of business is believed to have contributed substantially to the decline in
unionization in a variety of ways.
4. Large companies are establishing new facilities in states where unionization rates are low.
Moreover, Right-to-work laws take effect in reduction of union members.
5. Unionization is substantially higher in the public or government sector than in the private sector.
Still, public sector unionization is being challenged throughout the country. Traditionally, there
was much less resistance to unionize in the public sector than in the private sector. But the tide is
changing.
ORGANIZED LABOUR
STRATEGIES FOR A
STRONGER MOVEMENT
There are the following strategies that had not been used for union membership to be lower.
Strategically located Union members
The importance of the jobs held by union members significantly affects union power. The type of
firm that is unionized can also determine a union’s power. Through control of key industry, a union’s
power may extend to firms that are not unionized.
Pulling the Union Through
One union that has worked effectively at times is to put pressure on the end user of a company’s
product to have a successful organizing attempt.
Political Involvement
The political arm of the AFL-CIO is the Committee on Political Education (COPE). Founded in
1955, its purpose is to support politicians who are friendly to the cause of organized labor. The
union recommends and assists candidates who will best serve its interests. In presidential and
congressional elections, union support may have a significant impact
Union salting
Union salting is the process of training union organizers to apply for jobs at a company and, once
hired, working to unionize employees. An employee who serves this role is known as a “union salt.”
There have been a variety of court cases regarding legal protections for union salts. There have been
a variety of court cases regarding legal protections for union salts.
Flooding the Community
Flooding the community is the process of the union inundating communities with organizers to
target a particular business in an organizing attempt. With their flooding campaigns, unions
typically choose companies in which nonunionized employees have asked for help in organizing.
Generally, organizers have been recruited and trained by the national union.
Public Awareness Campaigns
Public awareness campaigns involve labor maneuvers that do not coincide with a strike or an
organizing campaign to pressure an employer for better wages, benefits, and the like. Increasingly,
these campaigns are used as an alternative to strikes because more employers are willing to replace
their striking employees.
Building organizing funds
To encourage workers to come together, the AFL-CIO often asks its affiliates to increase organizing
funds. The federation may also increase funding to its Organizing Institute, which trains organizers,
and even launches advertising campaigns to create wider public support for unions. National unions
also create organizing funds.
Unions Partnering with High Schools
Some high schools are pairing up with labor unions to prepare students for a career. The goal of this
program is to bring people into the union at a younger age.
Organizing Young Worker
A major strategy now being pursued by union organizers is to recruit younger workers, and it may be
coming at the right time because the lowest union membership rate is occurring among this group. In
the past, younger organizers were often considered second-class citizens.
Organizing through the Card Check
The card check is an organizing approach by labor in which employees sign a nonsecret card of
support if they want unionization, and if 50 percent of the workforce plus one worker sign a card, the
union is formed. It permits workers to decide in a nonsecret election their union status
LAWS AFFECTING
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
A variety of laws influence the collective barraging process and outcomes.