MANAGEMENT 1 WHAT IS MANAGEMENT? “Management” or “Manage” is one of those words which is used everyday, which we think we understand until we are asked exactly what it means. The word “manager” takes its root from French “manageur” which means control, organise, direct, and plan. Generally, management may be viewed as a process that enables organisations to achieve their objectives. 2 Definitions of MANAGEMENT I Classical definition by H Fayol “To manage is to forecast and plan, to organise, to command, to co-ordinate and to control.” the emphasis is on (the authoritative role) of management but fails to mention motivation or any special qualities of leadership. 3 II Peter Drucker defines management as making Resources productive, being the organ of society, specifically charged with making resources productive. He points out the need for a sense of social responsibility on managers His analogy with animal world (management:- Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices”) comparing a business operated by an owner-entrepreneur with “helpers” Drucker talks about size of an organisation and its management. The larger the size the need for size of management. 4 III Kast and Rosenweig- relate management to the environment in their book “ The management of Systems.” They see a firm as a system which exists within larger terms (Its environment) and which must adjust to those larger system in order to survive and grow. They define “management” as involving the coordination of human and material resources towards objective accomplishment. It is the primary force within organisation which coordinates the activities of the systems and relates them to the environment. 5 They stress on employment of resources and objectives. The definition also tends to look at that part of management function within an organisation as ensuring that the organisation relates to what the environment covers. Koontz and O’Donnell also define “Management” stressing on environment. 6 IV John Marsh – “Management is an art and science concerned with the proper, systematic and profitable use of resources in all sections of a nation’s economy.” V R. Falk, Rosemary Stewart- They define the term “management” as getting things done through people.” Reference: Study Manual (pp 2 & 3) 7 Organisations and Management Management is an essential ingredient in organisations, because it is the only tool that can create the conducive situation in which an organisation can achieve its objectives. Management is needed in all cooperation and at all levels of organisation in an enterprise. E.F.L Brech:- Management as a process. “Management is a social process entailing responsibility for effective planning and regulation of the operations of an enterprise in fulfillment of a given purpose.” 8 Components of the Process a) Planning • Forecasting • Goal setting • Decision making b) Organising and directing • Organising- arranging for the work to be done (allocating of resources) • Directing- ensuring that employees are appropriately engaged in working on activities to meet goals and plans. (Involves motivating and supervising staff for effective performance. 9 c) Controlling • Process of monitoring and regulating performance (measurement and evaluation of activities) • Control also involves taking the appropriate, corrective action to ensure that performance is done according to expectations. 10 Management of Activities • Determining objectives (goal identification/ objectives) • Problem identification for solution • Searching for solutions-(alternatives) considering time and cost • Determining of the best solutions – choosing the best method for resolving problems considering cost effectiveness (effectiveness and efficiency) • Implementation – seeking agreement for funds. 11 • Preparation and instructions (effective communication) • Execution of agreed solutions – (meeting organization goals and objectives) utilizing human resource, placing staff at the right place. • Devising and discharge of an auditing process – continuous monitoring and assessment to determine the success of activity. 12 Roles Description____________ Interpersonal Figurehead- formal, representational, and symbolic duties Leader - relationship with subordinates – motivating, communicating, coaching. Liaison - contacts with others outside work unit Informational Monitor - ensuring acquisition of information necessary for work Disseminator - information distribution Spokesperson - formal provision of information on behalf of organization. 13 Roles Decisional Entrepreneur Description________ - initiating, developing and facilitating change and information. Disturbance - trouble shooting problems when they arise. Resource allocation - distributing and arranging use of resources. Negotiator - Representing organization in negotiations within area of responsibility. 14 HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 15 HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT Scope and Definition of Human Resource and its Importance. Definition – HRM is concerned with People: It is a dimension of management in organizations, made up of people, acquiring their services, developing their skills, motivating the high levels of performance and ensuring that they continue to maintain their commitment in order to achieve organisational objectives. 16 David Denzo and Stephen P. Robbins 1998 Robert Math’s and John H. Jackson define HRM as “a key ingredient affecting organizational effectiveness of an organization in product or service that fits”. Customers need is critical to its survival. HRM has recently grown to become a strategic tool in management through the effective use of its employees, which results in competitive advantage to an organization. HRM systems that focus on performance of organizations have shown remarkable financial improvement and higher profitability. 17 It is about the efficient utilization of human talent to achieve organisational goals. HRM – is simply defined as “a strategic and coherent approach to the management of an organisation’s most valuable asset (the people) working there, who individually and collectively contribute to the achievement of its objectives.” 18 Main features of HRM • Strategic management of people (the human capital) in the organization which achieves ‘fit’ or integration between the business and Human Resource strategy. • Comprehensive approach to the provision of mutually supporting employment policies and practices. • Gaining commitment to the organizations mission and values – it is commitment –oriented. 19 • Treatment of people as assets and not cost and as human capital to be invested in through learning and development opportunities. • Concerns with employee relations, employees sharing the same interest with employers • Delivery of HRM as a line management responsibility. 20 • • • • • • • • • Goals of HRM Achieving high performance through people Enhancing motivation, commitment and engagement Human capital development Knowledge management H.R. development Valuing employees Employee relations Bureaucratic administration Centralization of personnel functions for departmental initiative. 21 Goals of HRM contd • Centralization of personnel functions for departmental initiative • Political dimension of Personnel Management in Public sector e.g. Position of Chief Executive. 22 Evolution from Personnel Management to HRM Personnel Management – traditionally characterized by a technician mentality. Level of authority for personnel-related activities and decision was low because personnel managers operated under the ambit of Finance and Administration Directors. Several organizations had personnel-related activities whose duties were mainly administrative, ie filing, logistics, leave rosters, running errands, providing refreshment, etc. 23 Models of PM • Clerk of works model – routine administrative functions only are allowed or are the only functions to characterize the management of people. It is inadequate and highly inappropriate to the emerging needs of today’s business. • Contract Management Model – Improvement on the clerk of works model. • Architect Model - Best model for HRM. Professionalism and a high level of involvement in corporate decisions characterize HR function. 24 • • • • Effective HRM Day-to-day dimension Daily production Administrative Its aim is to ensure that people are healthy and attend to work in good environment. Effective HRM – implies ability to produce results • Ineffectiveness has consequences • Productivity • Organizational survival • Workers – poor relationship • Stress • Poor commitment and poor motivation 25 Techniques of Strategic HRM 1. People skills • Human Relations – treat people as human beings and not as objects 2. Communication skills • Top-down – Bottom-up • Open door – participatory involvement 3. Supervisory skills • Control • Oversight • Delegation • Task skills • Job planning • Performance Management (Effective) • Leadership (by example) 26 Competencies required of HRM Professionals • • • • • • Personal drive and effectiveness People management and leadership Professional competence (skills) Adding value through people Continuing learning Thinking and applied resourcefulness (application to a systematic approach to situational analysis; convincing business focused action plans, intuitive, creative thinking.) • Customer focus • Strategic capability • Influencing and interpersonal skills 27 Soft HRM (Personnel Administration) Reaction-Service role • Emphasis on communication, motivation and leadership • Implements procedures and policies • Treats employees as valued assets • Employees seen as means rather than objects • Sets commitment of employees through involvement and communication • Builds trust • Common interest between employees and employers but interest of organization overriding those of the individual • Supporting change 28 Hard HRM Proactive/ Innovative • Business –oriented approach • Result- oriented • Seeks competitive advantage • Regards people as human capital for value • Strategic policies for results • Human capital to be invested and not as cost (training and dev.) • Initiates change 29 Activities of HRM • Organizational design • Organizational development • Job and role design • Human resource planning • Talent management • Recruitment and selection • Career development • Salary administration • Health and safety • Welfare service 30 Questions for assignment • Indicate a number of peculiar Human Resource problems or issues confronting your company/organization and suggest professional solutions to three of these problems based on your knowledge of HRM gained from this course. • Give clear definition of HRM and state its scope. Differentiate between ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ HRM 31 References : 1. Human Resource Management (2004) Robert L. Mathis Etal, 10th Edition • 2.Personnel and Human Resource Management (2005), 5th Edition by G. A. Cole • 3. A Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice – Michael Armstrong (2003) 9th Edition • 4. Personnel/Human Resource Management, David A. Deconzo and Stephen P. Robbins 3rd edition • 5. Essential Elements of Human Resource Management – Modular Series 1995, Sally Howe. 32 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 33 33 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT International HRM – is the process of employing and developing people in international organizations which employ people in Europe and other overseas countries including those of the African continent. It actually concerns itself with working across national boundaries to formulate and implement resourcing, developing, career management and remuneration strategies, policies, strategies, and practices, that can be applied to an international workforce, including: 34 • Parent country nationals working for long periods as expatriates or on short-term assignments • Local country nationals • Third country nationals who work for the corporation in a local country but are not parent country nationals (eg German working in West Africa for a British owned company) 35 Challenges I.H.R.M can be more demanding than management within the boundaries of one country for the following reasons: • Problem of managing the complex nature of the workforce. Eg. Wholly owned subsidiary companies may employ both host and parent country people together with third country nationals – problem with employment practices as well as remuneration. A joint venture or complex workforce consisting of expatriates of the joint venture company, host country nationals, third country nationals and experts from any of the partners dealing with special problems or provide consultancy services. 36 According to Kanter (1989) and others, such problems include divided loyalties between the parent company and the joint venture consortium and the difficulties managers may face in trying to be both sensitive to local conditions and aware of the demands made by the consortium of their own parent company. 37 • Managing diversity – between cultures, social systems and legal requirements. International personnel managers are not in the business of controlling uniformity – they would fail if they tried. • Communications – Global communication is a major challenge. Even the most sophisticated electronic communication system may not be an adequate substitute for the face-to-face communications. • Resourcing international operations – with people of the right calibre to deal with the much more complex problems that may arise. 38 As Perkins (1997) points out, it is necessary for businesses to remain competitive with their employment offering in the market place for attraction and retention of high quality staff with world-wide capabilities. 39 Characteristics of IHRM Torrington (1994) suggests that “IHRM is not just about copying practices from the Americans, Japanese, Germans, etc, which will not necessarily translate culturally. Neither is it simply a matter of learning the culture of every country and suitably modifying “behavior in each of them which is an impossible ideal because of the robust and subtle nature of national cultures.” His definition of IHRM relates to the following characteristics: 40 • • • • 7 C’s Cosmopolitan – members of high flying multilingual elite or expatriates who may relocate after a long time who will find repatriation difficult. Cultural diversity – major differences in cultural background. Compensation – special requirements for the determination of the pay and benefits of expatriates and host country nationals. Communication – maintaining good communication between all parts of the organisation globally. 41 • Consultancy – need to bring in expertise to deal with local needs. • Competence – developing a wider range of competences for people working across political, cultural and organizational boundaries. • Coordination – devising formal and informal methods of getting thee different parts of the international business to work closer together. 42 Forms of Organisation and Governance 4 Organisational Models 1. Decentralized federation – traditional multinational corporation. Each national unit managed as a separate entity. 2. Coordinated federation – the centre develops sophisticated management systems enabling it to control. But local management given the opportunity to adopt practices according to local market traditions. 3. Centralized hub – Focus on the global market rather than the local. Japanese practice this hub model. 43 4. Transnational model – the corporation develops multi strategic capabilities towards global competitive capabilities. Caution: - Perkins and Hendry (1999) sign a note of caution as firms seem polarized along these 2 lines: • Regionalization – where local customer is important • “Global business streams” – involved in setting up centrally controlled business segments dealing with similar products globally. 44 Cultural Diversity – Hofstede (1980) identifies a number of cultural dimensions that affect international operations as follows: • Equality versus inequality. • Certainty versus uncertainty. • Controllability versus uncontrollability. • Individualism versus personalization. 45 Sparrow and Hiltrop (1997) noted the following HR areas affected by national culture: • Definitions of effective manager. • Giving face-to-face communication. • Readiness to accept international assignments. • Expectations of a manager – subordinate relationships. • Pay systems and differential concepts of social justice. • Approaches to organizational structuring and dynamics. Divergence to respect cultural differences may be more appropriate if the full potential of the overseas company is to be realized. 46 International Balancing Act Balancing the needs of coordination, control, and autonomy and maintaining the appropriate balance are critical to the success of the multi-national corporation. 6 Capabilities to achieve this balancing act. • Being able to determine core activities and non-core activities. • Achieving consistency while allowing flexibility. • Building global brand equity while honoring local customs. • Obtaining leverage while achieving focus. • Sharing, learning and creating new knowledge. • Endangering global perspectives while ensuring local accountability. 47 Employment Policies 1. Fill key positions with parent country nationals 2. Appoint home country nationals. 3. Appoint the best people despite nationality. (International image) 4. The third model is more favourable but has to contend with some countries which insist that their own nationals should be used at all cost. 48 Managing Development Strategy • • • • • • • • Recruitment and selection:- criteria Technical competence Previous achievement in the home country Language skills Motivation Stress assistance Goal – oriented personality Communication skills Family circumstances – how well the person and spouse are likely to adapt to working overseas. 49 Career Planning to be designed to suit international perspective. Based on i.e. • Talent and potential • Job rotation • Special assignment training • Attendance of management programmes run by international business schools. 50 International Employee Development To implement international development strategies and programmes along cultural diversity factors and the impact of different legal, political, social and value systems and of the extent to which training should be left to local initiatives or centrally controlled. 51 Managing Expatriates -Most difficult aspect of international personnel management. European multinationals face less failure rate than American ones according to Scullion (1995) because of the following: • They felt they had more effective personnel policies covering expatriates. • Closer attention paid to the selection of expatriates. • International experience more valued. • British managers more international in their outlook than US managers. 52 53 LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT 54 LEADERSHIP Leadership is defined as the ability to inspire confidence and support among people who are needed to achieve set objectives/goals. Distinction between management and leadership In today’s world of business management is the ability to lead and get result from people or a team Management deals with planning, organizing and controlling which are also ingredients of leadership 55 Differences Management involves getting things done through people by way of delegation, where as leadership is helping people to get things done. Leadership involves vision and team work about the future and about the organization. The leader thinks of what the organization will be in future through team work. He motivates and encourages employees but a manager persists. 56 Management is more formal than leadership as it rallies on universal skill such as budgeting, forecasting, experience and expertise. But leadership rallies on creativity, innovation and passion. 57 Influences of leadership Power Leaders influence people and employees through power and authority. This is the ability to influence decision and control resources. Power can control decision to buy and sell, employment, paying, demotion of staff and training. Power also controls money, access, cost, expenditure, revenue and profit. 58 Authority Authority is the formal right given to people to do things in a formal or right way. It is only the organization that can give authority to someone but power can be acquired .E.g. if the HR manager is not given the authority he cannot sack any employee. 59 Types of power For leaders to make their leadership effective they require the following types of power. (Very useful) Expert power Power derived from the leader’s job- related knowledge as persists in the organization It is derived from expert knowledge and skills. Such power can be exercised even in the absence of the leader. Expert Power Skill Knowledge Experience 60 Reward Power This type of power is derived from the leaders’ ability to reward people. E.g. the ability to increase or decrease salary of employees. Reward power is excised on individual employees rather than team. It results in hard work. Legitimate Power Power enables the leader to make certain decisions whether favorable or not. This can be given or acquired. 61 Coercive Power Power associated with punishment to offenders. Coercive power includes demotion, salary reduction, inflexible working hours, Job rotation, transfer or indefinite suspension. . Subordinate Power This is type power employees can excise on their junior employees. For example, an accountant can request an accounts clerk to work overtime. 62 Strategies of influence on leadership • Leadership by example – service leading by example must watch his words and actions. If you, the leader wants your employees to report to work early, you yourself must come early. • Leader by value- A leader influences the people by demonstrating value through behavior that guides other people .If you the manager say the worker should not fight you must not fight with a customer. Should show positive attitude 63 • Assertiveness – what is expected of the employee and not make his feeling known. Can influence employees without looking at his feelings. • Rationality- influence through logic and common sense • Exchange – influencing employees by offering something for a job done, e.g. giving a command by exchange of bonus. 64 Charismatic Leader Such a leader is the one who appeals to the followers, not through beauty but by appearance. He wins the heart of his followers by what he says. The drive to achieve He is noted for effort to achieve greatness; driven by achievement. He can motivate for goal achievement. He sets high standard for himself . The group must be passionate about what he does. 65 • • • • Self Confidence Must be self –confident in order to be an effective leader, especially in decision making. Project his self-image for followers to follow. Must be independent –minded, when weighing opinions. Trust Worthiness Must be trustworthy in keeping secrets. Must be reliable in difficult and turbulent times. Courageous and must be able to make bold decision. To exhibit moral and economic values. 66 • • • • • • • Intellectual Ability Technical know how about the organization Intellectual ability to lead a team Ability to share knowledge with team members Attitudes Must seek after knowledge acquisition. Must take interest in developing his followers Must be focused and smart. 67 BEHAVIOUR OF LEADERS Setting high standard by effective leaders of the group they lead. Hold people responsible when standard as not met . Encourages people to meet goals and objective. Set higher expectation of their followers and how to achieve them. Emotional Support ; They provide moral support. They encourage subordinates to achieve more even at first failure. Provide frequent feedback to employees through report and letters . Help employees to overcome their weakness and build their strength 68 Adaptive to change; Ability to change to situation in order to achieve their goals. When situation changes they adapt to new ways of reaching their destination. Flexibility is one of the goals of leaders. 69 TYPES OF LEADERSHIP Success of leadership depends on the type of style of particular leader. It also depends on the type of particular leader. It also depends on implementation of control and authority. Leadership implies the exercise of power and control. 70 Types of leadership styles • Autocratic leadership – characteristics. He makes decision in confidence and assumes the group members will comply. 1. They do not concern themselves with group members’ attitude towards their decision 2. Task- oriented who want a job to be done 3. Insensitivity- toward group members • Participative leadership – three types - Consultative - Democratic - Consensus 71 • Consultative leadership- leader confers with subordinate before making a decision. The leader brainstorm with the employee before coming up with a decision. His decision, however is final. • Democratic leadership –the leader brainstorms with the employees/employers but then delegates total decision to the employees. He gathers data from all employees about their opinions regarding certain issues and sometimes takes vote before decisions. • Consensus leadership – Discuss between the leader and employees or members about an issue. Decisions are not final until all parties agree on a decision. Decisions are not final until all parties agree on a decision. 72 Free –rein leadership- hands over total authority and control to the group. Members discuss and determine the outcome of the issue and come out with the best way of solving the issue. Subordinates/ members are allowed all the freedom to decide on what is best for the organization and submit to the leader. The leader will only reject the decision by the group only when it is against the corporate policies, goals, objectives, short term and long term plans. 73 • Theory X & Y Leadership- According to McGregor, X &Y employees must be carefully led since by nature they are lazy or hardworking. If Managers misuse their leadership style, X & Y employees may be wrongly led. McGregor indicates that theory X employees must be led by participative leader with little application of autocratic leadership style. There must be small punishment. The Y poses that an employee who does not want to be supervised must be led by free-rein leader with little application of participative leadership style. 74 Situational leadership- Such leadership style demands application of either participative, autocratic or free-rein depending on the situation. It is the leadership style that is applicable to the readiness of group members to do as occasion demands. Basis of the situational leadership under situation model depends on the following behavior of the employees/ members. 75 • Task Behavior ; where the leader carefully outlines the responses and duties of the group and individual. In this situation the leader should look at the behavior of the appropriate at a time. Autocratic leadership is needed under task behavior when employees behavior controlling or against what is expected of them. • Relationship Behavior ;The leader enters intotwo-way communication with the employees. It involves listening, providing encouragement and coaching. What methods to apply is participative style since it is two-way communication. • Readiness Behavior : group members have the ability and willingness to accomplish a specific task. The leader should apply free-rein leadership style when employees are ready to perform task. 76 • Entrepreneur Leadership; This is the type of leadership that is seen in individual who start their business from scratch. The entrepreneur leader must have the following qualities. a) Full of vision about the business b) Can see the future c) Can see new products d) New objectives and goals e) New competitors f) Willingness to be active g) Good attitude and value h)Enthusiastic person i) Creative and innovative – can build business from nothing from small ideals into money business. 77 j). Adaptive to change when things are not going according to plan k). Persistence – does not give up easily on difficult things l). Confident and willing to take a decision alone m). Ready to take responsibility ,must be willing to do most of the job himself. Must not delegate too much. n). Should not hold people accountable but must also be accountable to his job. Accept mistakes and final solution. 78 • Transformational/charismatic leadership- leader who helps the organization and people to make positive change in the way they do things. He combines charisma, inspiration and intellect as a leader. He motivates and has ideas about things. He develops new visions for the organisation and mobilizes employees to accept and work towards the vision. Such leaders can turn a dying business in to living business • Charismatic leadership- he has the ability to lead or influence others based on personal charm, magnetism, inspiration, persuasion and emotion. Can lead a team of employees to achieve a task that they may not be willing to do. 79 • • • • • • • • • • • Qualities of Leadership:Skill Technology perception knowledge physique Memory Imagination Determination Endurance Courage Affability. 80 Lord Montgomery defines Leaders as “one who can be looked up to, whose personal judgment is trusted, who can inspire and warm the heart of those he leads, gaining their trust and confidence and explaining what is needed in language which can be understood.” 81 Action—Centred Leadership (Functional Leadership model) Adair’s 3 responsibilities of a Leader 1. Task achievement 2. Building and maintaining a team 3. Satisfy and develop the individuals with the team Task needs paradigm shift in all Team needs - Balance needed Individual needs combination of all these qualities result in Effective leader But a leader must always be self-appraised. • To achieve tasks • To develop the team • To develop the individual 82 Task needs • Identify task and constraints • Establish priorities (resources available) • Decide on action • Briefing • Report on progress, monitor and ensure discipline • Review objectives and attainment and re-plan Team needs Recognize success • Involve team and share commitment with members • Consult and agree on standards and structure of team • Answer queries • Co-ordination and co-operation 83 Individual needs • Clarify aims with each person for acceptance • Assess each member’s skills and set targets • Advise , listen and enthuse • Assist, reassure, recognize effort and counsel, • Assess performance appraise, guide and train. 84 Task achievement Team building Individual development 85 Contingency Theories Fiedler’s contingency Model (circumstances) Position power Task structure Leader- member relations Situation Leadership • Degree of task relationship • Follower readiness 86 Appropriate leadership style for each level R1 Telling ---- Providing specific direction R2 Selling ---- giving direction, willingness, supportive R3 Participating ---- supportive style R4 Delegating ---- little direction or support is needed. Handy’s Contingency model • The manager • The work group • The task • The organizational environment 87 HOW TRANSFORMATION OCCURS INTO CHARISMATIC LEADER A charismatic leader who lacks the skills of transformational leader should do the following to become a transformational leader. • Brain washing of the employees by encouraging them on their weakness and beyond . • Must raise employee awareness about the reward to the task • Must help the employees to go beyond minor satisfaction and go for major achievement 88 Characteristics of Transformation and charismatic Leaders 1. Vision – Visionary leader is willing to die for his vision, mixed with passion, confidence, determination, self- motivation. 2. Communication skills –must know how to convince people with motivational words e. g. Obama must know how to communicate to employees through the right channel. Must know how to communicate on team basis as well as on the individual basis. 3. Inspiration/ trust - Must have integrity, be trustworthy so the followers are ready to follow based on his values. 89 90 PRINCIPLES OF RECRUITMENT, SELECTION AND INDUCTION 91 PRINCIPLE OF RECRUITMENT, SELECTION AND INDUCTION Recruitment - the generation of an applicant pool. Selection is the choice of specific individuals to join the organization. The Recruitment and selection process is concerned with choosing from a sample of applicants. The individuals, best suited for the jobs available. It is normally used to decide who shall enter the organization. Since the competitive edge of any organization is direct function of the quality of its human resource, the selection of the right caliber of staff, represents a significant aspect of the whole HR function. 92 • Recruitment - general exercise - casting the wider net and at the right place for good solution. • Selection - process of making the choice advert, outsourcing • Placement- generate accurate selection to place them into various departments/ vacancies. 93 Process of Recruitment The Position * Qualification of applicant * Gender * Working experience * Appearance * Skills and expertise * Future potentials 94 Attraction * Salary (including bonus) * Perks (e.g. discount of goods, overalls, canteen services, other staff facilities) * Hours of work * Holidays * Good leadership * Welfare support * Safety precautions * Insurance 95 Purpose of Recruitment Inviting applicants is most cost effective way to form a pool of job applicants, potentially qualified to do a particular job. How Recruitment is done * Advertisement of vacancy * Short listing * Interviewing * Selection Ways of recruitment * Internal * External Internal recruitment - getting candidates from within the organization (operation, Tactical and strategic) External through external advertisement / oral 96 Advantages of Internal Recruitment • Saves cost • Motivation to work hard (employees) • Saves time • To tap from existing staff and their expertise experience, skill, knowledge (Not much training needed) Disadvantages of Internal Recruitment • Rivalry and conflict not palatable to organization • Unhealthy competition • Discourages hard work among employees • Leads to favouritism, criticism 97 • Demotivation of employees Advantages of External Recruitment • Resulting in change of management of the organization and its goals • Downsizing by reducing the numbers of employees to save cost (it also brings about stress) • Leading to bureaucracy / delays of job or completion of jobs. 98 Advertising The process of creating the awareness of a job in an organization to the general public. Process of Advertising • Job title (specific) • The organization type (service or production) • The person required (person specification) experience, qualification, expectation) • The pay and benefits offered • Location of org. 99 • Job requirement (whether it includes travelling) • Layout - attractive and interesting • Brief summary of the job (how you report) • Avoiding grammatical errors, spellings, typing, wrong telephone numbers) • Contact address including E-mail • Realistic closing date. 100 External Recruitment Agencies • Government agencies • Private employment agencies • Selection, consultants to provide a shortlist of candidates. (direct contact candidates) • Advertising agencies to design and place advertisement (Note. Very expensive method) The Traditional Position or Approach • Whom do you know (contacts) • Perfect match • Academic Qualification • Experience The Emergent Approach A focus on skills, intelligence, trainability and general 101 conscientiousness. (ability to do or apply knowledge) Selection Policy - (to be available) are you recruiting? * Fresh graduate always? * Experience? * Cream of the cream? * Trainable people? * Known as offering best salaries * Need for selection - what organizational problems are being identified to solve?) Contemporary/General Approaches. • Use of Executive search consultants • In-house procedures • Old-boy network and personal recommendations 102 Selection Process • Receiving applicants-letters and forms, electronic CV's sorting out applications and short listing by looking at CV's • Sending standard acknowledgement to applicants • Comparing applications with critical analysis in the job • Drawing an interview programme • Inviting the applicants for interview Interview • Preparation (plan, set up interview panel) • Implementing interview plan • Follow up. 103 Methods of Selection. Preparation includes short listing from pool of applicants. • Scheduling - giving enough time • Reviewing CV's prior to interview date • Why he left previous job • Check referee e.g. (applicant's background) • Issue circular to all departments 104 Process of Interview • Welcome candidate with introductions • Begin with self introduction • Candidates to do most of talking • Interviews to listen and put down notes • Give them opportunity to ask questions • Questions to be clear and unambiguous • Avoid leading questions e.g. You will be right, will you? • End on positive note. HR's concern relates to candidate's overall fit into the organization and his/her contribution to corporate goals. Functional department, unit or project team's concern is ability to execute requisite tasks. 105 Likely Questions to ask. • Did you leave school in 1989? (open) • Did you get your professional qualification in 1992 and then decide that it was time to get a better job. • What made you dislike your first job why was that? (Probing) • How good are you in making difficult decisions (hypothetical) • What would you do if your speed boat capsized on the ocean? (probing question) • What exactly was your contribution to the success of the project? ( Probing) 106 Don’ts of Interviewing. • Don't keep the applicants waiting • Don't allow any interruption • Don't interview without preparation and planning • Don't ask tricky leading questions or too many closed questions (eg.yes, no, I don't know) • Don't lose control of the interview • Don't fail to give the candidates information on the job. • Don't display bias or prejudice • Don't talk too much • Don't allow candidate to gloss over important points 107 Do's . • Give yourself sufficient time • Plan the interview in order to structure properly • Create the right atmosphere • Start with open questions - establish informal/friendly relationship • Encourage candidates to talk • Analyze his career to reveal his/her strengths, weakness and interests. • Make judgment about the factual information received about candidate's experience • Keep control over content and timing of interviews 108 After Interview • Access the outcome of interview • Do a reference check • Keep records • Inform candidate • Prepare a written offer of employment 109 Types of Tests Validity OF Tests (Justification) • Intelligence Test Must be able to differentiate between satisfactory and unsatisfactory performance on the Job • Personality Test - Aware of 3 types of validity Content, construct and criterion validity e.g. content- typing Test • Psychomatic Test - Psychological (personality test) 110 Types of Tests Validity OF Tests (Justification) • Ability Test Construct observing various behaviors of applicants as Related to tab • Aptitude Test Criterion Predictability of work behaviors e.g. relation between test score and performance. • Attainment Validity - compare post - employment (1 yr) evaluation . With interview test result equal to success 111 INDUCTION PROGRAM Induction is the process of introducing new employees into the organization. It is the method of helping employees to cope with a new job with a strange organization and also giving them the basic information they need to settle down quickly and happily and start work thereby encouraging him/her to stay. 112 Aims of induction -Allowing new blood into the organization -To encourage the new employee to become committed to the organization -To familiarize the new employee the job to quickly dispel the feeling of the being out of place in the organization. Reasons for induction Induction program must be designed to fit the characteristics of the job and of its organizational context. 113 • Process of induction - Induction training / courses and procedures • Disciplinary and grievance procedures • Trade union membership and collective bargaining arrangement • Staff purchase arrangements and other "perks" • Traveling and transport arrangement and allowance • Medical and welfare facilities • Canteen facilities • Health and safety arrangement • Education and training policies • Pay arrangements • Promotion practice and opportunities • Open forum 114 DEPARTMENTAL INDUCTION All departments conduct induction for their newly employed staff within that department ROLES Department manager -welcome new employees to the department. Supervisors - Explaining the job to the new employee and providing support during the initial period Fellow workers - Making the new employee feel welcome and comfortable in the work group Personnel staff - Explaining condition of employment very early in the employment of the new comer Training staff - Designing inductions courses or other training aids relevant to the need of new employees 115 QUESTIONS FOR ASSIGNMENT 1. Discuss the process of recruitment to the point of selecting the best candidate for the new job, giving the reasons for recruitment in an organization and show the importance of induction 2. State the acceptable behavior of an interviewer and those that should avoid and state likely questions to ask during interview 3. Discuss how you think recruitment and selection issus impact on corporate profitability 116 INDUCTION PROGRAMME A. History of the organization B. Vision and mission C. The new employee role D.Job description E. Logistical issues F. Industry information G. Organizational structure H. Terminology I. Company standards of performance, rules J. Compensation issues K. Health and safety 117 INTRODUCE THE PROCEDURES HR manual - Distribute corporate literature What are the advantages of a well executed orientation program? 1. Elimination of induction crisis 2. Facilities' that deepen the learning curve 3. Employee quickly decides whether this is the place for me 118 PLACEMENT Relevant when you do speculative / selective, dependent on; 1. Proper assessment of potentials 2. Department and personal needs 3. A well structured training programme 119 TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT Training is a planned process which modifies attitude, knowledge or skill behavior through learning experience to achieve effective performance in an activity or range of activities. Its purposes, in the work situation are to develop the abilities of the individual and to satisfy the current and future needs of the organization as defined by Manpower service commission UK (1981) 120 Training as an element of HRD, must emerge from a Human Resource Development Policy and plan. Too often Training is taken as just another usual organizational activity which must be undertaken whether necessary or not. Perhaps because workers expect to see it as a reward or just because it is spelt out in CBAs 121 Training is done by; 1. The line manager 2. Training consultants 3. Training development officer 122 PROCESS OF TRAINING and Development 1. Training needs analysis 2. Matching the individual vs. org. needs 3. Training method (appropriate) 4. Post-training evaluation and monitoring TRAINING COMPONENT 1. Needs assessment 2. Organizational 3. Task, job career 4. Individual 123 2. TECHNIQUES OF NEEDS ASSESSMENT - Carrying out HR Audit (exposes employee to training. Classification into age, gender, education Experience and promotion ability) What are the needs? * Questionnaires - finding out from employee * Data on performance appraisal * Organizational survey * Expanding - opening new branches * Contracting - developing new products. * Changing focus - whether current skills are to meet needs. 124 • • • • • • • • • 3. DESIGNING TRAINING PROGRAMME Drawing of program Skills and knowledge Objectives Target audience Mythology Venue (in house, external) Duration Resources needed Cost (budget) 125 ACTION DESIGN Needs met and review - Needs identified - Try models designed - Class Lecture - Field work on job. -Packaged - Appropriate programme Tailored - client specifics - aimed at Objectives/ specific needs 126 Evaluating organisation costs -Assessing the benefits of training Measure monetary benefits (inputs) as opposed to outputs) Has it been worth it (Time, money spent?) Does it merit the cost? Assess the content of Training. In terms of your needs, org. and individual. Does it address the performance gap (post-training evaluation) Reaction (post delivery - feelings ) Immediate - how trainees react to the programme i.e. Delivery, logistics Outcomes (performance) Critique –has the delivery resulted in any change in job, 127 performance, attitude and behavior? TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT As part of HRD - need HRD plan and methods for the job THE JOB DESCRIPTION • Performance objectives, Job Analysis, peer superior sub Data interview with job incumbent. • Methods for the individual • Appraisal Data • Training Policies • Career Aspirations 128 NATIONAL TRAINING POLICIES • • • • • Youth Training schemes Employer Initiatives Placement schemes Vocations Training Continuing Development (Professional training) CAREERS IN ORGANISATION Organizational structure determines what is possible. 129 TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT Definition of Training Training is a learning experience in the sense that it takes a relatively permanent change in the individual that will improve his or her ability to perform on the job. Training can involve the changing of skills, knowledge, attitude or social behavior. It may mean changing what employees know how they work, their attitude towards or their interactions with their co-workers or their superior. For purpose training will be presented as it applies primarily to operate employees in an organization 130 Education Education has been defined as activities which aim to develop knowledge, skills, moral values and understanding required in all aspect of life rather than knowledge and skill relating only a limited sphere of activity. It encompasses the concept of why things happen, rather than simply how they happen (or can be made to happen. This can help to make skills transferable. Education is also about the wider knowledge underpinning process and procedures and their contexts. It is therefore, a key element of development and closely associated with professional development. 131 Learning Learning is the process by which individuals acquire the knowledge, skills and behavior/attitudes which they use to deal with all aspects of life. The study of learning is a whole subject itself, but managers need to understand certain aspects of the process in order to enable others learn and develop. It underpins the way in which effective training and education is provided and a misunderstanding of the process involved can easily render such provisions ineffective. 132 Differences between education and Training Characteristics of the Learning process Education Training Objectives More intangible objectives geared To the needs of individual and to Society in general Specific behavioral objectives to Make workers more effectors Time scale General a long term process Can be very short term especially When concerned with acquisition Of specific skill Content Widely drawn content Often very narrow content Specific to the employee’s workers situation. 133 Development is seen as any learning activity directed towards future needs rather than present needs, and which is concerned more with career growth than immediate performance. Focus: directed towards organization’s future man power requirement b) on the growth needs of the individual in the work place. E.g. of development needs. The need for managers to be able utilize the facilities offered by micro computers in the operating of the business. The need for replacing senior staff with potential candidate From within the organization and the need for preparing employees to accept change. 134 HOW WE LEARN Learning Theories • Operant Conditioning—Developed by skinner (1953) researched into rats – their behavior can change using negative and positive reinforcement (giving food rewards) given to them to promote responses. Negatives (taking the food away) when applied, the rats displayed non compliant behavior. 135 METHODS OF TRAINING • Orientation/Induction Training • On –the –job Training • Off-the -job training.: a. internships, b. apprenticeship -both mix classroom try and on the job experience. • On-the -job-Training • Simulation –learning under realistic conditions away from office/work • Formal Training ---classroom and conferences training lectures i.e. Seminars, courses, lecture presentation 136 System Approaches to Training • Training Needs Assessment (Setting Training Object) • Training Needs Analysis /Identification – organizational needs task analysis/ identification individual analysis by questionnaires, job knowledge tools, skills test, attitudes surveys, replacing result of critical accident , data from assessment center. 137 MODEL OF TRAINING SYSTEM Determining Training Needs ↓ Identifying Training Objectives ↓ Developing Criteria (Objectives) ↓ Pre-testing Training ↓ Implementation ↓ Selecting Training Methods ↓ Arranging for Training (programmed) ↓ Contracting for Training ↓ Monitoring Training 138 Evaluation Comparing Training outcome against criteria (objective Organizational Needs Analysis • Grievance • Accident rewards • Observations • Exit interviews • Complaints from customers • Equipment utilization figures • Training committees observation • Waste /scrap/ quality control data. 139 • • • • Training criteria / objectives Quality of work from training e.g. number of words per minute typed or number of applications processed per day. Quality of after training (e.g. dollar cost of reward, scrap, loss of errors.) Timelines of work after training (e. g. schedules met or budget report turned in on time) Cost savings as a result of training (e. g. deviation from budget , sales experiences, or cost of downtime.) 140 USING JOB PERFORMANCE TO ANALYSE TRAINING NEEDS. JOB Analysis and job description Ability and motivation Performance standard Job performance level Comparison and performance approval 141 Identification of areas of weakness Pick training method/programs specially aimed at weak areas. Consider measurement methods cost, time frame Conduct training activities. 142 PHYSIOLOGICAL CONTRACTS • Coercive physiological contracts exist when people work because they are forced to do so . • Tied in the job because the salary/fringe benefit prevents them from moving elsewhere. • Inability to achieve the same package from employer and would have to lower their standard of living. Age can also render them immobile A remunerative psychological contract—when people work for the money. Tolerance for job to attain the life styles provided. (Different from coercive contract). May bind people in the short term but later severed if a better deal is available elsewhere. 143 A COLLABORATIVE PHYSICAL CONTRACT The worker is bound to the organization by a belief that personal objectives can best be obtained by enabling the organization to fulfill its objectives. Highly motivated worker (from the pointing viewed of the employer. The person ‘s desire to achieve can facilitate the company’s performance objectives. Physiological contract Can change radically by de-layering and down-sizing, (common features) with middle managers being sacrifices in pursuit of greater efficiency .Redundancy programmed affect the values, beliefs and drive of these changes in order manage in an increasingly volatile situation. 144 LEARNING STYLES Kolb’s learning cycle provides the following as the learning styles; • The activist –most comfortable and learn from experience • The reflector –effective in reflecting stage. • The theorist – able to generalize and draw conclusions • Pragmatist –effective in taking action. Activist – they absorb themselves fully in new experience and dump in the last end – pen- minded, enthusiastic, and flexible and thrive on challenge implication. They act first and considered the consequences. 145 Reflection - they like to stand back and take it all in. They take a minor role in discussion that will assimilate other people‘s ideas ready. • Thoughtful • Methodical and caution • Good listening skills but then minus is unwillingness to participate Theorist –they are able t o integrate their observation into theories or patterns • Logical • Rational • Objective • Discipline for chaos, discord tendency towards perfections, intolerance of initiation and subjectivity 146 Pragmatist –likely to apply theories and concept in practice Patient Realistic Task oriented and like to get on with things without always testing the options Supervisor’s view about their staff, usually are concerted on training to improve current job performance. An effect training analysis take both types of need into account and procedure training plan which shrikes an acceptable balance. b) Corporate needs; this concern with needs of the company and development designed to meet the department and whole organizational level. The focus is on a group staff and their common needs as defined by 147 management. There are three particular aspect of this. • Improving performances either out of problems of effectiveness or not, which may require corporate response? E.g. time management or team building concern with considering or introducing new core value such as quality management or customer services and or orientation. • Ensuring the effective introduction of new products or services and or working practices .i.e. the introduction of a new line in a slip, a new financial management system or the use of new equipment. • Another method of viewing corporate individual distinction is to consider it as the separation of job centered or needs. 148 Corporate Approach • Focus on needs of the job no matter the individual doing it (individual viewed collectively with other doing the job. • E.g. if time management programmed should be an obligation. For all staff in the finance department, no matter their age, experience actual performance and wither they have attendant a similar program with their previous employer. They need of the company are considered paramount even if some employees consider it as waste of funds. Implication of this strategy;-recognizing that all level are part of management at in the organization. • It achieves organizational goals and cannot be sidelined as the concern of only the personnel department /training section. 149 Both the individual needs identification and corporate needs identification are the responsibility of those with the responsibility for the performance of employees as individuals and collectively. Knowledge , skills and behavior Having identified the training needs the particular form of activities which will enable them to be met must be considered. In order to do this it is important to know the outcomes expected, i .e .what are the knowledge, skills and behaviors which need to be developed. 150 • What do employees need to know in order to perform their jobs well?- criteria ; a) background information about the organization to be very detailed (technical) b) knowledge about the individual work tasks. • What skills and competences are required and to what level. Knowledge by itself is not enough to secure acceptable performance but skills to be used in the job. • What behavioral characteristics are needed? – general attributes of interest, commitment and enthusiasm are important for all jobs but behavior needs more attention. E.g to develop a set of attitude and behavior towards customer service, technical standards, cost consciousness working together effectively, work flexibility. 151 PHYSIOLOGICAL CONTRACTS Definition as the perceived relationship between the individual and the organization and involves the previous factors which bind the individual to the enterprise. The way people feel about the organization for which they work. Dynamic concept Nature of contract will change overtime and influence by many variables will also affect the factors which will motivate the individual. 152 Skills development Skills- ability to do something at a high level of performance e. g. dancing , operating a machine or horse riding. It can also mean mental reasoning skills, interpersonal skills working in groups. Presenting information and asking questions. Skills are learned by following a set of instruction, written or spoken Two factors necessary to improve performance essential to develop skills. a) Practice b) Feedback 153 Motivation to learn If we ask how do we learn? We should also ask why people learn? Motivation – key factors in the learning process Conditions to be provided that will lead people to want to direct their effort toward the objectives set motivation to learn can take 2 forms a) Intrinsic - satisfaction of our curiosity over something that is nuclear or unfinished b) Achievement of competence c) A means of knowing how well we are doing d) Extrinsic where rewards at work surveys on why people stay on their job. 154 Types of learning a) Individuals learning –setting tasks with learning targets or objectives appropriates to the learner’s current ability and needs. b) Monitoring progress –meeting to discuss progress made c) Reviewing and learning from performance reviewing when tasks have been completed d) How to avoid problems Group learning – controlled by a professional teacher Project Methods – discussions syndicate work-reading, discussions, interviewing, role-playing and written report Case history – for the group to be decide Role playing –given particular role to play 155 TRAINING METHODS On- the job methods a) Demonstration b) Coaching – experienced instructor gives guidance and feel back to the trainee and provides encouragement and assistance in overcoming difficulties c) Project d) Job Rotation e) Attachment /Internship and secondments f) Mentoring, counseling and guidance g) Assistance (to more senior person) h) Committees/ Quality Circle 156 Off the job methods Open- general training irrespective of organization . Tailored to suit all organization creativity and innovation Closed –course developed to suit specific organization Case studies In – tray exercises - letters from customers , memo from staff, request for information observed how they work on those assignments. 157 Management games • Role playing • Longer education-based courses –distance learning , evening classes, part-time • Conference, seminars and workshops • Programmed instruction – books / prepared notes, audio cassettes or discs television programmes , computers • Outdoor/ out ward bound programmes 158 QUESTIONS Now that we understand something of learning styles and that every one learns differently , we ought to design training and development programmes for each individual. But that would cost too much a) Explain the importance of organization objectives and of employee objectives in the preparation of a training or development programmes b) Outline two distinctively different types of development which could be used irrespective of individuals learning styles. Explain your answers. 159 COACHING Define Coaching is an ongoing process aimed at helping people to improve their performance to meet or exceed organizational personal goals. Who is a coach? A coach is a person responsible for helping people to achieve through a process of discovering each person's strength and weaknesses and then matching resources, advice to improve those strength and minimizing those weaknesses. What situation needs coaching? Coaching is needed when an employee's performance falls below expectation when manager is trying to raise the employee's performance a level or two. 160 What situations need coaching? • Not performing to company's goals • Not performing at potential level • During setbacks and problems • When people are new to a job • Through success and failure • As identified by coach 161 Examples: • Struggling with too many projects and ideas • Needs to correct an employee relations problem and doesn't know how • Doesn't have enough support and want a mentor • Feels like there aren't enough hours in the day get everything done. • Needs to begin a project but doesn't have a clue how to get started. • Fears you might be let go in next downsizing • A boss who is driving one crazy • Will be going through a big transition • Can't get used to change • Feels like the lone with no one really talk to • Can't sleep at night because of ………………………… accident 162 • Has struggled ever since (the divorce, you got fired) • Can't seem to get motivated to do anything Coaching Sessions 4 Types of coaching sessions • Counseling • Encouraging and Mentoring • Teaching or Training • Confrontation 163 The 10 steps of one-to-one coaching • Initial Fact Finding - Make Sure You've Got it Right • What was covered in precious session? • What goals were set? Were they met? • Have I personally quantified the result? Am I basing this session on Second- Third- hand information? • Am I being objective? Am I allowing prejudice (goods or bad) to influence my coaching? 164 • Do I have a current evaluation of this person? -Strength -Weaknesses -Opportunities -Threats • Have I talked with peers and other coaches as a reality check • What are the goals for this coaching session? • What action I like to occur as the result of the session? 165 2. Setting the Stage • Praise what they do well • Briefly describe the opportunity for change/growth as you see it • Communicate your expectations for the sessions 3. Dealing with the challenge / Problem • Listen actively • Ask questions - the employee is the best one to define the challenge /problem • Reflect and paraphrase their perceptions • Let people vent -Let them finish before you talk -Manage your reactions 166 • Offer your perceptions as a guide if they go off track • Describe their behaviour only - be objective, descriptive and specific • Don't be judgmental 4. Getting Agreement on the Facts • Clarify • Summarize 5. Searching for Options Ask questions and listen Encouragement to come up with solutions Guide them to other options, if their solutions are not adequate /practical - ask the right questions, don't just your solutions 167 6. Prioritizing the Options • Evaluate the consequences of each one • Rank in descending order of preferred solutions 7. Developing an Action Plan • Determine the specific training steps needed to be taken. • Determine when the training will begin • Define the activities 8. Defining the Timeliness 9. Recognition • Let them know you appreciate their contribution to the organization (appreciation) 168 • Let them be part of decision making (involvement) 10. Follow -Up • Monitoring • Evaluate performance against the standards agreed to in the action plan • Redirect and reassess • Begin the coaching cycle again How to ascertain the success of coaching session • It is mutual • It is respectful • It is solution and opportunity focused • It is structured / planned • You maintain control • You stay on one topic per session • It results in a positive change in behaviour 169 One of the best ways to get positive change in behaviour and reach the goal of improving the performance of your employees is to give continuous, accurate, non-judgmental feed back Giving feedback Make a huge difference in how well you do • Should feedback always be negative / positive • As a coach, you can't respond only to problem areas Feedback characteristics • It must be timely. The closer to the behaviour that feedback occurs, the more likely you are to re-enforce, enhance or redirect that behavior. • It must be specific- address specific behaviour and actual performance not the perceived qualities of the other person. 170 PROCESS OF COACHING Addressing Behaviour In correcting an employee you address the conduct and not the person. By addressing the behaviour and not the individual, you let the person know that they are still valued, even if they’ve made a mistake or are doing something incorrectly. Explain what the problem is and why it needs to be changed. Suggest alternative ways of handling the problematic situation. Taking the time, the first time will help prevent problems in the future. Involving employees Giving your employees up to date operational information. Failure to do that would create chaos and stress in work environment for your workers. Letting them know about the changes ahead of time will help them feel part of the company and its goals (part of investment). 171 Complementing Employees. Applicant employees when they do something praise worthy. Some Managers wait for mistakes, rather than rewarding positive performances with praise and support. Such posture creates tension where workers are constantly apprehensive about their next mistake. By praising employee's performance you encourage your workforce to strive for success. MOTIVATION Managers often erroneously believe that the key to getting the most out of their employees is to serve as a policing and disciplinary force in the office. The reality is however that focusing on the negative creates a negative work environment When people are fearful or feel threatened by their productive and less willing to communicate with employers about 172 conflicts problems and on the job stress How to motivate your employees Understanding • Make sure that employees understand what is expected of them. Most people want to do well at their jobs but sometimes are ill informed about their positions’ responsibilities. • Make sure you provide job descriptions and review duties and add new ones if responsibilities have changed. Adequate Training • Make sure employees get adequate training to perform their jobs. Early training decrease anxiety and maximizes employees productivity 173 Feed Back Provide feedback to employees to gauge the success of their effort. Feedback is thus a positive reinforcement to employees. Mentoring Traditionally mentoring might have been described as the activities conducted by a person (the mentor) for another person (the mentee) in order to help that other person to do a job more effectively and for them to progress in their career. The mentor was probably someone who had been there and done that before. A mentor might use a variety of approaches e.g. Coaching, Training, Discussion, Counseling etc Today, there seems to be much ongoing discussion and debate about definitions and difference regarding coaching and mentoring. The major difference however is that, Mentors normally are like Big Brothers and don't get paid for what 174 they do. CAREER DEVELOPMENT Career is the sequence of Work-related positions a person occupies throughout life Career Development Any work, paid or unpaid pursued over an extended period of time, can constitute a career. Career Development has stages -from exploration to decline or retirement 175 Organizational Career Development focuses a job and on constituting career paths that provide for the logical progression and people between jobs in an organization. These paths represent ladders that individuals can climb to advance in certain organizational units. For e.g., a person might enter the sales department as a sales manager, counseling them to account and finally to vice - president (sales). For organizations where lifetime employment is unlikely career development for employees may risk creating unrealistic expectations about the employees’ future in serious situations. The employees may leave the organization. 176 Individual career Development - focuses on individual careers rather than organizational needs. Individuals' needs and skills are the focus of the analysis. Such analysis might consider situations both within and outside the organization that could expand the person's career 177 Organisational Career Perspective Individual Career Perspective Identify future organisational staffing needs Identify personal abilities and interest Plan career ladders Plan life and work goals Assess individual potential and training needs Assess alternative paths inside and outside the organisation. Match organisational needs with individual abilities Note changes in interests and goals as career and life stage change Audit and develop a career system for the organization. 178 Summary 1. A career is a sequence of positions occupied by a person during the course of a lifetime 2. Effective organizational career development • Ensures that needed talent will be available • Improve the organization's ability to attract and retain high talent personnel • Ensures that minorities and women will have opportunities for growth and development • Reduce employment frustration 179 3. A career can be viewed as consisting of five stages • Exploration • Establishment • Mid Career • Late Career • Decline 4. Effective organizational career development techniques include: • Challenging initial jobs • Dissemination of career option information • Job posting • Assessment centres • Career counseling • A career development workshops 180 • Continuing education and training • Period job changes • Sabbaticals 5. lndividual career development is a three -steps self assessment process: • Identifying and organizing skills interest work- related needed and values • Converting those into general career fields and specific job goals • Testing those possibilities against realities of the organization or the job market. • Career opportunities appear to be good for the post-baby boom group • Variety of suggestions that one can follow to get ahead 181 monthly seems to be an issue For more effective organizational career development • Challenging initial jobs • Understanding career options • Job posting • Assessment centers • Career development workshops • Continuing education and training • job changes • Sabbaticals /leaves of absence 182 183 LEARNING 184 LEARNING HOW TO LEARN • Providing a basis for organizing and planning learning • Pinpointing precisely what has been learnt and what to do better or differently as a consequence. • Sharing what has been learnt with other people for their benefit. • Checking on the quality of what has been learnt. • Transferring what has been learnt and applying it in different circumstances • Improving the learning process itself so that how people learn, not just what they learn is given constant attention. 185 CONDITIONS OF EFFECTIVE LEARNING • Individual to be motivated to learn – should be aware that their present level of knowledge, skill or competence, or their existing attitude or behavior needs to be developed or improved. • If learners have learning goals/targets/standards of performance acceptable and can use to judge their own progress. • Need sense of direction and feedback on their performance (self-motivation). • Learners to gain satisfaction from learning most capable of learning if it satisfies one or more of their needs. • Learners to be actively involved, as learning is an active process. 186 • Appropriate process and methods to be used according to the needs and learning styles of the individual/group. • Learning needs requirement of time to assimilate, test and accept. • The need to receive re-enforcement of correct behavior should quickly know if they are performing well. • That there should be different levels of learning and these need different methods and takes different times. Simplest level, learning requires direct physical responses, memorization and conditioning. Higher level – learning involves adapting existence knowledge or skills to a new task or environment. Next level – learning becomes a complex process when series of isolated tasks have to be integrated. Most complex when values and attitudes of people and groups are concerned. 187 CONCEPTS OF E-LEARNING 3 CONCEPTS: • Connectivity – computer network using CD ROM as a means of distributing training materials. • Focus on the learner – individuals/groups taking charge of their own training. • Blended learning – lays emphasis on the range of ways that e-learning can be delivered when combined with multiple models’ facilitating learning (taking into account the learners environment, motivation, and learning styles). Richer/polished level of learning methods: - does not rely on one approach. It combines conventional instructions and self-managed learning (need for balance between face-to-face and electronic learning) 188 DEVELOPING E-LEARNING PROCESS Main steps: Initial analysis • Definition of human resource development strategy at organizational level • Identification of organizational learning needs • Assessing the strengths and weaknesses of the present arrangements for developing people. Scope • Identifying the overall scope for developing e-learning systems with particular attention to an assessment of the added value to be provided, (enhancing present approach to blended learning). • Identifying any areas where e-learning might be appropriate and establish what specific opportunities technology offers to enhance knowledge. 189 E-LEARNING DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS • The learning need • Meeting of e-learning with that need • The learning system to be used • The content of the learning to be delivered. • The scope of program to cater for individual or group. • The blending with other forms of training. • Who to be responsible within the organisation for developing and delivering e-learning. • Consider the availability of resources within the organisation to develop content. 190 • How the material needs to be tailor-made to fit the organisation. • Possibility of suitable materials available elsewhere. • Comparative cost of each option. • Identifying possible organisations to supply suitable material. Criteria – Understanding of the requirements. • – Learning methods used (pedagogic principles and theoretical perspective resulting from the methods) • – Outcomes from the methods and how measured. • – Suitability of learning material (fit with requirements) • – Cost • – Selection and training of tutors • – ensure the availability of facilities for e-learning (computers, learning resource centers) 191 IMPLEMENTATION • Preparing briefing material • Awareness of the facilities for e-learning by all trainees and managers • Ensuring e-learning arrangements are linked to other HR initiatives like performance management, career planning and knowledge management. • Launching e-learning, starting with a pilot scheme in a department or a specific area of learning such as IT. EVALUATION • Monitoring and evaluating performance and impact of e-learning. 192 193 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS 194 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS • Conceptual background • Industrial Relations-What is it? • Industrial Relations is the relationship between workers and management, between employees and owners of productive capital. 195 PARTIES OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS: 1. Categories of employees-(Private or Govt. workers) -Government -the Private Sector -non Governmental organization 2. Categories of employers -Blue collar workers (clerks, secretaries) -White collar workers -Unskilled -Professionals 196 THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES 3. Basic theoretical perspectives/approaches 1. Radical perspectives -Emerged from Marxist philosophy of class struggle whereby the worker is exploited and breeds antagonism between worker and owner/manager, the interest are dramatically opposed to each other. How do we address this problem of conflict? By Grouping of workers- which emerged class struggle idea ie workers to group and confront management. No one person capable of taking up the challenge. 197 2. Unitarian Perspective- Too radical /collective - all together in the same boat. Workers demand of too much money that could collapse the business- same interest goal-too simplistic. Emerged from productive capital the two theories above fail to address the exploitative issues. 3. Pluralist Perspective-Different interests/ concerns are at play thus creating conflict situation in the workplace. So we should recognize the difference (govt. being different from NGO; NGO different from an Entrepreneur and manager different from solution? Creating a system for mutual co-existence). 198 1. Categories of employers -Government -Private Non-Governmental 2. Categories of Employees -Blue Collar workers -White collar workers -Unskilled -Professional 3. Owners of Productive Capital Emergence of industrial relations 199 -WHY DID IR ARISE? 4 main reasons 1. Exploitation of workers 2. Inadequate of the welfare tradition 3. Quality of working line concerns (OWL) (People being more and more concerned with their work to ensure that sporting activities, leisure, and entertainment is given a room) 4. Complexity of society 200 CHARACTERISTICS OF IR - Pluralist approach confirmed. -Laws to ensure that workers get what they want, and owner gets what he wants. So that there is no exploitation. Maximum requirements for both workers and employer (owner of productive capital) -Unions and labour organizations Emergence of workers’ groupings Union to champion the interest of the worker but not to confront - industrial democracy. 201 -Employers organizations This must be available to do the negotiation as Ghana Employers Association (G. E. A.) -The bargaining process Negotiation from different angles or interests Tripartite Negotiation (Govt. Employers, Workers) Industrial Relations Framework Ghana recognizes and operates a pluralist IR framework. Evidence shown in the Tripartite Arrangement Tripartite Arrangement/Agreement. -Labour/workers Union (TUC) Govt. always gets involved as it is a major player 202 -Employers Association (GEA, AGI, Govt.-Ministry of employment) Issues- Wages Health and Safe Working Hours Retirement benefits Leave Provisions Nature of Employment contract Negotiations and Collective bargaining For Union-employer negotiation the following must be present; Recognition of the union by acceptable number of workers as union members (sometimes right of representation breeds dispute) Follows the code of practice-a union must not recruit a member who has already been recruited by another union. Collective bargaining takes place where unions are recognized 203 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING Collective bargaining agreement. -This occurs where an employer or group of employers negotiate the terms and conditions of employment of their workforce with the representatives of one or several workers organizations and reaches agreement on those issues. Thus various aspects of workers contract of employment are determined not individually, but collectively. Outcomes of Bargaining Substantive agreements- based on pay terms and conditions of employment. Procedure agreements-Set out on agreed course of action for various eventualities, i.e. equal opportunities, recruitment, redundancy, discipline etc. 204 8 KEY ARTICLES OF LEGISLATING IR 1. Trade Union Ordinance (1941) 2. Conspiracy and Protection of Property (Trade Dispute Ordinance (1941) 3. Trade Disputes (Arbitration and Enquiry) Ordinance 1941 4. Industrial Relations Act, 1965 (Act 299) 5. Labour Decree, 1967 NLCD 157, Labour Law 6. Labour Regulations, 1969 (LI 632) 7. Workman’s Compensation Law 1987(PNDCL 187) 8. Factories, offices and shops Act 1970 326 205 TRADE UNIONISM Definition Trade Unions-Organization (Temporary or permanent) consisting wholly of workers of one or more descriptions whose principal purpose includes the regulations between workers of that description and employers/ employers “association”. • Regards as any group of workers who combine even for a brief period to secure something from an employer • Independent of the employer 206 • Involved with the terms and conditions of it’s members. • Need to register with the certification officer to gain legal status recognition. • Its recognition of independence is the avoidance of it’s activities free from the manipulation of the employers • Its size gradually increased to include transport and general workers’ Union (TG WU until 1993) since then its numbers have been falling due to mergers and general economic recessions in Economic restructuring in UK. 207 PROCESS OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING - Conduct by negotiation ( discussion of matters with a view of reaching an agreement) Negotiation can take place in 2 main forms 1. Through distributive bargaining where negotiation is based on distribution of limited resources ( one party’s gain is another party’s loss or win- lose bargaining.) 2. Through integrative bargaining • Based on joint problem-solving negotiation at finding mutually acceptable satisfying solution to problems (WIN-WIN) bargaining, agree to disagree situation. 208 PROCEDURE Preparation - Setting objectives, prioritization. Basic minimum requirements to be achieved. Desirable requirements to be achieved by negotiator. Optimum requirement for best level of achievement. - Research the background to the negotiation • Including bargaining power of other party • Preparing the Case to be agreed 209 - Selecting the negotiations- good communication: persuasive, acceptable to the other party and authoritative. Terms of C. B. A.’s are binding on all works for C.B. to take place, bargaining units need to be established- such units could be small work group at a local level right through national units representing hundreds of thousands of workers honor the relationship between local and national bargaining has varied over time. 210 CENTRALISED VRS LOCALIZED BARGARNING Centralised (National) - Terms and conditions fixed for a whole sector of the labour market Advantage reducing local wage competition. - Power of such a bargaining unit - considerable - Basic national rate provide stability and guarantee minimum wage for membership. Localized - Units allow varied range of outcome and greater local flexibility - More responsive to local needs currently the tendency has been towards more decentralized bargaining units. 211 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING Individual organisations may bargain separately with each organised trade union or arrange single - table bargaining where the representatives of all the trade sit down together with management Advantage of single - table bargaining is integrated negotiation but difficult in coming to an agreement that satisfies all parties. NEGOTIATION • Exchanging information • Listening to the other party's position • Signal likely compromise points • Propose ways forward 212 CLOSING • Summaries of positions • Propose a final offer which meets the needs of both parties • Reach agreement TRADE UNION SANCTIONS • Stikes • Overtime bans • Work to rule • Go slows • Sit - inns • Boycotts • Picketing EMPLOYER SANCTIONS • Lockouts • Lay - offs • Dismissal 213 COLLECTIVE LABOUR LAW TRADE UNION IMMUNITIES • Terms and conditions of employment or the physical conditions of work • Engagement, non - engagement, termination or suspension of employees • Allocation of work between employee or groups of employees. • Discipline • Membership or non - membership of a trade union Facilities for trade union officials • The machinery for negotiation or consultation including trade union recognition Disputes between trade union or between one group of workers and another are not covered by immunity from prosecution. Sanctions are applied in extreme situations 214 TECHNIQUES FOR RESOLVING DISPUTES • Conciliation, where an independent third party acts as a go between in order to help achieve a settlement between the two parties • Mediation, where a third party has a more active role in proposing recommendations for both sides to consider. • Arbitration, where a third party settle the dispute by making a independent decision for the parties in dispute. 215 LABOUR LAW REFERENCE TO NEW LABOUR LAW 1. Individual Labour Law 2. Collective Labour Law 216 INDIVIDUAL LABOUR LAW (AREAS) • • • • • Contract of employment Equal opportunities Access to medical records Dismissal/Redundancy Time off work - legal right to take reasonable time off for trade union or public duty activities. • Maternity benefits 217 • DISCIPLINARY AND GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE 218 DISCIPLINE The term, "discipline" refers to condition in the organization when employees conduct themselves in accordance with the rules and standard of acceptable behaviour. Members' conforming with what is considered proper behaviour because they believe it is the right thing to do. 219 • • • • • • • TYPES OF DISCIPLINE PROBLEMS Attendance / Absenteeism - time keeping Health and Safety Use of company facilities Discrimination Infraction of company rules Dishonesty Gross misconduct (the kind of offence resulting in instant dismissal should be noted.) 220 PROBLEM IN PERSPECTIVE BEFORE DISCIPLINE ACTION • • • • • Seriousness of the problem Duration of the problem Frequency and nature of the problem Employees' work history Extenuating factors - e.g. a student who fails to submit his semester paper by the deadline is likely to violate and must be treated leniently. • Degree of socialization - organisation's effort to educate the employee causing the problem. • History of organisation's discipline practices • Implications for other employees 221 REQUIREMENTS OF THE PROCEDURE: (industrial democracy) • Be in written form. • Specify to whom it applies • Provide for the speedy progress of disciplinary hearings • Indicate the various forms of disciplinary action that may be taken (warning, dismissal etc) • Ensure that individuals are informed of the disciplinary charges made against them. • Permit individuals to state their case 222 • Ensure proper investigations of every case before disciplinary action is implemented • Individuals are informed of the reasons for the action being taken against them. • No individual is dismissed for a first offence except in cases of group misconduct • Provide for a right of appeal 223 MISCONDUCT a) Breaches, infringements or non observance of any of the general rules / working rules eg poor attendance, bad time keeping b) Failure to obey lawful and reasonable instructions c) Unreasonable / unacceptable conduct - under alcohol. d)Threatened violence on a colleague or member of the public. GROUP MISCONDUCT e) Any behaviour that warrants instant dismissal i.e. stealing, falsifying various claim sheets, allowance bonus sheets f) Malicious damage to company property g) Sexual misconduct in work place, sexual harassment. 224 The interviewer needs good communication and counseling skills, where action is needed. Grievance procedures should allow the right of appeal to higher level of management if the individual feels that their grievance has not been dealt with adequately. 225 GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE: COMPLAINTS / GRIEVANCE HANDLING, DISCIPLINE AND DISMISSAL CONCEPT: The needs for mechanisms that help in regulating the relationship between employer and employee to avoid breakdown of relationship. The basis for the relationship in law is the contract of employment and the company's rules covering conduct and behavior in employment. 226 The normal communication channels should ensure that any difficulties are resolved informally between the individual and his manager. If this does not occur, more formal procedure may be used. For the employee, the main source of further action would be through the grievance procedure, for the employer through the disciplinary procedure. 227 GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE - Is a system which provides a method for employees to raise issues or complain with management before they escalate into major disputes or result in the resignation of the employee. It is the responsibility of management to ensure that: • grievances are heard speedily and impartially and that action is taken as a result. stage: • to raise the issue formally with the line manager and for an interview to take place which defines the problem and moves towards an acceptable solution. Why grievance? - It may be raised about pay or other terms and conditions of employment, or behaviour such as harassment or race, sex discrimination. 228 MANAGEMENT RANKING • management to rank the necessity and equality of the action taken and feel that his superior supports his decision. Culprits can also challenge the decision of management. 229 GUIDELINES IN ADMINISTRATERING DISCIPLINE Discipline should be • Corrective • Progressive ( only for the most serious violations will an employee be dismissed after a first offence. Progressive action starts with an oral warning and soon • Follow the "Hot stove" rule - implementing discipline can be equated with touching a hot stove. It gives you an instant result (pain) The burn is instantaneous leaving no question of cause and effect, if touched. 230 • Ample warning • Action consistent • Result - impersonal no matter who you are(keep - discipline impersonal) 231 REPRIMAND PROCESS 1. Tell employees beforehand that you are going to let them know how they are doing and in no uncertain terms. 1st half of PEPRIMAND: 2. Reprimand people immediately 3. Tell them what they did wrong - be specific 4. Tell them how you feel about what they did wrong. 5. Stop for few seconds of uncomfortable silence to let them feel how you feel. 232 SECOND HALF REPRIMAND: 6)Shake hands or touch them in a way that lets them know you are honestly on their side. 7) Remind them how much you value them 8) Reaffirm that you think well of them but not of their performance in this situation 9) Realise that when the remand is over it's over. 233 PROCESS OF DISCIPLINARY ACTION • Oral warning (private and informal environment first talk of the rule broken) • If explanation is acceptable further disciplinary action is avoided. If not the process continues • Written warning (first formal stage and put on file) after discussion warning letter. 234 1ST AND 2ND FINAL WARNING • • • • Suspension(with pay without pay) Demotion Pay cut Dismissal 235 DISMISSAL Reasons • Capability or qualification • Conduct • Redundancy • Statutory reason - performing job will lead to breaking the rules • Any other substantial reason - banned driver working against interest of company. 236 237 PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT 238 EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT In the quest for the implementation of certain breakthrough interventions such as quality customer service, total quality management, productivity improvement and many others, the attendant fanfare over indexes and slogans sometimes diverts attention from one really essential elements of such breakthrough initiatives, that's people's performance. It is always people who make plans work or fail through their performance. It is therefore imperative to first work, among others, 239 In this presentation, I would want to focus on:• The nature of performance Management • The most essential and useful tool in an organization • The practical ways of implementing this tool in an organization • The nurturing of a performance based culture in an organization. • Problems of performance appraisals in Ghanaian organizations. 240 THE NATURE OF PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT Effective employee performance management begins with a clear statement of organizational objectives. Everyone should be singing from the same sheet music and committed to the song. Without that, employee performance management can be isolated, irrational and irrelevant. The responsibilities of each work group and of each individual fit within and optimally support the organization's goals. Performance in all activities is measured and 241 Again, employees need to be provided with an honest and objective evaluation of their performance. Besides, areas where improvements are needed are communicated to employees and then reassessed to make those improvements. Furthermore, there is always the need to indentify potential for further growth and development. 242 All rewards are based on employee performance. Organizational structure, processes, resources and authority systems are designed to optimize the performance of all employees. There is an ongoing effort to create and guide appropriate initiatives for achieving organizational goals and for seeing newer and more appropriate goals. 243 A TOOL FOR MANAGING EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE No other management tools are more critical to employee performance management than a goal or job objective and reward-based performance planning and appraised system. The system comprises of distinct activities:a) Performance planning b) Performance monitoring c) Performance evaluation d) Reward system tied directly to performance. 244 a) PERFORMANCE PLANNING Performance planning embodies the process of setting and agreeing on job objectives which each officer is personally accountable for achieving. It is a powerful and direct way of developing a clear understanding between appraiser and appraisee about:*The key outputs of the job and how it fits into the key result areas of the business * Building commitment to the achievement of the objective set * Identify performance competencies for the achievement of the objectives set. 245 (b) PERFORMANCE MONITORING This is an ongoing evaluation of the Appraiser's job performance on a regular basis. This may take several forms-free discussions based on the appraiser's observation or it could be a more structured periodic review based on established criteria. Whatever the form, the main objective is to encourage open and honest 2-way communication about the appraiser's activities, tasks and conducts, and to provide timely guidance and support when required. 246 PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AT DIFFERENT LEVELS • Performance of the entire human resources system and the interrelationship between specific systems and sub systems. E.g. how effective is an organization's human resources strategy and its contribution to achieve general corporate strategic objective. How will these strategies influence employee effectiveness in the organization as a whole? • Performance of specific human resource subsystems: Focus on strengths and weaknesses of staff developed or recruitment and selection policy and practice and how effective their procedures as well as their implications of the strategy for training and development for new and existing employees. 247 • Performance of specific departments: Comparing and contrasting the performance of specific department will reveal the weakness and strengths in the management of employee performance. It will also indicate how effectively/ineffectively employee performance is being addressed by line managers through the general criteria. • Team performance: Specific teams with short/ long term responsibility should be evaluated and rewarded according to their team performance. • Individual performance: Performance of 248 (c)PERFORMANCE EVALUATION This process is a formal written review of performance and must take place at least once a year with objectives and performance being reviewed on quarterly basis as well. Very often, it is necessary for objectives to be reviewed or revisited based on business priorities or extenuating marked circumstance beyond the appraiser's control. The quarterly review addresses this need. Any changes made to objectives set earlier must be documented in the performance planning form. 249 Each job should have an ideal performance level that an employee can reasonably achieve. Supervisors and subordinates should agree on job-specific tasks and work related traits or skills. That way an employee is measured with respect to mutually agreed-upon goals for his or her job. Supervisors shouldn't make over all evaluations. Evaluations should be built from pertinent specific criteria that can be judged and explained. They shouldn't be based on nonspecific subjective, indefensible feelings. Discuss achievement levels with appraise and 250 Where the overall rating at the end of the evaluation period falls below average there should be sufficient evidence of the appraisee having been regularly informed through written communication as regards quality of his performance. This would ensure that the appraisee would have had the opportunity to be made aware of his/her short comings with a view to addressing them. 251 TYING REWARD TO PERFORMANCE At the heart of the system is the idea that salary increases should be based on performance appraisals. Many organizations separate the two, hoping that a performance review itself will motivate an employee. But if organizations aren't paying for performance, what are they paying for? The real reason they separate pay from performance is that their systems can't successfully connect the two. 252 Combine cost-of-Iiving allowance and merit increases. The usual purpose of COLA increases is to hold into good employees. However, separating the two can further distance pay from performance and render each of the two raises insignificant. A performance appraisal shouldn't end with a supervisor suggesting a specific raise. Such an evaluation usually begins with a figure and is manipulated to justify it. Discussions tend to be more about the increase than the performance. If an organization uses a performance/ raise index, employees can judge their raises by seeing where their performance ratings place them. If 253 MEANS OF SUCCESSFUL IMPLEMENTATION OF OBJECTIVE APPRAISAL SYSTEM a) CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT OF SUCCESS The system should assume that most employees will receive good ratings. If it can't then management have big problems. If the assumption is "good job" and the appraisal question is "how good?" the process is less likely to be seen as an annual criticism. Organizations should make it clear that deliberate improvement is valued. They should expect supervisors to help subordinates reach their highest possible levels of productivity. A performance appraisal should serve to promote selfimprovement. 254 b) THE SUPERVISOR'S ROLE It's crucial to recognize the role of the supervisor in performance appraisals. If a supervisor has had nothing to do with the performance of a subordinate for some time, that supervisor probably shouldn't be doing the evaluation. Supervisors should evaluate employees as members of a team. They should assess how they can improve. It's important to identify the contributions an employee has made to the team, the adjustments needed to support improvement, and what supervisors need to do differently to help. 255 c) NO SURPRISES A formal evaluation shouldn't contain surprises. It shouldn't bring up problems out of the blue. Evaluations are merely specific points in an ongoing process. No single performance review can bear the burden of a year's worth of poor supervision. There should be a specific remedy plan for improvement. A nonspecific plan has very little chance of being achieved. A plan that's based on an employee's conscious and deliberate 256 d) MARKETING THE SYSTEM Get input from supervisors and subordinates alike. If they are allowed to contribute; they will be more likely to accept the system and it is more likely to do what it is supposed to. Involve Unions: An organization in Accra, for example found itself with a union contract containing a pay-for-performance provision but no system to implement it. Union leaders are usually sympathetic to a fair and 257 e) KEEP IT SIMPLE Four pages of instructions are enough. Spend money to train supervisors in doing evaluations, not to print bulky manuals. Training makes not only better performances appraisers but better supervisors and managers as well. f) TEST THE SYSTEM Large firms have the advantage of good marketers. They can test ideas on small parts of the population before they put their money and pride on the line. The appraisal system could be 258 A PERFORMANCE-BASED CULTURE Value performance leadership. When assessing the performance of supervisors, cover the following area:• Quality and quantity of work • Leadership and management • Turnover, absenteeism, and safety • Group attitude and morale • Performance evaluations. Value all employees. Authoritarian mangers may get some short-term results, but no performance appraisal system can be 259 Promotions in an organization should be based on superior or consistent outstanding performance and not on politics or relationships. Performance should be the major reason for giving any award, reward or incentives rather than following traditional practices of long service, attendance etc. 260 PROBLEMS OF PERFORMANCE IN GHANAIAN ORGANIZATIONS. Unfortunately most organizations in Ghana often fail to accomplish the goals that an effective performance appraisal should be achieved. That's to establish what employees are supposed to do, staff needed to do it and to assess how well they do it. Too frequently, employees don't know what's expected of them, their performance is ineffectively evaluated by employers. At a food processing plant, managers claim that they can't evaluate employee performance. So, they give raises based on 261 The following quotes from employees illustrate the most common problems found in performance appraisal systems in Ghanaian organizations : Supervisors or managers don't know what I do. They have no basis on which to evaluate me . If there was a problem, why wasn't I told earlier? The appraisal instrument used doesn't fit my job The rating aren't applicable, clear or objective 262 CONCLUSION Realistically, those concerns may never be totally eliminated in large complex organizations. But they can be minimized with better performance management. If the saying “what gets rewarded gets done" is true, organizations should establish effective systems to guide supervisors/managers in tying reward to performance. That way, management of performance in our organizations will be very effective and fruitful. 263 APPRAISAL Why appraise? - Where are we now? Do's and don'ts of the appraisal interview 264 BENEFITS OF APPRAISAL TO THE INDIVIDUAL Feedback on performance Involvement in organizing his / her work Training / career development TO THE MANAGER You will gain from knowing your staff better Feedback on work problems An objective way of reviewing performance future work can be planned 265 To business plans WHAT APPRAISAL IS NOT A 'tell' situation by the manager to the employee A secret report on the employee who never sees the document Another name for a discipline interview An attack on the job-holder's personality Or a character assassination A salary discussion 266 PREPARATION LIST (1) 1. Fix mutually convenient time 2. Don't fill the diary for the whole day with appraisal interviews 3. Describe to the interviewee, in advance, the format and procedure to help his thoughts and questions: 4. Ask the job-holder to prepare his thoughts and questions. 5. Read and review: a) Job description b) Standards of performance and priorities 267 PREPARATION LIST (2) 6. Review in advance targets and special project 7. Consult peers whose departments interface with the work of the interviewee. 8. Prepare the interview room 9. Ensure no interruptions 10. Make sure any aggravation from a previous meeting is out of your system before starting the interview. 268 GETTING THE DISCUSSION GOING (2) Typical types of questions: • How have you found dealing with T&D has worked out? • What have been the most difficult problems that you have faced? • Where do you see your future in the company? • How do you see this job developing? • What would you say are the priorities for the next twelve months? • Get the employee to discuss and assess his/ her performance before you state your views. 269 APPRAISAL PREPARATION FORM (1) FOR THE JOB-HOLDER PURPOSE To help the job-holder to prepare for the Appraisal so that the discussion can be as meaningful as possible. APPRAISAL PREPATION FORM (2) 1. What particular parts of the job interest you the most? 2. What particular parts interest you least? 3. How do you feel you have carried out the main 270 APPRAISAL PREPARATION FORM (3) 5. What, if any, were the reasons preventing you from being more effective in these areas? 6. What tasks do you feel you have performed particularly well and why? 7. What areas, if any, are unclear in the job? APPRAISAL PREPARATION FORM (4) 8. What aspects of work would you most like to target on next year? 9. What extra help or guidance do you feel you need to do the present job more effectively? 271 Report of the interview Essential for future reference Essential for central reference • Analysis of training needs • Manpower planning • Career planning etc. If you prefer not to use the proforma, cover the following areas • Current/past performance • Future objectives • Training needs (short and long term) Career 272 APPRAISAL CASE STUDIES Here are some situations about ways employees responded to their appraisal. How would you react? Situation 1. The employee agrees with appraisal and wants to improve. Some genuine differences of opinion are expressed but the employee makes positive efforts to clarify the issues rather than be defensive. Thank the employee for active participation - this 273 Situation 2. The employee does not accept responsibility for his substandard performance and blames corporation procedures and other employees. Listen with open mind without interrupting or arguing. Try to find out why employee is being blamed elsewhere. There must be agreement towards corrective actions that can be achieved with his co-operation. Complement him on this achievement. Follow up closely and set another review soon to measure changes and view point. 274 Situation 3. The employee disagrees with elements of your appraisal and offers specific information to refute your findings. Listen carefully- indicate willingness to reexamine yours. If employee is right modify your position. If employee's duty is invalid or irrelevant note your ground and explain your position. 275 Situation 4. Employee accepts appraisal without comment and prepares to leave before you have discussed the next performance plan. Some employees are intimidated . Effort is necessary to open up discussion. Some feel that there should be agreement in areas of discussing their faults. Encourage them by asking questions, ask and suggest activities which would help them. Ask them to give summaries of their new performance plan. 276 IDENTIFYING AND place STANDARDS In the following list ofGOALS statements, a G if it is a goal and an 5 in the box if is a standard according to the definitions you have heard. If the statement is neither a goal nor a standard, leave the ___ blank. ___ 1. Breakage in the kitchen should be kept to a minimum. ___2. to eliminate maintenance coding errors for existing computer programs by 1 October, at a cost not to exceed 40 working hours. ___3. Reduce the cost of ongoing operations by 1st January ___4. Telephone are to be answered quickly and 277 ___6. To increase sales of man's watches by 10 per cent before June, with no increase in costs. ___7. Appreciably reduce time lost because of accidents by year end. ___8. Errors in recording class enrolment will not exceed 2% of the total monthly enrolment. ___9. Telephones should be answered after no more than two rings. Telephone manners are expected to follow those prescribed in the company handbook. Messages should include date, time of call, relevant names and numbers, and nature of the call. 278 IMPROVING EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE 1. The importance of the manager in the training process 1.1 Managers at all levels must supervise people. Done correctly, everyone benefits and the manager will receive credit for a job well done. However, if people are not managed effectively, no one will benefit and the manager will quickly get the blame. The task of directing people at work is not easy because human beings are very complex. However much they may want to do well, employees performance will not excel until they know WHAT they are supposed to do and HOW they are supposed to do it. A well-developed training programmed addresses these issues. 279 1.2 As Manager supervises employees, they must: Develop staff lead staff • Induction - Motivate • Training - Appraise • Professional Development - Discipline Problem solving Resolve conflicts Delegate 280 2. Employees Benefit From Training 2.1 It is the manager’s job to demonstrate how training will help employees, trainees who understand the benefits they can receive from training will want to learn (have the proper attitude) 2.2 Managers have to think about their employees In terms of perceived attitude and level of job knowledge:- 281 Employee attitude Good 1 2 3 4 Poor Low Job Knowledge High 282 • The possibilities above show us:• Box 1: an employee with a good attitude and low level of job knowledge can be helped dramatically by training. • Box 2: in this situation training will help provided there is adequate time etc. • Box3: In this situation personnel action (transfer) may be most appropriate. • Box 4: This employee could do the job with the proper attitude but without it, training will not reduce the problem. Counseling and appraisal are probably the answer. 283 3. The four basic steps of training Whatever the training objectives, there are four basic steps involved:Step 1: Define how the job should be done. If there is a full job description, it will provide the manager with information about the job, broken down into its specific task elements. Form this list the trainer can readily observe how the tasks should be performed and their required quality level. 284 ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF APPRAISAL ADVANTAGES • Boss and subordinate have a formal opportunity for a candid exchange of views, provided that the relationship between them and the nature of this appraisal scheme encourages them. • Good performance appraisal systems encourage line mangers to think systematically about career and management development for their subordinates. 285 DISADVANTAGES • The relationship between boss and subordinate is frequently fragile. Manager's words, written or verbal, on what he really feels about the subordinate can be harmful. • Even after training, some mangers have difficulty with appraisal interviews. • Many appraisal systems involve too much paper work. This hinders rather than helps. 286 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. PREPARATION PROCESS OF APPRAISAL Get top management support Clarify management's objectives for performance appraisal Give oral introductory presentations to mangers, trade union representatives and employees and prepare explanatory notes. Train appraisers Make sure that the scheme is effectively implemented -Ensure that promises made in appraisal interviews, for example for further training are carried out 287 288 MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES 289 MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES Multifunctional techniques Components • Definitions – Performance Management systems are attempts to monitor, measure, report, improve and reward employee performance. • Key elements • Objective setting • Formation of objectives • Scope of objectives • How objectives change 290 • • • • • • • • Using objectives MBO process MBO cycle Problems Responsibilities (facilitator) Coaching Counseling Mentoring 291 Definitions: J.W. Humble: - defines MBO: “as a dynamic system which seeks to integrate the company’s need to classify and achieve its profit and growth goals with the manager’s need to contribute and develop himself” George Odiome – MBO defined as “the superior and the subordinate managers of an organisation jointly define its common goals, define each individual’s major areas of responsibility in terms of the results expected of him and use these measures as guides for 292 Koontz et al – define MBO “as a comprehensive managerial system that integrates many key managerial activities in a systematic manner, consciously directed towards the effective and efficient achievement of organizational and individual objectives” 293 KEY ELEMENTS OF MBO • Planning (throughout the organisation) • Leadership and direction (contact between superiors & subordinates in setting objectives) by Odiome • Communication (between senior and junior managers) • Control (setting standards, results monitoring and feedback to be developed) • Motivation ( Druker’s link between MBO and motivation by stressing the self control, selfdirecting and self-motivation aspect of MBO) 294 SETTING OBJECTIVES – should be achievable and measurable Types : Time specific (Timetable to achieve objectives) • Benefit –specific ( Benefits to be derived for organisation) • Description –specific ( To describe clearly objectives) FORMATION OF OBJECTIVES • Objectives are formed under three angles • Management team • Subordinates – put constraints 295 SCOPE OF OBJECTIVES • • • • • • • • Market standing Innovation Productivity Physical and financial resources Profitability Manager performance and development Worker performance and development Public responsibility 296 CHANGING OBJECTIVES – deliberately or by circumstances, permanent/temporary Reasons • Senior Executives’ aspirations change due to past performance of organisation or as compared to its competitors • External pressure like the Union or from new members of staff • Due to priority of objectives from time to time • When objectives are achieved, they need to change • Environmental changes affect objectives 297 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • MBO CYCLE Training & Development Promotion Corporate Plan Strategic Objectives Managers Potential Review Improvement Plan Operating Plan Strategic Objective Performance Review Key Result Areas Managers Objectives 298 ADVANTAGES • Individual objectives are integrated with organizational objectives – all agree they are moving in the same direction. • Suggestions for improvement come from those who see the problems: sections, department and not from Top Management. • MBO ensures that all managers know how well or badly they are performing. • MBO can identify training needs of managers • MBO focuses on planning for results and not work is to be done. – Use results as the arbiter of the effectiveness as put by Koontz. If results 299 PROBLEMS OF MBO • Without proper understanding (process and ideas) it turns out to be checking on people • If objectives are not clear, realistic and concise, with vague targets, it becomes useless. • Objectives without regular review, MBO becomes expensive • In trying to set measurable targets, the reputation of the organisation suffers due to some immeasurable objectives. • Some managers pay lip service to MBO but in reality, do not operate well. 300 • • • • • • • USING OBJECTIVES – CRITERIA Clear, concise and understandable Set with subordinate to gain commitment Achievable but challenging to provide motivation Non – conflicting As quantifiable as possible for control purposes Not too numerous to avoid confusion Allotted to individual – each employee to have his/her own set of objectives 301 MBO PROCESS • Overall objectives and targets – clear definition of the job by subordinates and superiors – identifying key areas. • Key result analysis – noting key tasks in the job to be achieved by a manager Key task • objective Performance standard measure Personal Improvement plan action Control feed back Improvement suggestions Target date – Comment date achieved 302 TASK INVOLVED TO BE EXPLAINED • Know your responsibility and what you are supposed to do. • Performance standard to be explained. • Job, critical task, standard • Performance plan is sold through checking of the company’s previous performance standard 60 – 80% • Setting performance standard. Describe the characteristics of performance management • Performance must be clear and specific 303 PERFORMANCE SUPPORT Performance support – is the process of encouraging, supporting, motivating an employee in order that he/she may improve the performance. It is a nurturing process through the following means: • Provision of necessary resources e.g. money, transportation • Continuous feedback performance through the standard means • Regular meeting and discussion – ie to discuss employees challenges and needs • Encourage innovative thinking and creativity 304 • Creating training and development opportunities – delegation • Taking major decision regarding the company • Helping employees to face challenges in the future PERFORMANCE REVIEW • Performance review is the system of going over employees strengths and weaknesses on regular basis. Performance review should only be done concerning employees performance on the job. Review should be done in relation to matters that are concerned with the job of 305 GUIDELINES FOR PERFORMANCE REVIEW • Do not be bias towards employees or discriminate • Do not be too lenient • Do not be too strict • Do not indulge in workplace politics (where there are too many managers) • Performance discussion • Avoid stereotyping (too much tradition), adapt to change 306 PERFORMANCE DISCUSSION This is where the superior or the boss calls the attention of the subordinates to discuss a particular topic or to reference point that relate to the employees strength or weakness as far as his or her performance is concerned. Employees are allowed to make their opinions known in matters relating to their performance. 307 308 HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING 309 HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING DEFINITION Human Resource Planning is the process by which an organization ensures that it has the right numbers and kinds of people, at the right place, and at the right time, capable of effectively and efficiently completing those tasks that will help the organization achieve its overall objectives. Human Resource Planning thus translates the organization’s objectives and plans into the number of workers needed to meet those objectives. Without clear-cut planning, estimation of an organization's human resource need is reduced to mere guesswork. 310 SIMPLY PUT - Human Resource Planning is a strategy for the acquisition, utilization, improvement and retention of an enterprise" (Department of employment, 1974). Human Resource Planning means, any rational and planned approach for ensuring: 1. The recruitment of sufficient and suitable staff. 2. Their retention in the organization 3. The optimum utilization of staff 4. The improvement of staff performance 5. The disengagement of staff as and when necessary 311 HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING COMPONENTS • Human Resource planning process • Corporate objective • Assessing the demand for labour • Estimating personnel requirements • Assessing the supply of labour • Labour turnover • Eternal lablour market THE PROCESS Four categories of staff important in Human Resource Planning as follows: • Existing staff • New recruits 312 Existing Staff - Performance appraisal Productivity Deployment Equal opportunities Training Remuneration Promotion/career development New recruits Recruitment methods Selection procedures Induction 313 Potential staff- Recruitment methods Public relations Wage/salary levels Employees Leavers Dismissals for poor performance Retirements Redundancy procedures Labour turnover 314 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • THE PLANNING PROCESS – ILLUSTRATION Promotion Succession Plans Tanning Plans Recruitment Plans Personnel Estimates Potential Labour Market Market Demand Demand for Personnel Assess Personnel Supply Corporate Objectives Pay/Productivity Proposal Retirement Redundancy Programmes Periodic Reviews Existing The Human Resource Planning Process 315 Existing Staff Numbers Categories Skills Performance Flexibility (how easy to transfer) Promotability Potential Staff Location Categories (engineers, process workers etc) Skills Trainability Attitudes Competition 316 Less Leavers: Retirement Redundancies Dismissals Profiles 317 LABOUR TURNOVER INDEX It provides information about the ratio of leavers to the average numbers employed during the course of a year. NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES LEAVING DURING A YEAR x100 Average number employed during a year Turnover of 25% Turnover of 100% - Satisfactory major problem 318 Though useful, the labour turn over has disadvantages 1. Does not indicate in which areas of the organization the rate of leavers is high. 2. Does not identify the length of service of the leavers 3. Does not indicate any sudden changes in the numbers employed from one year to the next. 319 LABOUR STABILITY INDEX - links the leaving rate with length of service. Number of leavers with more than one year service x 100 Number employed a year ago This is to identify the extent to which new recruits leave rather than longer–serving employees. 320 LEAVERS BY LENGTH OF SERVICE Period - 1 January to 31 December Employee less than 6 – 12 1–2 3–5 6 – 10 over 10 Category 6 months months yrs yrs yrs yrs _________________________________________________________________ Unskilled Skilled Clerical Supervision Management 321 ADVANTAGES OF STAFF TURN OVER • Provides incentives to recruit fresh staff • Enables organizations to shed staff more easily when redundancies are planned (through natural wastage) • Opens up promotion channels for longer serving employees. • Introduces element of "self - selection" among new employees which may save dismissals at later date 322 DISADVANTAGES • Additional costs of replacement and recruitment • Disputes on production of goods/services • Additional training costs • Wasted investment in people • May lead to difficulties in attracting new staff. 323 THE EXTERNAL LABOUR MARKET Factors Affecting Nature of External Labour Market Importance/ Benefits Of Human Resource Planning (Process To Acquisition, Use And Deployment) • Appropriately skilled and flexible workforce • Ability to respond to change • Stability in the core of the workforce • Reduced need to recruit externally • Improved morale and employee relations (motivation) • Improvement in quality of products/services • Higher productivity 324 RESOURCING STRATEGY - Business plan - How many people likely to be required in the key operation functional areas in the short and long plan - Skills needed in the future - Ability to meet the needs from existing resources if not, where do you find them (required) - How to develop or expand skills base - How to identify people with potential and developing their abilities - Any problem in attracting or retaining key staff - The need to increase employment flexibility - What about downsizing - if any danger, how to solve it. 325 COMPONENTS OF RESOURCING PLAN • Resourcing Plan - planning to find people from within and providing training programme for them (first, before turning outside the organization :or suitable resources • Flexibility Plan- Planning for increased flexibility in the use of human resources to enable the organization to make the best use of people and adapt quality to changing situations. • Retention - Preparing plans for retaining the people the organization needs 326 FACTORS AFFECTING HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING INTERNAL - Business Strategic Plan - Demand/Supply Forecasting - Labour Turnover Analysis - Resourcing Strategy EXTERNAL - Scenario Planning - Work Environment -Operational Effectiveness 327 - Business Strategic Plan (Internal) - Defining future activity levels and -Initiatives and demanding new skills Scenario Planning Assessing in broad terms towards the direction of the organization 328 Demand/Supply Forecasting (External) Estimating the future demand for people (Numbers and skills) and assessing the number of people likely to be available from within and outside the organization Work Environment Analysis - Analyzing the environment in which people work in terms of this scope it provides for them to use and develop their skills and achieve job satisfaction. 329 - Labour Turnover Analysis (Internal) - Analyzing actual Labour turnover figures trends as an input - Resourcing Strategy ( Internal & External) - Planning to achieve competitive advantages by developing Intellectual capital- employing more capable people than trials Ensuring that they develop organizing specific skills and knowledge and talking steps to become employer of choice 330