Steps Of: 1. Assessing Current Human Resources
Steps Of: 1. Assessing Current Human Resources
5. Increasing Supply
An increase in the supply of any unit is human resources can come
from a combination of three sources: new hires, transfers-in or
individuals returning from leaves. The task at predicting these new
inputs can range from simple to complex.
New hires are easy to predict, since they are self-initiated. A unit recruits
to meet its needs and hence, at least in the short term, the number and
types of new hires that will be added can be determined with high
accuracy.
It is more difficult however to predict transfers in to a unit, since they
often depend on concurrent action in other units. While the net effect to
the total organization by a lateral transfer, demotion or promotion may
be zero, there are clear effects on individual departments and the mix
within departments.
Finally, the net effect on internal supply by people returning from ' leaves
must be considered. This would include absences due to maternity,
military, or sabbatical leaves. Such increases however are usually easy to
estimate, since they are usually for some fixed duration--two months, six
months, two years, and so forth.
Decreasing Supply
Decreases in the internal supply can come about through retirements,
dismissals, transfers out of the unit; layoffs, voluntary quits sabbaticals
prolonged illnesses, or deaths. Some of these occurrences are easier to
predict than others. The easiest to forecast are retirements, assuming
that a specific age criterion exists within the organization. If mandatory
retirement occurs at age seventy, there is no difficulty in forecasting.
Those individuals reaching their seventieth birthday will be required to
terminate their ties with the organization. In some organizations, this can
be modified by allowing the individual one-year delays-for example, up
to age seventy-two. However, this can only be done with the agreement
of both the employee and the organization. It is therefore totally
controlled by management and easy to forecast accurately. At the other
extreme, voluntary quits, prolonged illnesses, and deaths are difficult to
forecast. Deaths of employees are the most difficult to forecast because
they are usually unexpected. Although very large organizations can use
probability techniques to estimate the number of deaths that will occur,
such techniques are of course useless for forecasting the exact positions
that will be affected. Voluntary quits can also be predicted by utilizing
probabilities when the population size is fairly large.
In between the extremes, transfers, layoffs, sabbaticals, and dismissals
can be forecast within reasonable limits of accuracy. Since all four of
these types of actions are controllable by management-that is, they are
either initiated by management or are within managements veto
prerogative-each type can be reasonably predicted. Of the four, transfers
out of the unit, such as lateral moves, demotions, or promotions up, are
the most difficult to predict because they depend on openings in other
units. Layoffs are more controllable and forecastable by management,
especially in the short run.
1. Outplacement
Although outplacement services differ, they are intended to
provide career guidance for displaced employees. Guidelines for such an
activity include communicating what is to come; identifying the
displaced employee; retraining those productive employees who can be
placed elsewhere in the organization; and assisting with resume writing,
interviewing techniques, career counseling, and job searching.
2. Layoffs
Layoffs can take many forms. They can be temporary or
permanent. Temporary layoffs usually occur during slack periods when
the work, loads do not warrant such a large work force. As soon as the
work resumes to its normal level, workers are recalled. Although this is a
cost cutting measure it can result in turning workers into cyclical
employees and also increase a company's unemployment insurance
premiums.
Proper human resource planning, leaving the work force at the proper
staffing level, can help reduce this yo-yo" effect. However, proper
staffing may mean a permanent layoff for other employees. When this
occurs, it is hoped that outplacement services are available.
Unfortunately, many workers have been placed on permanent layoff and
have joined countless others in periods of long unemployment.
4. Loaning
The loaning of valuable resources to other organizations is a
means of keeping the loaned" employees on the organization's payroll
and bringing them back after the crisis has subsided. Under the loaning
activity, usually higher-level managers are sent on special projects with
government or quasi-government agencies. The organization pays these
loaned" managers a reduced salary, with the difference usually paid by
the agency. While an organization may ultimately lose some of these
managers, some that have been loaned do return.
5. Work Sharing
Two people split an eight-hour workday, with the remaining time being
spent on individual pursuits. Two people hold one job. and the cost to
the company is no greater than if only one person held the job. In
retrenchment, this option may keep good employees from leaving the
company. They may use the time to do some things they have wanted to
do. And if the company recovers, it has not lost a valuable employee.