Human Resource Managment-Introduction
Human Resource Managment-Introduction
• Human resources
• Financial resources
• Physical resources
• Information resources
1
some prominent writers define management as the process of getting
things done with and through other people.
Some writers in the field and other management people may use such
names as "personnel", "personnel management", "manpower
management", and "employee relations" to say the same thing: human
resource management.
2
performed in utilizing human resources for better achievement of
organizational objectives. Following are the major elements (Mondy &
Noe, 1990):
1. Human Resource Planning
Human resource planning (HRP) is the process of systematically
reviewing human resource requirements to ensure that the
required numbers of employees, with the required skills, are
available when they are needed. HRP is the process of matching
the internal and external supply of people with job openings
anticipated in the organization over a specified period of time.
2. Recruitment
Recruitment is the process of attracting individuals in sufficient
numbers and encouraging them to apply for jobs with the
organization. It is the process of identifying and attracting a pool
of candidates, from which some will later be selected to receive
employment offers.
3. Selection
Selection is the process of choosing from a group of applicants
the individuals best suited for a particular position. Whereas
recruitment encourages individuals to seek employment with a
firm, the purpose of the selection process is to identify and
employ the best qualified individuals for specific positions.
4. Orientation
Orientation is the formal process of familiarizing new employees
with the organization, their job, and their work unit. Through
orientation (also called socialization or induction) new employees
will acquire the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that make them
successful members of the organization.
6. Compensation Administration
Compensation administration refers to the administration of
every type of reward that individuals receive in return for their
services. In its boarder sense, compensation represents all sorts
of rewards that individuals receive as a result of their
employment.
3
7. Performance Evaluation
Performance evaluation is a formal system of periodic review and
evaluation of an individual's job performance.
4
Human resources management (HRM), as it is currently perceived,
therefore, represents the extension rather than the rejection of the
traditional requirements for managing personnel effectively.
1. Scientific Management
5
Frederick Taylor rested his philosophy on some basic principles
(Stoner & Freeman, 1992):
♦ techniques of production
♦ the most efficient method
♦ rigid rules of performance
♦ using the shortest time possible
♦ workers productivity /efficiency
♦ minimum cost of production hence maximum profit
6
♦ highly refined tools and materials
♦ training and closer supervision, etc.
7
♦ the need for recognition, security, and a sense of
belonging is more important in determining workers'
morale and productivity than the physical conditions under
which he works.
8
ASSESS CONDITIONS
External
Organizational
Employee
A skillful administrator knows the various informal organization in
his work environment and he knows their leaders. In discussion
with the leaders of informal groups, he hears opinions, which
might not be openly expressed in formal meetings. This leader
recognizes that the informal organization adds a flexible
dimension, which enables the formal organization to adjust to
special cases and situations.
9
EVALUATE
RESULTS SET OBJECTIVES Planning
CHOOSE ACTIVITIES
Staffing
Development
Compensation
Employee/Labour Relations
10
The external environment is composed of two layers: the general
environment and the task environment.
11
The socio-cultural dimension of the general environment is made
up of the customs, values, and demographic characteristics of
the society in which the organization functions.
• The Customers
• The Suppliers
• The Regulators
• The Owners
12
• The Competitors
• The Partners
All these elements are much close and specific to a given
organization. Whereas the elements of the general environment
affect virtually all organizations in the society, the elements of
the task environment are pertinent (more relevant) to a specific
organization.
• Mission
Mission is the organization's continuing purpose or reason for its
existence. Each management level should operate with a clear
understanding of the firm's mission. The specific organizational
mission must be regarded as a major internal factor that affects the
tasks of human resource management.
• Policy
A policy is a predetermined guide established to provide direction in
decision making. As guides, rather than hard and fast rules, policies
are somewhat flexible, requiring interpretation and judgment in
their use. They can exert significant influence on how human
resource managers accomplish their jobs.
13
- To ensure that current employees are considered first for any
vacant position for which they may be qualified.
• Organizational Culture
As an internal environmental factor affecting human resource
management, organizational culture refers to the organization's
social and psychological climate. Organizational culture is defined
as the system of shared values, beliefs, and habits within an
organization that interacts with the formal structure to produce
behavioral norms.
14
17. What is the difference between the "general environment" and the
"task environment"?
18. Define the internal environment"
19. Describe the components of the "internal environment"
References:
15
CHAPTER- 3
JOB ANALYSIS
Definition
Job analysis is a systematic analysis of each job for the purpose of collecting information
as to what the jobholder does, under what circumstances it is performed and what
qualifications are required for doing the job.
Job analysis deals with complete study of the job embodying every
known and determinable factors, including
1The duties and responsibilities involved in its performance
Job analysis is the determination the task which comprises the job and the skills,
knowledge, abilities, and responsibilities required of the worker for successful
performance and with differentiate the job from all other jobs.
The information collected through job analysis relates to the job and the jobholder. The
requirements relating to the job are termed as job description where as the qualities
16
demanded from a jobholder is known as job specifications.
N. B. Job description and Job specification are the immediate products of job analysis. The
following chart shows the information, which appears in job description and job
specification.
JOB ANALYSIS
17
Step4. Carefully analyze the job – by collecting data on job activities, required
employees behavior, working conditions, and human traits and abilities needed to
perform the job.
Step5. Verify the job analysis information with the worker performing the job and with
his or her immediate supervisor. This review can also help gain the employee’s
acceptance of the job analysis data and conclusions, by giving the person chance to
review and modify your description of the job activities.
Step6. Develop a job description and job specification.
18
evaluation that may affect their pay. They may tend to exaggerate certain
responsibilities while minimizing others.
B. Observation
Direct observation is especially useful when jobs consist mainly of observable physical
activities like assembly worker and accounting clerk. On the other hand, observation is
usually not appropriate when the job entails a lot of mental activities (lawyer, design
engineer). By personal observation, the analysts can come to know about facts relating to
jobs though materials, equipments, working condition etc.
2There is a possibility that either the respondent or the job analyst will misinterpret the
information.
19
employers must be able to show that their selection criteria and job performance are
actually related. Doing this, of course, requires knowing what the job entails – which in
turn requires a job analysis.
♥ Job definition – a job analysis results in a description of the duties and responsibilities
of the job. Such a description is useful to the current jobholders and their supervisors as
well as prospective employees.
♥ Orientation - Effective job orientation cannot be accomplished with out a clear
understanding of the job requirements. The duties and responsibilities of a job must be
clearly defined before a new employee can be taught how to perform the job.
♥ Employee safety –A thorough job analysis often uncovers unsafe practices and
environmental conditions associated with a job. Focusing precisely on how the job is
done usually reveals any unsafe procedures.
♥ Manpower planning –It helps in developing labor supply as labor needs are laid dawn
in clear terms.
♥ Recruitment and selection –Job analysis provides guidance in recruitment and
selection of employees, as specific requirements of the job are laid down in concrete
terms. It provides reliable data on the bases of which the employees are selected.
♥ Promotion and transfer-Job analysis helps in evaluating current employees for
promotion and transfers. If information about the job is available –employees can be
transferred from one department to another with out any complication.
♥ Compensation –job analysis information is crucial for estimating the value of each job
and an appropriate compensation. Compensation (such as salary and bonus )usually
depends on the job required skills and education level, safety hazards, degree of
responsibility, and so on-all factors you can assess through job analysis.
♥ Training and development –The job information helps in determining the content,
context and subject matter of training and development program.
♥ Performance appraisal –The standard of performance for employees can be set on the
bases of information provided by job analysis and actual performance can be compared
with these standards. It helps the management in judging the worth of employees.
♥ Job evaluations-Job analysis provide data determining the value of the job in relation
other jobs on the bases of which actual wages for the jobs are fixed.
20
Job Description
It is factual and organized statement describing the job in terms of its title, location,
duties, responsibilities, working conditions, hazards, and relationship with other jobs. It
tells us what to be done, how it is to be done and why. The main objective of job
description is to differentiate from other jobs and to set out it outer limits. Job description
is an important document as it helps to identify the job and give a clear idea of what the
job is.
21
It provides an idea of vertical workflow and channel of promotion. It also
indicates to whom the jobholder will report and who will report to him/her.
Specimen of job description
Job title: Manager, wage and salary administration
Code number: HR/1705
Department: Human resource division
Job summary: Responsible for company wage and salary programs, job analysis,
job evaluation, wage and s alary surveys and benefit administration.
Job duties:
♣ Supervises job analysis studies and approves final form of descriptions.
♣ Acts as a chairman of company wide job evaluation committee
♣ Conduct periodic wage and salary surveys in the community and industry
♣ Administer the company’s fringe benefits program.
Working conditions:
Normal working conditions Eight hours per days a week.
Supervision:
Reports to director, human resources, and exercise supervision on officers in the wage
and salary department in human resource division of the company.
Relation ships: → with equivalent levels of other departments.
22
Job specification tells what kind of person is required for a given job. It serves as a guide
in the recruitment and selection processes. See the typical example of job specification of
compensation manager below
Specimen of Job specification
Position title: Manager, wage and salary administration.
Department: Human resource division.
Education and training: →A bachelor degree with at least 3.00 CGPA
→A degree or diploma in law will be desirable qualification.
→ MBA with specialization in HRM.
CHAPTER- 4
HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING (HRP)
MEANING
Human resource planning involves forecasting the organization’s future demand for
employees, forecasting the future supply of employees within the organization, and
designing programs to correct the discrepancy between the two.
Human resource planning is the process of translating over all organizational objectives,
plans, and programs to achieve specific performance of work force needs. The systematic
and the continuing process of analyzing an organization’s human resource needs under
changeling conditions and developing personnel policies, appropriate to the long term
effectiveness of the organization.
The purpose of human resource planning is to ensure that, in the future, the organization
has enough employees with the appropriate skill so that it can accomplish its long-term
goals.
23
career opportunities within the company.
B. To achieve more effective and efficient use of people at work
HRP should precede other HRM activities. It is difficult to envision how an organization
could effectively recruit, select, or train employees with out advance planning. In
addition, efficient use of those human resource already employed by an organization can
really be achieved only through careful planning activities. Especially in today’s
competitive business environment reduction of the work force (down sizing) has almost
become a way of life for organizations. HRP is an essential part of this process as well..
24
1. Conducting external and internal environmental scanning
A number of external influences affect the conduct of HR management. These include
Economic conditions, labor market, laws and regulations, and labor union. Accordingly,
these factors are also grist for HR planning.
Of the various areas mentioned through environmental scanning, the labor market is most
directly relevant to HR planning. If tight labor market is expected, the organization must
plan to put considerable time and money in to attracting and retaining the needed talent. It
is also important for an organization to scan its internal environment. The monitoring of
key indexes such as employee performance, absenteeism, turnover, and accident rates
help us to learn what is going on in the organization.
2. Determining future human resource requirement
This step involves considering what the organization’s HR needs will be in the future.
This includes the number of employees that will be needed, the type of skills that will be
required, productivity levels needed to complete successfully, and so forth.
The logical place to begin this process is with an organization’s business plan (long-term
and operational plan). These plans usually indicate major sales, production, and financial
goals. This information tells the human resource planner whether volumes will be going
up, staying the same, or going down.
From organizational plan we can infer whether or not there will be any change in the
basic technologies the organization uses to make, and distribute its products /services.
Such changes typically are introduced as a means of increasing employee productivity
and thus reducing future human resource requirements.
3. Determining future human resource availabilities
The task here is to estimate the number and types of employees that will be available in
various job categories at the end of planning period. This phase of HR planning is
designed to answer the question, “how many and what kinds of employees do I currently
have interims of the skills and training necessary for the future?” It all begins with an
inventory of employees expected to be available in various job categories at the start of
planning period. From these figures are subtracted anticipated losses during planning
period due to retirements ,voluntary turnover , promotions, transfers, death, quits,
resignation and others.
25
4. Determining net manpower requirements
This requires comparing over all personnel requirement with personnel inventory where
the difference is net requirement.
5. Developing action plans
Once the supply and demand of human resource are estimated, adjustments may be
needed. When the internal supply of workers exceeds the firms demand, a human
resource surplus exists. The alternative solutions include: early retirements, demotions,
layoffs, terminations, attrition, voluntary resignation inducement, reclassification,
transfer, work sharing and hire freezing.
Decisions in surplus conditions are some of the most difficult that managers must make,
because the employees who are considered surplus are seldom responsible for the
condition leading to surplus. A shortage of row materials such as fuel or a poorly
designed or poorly marketed product can cause an organization to have a surplus of
employees.
As a first approach to dealing with a surplus, most organizations avoid layoffs by relying
on attrition, early retirements, and creation of work and the like. Many organizations can
reduce their work force simply by not replacing those who retire or quit.
When the internal supply can not fulfill the organization’s needs, a human resource
shortage exists. If the shortage is small and employees are willing to work over time, it
can be filled with present employees. If there is a shortage of highly skilled employees,
transfer, training and promotions of present employees, together with the recruitment of
employees, are possibilities. This decision can also include recalling employees who
were previously laid off. Now days many organizations make use of part time workers,
subcontractors, and independent professionals in response to changing demands. Using
these kinds of employees give an organization surplus of labor than maintaining more
traditional fulltime employees for all jobs.
26
CHAPTER- FIVE
RECRUITMENT
Meaning
Recruitment is the process of searching for prospective employees and stimulating
them to
apply for jobs in the organization. Source of manpower can be internal or external.
Recruitment is the process of attracting potential new employees to the organization.
This HR
program is closely related to selection, because it supplies a pool of qualified
applicants from
which the organization can choose those best suited for its needs.
Recruitment refers to the process of generating job applicants. Obviously, if an
organization
fails to obtain applicants who are qualified for the job, it will face a problem in
selection phase,
like wise, if too few applicants apply, an organization may be unable to fill all of its
vacancies. It
is there fore critical for organizations to identify and properly utilize effective
recruitment
practice. Recruitment needs are of three types: planned, anticipated and unexpected.
27
Planned
needs arise from changes in organization retirement policy. Resignation, death,
accidents and
illness give rise to unexpected needs. Anticipated needs refer to those movements in
personnel,
which an organization can predict by studying trends in external and internal
environments. Features of recruitment
2Recruitment is linking activity as it brings together those with job (employer) and those
seeking jobs (employees).
3Recruitment is a positive function as it seeks to develop a pool of eligible person from
which most suitable ones are selected.
4The basic purpose of recruitment to locate the source of people required to meet job
requirements and attracting such people to offer themselves for employment in the
organization.
5Recruitment is an important function as it makes possible to acquire the number and type of
persons necessary for the continued function of the organization.
6Recruitment is a pervasive function as all organizations engage in recruitment activity. But
the volume and nature of recruitment varies with the size, nature and environment of the
particular organization.
7Recruitment is a complex job because too many factors affect it. E.g., image of the
organization, nature of job offered, organizational polices, working conditions,
compensation levels in the organization and rate of growth of the organization etc.
Sources of recruitment
An organization may fill particular job either with some one already employed by the
organization or with some one from out side. Each of these sources has advantages and
disadvantage.
Internal sources: Internal sources consists of the following
Present employee-permanent, temporary and causal employees already on the pay of the
28
organization are good source. Vacancies may be filed up from such employees through
promotion, transfers, and upgrading and even demotion. Transfer implies shifting of an
employee from one job to another with out any major change in the status and
responsibilities of the employee. On the other hand, promotion refers to shifting of an
employee to a higher position carrying higher status, responsibilities and pay. Retired and
retrenched employees who want to the company may be rehired.
Internal sources have the following advantages:
1Morale and motivation of employees is improved when they are assured that
they will be preferred in filling up vacancies at higher levels. A sense of
security is created among employees.
2Suitability of existing employees can be judged better as record of their
qualifications and performance is already available in the organization.
Chances of proper selection is higher
3It promotes loyalty and commitment among employees due to sense of job
security and opportunities for advancement.
4Present employees are already familiar with the organization and its polices.
Therefore, time and cost of orientation and training is low.
5The time and cost of recruitment is reduced, as there is little need for
advertising vacancies, or arranging rigorous tests and interviews.
6Relations with trade unions remain good because union prefer recruitment
particularly through promotion.
7Filling of a higher-level job through promotion within the organization helps
to retain talented and ambitious employees. Labor turn over is reduced.
8It improves return on investment of human resource.
Internal source, how ever, suffer from some demerits:
First, it may lead to inbreeding. Second, if promotion is based on seniority, really
capable persons may be left out. Third, the choice of selection is restricted. More talented
outsiders may not be employed. Mobility of labor is restricted. Chances of favoritism are
higher and the limited talent of inside restricts growth of business. Finally, this source of
recruitment is not available to a newly established enterprise.
29
External sources
An external source of recruitment is recruitment outside the organization. These are;
A. Campus recruiting
Recruiting from colleges and universities is common practice of both private and public
organizations. In college recruiting the organization sends an employee, called recruiter,
to a campus to interview candidates and describes facts about the organizations to them.
Coinciding with the visit, brochures and other literature about the organization are often
distributed. The organization may conduct seminars at which company executives talk
about various facts of the organization.
From the employer’s perspective, campus recruitment offers several advantages, as well
as several shortcomings. On the positive side, many organizations find the college
campus an effective source of applicants. The placement center typically helps locate
applicants have at least some qualification, since they have demonstrated the ability and
motivation to complete a college degree. Another advantage of campus recruitment is
that students generally have lower salary expectations than more experienced applicants.
On the negative side, the campus recruitment suffers from several distinct disadvantages
compared with other recruitment sources. First, most of the applicants have little or no
work experience. Thus, the organization must be prepared to provide some kind of
training to applicants they hire. Second, campus recruitment tends to depend on seasons.
Third, campus recruiting can be quite expensive for organizations located in another city.
Costs such as airfare, hotels, and meals for recruiters as well as applicants visit can
become quite higher for organizations located at a distance from the university.
B. Walk Ins/unsolicited applications
Many applicants search for jobs either by walking in to organizations and completing an
application blank or by mailing a resume in the hope that a position is available.
Corporate image has a significant impact on the number and quality of people who apply
to an organization in this manner. Compensation policies, working conditions,
relationships with labor, and participation in the community activities are some of the
many factors that can positively or negatively influence an organization’s image.
The major advantage of this source is that it is relatively of low cost, because the
30
company is not spending money to advertise and collect the resumes. On the other hand,
there are several disadvantages. First, although there are no advertising costs, there is a
cost associated with processing and sorting the resumes and application blanks. Second,
minorities are less likely to apply for jobs that have not been advertised.
Thus, heavy reliance on this approach may lead to the under representation of minorities
in the work force, which may result in legal problems. This source tends to favor
applicants who are actively searching jobs; highly qualified applicants who are satisfied
with their current jobs are unlikely to apply.
C. Employee referrals
Many organizations involve their current employees in recruiting process. These
recruiting systems may be informal and operated by word of mouth, or they may be
structured with definite guidelines to be followed. Incentives and bonuses are some times
given to employees who refer subsequently hired people.
Employee referral programs have pros and cons. Current employees can and usually will
provide accurate information about the job applicants they are referring, especially since
they are putting their own reputation on line. The new employees may also come with a
more realistic picture of what working in the firm is like after with friends there. But the
success for the campaign depends a lot on employee morale. And the campaign can back
fire if an employee’s referrals are rejected and the employee becomes dissatisfied. Using
referrals exclusively may also be discriminatory if most of the current employees and
their referrals are male or white. Other draw back to the use of employee referrals is that
cliques may develop within the organization because employees tends to refer only
friends or relatives.
31
negative side , news paper ads tends to attract only individuals who are actively seeking
employment, while some of the best candidates , who are well paid and challenged by
their current jobs, fail to even be aware of these openings. Also, a company may get
many applicants who are marginally qualified or completely unqualified for the job.
Thus, this source may generate a generate a great deal of administrative work for the
organization, with little in return.
F. Recruiting on Internet
A large number and fast growing proportion of employers use the Internet as a recruiting
tool. Employers list several advantages of internet recruiting. First, it is cost effective:
Newspapers can charge from $50 to $100 to several thousands dollars for print ads; job
listings on the internet may cost as little as $10 each. The newspaper ads may keep
attracting applications for 30 days or more. Internet recruiting can also be more timely.
Responses to electronic job listing may come the day the ads is posted, where the
responses to news paper ads can take a week just to reach an employer. Some employers
cite just such a flood of responses as a down side of internet recruiting. The problem is
that the relative ease of responding to internet ads encourages unqualified job seekers to
32
apply; further more, applications may arrive from geographic areas that are un
realistically far away.
♣ People having the requisite skill, education and training can be obtained.
♣ As recruitment is done from a wider market, best selection can be made irrespective
of caste, sex,
or religion
♣ Expertise and experience from other organization can be obtained.
♣ This source recruitment never “dries up”. It is available to even new enterprises.
♣ It helps to bring new blood and new ideas into the organization, their orientation and
training is
necessary
External sources, however, suffer from the following disadvantages;
◊ It is more expensive and time-consuming to recruit people from outside. Detailed
screening is
necessary as very little is known about the candidates
◊ The employees being un familiar with the organization, their orientation and training
is necessary
◊ If higher levels are filled from the external source, motivation and loyalty of existing
staff are
affected.
33
SELECTION
MEANING
Selection is the process by which an organization chooses from a list of applicants the
person or persons who best meet the selection criteria for the position available,
considering current environmental conditions.
Selection is the process of matching the qualification of applicants with job requirement.
Selection divides all applicants into the categories- suitable and unsuitable, selection may
be described as a process of rejection because generally more candidates are turned away
than the hired. Selection differs from recruitment. Recruitment technically precedes
selection. Recruitment involves identifying the source of manpower and stimulating them
to apply for jobs in the organization. On the other hand, selection is the process of
choosing the best out of those recruited. Recruitment is positive as it aims at increasing
the number of applicants for wider choice or increase selection ratio. Selection is negative
as it rejects a large number of applicants to identify the few who are suitable for the job.
Recruitment involves prospecting or searching whereas selection involves comparison
and choice of candidates. The purpose of selection is to pick up the right person for every
job. Selection is an important function as no organization can achieve its goals with out
selecting the right people. Faulty selection leads to wastage of time and money and spoil
the environment of the organization.
34
difficult .If an organization hires poor performers, it can not be successful long, even if it
has a perfect plan and good control system s. In today’s business what makes the kind of
human resource you have, not technology or financial resource.
3Selection affects other HR functions. If less qualified people are selected, then it will be
necessary to budget funds for training them.
Environmental factors affecting selection process.
A. Legal considerations
HRM is influenced by legislation, executive orders, and court decisions. Managers who
hire employees must have extensive knowledge of the legal aspects of selection. They
must see the relationship between useful and legally defensible selection tools.
B. Organizational hierarchy
Different methods of selection are taken for filling positions at varying levels in the
organization. For example, extensive background checks and interviewing would be
conducted to verify the experience and capabilities of the applicant for the sale’s manager
position. On the other hand, an applicant for a clerical position (secretary) would most
likely take only a word processing test and perhaps a short employment interview.
C. Probationary period
Many Organizations use a probationary period that permits them to evaluate an
employee’s ability based on established performance. Probationary period is required for
either of the following two reasons.
1. a substitute for certain phases of the selection process (If the an individual can
successfully perform the job during the probationary period , other selection
tools may not be needed) or
35
2. a check on the validity of the selection process ( to determine whether the
hiring decision was a good one)
SELECTION CRITERIA
Categories of criteria
The criteria typically used by organizations for making selection decision can be
summarized in several broad categories: education, experience, physical characteristics,
and other personal characteristics.
A. Formal education
An employer selecting from a pool of job applicants wants to find the person who has the
right abilities and attitudes to be successful. A large number of cognitive, motor,
physical, and interpersonal attributes are present because of genetic predispositions and
because they were learned at home, at school, on the job and so on. One of the more
common cost- effective ways to screen of many of these abilities is by using educational
accomplishment as a surrogate for of summary of the measures of those abilities. Rather
than using a selection test to measure each of these, the organization might simply require
that applicants have proof that they have completed the specified level of education. For
certain jobs, the employer might go one or more steps further than simply requiring than
36
a certain educational level has been achieved; The employer may stipulate that the
education (especially for college-level requirements) is in a particular area of expertise,
such as accounting or management. The employer might also prefer that the degree be
from certain institutions that the grade point average be higher than some minimum, and
those certain honors have been achieved.
C. Physical characteristics
In the past, many employers consciously or unconsciously used physical characteristics
as a criterion. Studies found that employers were most likely to hire and pay better wages
to taller men, and airlines choose flight attendants and company receptionists on the base
of beauty. Many times such practices discriminated against ethnic groups, women, and
hind capped people. For this reason, they are now illegal unless it can be shown that a
physical characteristics is directly related to effectiveness at work. Fore example, visual
acuity (eyesight) would be a physical characteristic that could be used to hire airline
pilots. It might not, however, be legally used for hiring a telephone reservations agent for
an airline.
37
have assumed that married people have a lower turnover rate. On the other hand, other
employers might seek out single people fore some jobs since a single person might be
more likely to accept a transfer or a lengthy over sees assignment. Age, too, has some
times been used as a criterion. While it is illegal to discriminate against people who are
over the age 40. However, minimum and maximum age restrictions for the job be used
only if they are clearly job related. Thus, age should be used as a selection criterion only
after very careful thought and consideration.
SELECTION PROCESS
The selection process consists of a series of steps. At each stage facts may come to light,
which may lead to rejection of the applicant. It is a series of successive hurdle or barriers,
which an applicant must cross. These hurdles are designed to eliminate an unqualified
candidate at any point in the selection process. However, every selection procedure dose
not contains all these hurdles. Moreover, the arrangement of these hurdles may differ
from organization to organization. There is no standard selection procedure to be used in
all organization or for all jobs. The complexity 0f election procedure increase with the
level and responsibility of the position to be filled. The strategy and method used for
selecting employees varies from firms to firm and from one job to another.
1. Application blank: Application form is a traditional and widely used device for
collecting information from the candidates. Small firms design no application form and
ask the candidates to write details about their age, marital status, education, work
experience, etc. on a plan of sheet of paper. But big companies use different type of
application forms for different jobs. The application form should provide all the
information relevant to selection.
38
2. Preliminary interviews: The preliminary interview is used to determine whether the
applicant’s skills, abilities, and the job preferences match any of the available jobs in the
organization, to explain to the applicant the available jobs and d their requirements, and
to answer any questions the applicant has about the available jobs or the employer. A
preliminary interview is usually conducted after the applicant has completed the
application form. It is generally a brief, explanatory interview screens out unqualified or
un interested applicants. Interview questions must be job related and are not subject to
demonstration of validity.
3. Employment test: A technique that some organizations use to aid their selection
decisions is
employment test. An employment test is a mechanism that attempts to measure
certain
characteristics of individuals. The basic categories of tests are:
i. Aptitude test: means of measuring a person’s capacity or latent ability to learn
and perform the job
ii. Psychomotor test: test that measures a person’s strength, dexterity, and Coordination.
iii. Job knowledge test: Tests used to measure the job related knowledge of the
applicants.
iv. Proficiency test: tests used to measure how well a job applicant can do a
sample of the work to be performed in the job.
v. Interest Test: tests designed to determine how a person’s interest compared
with the interest of successful people in a specific job.
vi. Personality test: tests that attempt to measure personality traits.
vii. Polygraph test: the polygraph, popularly known as the lie detector, is a de
vice that records physical changes in the body as the test subject answers a
serious of questions. The polygraph records fluctuations in blood pressure, respiration,
and perspiration on a moving roll of graphic paper. The polygraph operator makes a
judgment as to whether the subject’s response was truthful or deceptive by studying
the physiological measurements recorded on paper
viii. Graphology (hand writing analysis): use of trained analysis to examine a person’s
hand writing to assess the personality, emotional problems, and honesty.
39
4. Secondary or follow-up interview or Employment interview
Most organizations use the second or follow up interview as an important step in the
selection process. Its purpose is to supplement information obtained in other steps in the
selection process to determine the suitability of an applicant for a specific opening. All
questions asked during an interview must be job related
There are different types of interview and different organizations use one or more of them
to make their selection choices. Interview types that are generally used are discussed
below.
I. Structured interview
In this form of interview, the interviewer follows a predetermined approach designed
to ensure that all pertinent factors relating to he candidate’s qualifications suitability
for the job will be gone over. This type of interview also allows an interviewer to
prepare in advance, questions that are job-related and then complete a standardized
interviewer evaluation form.
40
question s. little preparation is required on the part of the interviewer. The interviewer
asks general questions designed to prompt the candidate to discuss him or her self and
often uses a thought or idea expressed on one response as the base for the next
question. The tremendous plus point of the unstructured approach is the freedom the
interviewer has to adapt both to the changing situations and a variety of candidates.
The difficulties, however, lie in the maintenance of job –relatedness and obtaining of
comparable data on each applicant. Spontaneity is the chief characteristics of this
approach but the pitfalls are daunting. In the hands of untrained interviewer, biases
invariably creep in and digressions, discontinuity and a host of subjective elements
may well destroy or negate the fundamental objective of selecting the best available
talent.
IV. Stress interview
This is a special type of interview designed to asses and provides use full information
as to whether a person would be able to cope with stress on the job or not. Stress
interviews are deliberate attempts to create tension and pressure in an applicant to see
how well he or she responds to those tensions and pressures. Methods used to induce
stress, ranges from frequent interruptions and criticism of an applicant’s opinion, to
keeping silent for an extended period of time.
V. Depth Interview
In this case, an attempt is made to cover completely the life history of the applicant
and develop a comprehensive profile based on in-depth understanding of the frozen
aspects of the frozen aspects of his or her personality such as education, extra-
curricular activities, early childhood experiences, etc. as well as the flexible aspects
such as hobbies , interests , hopes , desires, aspirations , goals etc . This is a time
consuming and costly approach best suited for executive selection rather than blue or
white collar workers, its major advantage is in getting a complete, detailed
understanding of the candidate but the price paid in terms of time and money need to
be carefully weighed.
Problems in Interviews
41
Despite the wide spread use of the employment interview, it continues to be the
source of a variety of problems of the selection process. There is no doubt that
problems of reliability can develop in the use of interviews when they are less
structured or conducted by relatively untrained interviewers. Following is a list of
some sources of errors in the interview process.
a. Contrast effects or Hallow effect: The order of interviewees’ influence
ratings. For instance , Strong candidates who succeed weak ones look even
stronger by contrast
b. Similarity to interviewer: interviewee’s similarity in sex, age, ethnicity,
religion and or attitude to interviewers may lead to favorable evaluation at the
expense of the expectations of the job.
c. Non-verbal signals: interviewers often fall in to the trap of using non- verbal
behavior patterns as a basis for reaching a decision. Factors such as how a
candidate looks, sits in the chair , maintains eye contact, fidgets or his or her
facial expressions may be allowed to become overriding criteria and this can
easily in by –passing competent candidates
d. Interviewer lack of knowledge: Where this happens there is almost
invariably a miscarriage of justice. The interviewer’s lack of familiarity with
job requirements prevents him or her from identifying those characteristics in
the candidate that makes him or her suitable for the job. Instead, he or she
might well be eliminated for the wrong reasons.
e. Over –emphasis on negative characteristics: quite often, there is a natural
human tendency on the part of interviewers to succumb to the pitfall of
assigning undue emphasis to one or two negative qualities of the applicant .
Very many good aspects suited to the job at hand may be ignored in the
process, the interviewer must consciously attempt to look beyond small
drawbacks in the candidate and take an objective, brad –based view.
f. Snap judgment: there is a tendency for the interviewers to make up their
minds on the first impression of the candidate. Based on the first observation
of the applicant and the first few minutes of discussion, a judgment is arrived
at which in fact, may be quite erroneous. Too often, interviewers from an
42
early impression and spend the rest of the time looking for evidence to support
it. The attempt, on the other hand, should be to collect comprehensive
information about the candidate and reserve judgment until various aspects
and areas have been probed.
5. Reference Checks
The applicant is asked to mention in his application form the names and addresses of two
or three persons who know him or her well. They may be his or her previous employers,
head of educational institutions or public figures. The organization contacts them by mail
or telephone. They are requested to provide their frank opinion about the candidate with
out incurring any liability. They are assured that all the information supplied will kept
confidential.
6. Selection Decision
In most of the organizations, the human resource department carries out selection
process. The decision of this department is recommendatory. The executive of the
concerned department finally approves the candidates short-listed by the department.
43
c)It prevents the employment of people suffering from contagious diseases.
How cost effective was the advertising? A simple way to measure is to divide the cost
(not only in birr but in your time) by either the number of total applicants or the number
of applicants that you considered seriously.
Were there questions that needed to be asked but weren’t?
How well did the interviewers do? One way to determine this is to ask the new employee
to critique the interviewing process.
Did employment tests support or help the hiring decision? If not, may be the firm will
have to reconsider the kinds of tests it is administering. Further, the evaluation process
should help the firm decide if the cost and the time involved in the testing is worth it.
Would you have come to the same hiring decision without testing?
44
3. Induction/Orientation
Orientation is the process of acquainting new employees with the organization. Orientation
topics range from such basic items as the location of the company cafeteria to such concerns
as various career paths within the firm.
Hence we can say that induction or orientation is the process through which a new employee
is introduced to the job and the organization. In the words of Armstrong, induction is "the
process of receiving and welcoming an employee when he first joins a company and giving
him the basic information he needs to settle down quickly and start work”.
Orientation is designed to provide a new employee with the information he or she needs to
function comfortably and effectively in the organization. It conveys three types of
information:
General information about the daily work routines;
Organization history, objectives, operations, products, etc.
45
Organization policies, work rules and employee benefits.
Purposes of orientation
In general, induction serves the following purposes:
a. Removes fears: A newcomer steps into an organization as a stranger. He is new to the
people, workplace and work environment. He is not very sure about what he is supposed to
do. Induction helps a new employee overcome such fears and perform better on the job. It
assists him in knowing more about:
• The job, its content, policies, rules and regulations.
• The people with whom he is supposed to interact. .
• The terms and conditions of employment.
b. Creates a good impression: Another purpose of induction is to make the newcomer feel
at home and develop a sense of pride in the organization. Induction helps him to:
• Adjust and adapt to new demands of the job.
• Get along with people.
• Get off to a good start.
Through induction, a new recruit is able to see more clearly as to what he is supposed to do,
how good the colleagues are, how important is the job, etc. He/she poses questions and seeks
clarifications on issues relating to his/her job. Induction is a positive step, in the sense; it
leaves a good impression about the company and the people working there in the minds of
new recruits. They begin to take pride in their work and are more committed to their jobs.
Some of the benefits of good employee orientation include the following: Strong loyalty to
the organization; Greater commitment to organizational values and goals; Low absenteeism;
46
higher job satisfaction and Reduction in turnover.
Content of induction
The areas covered in employee induction program may be stated as follows:
1. Organizational issues
History of company; Names and titles of key executive; Employees' title and department;
Layout of physical facilities; Probationary period; Products/services offered; Overview of
production process; Company policy and rules; Disciplinary procedures; Safety steps;
Employees' handbook.
2. Employee benefits
Pay scales, pay days; Vacations, holidays; Rest pauses; Training Avenues; Counseling;
Insurance, medical, recreation, and retirement benefit.
3. Introductions
To supervisors; to co-workers; to trainers; and to employee counselor
47
4. Job duties
Job location; Job tasks; Job safety needs; Overview of jobs; Job objectives; Relationship with
other jobs
2. Effective induction can minimize the impact of reality shock some new employees may
undergo. Often, fresher join, the organization with very high expectations, which may be far
beyond the reality. When they come across with reality, they often feel shocked. By proper
induction, the newcomers can be made to understand the reality of the situation. Every
organization has some sort of induction program either formally or informally. In large
organizations where there are well-developed personnel functions, often induction program
are undertaken on formal basis, usually through the personnel department. In smaller
organizations, the immediate superior of the new employee may do this.
Socialization
Socialization is a process through which a new recruit begins to understand and accept the
values, norms and beliefs held by others in the organization. HR department representatives
help new recruits to internalize the way things are done in the organization.
Orientation helps the newcomers to interact freely with employees working at various levels
and learn behaviors that are acceptable. Through such formal and informal interaction and
discussion, newcomers begin to understand how the department/ company is run, who holds
power and who does not, who is politically active within the department, how to behave in
the company, what is expected of them, etc. In short, if the new recruits wish to survive and
48
prosper in their new work home, they must soon come to 'know the ropes'.
The other company customizes its initiation programs to suit the profile of the new recruit.
For engineers, the program is offered in four parts: (1) familiarize with various functions and
meet division heads (ii) work on shop floor (iii) work at various other departments (iv) work
finally in departments for about 2 months, where they will eventually work.
In the last company the management trainees are picked up from premium B - schools and
undergo introduction training for about 6 months. During this period, the trainees see the
various divisions of the bank to get a holistic view of the bank's operations, and get a chance
to meet each of the bank's business heads. A two-day session dedicated to team building is
also conducted thereafter. After taking charge of the job, the new recruits have to attend a
review session about the job itself.
A. Promotion
Promotion means an improvement in pay, prestige, position and responsibilities of an
employee within his/her organization. A mere shifting of an employee to a different job
which has better working hours, better location and more pleasant working conditions does
not constitute promotion. The new job is a promotion for the employee when it carries
increased responsibility and enhanced pay.
49
Purposes of Promotion
To motivate employees to higher productivity
To attract and retain the services of qualified and competent employees
To recognize and reward the efficiency of an employee
To increase the effectiveness of the employee and of the organization.
To fill up higher vacancies from within the organization
To build loyalty, morale, and sense of belongingness in the employee
To impress upon others that opportunities are available to them too in the organization, if
the perform well.
Types of Promotion
A promotion involves an increase in status, responsibilities and pay. But in certain cases only
the pay increases and the other elements remain stagnant. In other cases, the status only
increases without a corresponding increase in pay or responsibilities. Depending on which
elements increase and which remain stagnant, promotions may be classified into the
following types.
i. Horizontal Promotion
This type of promotion involves an increase in responsibilities and pay, and a change in
designation. But the employee concerned does not transgress (go beyond the limit) the job
classification. For e.g. lower division clerk will be promoted to upper division clerk. In this
case there is no change in the nature of the job.
ii. Vertical Promotion
This type of promotion results in greater responsibility, prestige and pay, together with a
change in the nature of the job.
50
B. Transfers
A transfer involves a change in the job (accompanied by a change in the place of the job) of
an employee without a change in responsibilities or remuneration. It differs from a promotion
in that the later involves a change in which a significant increase in responsibility, status, and
income occurs, but all these elements are stagnant in the former. Another difference is that
transfers are regular and frequent, but promotions are infrequent, if not irregular.
Types of transfers
Broadly speaking, transfers may be classified into three types:
51
Those designed to enhance training and development
Those making possible adjustment to varying volumes of work within the firm
Those designed to remedy the problems of poor placement
Specifically, transfers may be production, replacement, versatility, shift and remedial.
i. Production transfers
A shortage or surplus of the labor force is common in different departments in a plant or
several plants in an organization. Surplus employees in a department have to be laid-off,
unless they are transferred to another department. Transfers affected to avoid such imminent
lay-offs are called production transfers.
ii. Replacement Transfers
Replacement transfers, too, are intended to avoid imminent lay-offs, particularly, of senior
employees. A junior employee may be replaced by a senior employee to avoid laying off the
later. A replacement transfer program is used when all the operations are declining and is
designed to retain long-service employees as long as possible.
iii. Versatility transfer
Versatility transfers are affected to make employees versatile and competent in more than
one skill. Versatile options are valuable assets during rush periods and periods when work is
dull. Versatile transfers may be used as a preparation for production or replacement transfer.
iv. Shift transfers
Generally speaking, industrial establishments operate more than one shift. Transfers between
shifts are common, such transfers being made mostly on a rotation basis. Transfers may be
effected on special requests from employees.
v. Remedial Transfer
Remedial transfers are affected at the request of employees and are, therefore, called personal
transfers. It takes place because the initial placement of an employee may have been faulty or
the worker may not get along with his or here supervisor or with other workers in the
department. He or she may be getting too old in his or her regular job, or the type of job or
working conditions may not be well-adapted to his or her present health or accident record. If
the job is repetitive, the worker may stagnate and would benefit by transfer to a different kind
of work.
52
C. Separations
When a person joins an organization, the main aim is to work and develop oneself but that
does not necessarily mean that the person will continue working with that organization only.
Besides that there can be various other reasons that may force an individual to leave the
organization.
Separation refers to employee leaving the organization. It means end of service with the
organization. It is called “negative recruitment”.
Exit simply put means separation from the organization. It may take the form of retirement,
either compulsory or voluntary, resignation, dismissal, lay-off or retrenchment. Though it is
end of relationship of an organization with an employee but it can give important guidelines
to an organization about the way it works and what change may be required. Separations are
painful to both the parties and should, therefore be administered carefully.
There may be many causes of separation/employee exit. Broadly these causes can be
classified under the following headings - Avoidable causes and Non avoidable
causes/unavoidable causes.
Lay-offs
A lay-off is a temporary separation of the employee from his or her employer at the instance
of the latter without any prejudice to the former. In other words, it refers to separation of
employees for an indefinite period due to reasons, much beyond the control of employer. It is
intended to reduce financial burden of organization. It may be for a definite period on the
expiry of which the employee will be recalled by the employer for duty. It may be occasioned
by one of the following reasons: Shortage of raw materials; accumulation of stocks;
breakdown machinery and for any other reason.
53
As the employees are laid off at the instance of the employee, they have to be paid
compensation for the period they are laid off.
The basis for the lay-off may be merit or seniority. If merit is the basis, employees with
unsatisfactory performance are laid of first. If seniority is used as the basis of lay off, then the
employees with the shortest period of service will be first laid off and the older employees
are retained as long as conditions permit. The basis for recalling the employees as soon as the
lay-off is lifted needs to be made clear. Naturally key employees must be the first to be
recalled.
Top management has to decide who are to be laid down. By and large “last in first out
(LIFO)” principle is used; when they are recalled and reemployed, last out first in (LOFI)
principle is used.
Resignations
A resignation refers to the termination of employment at the instance of the employee. This is
a manner of separation taken up by the employee. An employee resigns when he or she
secures a better job elsewhere, or when an employee suffers form ill health, and for other
reasons. The administration of separation caused by resignation is very simple because the
employee himself/herself is responsible for it. However, such process by employee can be in
either of the following two ways - Voluntary resignation and Induced resignation.
In voluntary resignation, the employee seeks separation from the organization due to reasons
of personal nature like lack of promotional opportunities, chances of better employment
elsewhere, health reasons, reasons of dissatisfaction of job etc.
On the other hand, induced resignation implies avoiding termination on grounds of discipline.
Meaning the individual may be induced or persuaded to leave due to any other serious
charges brought against him/her, and the proceedings of which might result in conviction and
termination of service.
Dismissal or discharge
Dismissal is the termination of services as a punishment for some major offences done by the
employee. Such punishment is awarded through a judicial or quasi-judicial process in which
ample opportunity is given to the employee who has been accused to defend him/her, call
54
witnesses in defending his/her case, etc. A dismissal needs to be supported by just and
sufficient reason. Principle of natural justice is applied in such proceedings and also in the
award of punishment. In case the reason of discharge is attributed to incompetence, poor
health or those due to organizational reasons, the employee must be given adequate notice
and must be properly explained the reasons of discharge.
The following reasons lead to the dismissal of an employee: Excessive absenteeism; Serious
misconduct; False statement of qualification at the time of employment and Theft of
company’s property.
Suspension
When any serious charge is brought to light against an employee, and a prime-facie case is
made out against him, it is normally a practice to suspend the employee, during the period of
investigation. These are done mostly for the purpose of preventing the employee from
tampering with the documents or influence the witness by making use of his opportunity and
power, which such employment provides.
During the suspension period, he is paid a reduced amount of salary, which is called
“subsistence allowance”. Depending on the results of the enquiry, at the end, he is either re-
established if found “not guilty” or discharged or dismissed if found “guilty” of charges. If he
is re-established, the areas of pay and allowances during period of suspension are paid to him
and his service seniority is restored.
Retrenchment
It refers to the termination of the services of employees because of the replacement of labour
by machines or the closure of a department due to continuing lack of demand for the products
manufactured in that particular department of the organization. In other words, it is the
termination of the services of an employee, permanently due to any reason, which is
economical but not discipline. It is acceptable if it can be proved, that retrenchment alone can
save the company. This may happen due to change of technology, competition, high-rise of
cost of production, mounting losses etc. On retrenchment, employee is entitled for gratuity in
addition to some compensation. The general principle for retrenchment is “last in first out
55
(LIFO)”.
Retrenchment differs from lay-off in that, in the latter, the employee continues to be in the
employment of the organization and is sure to be recalled after the end of the period of lay-
off. But in retrenchment the employee is sent home for good, and his or her connections with
the company are severed immediately.
Retrenchment differs from dismissal as well. An employee is dismissed because of his or her
own fault. On the other hand, retrenchment is forced on both the employer and the
employees. Moreover, retrenchment involves the termination of the services of several
employees. But dismissal generally involves the termination of the service of one or two
employees.
Retirement
Here there are two ways in which retirement can take place.
i.Compulsory retirement schemes
This type of separation method applies to persons working in an organization who have
reached a particular age. Currently most employers fix their compulsory retirement ages at
between 60 and 65.
ii.Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS)
VRS is yet another type of separation. Beginning in the early 1980s, companies both in
public sector and in private sector have been sending home surplus labor for good, not strictly
by retrenchment, but by a novel scheme called the VRS, also known as the Golden Hand
Shake Plan. Handsome compensations are paid to those workers who opt to leave.
Management prefers pay hefty sums and reduces staff strength than retaining surplus labour
and continuing to pay them idle wages. Further, VRS is perceived as a painless and time-
saving method of trimming staff strength, easing out unproductive older workers and other
56
dead wood. Unions, too, can not object as the schemes are voluntary.
57
ABSENTEEISM AND TURNOVER
1. Absenteeism
• Refers to the failure on the part of employees to report to work though they are scheduled to
work. In other words, unauthorized absences constitute absenteeism.
• is calculated as follows:
Number of persons - days lost
Average number of persons X number of working days
If the absenteeism rate is four percent, then only 96 out of 100 people are available for work.
It amounts to absenteeism when an employee is scheduled to work but fails to report for duty.
Obviously absenteeism reduces the number of employees available for work. It costs money
to the organization, besides reflecting employee dissatisfaction with the company.
Avoidable absenteeism arises because of night shifts, opportunities for moonlighting and
earning extra income, indebtedness, lack of job security, job dissatisfaction and unfriendly
supervision. This absenteeism needs intervention by the management. Managers should take
steps to remove causes of absenteeism. On the positive side, managers must create a work
environment which will make the employees realize that it makes sense to work in the
factory rather than staying at home and waste their time.
Controlling Absenteeism
Many factors influence whether employees attend work on any particular day. The two most
immediate causes are the employee's ability to attend and motivation to attend.
Ability corresponds closely to involuntary absenteeism. Major reasons employees may not be
able to attend include personal illness, family problems that keep employees from the job,
and difficulties with personal or public transportation. Although involuntary absenteeism of
this sort can be predicted to some extent (and hence controlled) through the selection process,
58
factors influencing ability to attend are not easily changed by management actions.
The major opportunity to control absenteeism comes through the employee's motivation to
attend. Managers often try to influence motivation through direct policies and practices
regarding attendance. Most common are policies against voluntary absenteeism, frequently
combined with penalties for offenders. These policies, however, appear to be generally
ineffective.
More promising results come from organizations that have experimented with the use of
positive rewards for good attendance, such as cash bonus, recognition, or time off with pay.
Although not always successful, such policies often reduce absenteeism.
Some organizations are also taking a second look at traditional paid-sick leave policies.
Increasingly, managers believe that sick leave plans that provide payment for a fixed number
of days’ leave each year actually encourage absenteeism. Employees see sick leaves as a
benefit to be used whether needed or not. Recommendations to reduce the use of such plans
(that is improved attendance) typically involve some positive rewards if sick days are
accumulated rather than taken.
In summary, attendance is contingent on many factors. Some of these are outside the control
of the individual and hence are essentially outside management’s ability to influence. Others,
however, appear to be at least partially within the organization’s control. Positive rewards for
good attendance (such as cash bonuses, recognition, or time-off with pay), perhaps combined
with negative sanctions for absenteeism, can lead to improved attendance.
59
2. Turnover
Turnover is the shifting or movement of a workforce into and out of a business enterprise.
Managerial activities necessary to control involuntary turnover are very different from
activities required to control voluntary turnover.
Voluntary turnover presents yet another set of issues for management to consider. It is caused
by many factors. Major influences are employee’s perceptions of the ease of movement and
the desirability of movement. Ease of movement depends largely on the personal
characteristics of the employees and on economic conditions. For example, employees with
the best work qualifications are likely to find it easier to leave and find alternative
employment opportunities. Also young employees are much more likely to terminate
voluntarily than the older employees. Economic conditions as reflected by unemployment
levels are negatively related to voluntary turnover.
A major factor that influences desirability to leave is employee satisfaction. The greater the
satisfaction, the lower the probability of leaving. The relationship is especially strong when
economic conditions in the external labor market are favorable.
60
CHAPTER- 5
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
A. Definition
Performance appraisal can be defined as a human resource activity that is used to
determine the extent to which an employee is performing his job effectively. Performance
is said to be a result of employee’s efforts abilities and role perception.
61
C. Who appraises the employee performance?
In designing an appraisal system, another significant factor worthy of consideration is the
appraiser. Who should actively make the appraisal?. The individual and group of
individuals who usually do the appraisal include the immediate supervisor, employee’s
peers, employees themselves (self- appraisal), and subordinates.
I. Immediate Supervisor
Appraisal of employees’ performance by their supervisors is the traditional and most
frequently used approach. In fact, this is one of the major responsibilities of all managers.
This approach is used because it is assumed that the supervisor has greatest opportunity
to observe the subordinate’s behavior. It is also assumed that the supervisor is able to
interpreter and analyzes the employee’s performance in light of the organization
performance objectives. In most organizations, the employee’s supervisor is responsible
for making reward decisions such as pay and promotion. If the immediate supervisor
appraises the employee, the supervisor can possibly link effective performance with
rewards. Supervisors are also in the best position to know the job requirements, to
observe employees at work and to make the best judgment.
62
In many organization self – appraisal is used for developmental purpose. It is getting
acceptance that comprehensive self-appraisal may serve as a vehicle of professional
improvement, ensuring lasting change and development of employee’s competence and
quality of performance. Self –appraisal helps an employee to analyze his or her actual
current level of performance in the light of desired performance competence. It is also
generates performance data on weakness, strength and potential of the employee, which
the appraiser, in the time of appraisal program, might not ascertain.
B.Establishing evaluation policies on when to rate, how to rate and who should rate
63
E. PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL METHODS
64
result in each paired comparison. The process is repeated until each employee has been
compared to every other employee on all of the chosen performance criteria. The
employee with the most check mark is considered to be the best performer. Likewise, the
employee with the fewest check marks is taken as the least performer. One major
problem with the paired comparison method is that it becomes too wide especially when
comparing more than five or six employees.
65
VII. Checklist method
This is performance evaluation method in which the rater answers with a yes or no, a
series of questions about the behavior of the employee being rated.
66
I. Unclear standards of evaluation
Problems with evaluation standards arise because of perceptual differences in the
meanings of the words used to evaluate employees. Thus good, adequate, satisfactory and
excellent may mean different things to different evaluators. This difficulty arises most
often in graphic rating scales but may also appear with essays, critical incidents and
checklists. There are several ways to minimize this problem. The best way is to develop
and include descriptive phrases that define the meaning of each dimension or factor and
training raters to apply all ratings consistently which will at least reduce the potential
rating problems.
67
IV. Constant error
This problem occurs when a supervisor has a tendency to rate all subordinates either high
or low. Some raters see every thing as good- these are lenient raters. Others-raters see
everything as bad these are harsh raters. This strictness or leniency problem is especially
severe with graphic rating scales, when firms do not tell their supervisors to avoid giving
all their employees high or low ratings. One mechanism used to reduce harsh and lenient
rating is to ask raters to distribute ratings- forcing a normal distribution. For example, 10
percent of subordinates will be rated as excellent, 20 percent rated as good, 40 percent
rated as fair, 20 percent rated below fair, and 10 percent rated as poor.
68
VII. Personal bias error
A personal bias rating error is an error related to a personal bias held by a supervisor.
There are several kinds of personal bias errors; some can be conscious such as
discrimination against some one because of the appraiser’s personal characteristics like
age, sex and race. Some supervisors might try to “play favorites” and rate the people they
like better than people they do not like. Other personal bias errors occur when a rater
gives a higher rate because the worker has qualities or characteristics similar to the rater.
.
IX. Problem with the appraised
For a system of performance appraisal to function well, it is important that employees
regard it as potentially valuable to improve their competence and to achieve
organizational goals successfully. However, most efforts of performance evaluation are
narrowly focused and oversimplified that they give little regards to the favorable
perception of employees.
A substantial amount of employee’s negative attitude towards appraisal results from their
doubt about the validity and reliability, and performance feedback or ratings presented by
their appraisers. Employees often question appraisers’ competence in appraisal, and
consequently tend to lose trust and confidence in their appraisers and often resist
accepting performance ratings.
Another appraisal problem often realized is employees’ reaction to appraisal result of low
ratings. Most employees have difficulty in facing up to appraisal results involving
negative feedback about their performance. Such a feedback often develops in employees
a sense of tension, friction, insecurity, embarrassment, frustration, anger, resentment, and
anti- feelings and action.
Performance appraisal may be less effective than expected if the employee is not work-
oriented and if he sees work only as a means of personal satisfaction. Such an employee
may see an appraisal program as only a system of paper work , unless the appraisal
results is so negative that the employee fears termination of his employment.
69
In sum, for performance appraisal to work well, the employee must understand it, must
feel that it is fair, and must be work oriented. One way to foster this understanding is for
the employees to participate in the design and operation of the system and to train them to
some extent in performance appraisal.
In general, there are problems with performance appraisal: with the appraisers, and with
the employees. It is, however, believed that the suggestions presented hereunder may
improve the system of performance appraisal.
70
CHAPTER- 9
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT
A. Meaning
Training and development can be defined as planned efforts by organizations to
increase
employees’ knowledge, skills and abilities.
Training refers to the method used to give new or present employees the skills they need
to perform their jobs.
Training is any process by which the aptitudes, skills and abilities of employees to Perform
specific jobs are increased. It is the act of increasing the knowledge and skills of an employee
for
doing a particular job.
Development is said to include training to increase skills and knowledge to do a particular job
and education concerned with increasing general knowledge and understanding. This shows
that
development involves learning opportunities aimed at the individual growth but not restricted
to a
specific job. Training is usually related to operational or technical employees while
development
is for managers and professionals. However, they are also many times used interchangeably.
71
I. To provide the knowledge skills and attitudes for individuals to undertake their current
jobs more effectively
II. To help employees become capable of assuming other responsibilities with in an
organization either at more senior or at their current levels (developing their potentials)
III. To help employees to adapt to changing circumstances facing organizations such as new
technologies, new business environment, new product etc
IV. To reduce wastage and increase efficiency
V. To minimize input and maximize output
VI. To relieve supervisors from close supervision and get time for other duties
VII. To lower turnover and absenteeism and increase employees’ job satisfaction
VIII. To lower the number and cost of accidents
72
A major problem with training and development is identifying who needs how much of
what type of training and development .The training and development needs of an
organization fall into two independent categories namely , organizational needs and
employee’s training needs.
73
employees. The following are some of the questions that might be asked:
1What does the employee have to do?
2What particular skills does he need in order to work effectively?
3What skills does he have?
4What skill must he acquire to do the job well?
In general, training and development needs are said to be existed in an organization when
there is a gap between the existing performance of an employee (or group of employees)
and the desired performance .To asses whether such a gap exists requires skills inventory
and analysis in the organization.
There are different methods of gathering information to determine the need for training
and development of human resources. The most frequently used ones are the following:
1Organizational analysis
2Task analysis or analysis of job requirement
3Performance analysis
4Supervisory recommendations
5Employee suggestions
6Observations
7Test of job knowledge test and questionnaire survey
8Management requests
74
preference and capabilities, trainer preference and capabilities and training principles.
Training can be conducted either on the job; that is with in the actual work environment
or off the job; that is out side the actual work.
75
conferencing and Internet based classes.
8.Vestibule training: setting up a training area very similar to the work area in
equipment , procedures, and environment ,but separated from the actual one
so trainees can learn with out affecting the production schedule
76
may need to pass the program in order to be certified or qualified for a particular
task or job. In many cases, passing the program will involve more than simply
attending all sessions. The trainee may need to have a certain grade or score on
some types of tests. Formal evaluation of each participant’s performance may
therefore be necessary.
d. Reducing professional liability: If you design or deliver a training program , you or
Your organization might be held legally responsible if a trainee subsequently become
injured or killed in the course of performing the task or job. Thus, It is important to
evaluate a training program to ensure that it can be defended against legal challenges.
E. MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT
Management development is any attempt to improve managerial performance by
imparting knowledge, changing attitudes or increasing skills. The ultimate aim is, of
course, to enhance the future performance of the company itself.
The general management development process consists o f
I. Assessing the company’s strategic needs (fore instance, to fill future executive
opining, or to boost competitiveness),
II. Apprising the managers performance, and then
III. Developing the managers (and future managers)
One of the most important management development techniques is succession planning.
Succession planning
Succession planning is a process by which one or more successors are identified for key
posts (or groups of similar key posts), and career moves and/or development activities are
planned for these successors. Successors may be fairly ready to do the job (short-term
successors) or seen as having longer-term potential (long-term successors).
Succession planning therefore sits inside a very much wider set of resourcing and
development processes which we might call succession management. This encompasses
the management resourcing strategy, aggregate analysis of demand/supply (human
resource planning and auditing), skills analysis, the job filling process, and management
development (including graduate and high flyer programs).
77
Organizations use succession planning to achieve a number of objectives including:
I. Improved job filling for key positions through broader candidate search, and faster
decisions
III. Auditing the ‘talent pool’ of the organization and thereby influencing resourcing
and development strategies
IV. Fostering a corporate culture through developing a group of people who are seen
as a ‘corporate resource’ and who share key skills, experiences and values seen as
important to the future of the organization.
Of these, it is the active development of a strong ‘talent pool’ for the future which is now
seen as the most important. Increasingly, this is also seen as vital to the attraction and
retention of the ‘best’ people.
Succession planning covers only the most senior jobs in the organization (the top two or
three tiers) plus short-term and longer-term successors for these posts. The latter groups
are often manifesting as a corporate fast stream or high potential population who are
being actively developed in mid-career through job moves across organizational streams,
functions or geographical boundaries.
Many large organizations also adopt a ‘devolved’ model where the same processes and
philosophy are applied to a much larger population (usually managerial and professional)
but this process is managed by devolved organizational divisions, functions, sites or
countries. It has to be said that few organizations successfully sustain the devolved
model, usually because it is not really seen as a high priority and not adequately
78
facilitated by HR.
Succession plans normally cover both short- and longer-term successors for key posts,
and development plans for these successors. Where a number of jobs are of similar type
and need similar skills, it is preferable to identify a ‘pool’ of successors for this collection
of posts.
b. Challenging and enriching succession plans through discussion of people and posts
c. Agreeing job (or job group) successors and development plans for individuals
e. Review, i.e. checking the actual pattern of job filling and whether planned individual
development has taken place.
The process is essentially one of multiple dialogues. Preliminary views are collected,
usually from senior line managers, and then these views are tested and amended in a
number of such dialogues: up the management line; with HR professionals; and in a
committee of peers. The use of succession or development committees to challenge and
agree plans is an important way of generating cross-boundary moves. They also help to
ensure that the view taken by the organization of an individual is based on objective
evidence.
The level of secrecy in succession planning is gradually being reduced. All employees
should understand that such a process exists and how it works. Those covered by the
process should have an opportunity to make an input about their own career aspirations,
79
preferences and constraints. They should also get feedback from the process in terms of
how they are viewed by the organization, their perceived development needs and the
kinds of job moves for which they would be considered.
F. CAREER DEVELOPMENT
Career development is an on going, formalized effort by an organization that focuses on
80
developing and enriching the organization’s human resource in light of both the
employee’s and the organization’s needs.
81
CHAPTER-5
WAGE AND SALARY ADMINISTRATION (COMPENSATION)
Definition
Compensation is the human resource management function that deals with every type of
rewards individuals receive in exchange for performing organizational task
Compensation refers to all forms of pay or rewards going to employees and arising from
their employment, and it has two main components: direct financial payments (in the
form of wages, salaries, incentives, commissions and bonuses), and indirect payments (in
the form of financial benefits like employer –paid insurance and vacation)
Employees need to be rewarded for the service they provide an organization. The
organization, on the other hand, has the obligation to reward employees fairly
according to the contribution they provide to the organization. Organizational reward
includes, both intrinsic and extrinsic, that are received as the result of employment by
the organization
COMPENSATION POLICIES
Certain policies must be formulated before a successful compensation system can
be developed and implemented. Naturally, these policies are strongly in flounced
by the organization’s objectives and its environment. Policies must deal with the
following issues:
82
1Minimum and maximum levels of pay (taking in to consideration the worth of the
job to the organization, the organization’s ability to pay, government
regulations, union influences and market pressure)
2General relation ship among levels of pay (e.g. between senior management,
operating management, and operative employees, and supervisors)
3The division of the total compensation dollar (i.e. what portion goes in to base
pay, in to incentive programs and in to benefits). In addition to these issues,
organizations must make decisions concerning how much money will go in to
pay increase for next year, who recommend them, how rises will generally be
determined
IMPORTANCE OF COMPENSATION
1. To employees:
A. It is the primary (and often the only) source of income for
employees and their family.
B. It determines employees ` social status. An income level is often
used as a measure of a person’s worth.
C. It is a faire reward for the work employees perform and the benefit
they provide for the employer.
2. To employers
A. To attract capable employees to the organization
B. To motivate employees to wards superior performance
levels
C. To retain current employees
83
FACTORS AFFECTING COMPENSATION DECISIONS
A. EXTERNAL FACTORS
1. Government: government rules, regulations, executive’s orders, and laws have
their influence on an organization’s compensation policy. Every government provides
laws for compensation in areas like, minimum wage rate, equal pay provision –to avoid
pay differentials based on sex in jobs requiring substantially equal skill, effort,
responsibility, and working conditions .etc
2. Cost of living: cost of living as measured in terms of consumer price index may
affect the organization’s compensation policy as it tries to adjust its employee’s
earnings to the rate of inflation. This process is called cost of living adjustment (COLA).
As per the policy of the organization, compensation could be adjusted.
3. Comparable wage rate: the wage pattern in the industry and community could
have an impact on the compensation policies and practices of organizations. Comparing
wages and salary rates in a given areas may help in ensuring that the organization is
offering a salary that is not substantially higher or lower than those paid by others in the
same area. Comparison could also be done based on occupation to provide a comparable
pay to similar occupations around the country.
In order to insure that comparable level of payment is offered to employees,
organizations conduct salary and wage survey on other companies to avoid costly
mistakes. These could also be done to offer comparable benefit packages to employees
4. Market condition: Regardless other factors involved, the supply and demand
relationships in the labor market will determine the wage and salary level in
organization.
5. Union’s influences: union and labor relations laws also influence pay plan design.
Historically, the wage rate has been the main issue in collective bargaining. However,
union also negotiate other pay related issues, including time off with pay, income security
(for those in industries with periodic lay offs), cost of living adjustments, and benefits
like health care.
84
B. INTERNAL FACTORS
1The size and age of the organization: It is argued that large and new
organizations tends to pay higher wages compared to small and old ones
There are several policy issues that need to be addressed for establishing a fair and
equitable compensation system. Most basic wage and salary system establish pay ranges
for certain jobs based on the relative worth of a job to the organizations and wage and
salary survey. Determining the relative worth of a job to the organization maintains fair
and equitable pay structure internally by comparing jobs within the organization while
wage and salary surveys ensures that the payment range is comparable to the payment
systems in other similar establishments or occupation s .An individual’s performance on
the job should then determine where that individuals pay fall within the job’s range
85
Determining internal fairness: Conducting Job Evaluation
Job evaluation
It is a systematic determination of the value of each job in relation to other jobs in the
organization. If it is done properly, the relative value of the jobs is reflected in the relative
wage rate for the jobs.
It involves
1To enumerate the requirements of a job
86
In order for the survey to be effective, it is essential to identify the jobs to be surveyed
and also the organizations and their geographic location. Then the appropriate wage
survey will be designed. Some of the issues usually included in the survey include:
1Length of workday
A. Time-of pay: this are payments for the time not worked and include pay vacations,
paid holidays, paid sick leaves, pension programs, rest periods, etc.
Example: Paid vacations- organizations provided employees a certain number of paid
vacation days in a year. The number of days may vary according to how long an
employee has worked for an organization. Usually, paid vacation times increases with
seniority.
Sick leaves:- providing employees with pay for days not worked because of illness
Pension programs: it represents a fixed payment other than wages, made regularly to
former employees or their surviving dependents.
B. Non-pay benefits: these are benefits not paid in cash but include expenditures
on items such as medical services, transportation, accommodation, insurance, cafeteria
services, education programs, child care services, and others.
Example: Health insurance: Medical insurance program designed to cover a portion or
87
total medical expense incurred by an employee. It may include coverage for
hospitalization, outpatient doctor bills, prescription drugs, dental, eye, medical health
care, etc.
Accident and disability insurance: it is designed to protect the employees who experience
a long term or permanent disability.
Methods of payment
There are three basic methods of payment
88
assessed in dollar terms.
2. It may result in scarifying quality of work for quantity
3. The administration of incentive system is also problematic because employees
are motivated to “beat the dame” by keeping standards low so that they can
maximize their pay with a minimum effort. As a consequence, an adversarial
relation ship may develop between the employees and managers responsible for
the pay system.
89