Transcript Document

Introduction
STRATEGIC HUMAN
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Much of life now looks like [a] doughnut. Organisations
as well as individuals have come to realise that they
have an essential core, a core of necessary jobs and
necessary people, a core which is surrounded by an
open flexible space, which they fill with flexible
workers and flexible supply contracts. The strategic
issue for organisations, nowadays, is to decide what
activities and which people to put in which space. It
is not always obvious (CHARLES HANDY, British
academic, business consultant and author).
WHAT IS HUMAN RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT?


Managing people within the employeremployee relationship.
It involves the productive use of people in
achieving the organisation’s strategic
business objectives and the satisfaction
of individual employee needs.




HRM is either a part of the problem or part of
the solution in gaining the productive
contribution of people.
The HR manager, as with any other functional
manager in marketing, production or finance, is
responsible for performance.
His or her position exists foremost to help
achieve the strategic business objectives of the
organisation.
The HR function is recognised for contributing
to the ‘bottom line (which refers to a final result
such as net profit after taxes).
HRM AND MANAGEMENT




HRM is management, but management is more
than HRM.
HRM is that part of management dealing directly
with people, whereas management also includes
marketing research and development, and
accounting and finance.
Because the purpose of HRM is to improve the
productive contribution of people, it is intimately
related to all other aspects of management.
Organisations needing to trim overheads or
reduce corporate flab cut HRM.
Who is responsible for HR?


It should be quite clear that human resource
management functions are not necessarily
executed by a human resource specialist or
department.
Precisely how the human resource management
functions are divided between the human
resource department’s specialists and the
organisation’s other managers varies from
situation to situation and is contingent upon a
vast number of circumstantial factors.
Circumstantial Factors
Internal factors:
 organisational history,
 size,
 structure and location,
 the values, philosophies and management
styles of top management,
 the nature of the workforce,
 the type of industry.
External factors:
 economic conditions,
 legislative requirements,
 industrial relations.
Myths that keep HR from being a profession
New Realities
Old Myths


People go into HR
because they like people.
Anyone can do HR.
HR departments are not
designed to provide corporate
therapy or to act as social or
health-and-happiness retreats.
HR professionals must create
the practices that make
employees more competitive,
not more comfortable.
HR activities are based on
theory and research. HR
professionals must master both
theory and practice.
Old Myths


New Realities
HR deals with the soft
side of business and
therefore is not
accountable.
The impact of HR practices on
business results can and must be
measured. HR professionals
must learn to translate their work
into financial performance.
HR focuses on costs,
which must be
controlled.
HR practices must create value by
increasing the intellectual capital
within the firm. HR professionals
must add value, not only reduce
costs.
New Realities
Old Myths


HR’s job is to be the policy police
and the health-and-happiness
patrol.
HR is full of fads.
The HR function does not own
compliance.
HR practices have evolved
over time. HR professionals
must see their current work as
part of an evolutionary chain
and explain their work with
less jargon and more authority.



Old Myths
HR is staffed by nice
people.
HR is HR’s job.
New Realities
At times, HR practices should force
vigorous debates. HR professionals
should be confrontative and
challenging as well as supportive.
HR work is as important to line
managers as are finance, strategy,
and other business domains. HR
professionals should join with
managers in championing HR
issues.
APPROACHES TO HRM


Instrumental HRM (hard approach): stresses the
rational, quantitative and strategic aspects of
managing human resources.
Humanistic HRM (soft approach): while
emphasising the integration of HR practices with
strategic objectives, it stresses competitive
advantage is achieved by employees with superior
know-how, commitment, job satisfaction,
adaptability and motivation.
The New Role of HR Managers
STRATEGIC PARTNER

HR professionals play a strategic role when they have the ability to
translate business strategy into action. This facilitating role allows the
HR manager to become part of the business team.
ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERT

To become administrative experts HR professionals must be able to reengineer HR activities through the use of technology, process
engineering and total quality management.
EMPLOYEE CHAMPION

The HR professional must be able to relate to and meet the needs of
employees
CHANGE AGENT

The HR manager needs to serve as a catalyst for change within the
organisation. This can be achieved by leading change in the HR
function and by developing problem-solving communication and
influence skills. In short, the HR manager must know how to manage
change.
HRM ACTIVITIES

Job analysis defines a job in terms of specific tasks and
responsibilities and identifies the abilities, skills and qualifications
needed to perform it successfully.

Human resource planning or employment planning is the process
by which an organisation attempts to ensure that it has the right
number of qualified people in the right jobs at the right time.
Employee recruitment is the process of seeking and attracting a
pool of applicants from which qualified candidates for job vacancies
within an organisation can be selected.


Employee selection involves choosing from the available candidates
the individual predicted to be most likely to perform successfully in the
job.
HRM ACTIVITIES (cont)




Performance appraisal is concerned with determining how well
employees are doing their jobs, communicating that information to
the employees and establishing a plan for performance
improvement.
Training and development activities help employees learn how to
perform their jobs, improve their performance and prepare
themselves for more senior positions.
Career planning and development activities benefit both
employees - by identifying employee career goals, possible future
job opportunities and personal improvement requirements - and
the organisation - by ensuring that qualified employees are
available when needed.
Employee motivation is vital to the success of any organisation.
Highly motivated employees tend to be more productive and have
lower rates of absenteeism, turnover and lateness.
HRM ACTIVITIES (cont)





Compensation refers to the cash rewards, such as the base
salary, bonus, incentive payments and allowances which
employees receive for working in an organisation.
Benefits are sometimes referred to as indirect or non-cash
compensation.
Industrial relations is concerned with the relationship between
an organisation and its employees.
Effective health and safety programs help guarantee the
physical and mental wellbeing of employees.
Management of diversity and successfully integrating
Australia’s multi-cultural population into the work force
maximises the contribution of all employees.
WHAT IS STRATEGY

Defines the direction in which an
organisation intends to move and
establishes the framework for action
by which it intends to get there.
STRATEGIC INTENT


Companies that have achieved global
leadership, have created a sustained
obsession to achieve a challenging longterm objective. This obsession is called
strategic intent.
Achieve this requires organisations to move
from their traditional conscript mindset
(externally motivated) to a volunteer
mindset internally motivated).
Strategic Intent
Establish a mission and key objectives
F
E
E
D
B
A
C
K
Analyse the environment
Analyse and select business strategies
Implement the strategies
Monitor and evaluate performance
BHP
Charter
To survive and prosper, we must create a
high performance organisation in which
every individual accepts responsibility
and is rewarded for results.
Business
strategy
We have adopted a portfolio business
asset model to compete in a clearly
defined and targeted approach.
People
strategy
We are committed to providing a great
company to work for, with great jobs and
attractive rewards.
Remunera- Our executives will be able to see the link
tion
between the results they produce and the
strategy
level of reward they achieve through a
flexible remuneration delivery model.
Link between organisation and HRM objectives and strategies
Source: BHP, ‘Coming out of a tight corner; Report to Shareholders, 2000, p. 31.
TYPES OF STRATEGIES




Growth
Retrenchment
Stability
Combination
HRM STRATEGY AIMS TO ENABLE
ORGANISATION TO ACHIEVE STRATEGIC
OBJECTIVES BY:







Ensuring all business processes recognise the value of
people
Seeing that all concerned appreciate the HR implications of
their proposals
Achieving a close match between corporate business
objectives and objectives of the HR function
Designing a culture, climate and organisational processes
conducive to optimal performance of staff
Identifying the firm’s distinctive competencies and the types
of people that match these competencies.
Assessing the performance requirements
Reviewing levels of commitment throughout the organisation
STRATEGIC HRM OBJECTIVES CAN BE
LINKED TO STRATEGIC OBJCTIVES
SUCH AS:




Cost containment
Customer service
Social responsibility
Organisational effectiveness
ASSESSMENT OF
INFLUENCES




Where are we now?
Where do we want to be in the future?
What path is best for us?
How and when can we implement it?
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES










Political
Legal
Environmental
Technological
Cultural
Demographic
Social
Business
Economic
Industrial relations
INTERNAL INFLUENCES




Organisational mission and purpose
Objectives and strategies
Organisational culture
Organisational structure
OUTCOMES IN EVALUATING HRM
STRATEGIES AND POLICIES









Commitment
Competence
Cost-effectiveness
Congruence
Adaptability
Performance
Job satisfaction
Employee motivation
Trust
THE HRM CHALLENGE
“Strategic HRM demands HR
professionals who have competencies
at a general management level and
who are willing to accept responsibility
for organisational performance outside
HRM” Davidson
Summary



In the current turbulent environment HR managers
need to adopt a strategic approach, be part of the
top management team, be involved in corporate
planning and develop a vision for HRM.
HRM activities must be part of a coordinated effort
to improve the productive contribution of people in
meeting the organisation’s strategic business
objectives.
Inability to do so means that the organisation will
ultimately stagnate and fail.